The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army

Margaret Vandercook
The Red Cross Girls with the
Russian Army, by

Margaret Vandercook This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at
no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it,
give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg
License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army
Author: Margaret Vandercook
Release Date: July 18, 2007 [EBook #22095]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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CROSS GIRLS ***

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THE RED CROSS GIRLS WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY
[Illustration: BARBARA PRESENTED HIM WITH THE ELECTRIC
LAMP. (See page 150.)]

The Red Cross Girls with the Russian Army
By MARGARET VANDERCOOK
Author of "The Ranch Girls Series," "Stories about Camp Fire Girls
Series," etc.
Illustrated
The John C. Winston Company Philadelphia
Copyright, 1916, by THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE
I. A PEASANT'S HUT IN RUSSIA 7
II. A FORMER ACQUAINTANCE 23
III. GENERAL ALEXIS 37
IV. AN ENCOUNTER 53
V. OUT OF THE PAST 67
VI. THE ARREST 80
VII. A RUSSIAN CHURCH 92
VIII. ANOTHER WARNING 104
IX. THE ATTACK 118
X. MILDRED'S OPPORTUNITY 134

XI. A RUSSIAN RETREAT 148
XII. PETROGRAD 158
XIII. THE NEXT STEP 174
XIV. MILDRED'S RETURN 191
XV. THE WINTER PALACE 206
XVI. THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS 217
XVII. THE DEPARTURE 236
XVIII. A POEM AND A CONVERSATION 247
XIX. THE REUNION 256
CHAPTER I
A Peasant's Hut in Russia
In the last volume of the Red Cross series the four American girls spent
six months in tragic little Belgium. There, in an American hospital in
Brussels, devoted to the care, not of wounded soldiers, but of ill
Belgians, three of the girls lived and worked.
But Eugenia went alone to dwell in a house in the woods because the
cry of the children in Belgium made the strongest appeal to her. The
house was a lonely one, supposed to be haunted, yet in spite of this
Eugenia moved in. There the money of the girl whom her friend had
once believed "poor as a church mouse" fed and cared for her quickly
acquired family.
In Eugenia's haunted house were other sojourners furnishing the
mystery of this story and endangering her liberty, almost her life. They
were a Belgian officer and his family whom the Red Cross girl kept in
hiding. Somehow the officer had managed to return to his own country
from the fighting line in Belgium. After securing the papers he desired

from the enemy, by Eugenia's aid, he was enabled to return once more
to King Albert and the Allied armies. Thus Eugenia was left alone to
bear the brunt of the German displeasure after the discovery of her
misdeeds. She was imprisoned in Brussels, and became dangerously ill.
Finally, because she was an American, Eugenia was made to leave the
country, rather than to suffer the punishment which would have been
hers had she belonged to another nationality.
But the four American Red Cross girls also had the companionship of
Dick Thornton during their stay in the once lovely capital of Belgium.
Dick had not recovered the use of his arm, but in spite of this had come
to Brussels to help with the work of the American Relief society.
Here his once friendly relation with Barbara Meade no longer existed.
Because of her change of attitude he apparently grew more attached to
Nona Davis.
However, at the close of the story, when Barbara is taking Eugenia
back to southern France, she and Dick unexpectedly meet aboard a
fog-bound ship. And in the darkness the light finally shines when Dick
and Barbara discover at last that their feeling for each other is stronger
than friendship.
Later, near "the pool of truth" not far from the "Farmhouse with the
Blue Front Door," Eugenia Peabody again meets Captain Henri
Castaigne, the young French officer whom she had once nursed back to
health. A short time afterwards he and Eugenia are married.
Later the three other American Red Cross girls decide to continue their
nursing of the wounded soldiers of the Allied armies in far-off Russia.
One cold October afternoon three American girls were standing in the
stone courtyard of a great Russian fortress near the border line of
Poland.
Situated upon a cone-shaped hill, the fort itself had been built like the
three sides of a square, with the yard as the center. Along the fourth

side ran a cement wall with a single iron gate.
Evidently the three girls were engaged in Red Cross work, for they
wore the familiar service uniforms. One of them had on a heavy coat
and
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