
A crisp November chill settles over the French countryside, where rows of brown canvas tents form a sprawling camp of American troops just weeks after the armistice. Soldiers move about with a surprising ease, sharing songs, jokes, and the lingering camaraderie of battle, while the quiet of peace feels almost foreign after years of gunfire. Into this scene arrive Mrs. David Clark, a seasoned Red Cross nurse, and her young ward Bianca, their bright red coats standing out against the winter gloom as they prepare to tend to the weary servicemen.
The narrative follows the gentle interplay of duty and humanity, capturing the nurses’ compassionate presence alongside the soldiers’ tentative return to normalcy. Through lively dialogue and vivid descriptions, listeners glimpse the hopeful anticipation of medals, the promise of home, and the subtle bonds forming between those who have survived the front lines and those who now care for them. The story offers a heartfelt portrait of post‑war life, where healing begins both on the battlefield’s edge and in the shared moments of everyday kindness.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (246K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2010-09-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1876–1958
Best known for lively girls’ adventure series, this American children’s writer filled her books with travel, friendship, and wartime service. Her stories helped shape early 20th-century popular fiction for young readers, especially the Camp Fire Girls, Ranch Girls, Red Cross Girls, and Girl Scouts books.
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