“IT is a splendid boy,”
said the nurse as she came in with the new-born baby
in her arms, “and perfect as a bit of sculpture.
Just look at that hand.”
“Faugh!” ejaculated Mrs.
Dinneford, to whom this was addressed. Her countenance
expressed disgust. She turned her head away.
“Hide the thing from my sight!” she added,
angrily. “Cover it up! smother it if you
will!”
“You are still determined?” said the nurse.
“Determined, Mrs. Bray; I am
not the woman to look back when I have once resolved.
You know me.” Mrs. Dinneford said this passionately.
The two women were silent for a little
while. Mrs. Bray, the nurse, kept her face partly
turned from Mrs. Dinneford. She was a short,
dry, wiry little woman, with French features, a sallow
complexion and very black eyes.
The doctor looked in. Mrs. Dinneford
went quickly to the door, and putting her hand on
his arm, pressed him back, going out into the entry
with him and closing the door behind them. They
talked for a short time very earnestly.
“The whole thing is wrong,”
said the doctor as he turned to go, “and I will
not be answerable for the consequences.”
“No one will require them at
your hand, Doctor Radcliffe,” replied Mrs. Dinneford.
“Do the best you can for Edith. As for the
rest, know nothing, say nothing. You understand.”
Doctor Burt Radcliffe had a large
practice among rich and fashionable people. He
had learned to be very considerate of their weaknesses,
peculiarities and moral obliquities. His business
was to doctor them when sick, to humor them when they
only thought themselves sick, and to get the largest
possible fees for his, services. A great deal
came under his observation that he did not care to
see, and of which he saw as little as possible.
From policy he had learned to be reticent. He
held family secrets enough to make, in the hands of
a skillful writer, more than a dozen romances of the
saddest and most exciting character.
Mrs. Dinneford knew him thoroughly,
and just how far to trust him. “Know nothing,
say nothing” was a good maxim in the case, and
so she divulged only the fact that the baby was to
be cast adrift. His weak remonstrance might as
well not have been spoken, and he knew it.
While this brief interview was in
progress, Nurse Bray sat with the baby on her lap.
She had taken the soft little hands into her own;
and evil and cruel though she was, an impulse of tenderness
flowed into her heart from the angels who were present
with the innocent child. It grew lovely in her
eyes. Its helplessness stirred in her a latent
instinct of protection. “No no, it must
not be,” she was saying to herself, when the
door opened and Mrs. Dinneford came back.
Mrs. Bray did not lift her head, but
sat looking down at the baby and toying with its hands.
“Pshaw!” ejaculated Mrs.
Dinneford, in angry disgust, as she noticed this manifestation
of interest. “Bundle the thing up and throw
into that basket. Is the woman down stairs?”
“Yes,” replied Mrs. Bray
as she slowly drew a light blanket over the baby.
“Very well. Put it in the
basket, and let her take it away.”
“She is not a good woman,”
said the nurse, whose heart was failing her at the
last moment.
“She may be the devil for all
I care,” returned Mrs. Dinneford.
Mrs. Bray did as she was ordered,
but with an evident reluctance that irritated Mrs.
Dinneford.
“Go now and bring up the woman,” she said,
sharply.
The woman was brought. She was
past the prime of life, and had an evil face.
You read in it the record of bad passions indulged
and the signs of a cruel nature. She was poorly
clad, and her garments unclean.
“You will take this child?”
said Mrs. Dinneford abruptly, as the woman came into
her presence.
“I have agreed to do so,”
she replied, looking toward Mrs. Bray.
“She is to have fifty dollars,” said the
nurse.
“And that is to be the last
of it!” Mrs. Dinneford’s face was pale,
and she spoke in a hard, husky voice.
Opening her purse, she took from it
a small roll of bills, and as she held out the money
said, slowly and with a hard emphasis,
“You understand the terms.
I do not know you—not even your name.
I don’t wish to know you. For this consideration
you take the child away. That is the end of it
between you and me. The child is your own as
much as if he were born to you, and you can do with
him as you please. And now go.” Mrs.
Dinneford waved her hand.
“His name?” queried the woman.
“He has no name!” Mrs.
Dinneford stamped her foot in angry impatience.
The woman stooped down, and taking
up the basket, tucked the covering that had been laid
over the baby close about its head, so that no one
could see what she carried, and went off without uttering
another word.
It was some moments before either
Mrs. Dinneford or the nurse spoke. Mrs. Bray
was first to break silence.
“All this means a great deal
more than you have counted on,” she said, in
a voice that betrayed some little feeling. “To
throw a tender baby out like that is a hard thing.
I am afraid—”
“There, there! no more of that,”
returned Mrs. Dinneford, impatiently. “It’s
ugly work, I own, but it had to be done—like
cutting off a diseased limb. He will die, of course,
and the sooner it is over, the better for him and
every one else.”
“He will have a hard struggle
for life, poor little thing!” said the nurse.
“I would rather see him dead.”
Mrs. Dinneford, now that this wicked
and cruel deed was done, felt ill at ease. She
pushed the subject away, and tried to bury it out
of sight as we bury the dead, but did not find the
task an easy one.
What followed the birth and removal
of Edith’s baby up to the time of her return
to reason after long struggle for life, has already
been told. Her demand to have her baby—“Oh,
mother, bring me my baby! I shall die if you
do not!” and the answer, “Your baby is
in heaven!”—sent the feeble life-currents
back again upon her heart. There was another
long period of oblivion, out of which she came very
slowly, her mind almost as much a blank as the mind
of a child.
She had to learn again the names of
things, and to be taught their use. It was touching
to see the untiring devotion of her father, and the
pleasure he took in every new evidence of mental growth.
He went over the alphabet with her, letter by letter,
many times each day, encouraging her and holding her
thought down to the unintelligible signs with a patient
tenderness sad yet beautiful to see; and when she
began to combine letters into words, and at last to
put words together, his delight was unbounded.
Very slowly went on the new process
of mental growth, and it was months before thought
began to reach out beyond the little world that lay
just around her.
Meanwhile, Edith’s husband had
been brought to trial for forgery, convicted and sentenced
to the State’s prison for a term of years.
His partner came forward as the chief witness, swearing
that he had believed the notes genuine, the firm having
several times had the use of Mr. Dinneford’s
paper, drawn to the order of Granger.
Ere the day of trial came the poor
young man was nearly broken-hearted. Public disgrace
like this, added to the terrible private wrongs he
was suffering, was more than he had the moral strength
to bear. Utterly repudiated by his wife’s
family, and not even permitted to see Edith, he only
knew that she was very ill. Of the birth of his
baby he had but a vague intimation. A rumor was
abroad that it had died, but he could learn nothing
certain. In his distress and uncertainty he called
on Dr. Radcliffe, who replied to his questions with
a cold evasion. “It was put out to nurse,”
said the doctor, “and that is all I know about
it.” Beyond this he would say nothing.
Granger was not taken to the State’s
prison after his sentence, but to an insane asylum.
Reason gave way under the terrible ordeal through
which he had been made to pass.
“Mother,” said Edith,
one day, in a tone that caused Mrs. Dinneford’s
heart to leap. She was reading a child’s
simple story-book, and looked up as she spoke.
Her eyes were wide open and full of questions.
“What, my dear?” asked
Mrs. Dinneford, repressing her feelings and trying
to keep her voice calm.
“There’s something I can’t
understand, mother.” She looked down at
herself, then about the room. Her manner was becoming
nervous.
“What can’t you understand?”
Edith shut her hands over her eyes
and remained very still. When she removed them,
and her mother looked into her face the childlike
sweetness and content were all gone, and a conscious
woman was before her. The transformation was
as sudden as it was marvelous.
Both remained silent for the space
of nearly a minute. Mrs. Dinneford knew not what
to say, and waited for some sign from her daughter.
“Where is my baby, mother?”
Edith said this in a low, tremulous whisper, leaning
forward as she spoke, repressed and eager.
“Have you forgotten?”
asked Mrs. Dinneford, with regained composure.
“Forgotten what?”
“You were very ill after your
baby was born; no one thought you could live; you
were ill for a long time. And the baby—”
“What of the baby, mother?”
asked Edith, beginning to tremble violently.
Her mother, perceiving her agitation, held back the
word that was on her lips.
“What of the baby, mother?”
Edith repeated the question.
“It died,” said Mrs. Dinneford,
turning partly away. She could not look at her
child and utter this cruel falsehood.
“Dead! Oh, mother, don’t
say that! The baby can’t be dead!”
A swift flash of suspicion came into her eyes.
“I have said it, my child,”
was the almost stern response of Mrs. Dinneford.
“The baby is dead.”
A weight seemed to fall on Edith.
She bent forward, crouching down until her elbows
rested on her knees and her hands supported her head.
Thus she sat, rocking her body with a slight motion.
Mrs. Dinneford watched her without speaking.
“And what of George?”
asked Edith, checking her nervous movement at last.
Her mother did not reply. Edith
waited a moment, and then lifted herself erect.
“What of George?” she demanded.
“My poor child!” exclaimed
Mrs. Dinneford, with a gush of genuine pity, putting
her arms about Edith and drawing her head against her
bosom. “It is more than you have strength
to bear.”
“You must tell me,” the
daughter said, disengaging herself. “I have
asked for my husband.”
“Hush! You must not utter
that word again;” and Mrs. Dinneford put her
fingers on Edith’s lips. “The wretched
man you once called by that name is a disgraced criminal.
It is better that you know the worst.”
When Mr. Dinneford came home, instead
of the quiet, happy child he had left in the morning,
he found a sad, almost broken-hearted woman, refusing
to be comforted. The wonder was that under the
shock of this terrible awakening, reason had not been
again and hopelessly dethroned.
After a period of intense suffering,
pain seemed to deaden sensibility. She grew calm
and passive. And now Mrs. Dinneford set herself
to the completion of the work she had begun. She
had compassed the ruin of Granger in order to make
a divorce possible; she had cast the baby adrift that
no sign of the social disgrace might remain as an
impediment to her first ambition. She would yet
see her daughter in the position to which she had from
the beginning resolved to lift her, cost what it might.
But the task was not to be an easy one.
After a period of intense suffering,
as we have said, Edith grew calm and passive.
But she was never at ease with her mother, and seemed
to be afraid of her. To her father she was tender
and confiding. Mrs. Dinneford soon saw that if
Edith’s consent to a divorce from her husband
was to be obtained, it must come through her father’s
influence; for if she but hinted at the subject, it
was met with a flash of almost indignant rejection.
So her first work was to bring her husband over to
her side. This was not difficult, for Mr. Dinneford
felt the disgrace of having for a son-in-law a condemned
criminal, who was only saved from the State’s
prison by insanity. An insane criminal was not
worthy to hold the relation of husband to his pure
and lovely child.
After a feeble opposition to her father’s
arguments and persuasions, Edith yielded her consent.
An application for a divorce was made, and speedily
granted.