Baby Mine

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Baby Mine Page 18

by Margaret Mayo


  CHAPTER XVIII

  His face covered with lather, and a shaving brush in one hand, Alfredentered the room just as his friend was about to escape.

  "Jimmy!" exclaimed the excited young father, "you're back."

  "Oh, yes--yes," admitted Jimmy nervously, "I'm back."

  "My boy!" cried Alfred, and he glanced toward the crib. "He's here!"

  "Yes--yes," agreed Aggie uneasily, as she tried to place herself betweenAlfred and the bassinette. "He's here, but you mayn't have him, Alfred."

  "What?" exclaimed Alfred, trying to put her out of the way.

  "Not yet," protested Aggie, "not just yet."

  "Give him to me," demanded Alfred, and thrusting Aggie aside, he tookpossession of the small mite in the cradle.

  "But--but, Alfred," pleaded Aggie, "your face. You'll get him all wet."

  Alfred did not heed her. He was bending over the cradle in an ecstasy."My boy!" he cried, "my boy!" Lifting the baby in his arms he circledthe room cooing to him delightedly.

  "Was he away from home when his fadder came? Oh, me, oh, my! Coochy!Coochy! Coochy!" Suddenly he remembered to whom he owed this wondroustreasure and forgetful of the lather on his unshaven face he rushedtoward Zoie with an overflowing heart. "My precious!" he exclaimed, andhe covered her cheek with kisses.

  "Go away!" cried Zoie in disgust and she pushed Alfred from her andbrushed the hateful lather from her little pink check.

  But Alfred was not to be robbed of his exaltation, and again he circledthe room, making strange gurgling sounds to Baby.

  "Did a horrid old Jimmy take him away from fadder?" he saidsympathetically, in the small person's ear; and he glanced at Jimmy withfrowning disapproval. "I'd just like to see him get you away from meagain!" he added to Baby, as he tickled the mite's ear with the end ofhis shaving brush. "Oh, me! oh, my!" he exclaimed in trepidation, as heperceived a bit of lather on the infant's cheek. Then lifting the boyhigh in his arms and throwing out his chest with great pride, he lookedat Jimmy with an air of superiority. "I guess I'm bad, aye?" he said.

  Jimmy positively blushed. As for Zoie, she was growing more and moreimpatient for a little attention to herself.

  "Rock-a-bye, Baby," sang Alfred in strident tones and he swung the childhigh in his arms.

  Jimmy and Aggie gazed at Alfred as though hypnotised. They kept time tohis lullaby out of sheer nervousness. Suddenly Alfred stopped, held thechild from him and gazed at it in horror. "Good heavens!" he exclaimed.The others waited breathlessly. "Look at that baby's face," commandedAlfred.

  Zoie and Aggie exchanged alarmed glances, then Zoie asked intrepidation, "What's the matter with his face?"

  "He's got a fever," declared Alfred. And he started toward the bed toshow the child to its mother.

  "Go away!" shrieked Zoie, waving Alfred off in wild alarm.

  "What?" asked Alfred, backing from her in surprise.

  Aggie crossed quickly to Alfred's side and looked over his shoulder atthe boy. "I don't see anything wrong with its face," she said.

  "It's scarlet!" persisted Alfred.

  "Oh," said Jimmy with a superior air, "they're always like that."

  "Nothing of the sort," snorted Alfred, and he glared at Jimmythreateningly. "You've frozen the child parading him around thestreets."

  "Let me have him, Alfred," begged Aggie sweetly; "I'll put him in hiscrib and keep him warm."

  Reluctantly Alfred released the boy. His eyes followed him to the cribwith anxiety. "Where's his nurse?" he asked, as he glanced first fromone to the other.

  Zoie and Jimmy stared about the room as though expecting the desiredperson to drop from the ceiling. Then Zoie turned upon her unwaryaccomplice.

  "Jimmy," she called in a threatening tone, "where IS his nurse?"

  "Does Jimmy take the nurse out, too?" demanded Alfred, more and moreannoyed by the privileges Jimmy had apparently been usurping in hisabsence.

  "Never mind about the nurse," interposed Aggie. "Baby likes me betteranyway. I'll tuck him in," and she bent fondly over the crib, but Alfredwas not to be so easily pacified.

  "Do you mean to tell me," he exclaimed excitedly, "that my boy hasn'tany nurse?"

  "We HAD a nurse," corrected Zoie, "but--but I had to discharge her."

  Alfred glanced from one to the other for an explanation.

  "Discharge her?" he repeated, "for what?"

  "She was crazy," stammered Zoie.

  Alfred's eyes sought Aggie's for confirmation. She nodded. He directedhis steady gaze toward Jimmy. The latter jerked his head up and down innervous assent.

  "Well," said Alfred, amazed at their apparent lack of resource, "whydidn't you get ANOTHER nurse?"

  "Aggie is going to stay and take care of baby to-night," declared Zoie,and then she beamed upon Aggie as only she knew how. "Aren't you, dear?"she asked sweetly.

  "Yes, indeed," answered Aggie, studiously avoiding Jimmy's eye.

  "Baby is going to sleep in the spare room with Aggie and Jimmy," saidZoie.

  "What!" exclaimed Jimmy, too desperate to care what Alfred might infer.

  Ignoring Jimmy's implied protest, Zoie continued sweetly to Alfred:

  "Now, don't worry, dear; go back to your room and finish your shaving."

  "Finish shaving?" repeated Alfred in a puzzled way. Then his hand wentmechanically to his cheek and he stared at Zoie in astonishment. "ByJove!" he exclaimed, "I had forgotten all about it. That shows you howexcited I am." And with a reluctant glance toward the cradle, he wentquickly from the room, singing a high-pitched lullaby.

  Just as the three conspirators were drawing together for consultation,Alfred returned to the room. It was apparent that there was somethingimportant on his mind.

  "By the way," he said, glancing from one to another, "I forgot toask--what's his name?"

  The conspirators looked at each other without answering. To Alfred theirdelay was annoying. Of course his son had been given his father's name,but he wished to HEAR someone say so.

  "Baby's, I mean," he explained impatiently.

  Jimmy felt instinctively that Zoie's eyes were upon him. He avoided hergaze.

  "Jimmy!" called Zoie, meaning only to appeal to him for a name.

  "Jimmy!" thundered the infuriated Alfred. "You've called my boy 'Jimmy'?Why 'Jimmy'?"

  For once Zoie was without an answer.

  After waiting in vain for any response, Alfred advanced upon theuncomfortable Jimmy.

  "You seem to be very popular around here," he sneered.

  Jimmy shifted uneasily from one foot to the other and studied thepattern of the rug upon which he was standing.

  After what seemed an age to Jimmy, Alfred turned his back upon his oldfriend and started toward his bedroom. Jimmy peeped out uneasily fromhis long eyelashes. When Alfred reached the threshold, he faced aboutquickly and stared again at Jimmy for an explanation. It seemed to Jimmythat Alfred's nostrils were dilating. He would not have been surprisedto see Alfred snort fire. He let his eyes fall before the awfulspectacle of his friend's wrath. Alfred's upper lip began to curl. Hecast a last withering look in Jimmy's direction, retired quickly fromthe scene and banged the door.

  When Jimmy again had the courage to lift his eyes he was confronted bythe contemptuous gaze of Zoie, who was sitting up in bed and regardinghim with undisguised disapproval.

  "Why didn't you tell him what the baby's name is?" she demanded.

  "How do _I_ know what the baby's name is?" retorted Jimmy savagely.

  "Sh! sh!" cautioned Aggie as she glanced nervously toward the doorthrough which Alfred had just passed.

  "What does it matter WHAT the baby's name is so long as we have to sendit back?"

  "I'll NOT send it back," declared Zoie emphatically, "at least not untilmorning. That will give Jimmy a whole night to get another one."

  "Another!" shrieked Jimmy. "See here, you two can't be changing babiesevery five minutes without Alfred knowing it. Even HE has SOME sense."

  "Nonsense!" answered Aggie
shortly. "You know perfectly well that allyoung babies look just alike. Their own mothers couldn't tell themapart, if it weren't for their clothes."

  "But where can we GET another?" asked Zoie.

  Before Aggie could answer, Alfred was again heard calling from the nextroom. Apparently all his anger had subsided, for he inquired in the mostamiable tone as to what baby might be doing and how he might be feeling.Aggie crossed quickly to the door, and sweetly reassured the anxiousfather, then she closed the door softly and turned to Zoie and Jimmywith a new inspiration lighting her face. "I have it," she exclaimedecstatically.

  Jimmy regarded his spouse with grave suspicion.

  "Now see here," he objected, "every time YOU 'HAVE IT,' I DO IT. TheNEXT time you 'HAVE IT' YOU DO IT!"

  The emphasis with which Jimmy made his declaration deservedconsideration, but to his amazement it was entirely ignored by bothwomen. Hopping quickly out of bed, without even glancing in hisdirection, Zoie gave her entire attention to Aggie. "What is it?" sheasked eagerly.

  "There must be OTHER babies' Homes," said Aggie, and she glanced atJimmy from her superior height.

  "They aren't open all night like corner drug stores," growled Jimmy.

  "Well, they ought to be," decided Zoie.

  "And surely," argued Aggie, "in an extraordinary case--like----"

  "This was an 'extraordinary case,'" declared Jimmy, "and you saw whathappened this time, and the Superintendent is a friend of mine--at leasthe WAS a friend of mine." And with that Jimmy sat himself down on thefar corner of the couch and proceeded to ruminate on the havoc thatthese two women had wrought in his once tranquil life.

  Zoie gazed at Jimmy in deep disgust; her friend Aggie had made anexcellent suggestion, and instead of acting upon it with alacrity, heresat Jimmy sulking like a stubborn child.

  "I suppose," said Zoie, as her eyebrows assumed a bored angle, "thereare SOME babies in the world outside of Children's Homes."

  "Of course," was Aggie's enthusiastic rejoinder; "there's one born everyminute."

  "But I was born BETWEEN minutes," protested Jimmy.

  "Who's talking about you?" snapped Zoie.

  Again Aggie exclaimed that she "had it."

  "She's got it twice as bad," groaned Jimmy, and he wondered what newform her persecution of him was about to take.

  "Where is the morning paper?" asked Aggie, excitedly.

  "We can't advertise NOW," protested Zoie. "It's too late for that."

  "Sh! Sh!" answered Aggie, as she snatched the paper quickly fromthe table and began running her eyes up and down its third page."Married--married," she murmured, and then with delight she foundthe half column for which she was searching. "Born," she exclaimedtriumphantly. "Here we are! Get a pencil, Zoie, and we'll take down allthe new ones."

  "Of course," agreed Zoie, clapping her hands in glee, "and Jimmy can geta taxi and look them right up."

  "Oh, CAN he?" shouted Jimmy as he rose with clenched fists. "Now youtwo, see here----"

  Before Jimmy could complete his threat, there was a sharp ring of thedoor bell. He looked at the two women inquiringly.

  "It's the mother," cried Zoie in a hoarse whisper.

  "The mother!" repeated Jimmy in terror and he glanced uncertainly fromone door to the other.

  "Cover up the baby!" called Zoie, and drawing Jimmy's overcoat quicklyfrom his arm, Aggie threw it hurriedly over the cradle.

  For an instant Jimmy remained motionless in the centre of the room,hatless, coatless, and shorn of ideas. A loud knock on the door decidedhim and he sank with trembling knees behind the nearest armchair, justas Zoie made a flying leap into the bed and prepared to draw the coverover her head.

  The knock was repeated and Aggie signalled to Zoie to answer it.

  "Come in!" called Zoie very faintly.

 

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