Mrs. Maynard opened the front door
just as the children approached with the baby-carriage.
“Come along, girlies!”
she cried. “Marjorie, wheel the carriage
right into the hall.”
“The baby’s asleep, Mother,”
said Midget, as she and Gladys brought the carriage
over the door-sill.
“Oh, is she? Totty’s
asleep, Mildred,” she called, in a stage whisper,
to Mrs. Harrison, who was upstairs.
“I thought she would be,”
responded that lady. “Just throw back her
veil, and leave her as she is. She often takes
her nap in her carriage, and there’s no use
waking her.”
Gently, Mrs. Maynard turned back the
veil from the little sleeping face, and, as she had
no thought of anything being wrong, she did not notice
any difference in the baby features.
“Gladys, we’d like to
have you stay to luncheon,” she said. “So
you and Midge run upstairs and tidy your curls at
once.” With demure steps, but with dancing
eyes, the girls went upstairs.
“I’m afraid it’s
mischief,” whispered Gladys to Marjorie, as she
tied her hair-ribbon for her.
“No, it isn’t!”
declared Midge, stoutly. “It’s only
a joke, and it can’t do any harm. Mother
didn’t know it was a different baby, and I don’t
believe Mrs. Harrison will know either.”
Trim and tidy once more the two friends went downstairs.
As they were on the stairs they heard the sound of
the telephone bell.
Mrs. Maynard answered it, and in a
moment Gladys realized that her own mother was talking
at the other end of the wire.
After a short conversation, Mrs. Maynard hung up the
receiver, and said:
“Mrs. Fulton says that Mr. Fulton
has come home quite unexpectedly and that they are
going for an afternoon’s motor ride. She
wants both of you girls to go, but she says you must
fly over there at once, as they’re all ready
to start. She tried to tell us sooner, but couldn’t
get a connection on the telephone.”
“But we haven’t had luncheon,” said
Marjorie, “and I’m fairly starving.”
“They’re taking luncheon
with them,” explained Mrs. Maynard. “And
you must go at once, not to keep Mr. Fulton waiting.
Of course, you needn’t go if you don’t
want to, Midge.”
“Oh, I do! I’m crazy
to go! And luncheon in baskets is such fun!
What shall I wear, Mother?”
“Go just as you are. That
frock is quite clean. Put on your hat and coat,
and I’ll get a long veil for you.”
Gladys had already run off home, and
Marjorie was soon equipped and ready to follow.
As she flew out of the door, she remembered
the joke about the babies.
“Oh, Mother, I’ve something to tell you!”
she cried.
“Never mind now,” said
Mrs. Maynard, hurrying her off. “It will
keep till you get back. And I hate to have you
keep the Fultons waiting. They’re in haste
to start. So kiss me, and run along.”
Even as she spoke, Dick Fulton appeared,
saying he had been sent to hurry Marjorie up; so taking
Dick’s hand, the two ran swiftly down the path
to the gate. Mrs. Maynard watched Marjorie’s
flying feet, and after she was out of sight around
the corner, the lady returned to the house.
With a glance at the sleeping child,
she turned to Mrs. Harrison, who was just coming downstairs.
“Totty is sleeping sweetly,”
she said, “so come at once to luncheon, Mildred.”
“In a moment, Helen. I
think I’ll take off her cap and coat; she’ll
be too warm.”
“You’ll waken her if you do.”
“Oh, well, she’ll drop
right to sleep again; she always does. And anyway,
it’s time she had a drink of milk.”
“Very well, Mildred. You
take off her wraps, and I’ll ask Sarah to warm
some milk for her.”
Mrs. Maynard went to speak to Sarah,
and Mrs. Harrison lifted the sleeping baby from the
carriage.
She sat the blinking-eyed child on
her knee while she unfastened her coat. Then
she took off the veil and cap, and then, she
stared at the baby, and the baby stared at her.
Suddenly Mrs. Harrison gave a scream.
“Helen, Helen!” she called
to her friend, and Mrs. Maynard came running to her
side.
“What is the matter, Mildred? Is
Totty ill?”
By this time the baby too had begun
to scream. Always afraid of strangers, Miss Dotty
Curtis didn’t know what to make of the scenes
in which she found herself, nor of the strange lady
who held her.
“Mildred, dear, what is the
matter? You look horror-stricken! And what
ails Totty?”
“This isn’t my child!” wailed Mrs.
Harrison.
“Totty isn’t your child! What do
you mean?”
“But this isn’t, Totty! It isn’t
my baby! I don’t know who it is.”
“Mildred, you’re crazy!
Of course this is Totty. These are her blue kid
shoes. And this is her coat and cap.”
“I don’t care if they are! It isn’t
Totty at all. Oh, where is my baby?”
Mrs. Harrison was on the verge of
hysterics, and Mrs. Maynard was genuinely alarmed.
“Behave yourself, Mildred!”
she said, sternly. “Gather yourself together.
Here, sip this glass of water.”
“I’m perfectly sensible,”
said Mrs. Harrison, quieting down a little, as she
noticed her friend’s consternation. “But
I tell you, Helen, this is not my baby.
Doesn’t a mother know her own child? Totty’s
hair is a little longer, and her eyes are a little
larger. I don’t know who this baby is,
but she isn’t mine.”
“I believe you’re right,”
said Mrs. Maynard, looking more closely at the screaming
baby.
“There, there!” she said,
taking the frightened little one in her own arms.
“Ma-ma!” cried the baby.
“Hear her voice!” exclaimed
Mrs. Harrison. “That isn’t the way
my Totty talks. Oh, Helen, what has happened?”
“I don’t know,”
said Mrs. Maynard, her face very white. “It
doesn’t seem possible that any marauder should
have slipped into the house and put this child in
Totty’s place. Why, it was only about a
half-hour ago that the girls brought Totty in.
Mildred, are you sure this isn’t Totty?”
“Am I sure! Yes, I am.
Wouldn’t you know your own children from strangers?
Helen, a dreadful crime has been committed. Somehow
this baby has been substituted for mine. Oh,
Totty, where are you now?”
“What shall I do, Mildred?
Shall I call up Mr. Maynard on the telephone, or shall
I ring up the police station?”
“Yes, call the police.
It’s dreadful, I know, but how else can we find
Totty?”
Meantime Sarah appeared with a cup of warm milk.
The baby stretched out eager little
hands, and Mrs. Maynard carefully held the cup for
her to drink.
“She’s a nice little thing,”
observed that lady. “See how prettily she
behaves.”
“Helen, you’ll drive me
crazy. I don’t care how she behaves, she
isn’t Totty. Why, that isn’t even
Totty’s little dress. So you see the kidnapper
did change her shoes and wraps, but not her frock.”
Mrs. Harrison showed signs of hysterics,
and Mrs. Maynard was at her wits’ end what to
do.
“I suppose I’d better
call the police,” she said. “Here,
Mildred, you hold this baby.”
Mrs. Harrison gingerly took the baby
that wasn’t hers, and looked like a martyr as
she held her.
But comforted by the warm food, the
baby pleasantly cuddled up in Mrs. Harrison’s
arms and went to sleep.
Mrs. Maynard, greatly puzzled, went
to the telephone, but before she touched it there
was a furious peal at the front-door bell.
The moment the door was opened, in
rushed a pretty, but frantic and very angry, little
lady, carrying a child.
“Where’s my baby?”
she demanded, as she fairly stamped her foot at Mrs.
Maynard.
“That’s my child!”
she went on, turning to Mrs. Harrison. “What
are you doing with her?”
“I don’t want her!”
cried Mrs. Harrison. “But what are you
doing with my baby?”
Totty, in the visitor’s arms,
held out her hands to her mother, and gurgled with
glee.
“Ma-ma!” said the other
baby, waking up at all this commotion and holding
out her hands also.
The exchange was made in a moment,
and, still unpacified, Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Curtis
glared at each other.
Mrs. Maynard struggled to suppress
her laughter, for the scene was a funny one; but she
knew the two ladies were thoroughly horrified at the
mystery, and mirth would be quite out of place.
“Let me introduce you,”
she said. “Mrs. Curtis, this is my dear
friend, Mrs. Harrison. Your little ones are the
same age, and look very much alike.”
“Not a bit alike,” said both mothers,
at once.
“I confess,” went on Mrs.
Maynard, “that I can’t understand it at
all, but you certainly each have your own babies now;
so, my dear Mrs. Curtis, won’t you tell me what
you know about this very strange affair?”
Mrs. Curtis had recovered her equilibrium,
and, as she sat comfortably holding Dotty, she smiled,
with a little embarrassment.
“Dear Mrs. Maynard,” she
said, “I’m afraid I understand it all better
than you do; but I’m also afraid, if I explain
it to you, you will, it will make ”
Suddenly Mrs. Maynard saw a gleam of light.
“Marjorie!” she exclaimed.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Curtis;
“I think it was due to Miss Mischief. When
I returned home from an errand, Lisa said that your
Marjorie and Gladys Fulton had had Dotty out in her
carriage, and had also another baby who was visiting
you. The girls had left Dotty or rather,
Lisa supposed it was Dotty asleep in her
coach, and Nurse let her stay there, asleep, until
my return. Then the child wakened and
it wasn’t Dotty at all! The baby had on
Dot’s slippers, cap, coat, and veil, but the
rest of her clothes I had never seen before.
I felt sure there had been foul play of some sort,
but Lisa was sure those girls had exchanged the babies’
clothes on purpose. I hoped Lisa was right, but
I feared she wasn’t, so I picked up the baby
and ran over here to see.”
Mrs. Maynard was both grieved and chagrined.
“How could Marjorie do such a thing!”
she exclaimed.
“Oh, don’t be too hard
on her, Mrs. Maynard,” said Mrs. Curtis.
“It’s all right, now, and you know Marjorie
and Gladys are a mischievous pair.”
“But this is inexcusable,”
went on Mrs. Maynard. “Mrs. Harrison nearly
went frantic, and you were certainly greatly alarmed.”
Mrs. Curtis smiled pleasantly.
“I was,” she admitted, “but it was
only for a few moments. I was mystified rather
than alarmed, for Lisa said the carriage had not been
out of her sight a moment, except when the girls had
it.”
Mrs. Curtis took her leave, and, carrying
with her her own baby, went away home.
Mrs. Maynard made sincere apologies
to her friend for naughty Marjorie’s mischief.
“Never mind, Helen,” said
Mrs. Harrison. “I can see now it was only
a childish prank, and doubtless Marjorie and Gladys
expected a good laugh over it; then they ran off unexpectedly
and forgot all about the babies.”
Mrs. Maynard remembered then that
Midget had said at the last moment that she had something
to tell her, but that she had hurried the child off.
“Still,” she thought to
herself, “that was no excuse for Midge.
She should have told me.”
After a refreshing luncheon, Mrs.
Harrison was able to view the matter more calmly.
“Don’t punish Marjorie
for this, Helen,” she said. “Children
will be children, and I daresay those girls thought
it would be a fine joke on me.”
“I certainly shall punish her,
Mildred. She is altogether too thoughtless, and
too careless of other people’s feelings.
She never does wilful or malicious wrong, but she
tumbles into mischief thoughtlessly. She will
be honestly grieved when she learns how frightened
and upset you were, and she’ll never do such
a thing again. But, the trouble is she’ll
do some other thing that will be equally naughty, but
something that no one can foresee or warn her against.”
“Well, just for my sake, Helen,
don’t punish her this time; at least, not much.
I really oughtn’t to have gone to pieces so;
I ought to have realized that it could all be easily
explained.”
But Mrs. Maynard would not promise
to condone Midget’s fault entirely, and argued
that she really ought to be punished for what turned
out to be a troublesome affair.
Mrs. Harrison went home about four
o’clock, and it was five before Marjorie returned.
Her mother met her at the door.
“Did you have a pleasant time, Marjorie?”
she said.
“Oh, yes, Mother; we had a lovely
time. We went clear to Ridge Park. Oh, I
do love to ride in an automobile.”
“Go and take off your things, my child, and
then come to me in my room.”
“Yes, Mother,” said Marjorie, and she
danced away to take off her hat.
“Here I am, Mother,” she
announced, a little later. “Now shall I
tell you all about my afternoon?”
“Not quite yet, dear. I’ll
tell you all about my afternoon first. Mrs. Harrison
had a very unhappy time, and of course that made me
unhappy also.”
“Why, Mother, what was the trouble about?”
Mrs. Maynard looked into the clear,
honest eyes of her daughter, and sighed as she realized
that Marjorie had no thought of what had made the
trouble.
“Why did you put Dotty Curtis’ cloak and
hat on Totty?”
Then the recollection came back to Marjorie.
“Oh, Mother!” she cried,
as she burst into a ringing peal of laughter.
“Wasn’t it a funny joke! Did Mrs.
Harrison laugh? Did she know her own baby?”
“Marjorie, I’m ashamed
of you. No, Mrs. Harrison did not laugh.
Of course she knew that the child you left in the
carriage was not her little Totty, and as she didn’t
know what had happened, she had a very bad scare,
and her nerves were completely unstrung.”
“But why, Mother?” said
Marjorie, looking puzzled. “I thought she
wouldn’t know the difference. But if she
did know right away it wasn’t Totty, why didn’t
she go over to Mrs. Curtis’ and change them back
again?”
“She didn’t know Totty
was at Mrs. Curtis’. Neither did I. We never
dreamed that you couldn’t be trusted to take
a baby out to ride and bring her home safely.
She thought some dreadful thing had happened to her
child.”
“Oh, Mother, did she? I’m
so sorry. I never meant to tease her that way.
I only thought it would be a funny joke to see her
think Dotty was Totty.”
“But, my little girl, you ought
to have realized that it was a cruel and even a dangerous
joke. You cannot carelessly dispose of little
human beings as if they were dolls, or other inanimate
things.”
“I never thought of that, Mother.
And, anyway, I started to tell you about it, just
as I went away, and you told me to run along, and tell
you what I had to tell after I came home.”
“I thought you’d say that;
but of course I thought you meant you wanted to tell
me some trifling incident, or something of little importance.
Can’t you understand that what you did was not
a trifle, but a grave piece of misbehavior?”
“Mischief, Mother?”
Mrs. Maynard bit her lip to keep from
smiling at Marjorie’s innocent request for information.
“It was mischief, I suppose.
But it was more than that. It was real wrong-doing.
When little girls are trusted to do anything, they
ought to be very careful to do it earnestly and thoroughly,
exactly as it is meant to be done. If you had
stopped to think, would you have thought either of
those mothers wanted you to exchange their babies?”
Marjorie pondered.
“No,” she said, at last;
“but, truly, if I had thought ever so hard I
wouldn’t have thought they’d mind it so
much. Can’t they take a joke, Mother?”
“Marjorie, dear, you have a
fun-loving disposition, but if it is to make you joy
and not sorrow all your life, you must learn what constitutes
a desirable ‘joke.’ To begin with,
practical jokes are rarely, if ever, desirable.”
“What is a practical joke?”
“It’s a little difficult
to explain, my dear; but it’s usually a well-laid
plan to make somebody feel foolish or angry, or appear
ridiculous. I think you hoped Mrs. Harrison would
appear ridiculous by petting another child while thinking
it was her own. And you meant to stand by and
laugh at her.”
This was putting it rather plainly,
but Marjorie could not deny the truth of her mother’s
statement.
“And so,” went on Mrs.
Maynard, “that was a very wrong intent, especially
from a little girl to a grown person. Practical
jokes among your playmates are bad enough, but this
was far worse.”
“I understand, Mother, now that
you’ve explained it; but, truly, I didn’t
mean to do anything so awfully dreadful. How are
you going to punish me?”
“Mrs. Harrison was very forgiving,
and begged me not to punish you severely. But
I think you deserve a pretty hard penance; don’t
you?”
“Why, the way you tell me about
it, I think I do. But the way I meant it, seems
so different.”
“Well, I’ve thought it
over, and I’ve decided on this. You dislike
to sew; don’t you?”
“Yes, I do!” said Marjorie, emphatically.
“I know you do. But I think
you ought to learn to sew, and, moreover, I think
this would be an appropriate thing to do. I want
you to make a little dress for Totty. I will
do the more difficult parts, such as putting it together,
but you must run the tucks, and hem it, and overhand
the seams. And it must be done very neatly, as
all babies’ dresses should be dainty and fine.
You may work half an hour on it every day, and, when
it is finished, it will be a pretty little gift for
Mrs. Harrison, and it will also teach you something
of an old-fashioned but useful art.”
Marjorie drew a deep sigh. “All
right, Mother. I’ll try to do it nicely;
but oh, how I hate a thimble! I never again will
mix up people’s babies. But I didn’t
think it was such an awful, dreadful thing to do.”
“You’re a strange child,
Midget,” said her mother, looking at her thoughtfully.
“I never know what you’re going to do next.”
“I never know myself,”
said Marjorie, cheerfully, “but you can always
punish me, you know.”
“But I don’t want to.
I want you to behave so you won’t need punishment.”
“I’ll try real hard,”
said Midge, as she kissed her mother, again and again.