To this she replied, "I suppose you do not mind if I sit down. I am a little weary."
The stranger's manner changed abruptly. He became courteous, almost courtly.
"I am sorry. I did not know there were chairs. You see I am a stranger here. Sit down if you prefer it, by all means. . . . I am not one to work hardships for a woman." She moved toward the long chair under the lindens and lay down, wrapping the cloak about her and closing her eyes.
"Perhaps," said the stranger, "you would prefer to sleep."
"No," she replied quietly, "I could not sleep now." And as if the idea amused her she added, "I might as well talk with you . . . since you too suffer from insomnia."
"As you will . . . if you do not hate me too much."
He sat in the chair by her side and slipped from his waist the belt in which hung his black lugar pistol. Thus they remained for some time, silently and peacefully, as if they were old friends between whom there was no necessity for speech. The German sat with his elbows resting on his knees, his head buried in his hands. There was a smoothness and angularity about his thin figure so trimly clad in a uniform that now carried the stains of battle.
At last he took out a cigarette and said, "I suppose you smoke, Madame?"
To which Lily replied without opening her eyes, "No."
He was so polite, so scrupulously polite. And presently he sighed, "Ah, this civilization . . . this world of monkeys. (Monde de singes.)" And once more the night stillness descended, for Lily made no effort at speech now. She lay motionless, so still that she might have been dead. Her silence appeared to reproach him for he turned suddenly and said, "Do you fancy I like this . . . this living like a burglar in a château . . . your château?"
"It is not mine," Lily murmured.
"Do you fancy I like this war. . . . I am not pleased with killing men. Why should I? I do not hate them. How is it possible? How can you even hate me?"
She stirred impatiently. "No. It is impossible to hate genuinely . . . without a reason one can put one's finger