About This Book
A narrator in an American relief organization records an observant volunteer’s account of a wounded young officer returned to his family estate, the anxious receptions that follow, and a restrained young woman who urges him to slip away to avoid stifling attention. The tale traces the practical care of the injured, the village’s ritualized gratitude, and the private dilemmas that war amplifies, exploring the tension between public spectacle and intimate feeling, the nervousness and fragility of convalescence, and the quiet negotiations of affection, duty, and escape in the aftermath of violence.
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