It was early in the forenoon of the
first day of July that Eliza told her mistress that
Mrs. Stetson was asking for her at the telephone.
Eliza’s face was not a little troubled.
“I’m afraid, maybe, it
isn’t good news,” she stammered, as her
mistress hurriedly arose. “She’s
at Mr. Cyril Henshaw’s Mrs. Stetson
is and she seemed so terribly upset about
something that there was no making real sense out
of what she said. But she asked for you, and said
to have you come quick.”
Billy, her own face paling, was already at the telephone.
“Yes, Aunt Hannah. What is it?”
“Oh, my grief and conscience,
Billy, if you can, come up here, please.
You must come! Can’t you come?”
“Why, yes, of course. But but Marie!
The the baby!”
A faint groan came across the wires.
“Oh, my grief and conscience,
Billy! It isn’t the baby. It’s
babies! It’s twins boys.
Cyril has them now the nurse hasn’t
got here yet.”
“Twins! Cyril has them!” broke
in Billy, hysterically.
“Yes, and they’re crying
something terrible. We’ve sent for a second
nurse to come, too, of course, but she hasn’t
got here yet, either. And those babies if
you could hear them! That’s what we want
you for, to ”
But Billy was almost laughing now.
“All right, I’ll come
out and hear them,” she called a bit
wildly, as she hung up the receiver.
Some little time later, a palpably
nervous maid admitted Billy to the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Cyril Henshaw. Even as the door was opened,
Billy heard faintly, but unmistakably, the moaning
wails of two infants.
“Mrs. Stetson says if you will
please to help Mr. Henshaw with the babies,”
stammered the maid, after the preliminary questions
and answers. “I’ve been in when I
could, and they’re all right, only they’re
crying. They’re in his den. We had
to put them as far away as possible their
crying worried Mrs. Henshaw so.”
“Yes, I see,” murmured
Billy. “I’ll go to them at once.
No, don’t trouble to come. I know the way.
Just tell Mrs. Stetson I’m here, please,”
she finished, as she tossed her hat and gloves on to
the hall table, and turned to go upstairs.
Billy’s feet made no sound on
the soft rugs. The crying, however, grew louder
and louder as she approached the den. Softly she
turned the knob and pushed open the door. She
stopped short, then, at what she saw.
Cyril had not heard her, nor seen
her. His back was partly toward the door.
His coat was off, and his hair stood fiercely on end
as if a nervous hand had ruffled it. His usually
pale face was very red, and his forehead showed great
drops of perspiration. He was on his feet, hovering
over the couch, at each end of which lay a rumpled
roll of linen, lace, and flannel, from which emerged
a prodigiously puckered little face, two uncertainly
waving rose-leaf fists, and a wail of protesting rage
that was not uncertain in the least.
In one hand Cyril held a Teddy bear,
in the other his watch, dangling from its fob chain.
Both of these he shook feebly, one after the other,
above the tiny faces.
“Oh, come, come, pretty baby,
good baby, hush, hush,” he begged agitatedly.
In the doorway Billy clapped her hands
to her lips and stifled a laugh. Billy knew,
of course, that what she should do was to go forward
at once, and help this poor, distracted man; but Billy,
just then, was not doing what she knew she ought to
do.
With a muttered ejaculation (which
Billy, to her sorrow, could not catch) Cyril laid
down the watch and flung the Teddy bear aside.
Then, in very evident despair, he gingerly picked
up one of the rumpled rolls of flannel, lace, and
linen, and held it straight out before him. After
a moment’s indecision he began awkwardly to jounce
it, teeter it, rock it back and forth, and to pat
it jerkily.
“Oh, come, come, pretty baby,
good baby, hush, hush,” he begged again, frantically.
Perhaps it was the change of position;
perhaps it was the novelty of the motion, perhaps
it was only utter weariness, or lack of breath.
Whatever the cause, the wailing sobs from the bundle
in his arms dwindled suddenly to a gentle whisper,
then ceased altogether.
With a ray of hope illuminating his
drawn countenance, Cyril carefully laid the baby down
and picked up the other. Almost confidently now
he began the jouncing and teetering and rocking as
before.
“There, there! Oh, come,
come, pretty baby, good baby, hush, hush,” he
chanted again.
This time he was not so successful.
Perhaps he had lost his skill. Perhaps it was
merely the world-old difference in babies. At
all events, this infant did not care for jerks and
jounces, and showed it plainly by emitting loud and
yet louder wails of rage wails in which
his brother on the couch speedily joined.
“Oh, come, come, pretty baby,
good baby, hush, hush confound it,
HUSH, I say!” exploded the frightened, weary,
baffled, distracted man, picking up the other baby,
and trying to hold both his sons at once.
Billy hurried forward then, tearfully,
remorsefully, her face all sympathy, her arms all
tenderness.
“Here, Cyril, let me help you,” she cried.
Cyril turned abruptly.
“Thank God, some one’s
come,” he groaned, holding out both the babies,
with an exuberance of generosity. “Billy,
you’ve saved my life!”
Billy laughed tremulously.
“Yes, I’ve come, Cyril,
and I’ll help every bit I can; but I don’t
know a thing not a single thing about them
myself. Dear me, aren’t they cunning?
But, Cyril, do they always cry so?”
The father-of-an-hour drew himself stiffly erect.
“Cry? What do you mean?
Why shouldn’t they cry?” he demanded indignantly.
“I want you to understand that Doctor Brown said
those were A number I fine boys! Anyhow, I guess
there’s no doubt they’ve got lungs all
right,” he added, with a grim smile, as he pulled
out his handkerchief and drew it across his perspiring
brow.
Billy did not have an opportunity
to show Cyril how much or how little she knew about
babies, for in another minute the maid had appeared
with the extra nurse; and that young woman, with trained
celerity and easy confidence, assumed instant command,
and speedily had peace and order restored.
Cyril, freed from responsibility,
cast longing eyes, for a moment, upon his work; but
the next minute, with a despairing glance about him,
he turned and fled precipitately.
Billy, following the direction of
his eyes, suppressed a smile. On the top of Cyril’s
manuscript music on the table lay a hot-water bottle.
Draped over the back of his favorite chair was a pink-bordered
baby blanket. On the piano-stool rested a beribboned
and beruffled baby’s toilet basket. From
behind the sofa pillow leered ridiculously the Teddy
bear, just as it had left Cyril’s desperate hand.
No wonder, indeed, that Billy smiled.
Billy was thinking of what Marie had said not a week
before:
“I shall keep the baby, of course,
in the nursery. I’ve been in homes where
they’ve had baby things strewn from one end of
the house to the other; but it won’t be that
way here. In the first place, I don’t believe
in it; but, even if I did, I’d have to be careful
on account of Cyril. Imagine Cyril’s trying
to write his music with a baby in the room! No!
I shall keep the baby in the nursery, if possible;
but wherever it is, it won’t be anywhere near
Cyril’s den, anyway.”
Billy suppressed many a smile during
the days that immediately followed the coming of the
twins. Some of the smiles, however, refused to
be suppressed. They became, indeed, shamelessly
audible chuckles.
Billy was to sail the tenth, and,
naturally, during those early July days, her time
was pretty much occupied with her preparations for
departure; but nothing could keep her from frequent,
though short, visits to the home of her brother-in-law.
The twins were proving themselves
to be fine, healthy boys. Two trained maids,
and two trained nurses ruled the household with a rod
of iron. As to Cyril Billy declared
that Cyril was learning something every day of his
life now.
“Oh, yes, he’s learning
things,” she said to Aunt Hannah, one morning;
“lots of things. For instance: he has
his breakfast now, not when he wants it, but when
the maid wants to give it to him which is
precisely at eight o’clock every morning.
So he’s learning punctuality. And for the
first time in his life he has discovered the astounding
fact that there are several things more important
in the world than is the special piece of music he
happens to be composing chiefly the twins’
bath, the twins’ nap, the twins’ airing,
and the twins’ colic.”
Aunt Hannah laughed, though she frowned, too.
“But, surely, Billy, with two
nurses and the maids, Cyril doesn’t have to to ”
She came to a helpless pause.
“Oh, no,” laughed Billy;
“Cyril doesn’t have to really attend to
any of those things though I have seen
each of the nurses, at different times, unhesitatingly
thrust a twin into his arms and bid him hold the child
till she comes back. But it’s this way.
You see, Marie must be kept quiet, and the nursery
is very near her room. It worries her terribly
when either of the children cries. Besides, the
little rascals have apparently fixed up some sort
of labor-union compact with each other, so that if
one cries for something or nothing, the other promptly
joins in and helps. So the nurses have got into
the habit of picking up the first disturber of the
peace, and hurrying him to quarters remote; and Cyril’s
den being the most remote of all, they usually fetch
up there.”
“You mean they take
those babies into Cyril’s den now?”
Even Aunt Hannah was plainly aghast.
“Yes,” twinkled Billy.
“I fancy their Hygienic Immaculacies approved
of Cyril’s bare floors, undraped windows, and
generally knick-knackless condition. Anyhow,
they’ve made his den a sort of of
annex to the nursery.”
“But but Cyril!
What does he say?” stammered the dumfounded Aunt
Hannah. “Think of Cyril’s standing
a thing like that! Doesn’t he do anything or
say anything?”
Billy smiled, and lifted her brows quizzically.
“My dear Aunt Hannah, did you
ever know many people to have the courage to
‘say things’ to one of those becapped,
beaproned, bespotless creatures of loftily superb
superiority known as trained nurses? Besides,
you wouldn’t recognize Cyril now. Nobody
would. He’s as meek as Moses, and has been
ever since his two young sons were laid in his reluctant,
trembling arms. He breaks into a cold sweat at
nothing, and moves about his own home as if he were
a stranger and an interloper, endured merely on sufferance
in this abode of strange women and strange babies.”
“Nonsense!” scoffed Aunt Hannah.
“But it’s so,” maintained
Billy, merrily. “Now, for instance.
You know Cyril always has been in the habit of venting
his moods on the piano (just as I do, only more so)
by playing exactly as he feels. Well, as near
as I can gather, he was at his usual trick the next
day after the twins arrived; and you can imagine about
what sort of music it would be, after what he had
been through the preceding forty-eight hours.
“Of course I don’t know
exactly what happened, but Julia Marie’s
second maid, you know tells the story.
She’s been with them long enough to know something
of the way the whole household always turns on the
pivot of the master’s whims; so she fully appreciated
the situation. She says she heard him begin to
play, and that she never heard such queer, creepy,
shivery music in her life; but that he hadn’t
been playing five minutes before one of the nurses
came into the living-room where Julia was dusting,
and told her to tell whoever was playing to stop that
dreadful noise, as they wanted to take the twins in
there for their nap.
“‘But I didn’t do
it, ma’am,’ Julia says. ‘I wa’n’t
lookin’ for losin’ my place, an’
I let the young woman do the job herself. An’
she done it, pert as you please. An’ jest
as I was seekin’ a hidin’-place for the
explosion, if Mr. Henshaw didn’t come out lookin’
a little wild, but as meek as a lamb; an’ when
he sees me he asked wouldn’t I please get him
a cup of coffee, good an’ strong. An’
I got it.’
“So you see,” finished
Billy, “Cyril is learning things lots
of things.”
“Oh, my grief and conscience!
I should say he was,” half-shivered Aunt Hannah.
“Cyril looking meek as a lamb, indeed!”
Billy laughed merrily.
“Well, it must be a new experience for
Cyril. For a man whose daily existence for years
has been rubber-heeled and woolen-padded, and whose
family from boyhood has stood at attention and saluted
if he so much as looked at them, it must be quite
a change, as things are now. However, it’ll
be different, of course, when Marie is on her feet
again.”
“Does she know at all how things are going?”
“Not very much, as yet, though
I believe she has begun to worry some. She confided
to me one day that she was glad, of course, that she
had two darling babies, instead of one; but that she
was afraid it might be hard, just at first, to teach
them both at once to be quiet; for she was afraid
that while she was teaching one, the other would be
sure to cry, or do something noisy.”
“Do something noisy, indeed!” ejaculated
Aunt Hannah.
“As for the real state of affairs,
Marie doesn’t dream that Cyril’s sacred
den is given over to Teddy bears and baby blankets.
All is, I hope she’ll be measurably strong before
she does find it out,” laughed Billy, as she
rose to go.