I Walked in Arden - LightNovelsOnl.com
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We no longer had the trained nurse, of course, but a plain ordinary everyday nurse, who, according to Helen, was most unscientific. Helen had been reading up in that abominable book on the horrors of babies. I wanted to show baby the horse, but Helen informed me the child was as yet quite unable to appreciate the privilege.
All this by the way. We were more excited over the journey to our new home than we had been on our wedding-day. We were now definitely for ourselves.
"No one to care if I spill pipe ashes on the rugs," I said. I judged from Helen's reception of this that my ill.u.s.tration of liberty was not well-chosen. "I mean," I went on, to make amends, "that you will be at home in your own house, able to do just as you like." This was clearly a much better example of my thought.
We went first cla.s.s, because of the baby. Helen thought first-cla.s.s carriages would have fewer germs in them. It had an added advantage: we had the compartment to ourselves, except for the nurse. Chitty went third.
At the station Chitty highly incensed the only porter by taking charge of all our luggage. In some miraculous fas.h.i.+on he also packed us all into one fly, seating himself beside the driver. We drove up to our new home in state, Helen and I hand in hand, the baby cooing from the nurse's shoulder.
Inside we found a solitary representative of the kitchen-range-and-decorating crew, who informed us that he had not as yet been able to "connect the range," but that this would certainly be accomplished in two or three days. Until then we could not build a fire in it or do any cooking. Helen and I sat down on our luggage for a counsel of war over the situation. Should we send nurse and the baby back to Kensington? It was Chitty who solved the problem.
"I beg pardon, sir," he said, touching his forelock, "but I could build a bit of fire in the back garden, sir, and do the cooking on that."
Helen and I leaped at the proposal. It was the very thing! Nurse made it evident she did not approve it. We overruled her, and I gave Chitty immediate instructions to prepare luncheon. He took a box of matches and a frying pan and stepped outside.
Soon the vans arrived, for they had left town early in the morning.
There also came a cook and a housemaid, engaged a month ago from a local employment agency. The cook's indignation at the condition of the range knew no bounds. She was not pacified by being shown Chitty hard at work in the garden. The smoke from his camp fire had already attracted the attention of two or three female neighbours. Helen's tact disposed of the cook for the time being. I went out to see how Chitty was getting along.
"What are we eating, Chitty?"
"Sausages and fried tomatoes, sir," he answered with the customary salute.
"Mind you do enough for the lot of us," I instructed him.
"Very good, sir."
I carried a deal table into the dining room, for the regular furniture was mostly in a chaotic pyramid on the pavement in front. Helen found knives, forks, and plates. The housemaid appeared to be paralyzed by circ.u.mstances. She was of little or no a.s.sistance. So it was that, amid gales of laughter from Helen, we sat down to the first meal under our own roof.
"The devil of it all is," I philosophized to her, between bites, "that nothing in this world ever turns out as one has imagined it will. Now, the number of times we have pictured ourselves eating our first dinner in our own home--"
"But what oceans more fun it is, like this," Helen interrupted.
"There is a great deal in your point of view, lady with the nice eyes,"
I agreed, carving her a wedge of bread from a household loaf. "What do you think, littlest Helen?" I added, turning to the baby, who sat, a solemn spectator, on nurse's lap.
"Now, Ted, please don't stir the baby up when she's being good," Helen cautioned. She always said that if I approached the child.
"When," I asked with mock irony, "will my daughter reach such an age of discretion that I may be permitted to converse with her?"
"You are being silly, Ted. If you'll promise to carry her about afterwards until she stops howling, you can speak to her now."
"I refuse your terms, and repudiate the vile implied slander," I returned, winking at the younger Helen. I believe the child sided with me. I poured myself a gla.s.s of stout and solemnly drank the baby's health. She continued to stare at me, not displeased.
"Ted, you dear idiot," exclaimed Helen, jumping up and kissing me in defiance of the nurse's presence.
"You have stout on your lips--serve you right," I said to the now retreating Helen. She scrubbed her face violently with a handkerchief no bigger than a postage stamp.
"Men are disgusting creatures."
"They are," I mused; "yet women love them." I drank deep of the stout.
"Ted, I'll shake you if you don't behave." She made a series of cabalistic signs at me, which, I took it, had reference to nurse. "It's time for baby's nap."
"Coward woman," I e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, "you are afraid of me."
"Will you walk up to the nursery and set up the baby's crib?"
"Not unless I am paid in advance."
Helen hastily dabbed a kiss on my cheek. "Now, Ted, please!"
"I obey, Omphale. Call in Chitty."
"Call him in yourself," was Helen's parting shot.
Chitty and I laboured some time setting up beds, beginning with the crib in the nursery. Though the heavens were to fall, the baby had to have a nap at precisely two o'clock every afternoon. We were interrupted once by Helen, who reported that cook, housemaid, and nurse alike had refused point blank to eat any of Chitty's cooking. It ended by our sending them all off to a public house, near the station, where food was obtainable.
"An ominous look-out until we get that range going," I growled.
"I wish we had a Polish girl from Deep Harbor," was Helen's comment after her first run-in with English servants.
"I had rather have a Pole from Deep Harbor than an American from Warsaw," I amended.
"That is nonsense, Ted," Helen said.
"It isn't, if you think it over," I replied.
Chitty and I resumed setting up beds. At the end of the first hour I paused. My face was moist.
"Chitty," I observed, "living is composed of a great many details. Take a bed, for example. You find them in lots of rooms, looking harmless enough. It is only when you a.n.a.lyze them, or, more correctly speaking, synthetize them--if that is, in fact, the word--that you realize their complexity."
"Yessir," said Chitty. "It's 'ard work for a gentleman, I dare say."
"Then dare say so no longer. On with our task."
"Very good, sir."
Gradually we reached the top of the house and the end of the infernal job. Helen appeared again. "Do we have tea?" she asked.
"How long since is it, madam," I asked sternly, "that afternoon tea became a necessity in your life? Shall we tolerate this aping of foreign customs?"
"I can easily make the madam a cup of tea, sir," Chitty cut in, a shade of anxiety in his tone.
"Then let the madam have her tea," I answered, "since her throat burns."
"Ted," said Helen, as Chitty disappeared, "how am I going to have any discipline among the servants if you persist in making a d.a.m.n fool of yourself in their presence?"
"A what, madam?" I inquired.