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"Ducks!" Adoree echoed, beatifically. "Hundreds and thousands of ducks! Little ducks and big ducks, fuzzy ones and smooth ones.
Campbell can write plays, and I'll wear kimonos and be comfortable. It's wonderful to think about, isn't it?"
Pope supplemented her eagerly. "I'm looking for a bungalow on salt-water, with a south exposure for the brooder-houses. Say!
We're going to live. I tell you, Bob, there's money in ducks. I'm reading up on the subject. My dear fellow, do you realize that--"
He swung into his pet subject so swiftly that Bob could not head him off and was forced to listen somewhat dazedly.
Lorelei reached forth and drew Adoree down to her, whispering: "I'm so glad, dear. I knew he would end by loving you, for everybody does."
Pope concluded a lengthy harangue by saying: "My mistake last year was in the food. Ducks need soft food."
"Listen!" Bob raised a hand and nodded in the direction of the girls. "They're discussing that very subject."
"Top milk, indeed!" Adoree was crying, indignantly. "Ours will have cream when they want it, and lots of it too."
"My dear! It will be fatal." Lorelei was horrified. "Use nothing but top milk and barley-water. Be sure to sterilize the bottles and soak the nipples in borax--"
"Say!" Campbell Pope flushed painfully and rose to his feet.
"They're not talking ducks. Women haven't the least delicacy, have they? Let's go out and smoke."
One day, after Bob had acquired sufficient confidence in himself and in the baby to handle it without anxiety to the nurse, he begged permission to show it to the hallman down-stairs. He returned greatly elated, explaining that the attendant, who had some impossible number of babies of his own and might therefore be considered an authority, declared this one to be the finest he had ever beheld. Oddly enough, this praise delighted Bob out of all reason. He remained in a state of suppressed excitement all that day, and on the following afternoon he again kidnapped the child for a second exhibition. It seemed that the infant's fame spread rapidly, for soon the tenants of neighboring apartments began to clamor for a sight of it, and Bob was only too eager to gratify them. Every afternoon he took his son down-stairs with him, until finally Lorelei checked him as he was going out.
"Bob, dear," she said, with the faintest shadow of a smile. "I don't think it's good for him to go out so often. Why don't you ask your father and mother to come up?"
Wharton flushed, then he stammered, "I--what makes you--er--think--"
"Why, I guessed it the very first day." Lorelei's smile saddened.
"They needn't see me, you know."
Bob laid the child back in its bed. "But that's just what they want. They want to see you, only I wouldn't let you be bothered.
They're perfectly foolish over the kid; mother cries, and father-- but just wait." He rushed out of the room, and in a few moments returned with his parents.
Hannibal Wharton was deeply embarra.s.sed, but his wife went straight to Lorelei and, bending over her chair, placed a kiss upon her lips. "There," said she. "When you are stronger I'm going to apologize for the way we've treated you. We're old people.
We're selfish and suspicious and unreasonable, but we're not entirely inhuman. You won't be too hard on us, will you?"
The old lady's eyes were s.h.i.+ning, the palms which were clasped over Lorelei's hand were hot and tremulous. The look of hungry yearning that greeted the elder woman's words was ample answer, and with a little choking cry she gathered the weak figure into her arms and thrilled as she felt the amber head upon her breast.
Hannibal trumpeted into his handkerchief, then cleared his throat premonitorily, but Bob forestalled him with a happy laugh. "Don't hold any post-mortems, dad. Lorelei knows everything you intend to say."
"I'm blamed if she does," rumbled the old man, "because I don't know myself. I'm not much on apologies; I can take 'em, but I can't make 'em." His voice rose sternly: "Young lady, the night that baby was born I stood outside this house for hours because I was afraid to come in. And my feet hurt like the devil, too. I wouldn't lose that much sleep for the whole Steel Trust; but I didn't dare go back to the hotel, for mother was waiting, and I was afraid of her, too. I don't intend to go through another night like that."
Bob's mother turned to her son, saying: "She is beautiful, and she is good, too. Anybody can see that. We could love her for what she has done for you, if for nothing else."
"Well, I should say so," proudly vaunted the son. "She took a chance when she didn't care for me, and she made me into a regular fellow. Why, she reformed me from the ground up. I've sworn off every blessed thing I used to do."
"Including drinking?" gruffly queried the father.
"Yes."
Lorelei smiled her slow, reluctant smile at the visitors, and her voice was gentle as she said: "He thinks he has, but it's hard to stop entirely, and you mustn't blame him if he forgets himself occasionally. You see, drinking is mostly a matter of temperament, after all. But he is doing splendidly, and some day perhaps--"
They nodded understandingly.
"You'll try to like us, won't you, for Bob's sake?" pleaded the old lady, timidly.
"I intend to love you both very dearly," shyly returned the girl, and, noting the light in Lorelei's face, Bob Wharton was satisfied.
Restraint vanished swiftly under the old couple's evident determination to make amends, but after they had gone Lorelei became so pensive that Bob said, anxiously, "I hope you weren't polite to them merely for my sake."
Lorelei shook her head "No. I was only thinking--Do you realize that none of my own people have been to see me? That I haven't had a single word from any of them?"
Bob stirred uncomfortably; he started to speak, then checked himself as she went on, not without some effort: "I'm going to say something unpleasant, but I think you ought to know it. When they learn that your parents have taken me in and made up with us they're going to ask me for money. It's a terrible thing to say, but it's true."
"Do you want to see them? Do you want them to see the baby?"
"N--no!" Lorelei was pale as she made answer. "Not after all that has pa.s.sed."
Bob heaved a grateful sigh. "I'm glad. They won't trouble you any more."
"Why? What--"
"I've been waiting until you were strong to tell you. I've noticed how their silence hurt you, but--it's my fault that they haven't been here. I sent them away."
"YOU sent them away?"
"Yes. I fixed them with money and--they're happy at last. There's considerable to tell. Jim got into trouble with the police and finally sent for me. He told me everything and--it wasn't pretty; I'd rather not repeat all he said, but it opened my eyes and showed me why they brought you here, how they put you on the auction block, and how they cried for bids. He told me things you know nothing about and could never guess. When he had finished I thanked G.o.d that they had flung you into my arms instead of--some other man's. It's a miracle that you weren't sacrificed utterly."
"Where is Jim now?"
"Somewhere in the boundless West. He gave me his promise to reform."
"He never will."
"Of course not, and I don't expect it of him. You see, I know how hard it is to reform."
"But mother and father?"
"I'm coming to them. My dad came around the day after our baby was born and shook hands. He wanted to stamp right in here and tell you what a fool he had made of himself, but I wouldn't stand for it. Finally, when he saw the kid, he blew up entirely, and right away proposed breaking ground for a jasper palace for the youngster. He wanted to build it in Pittsburg where he could run in, going to and from business. Mother was just as foolish, too.
Well, when I had had my little understanding with Jim and learned the whole truth about your people I realized that no matter where we went they would be a constant menace to our happiness unless they were provided for. It struck me that you had made a game fight for happiness, and I couldn't stand for anything to spoil it at the last minute. I went to mother and told her the facts, and she seemed to understand as well as I how you must feel in spite of all they had done, so we shook down the governor for an endowment."
"Bob! What do you mean?" Lorelei faltered in bewilderment.
"We asked him for a hundred thousand dollars and got it."
Lorelei gasped.
"He bellowed like a bull, he spat poison like a cobra, he writhed like a bucket of eels, but we put it over."
"A hundred thousand dollars!" whispered the wife.