Part 4 (2/2)

Cast Adrift T. S. Arthur 35590K 2022-07-22

He rang the bell, and in a few moments the servant appeared. Granger was about pa.s.sing in, when the man said, respectfully but firmly, as he held the door partly closed,

”My orders are not to let you come in.”

”Who gave you those orders?” demanded Granger, turning white.

”Mrs. Dinneford.”

”I wish to see Mr. Dinneford, and I must see him immediately.”

”Mr. Dinneford is not at home,” answered the servant.

”Shut that door instantly!”

It was the voice of Mrs. Dinneford, speaking from within. Granger heard it; in the next moment the door was shut in his face.

The young man hardly knew how he got back to the store. On his arrival he found himself under arrest, charged with forgery, and with fresh evidence of the crime on his person in the three notes received that morning from his partner, who denied all knowledge of their existence, and appeared as a witness against him at the hearing before a magistrate. Granger was held to bail to answer the charge at the next term of court.

It would have been impossible to keep all this from Edith, even if there had been a purpose to do so. Mrs. Dinneford chose to break the dreadful news at her own time and in her own way. The shock was fearful. On the night that followed her baby was born.

CHAPTER III.

”_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!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed 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 pa.s.sionately.

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 fas.h.i.+onable 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!” e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed 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.

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