Walking along with heart and thought where they dwelt for so large a part of her time, Edith, in turning a corner, came upon a woman who stopped at sight of her as if suddenly fastened to the ground--stopped only for an instant, like one surprised by an unexpected and unwelcome encounter, and then made a motion to pa.s.s on. But Edith, partly from memory and partly from intuition, recognized her nurse, and catching fast hold of her, said in a low imperative voice, while a look of wild excitement spread over her face,
"Where is my baby?"
The woman tried to shake her off, but Edith held her with a grasp that could not be broken.
"For Heaven"s sake," exclaimed the woman "let go of me! This is the public street, and you"ll have a crowd about us in a moment, and the police with them."
But Edith kept fast hold of her.
"First tell me where I can find my baby," she answered.
"Come along," said the woman, moving as she spoke in the direction Edith was going when they met. "If you want a row with the police, I don"t."
Edith was close to her side, with her hand yet upon her and her voice in her ears.
"My baby! Quick! Say! Where can I find my baby?"
"What do I know of your baby? You are a fool, or mad!" answered the woman, trying to throw her off. "I don"t know you."
"But I know you, Mrs. Bray," said Edith, speaking the name at a venture as the one she remembered hearing the servant give to her mother.
At this the woman"s whole manner changed, and Edith saw that she was right--that this was, indeed, the accomplice of her mother.
"And now," she added, in voice grown calm and resolute, "I do not mean to let you escape until I get sure knowledge of my child. If you fly from me, I will follow and call for the police. If you have any of the instincts of a woman left, you will know that I am desperately in earnest. What is a street excitement or a temporary arrest by the police, or even a station-house exposure, to me, in comparison with the recovery of my child? Where is he?"
"I do not know," replied Mrs. Bray. "After seeing your father--"
"My father! When did you see him?" exclaimed Edith, betraying in her surprised voice the fact that Mr. Dinneford had kept so far, even from her, the secret of that brief interview to which she now referred.
"Oh, he hasn"t told you! But it"s no matter--he will do that in good time. After seeing your father, I made an effort to get possession of your child and restore him as I promised to do. But the woman who had him hidden somewhere managed to keep out of my way until this morning.
And now she says he got off from her, climbed out of a second-story window and disappeared, no one knows where."
"This woman"s name is Pinky Swett?" said Edith.
"Yes."
Mrs. Bray felt the hand that was still upon her arm shake as if from a violent chill.
"Do you believe what she says?--that the child has really escaped from her?"
"Yes."
"Where does she live?"
Mrs. Bray gave the true directions, and without hesitation.
"Is this child the one she stole from the Briar-street mission on Christmas day?" asked Edith.
"He is," answered Mrs. Bray.
"How shall I know he is mine? What proof is there that little Andy, as he is called, and my baby are the same?"
"I know him to be your child, for I have never lost sight of him,"
replied the woman, emphatically. "You may know him by his eyes and mouth and chin, for they are yours. n.o.body can mistake the likeness. But there is another proof. When I nursed you, I saw on your arm, just above the elbow, a small raised mark of a red color, and noticed a similar one on the baby"s arm. You will see it there whenever you find the child that Pinky Swett stole from the mission-house on Christmas day. Good-bye!"
And the woman, seeing that her companion was off of her guard, sprang away, and was out of sight in the crowd before Edith could rally herself and make an attempt to follow. How she got home she could hardly tell.
CHAPTER XXVII.
_FOR_ weeks the search for Andy was kept up with unremitting vigilance, but no word of him came to the anxious searchers. A few days after the meeting with Mrs. Bray, the police report mentioned the arrest of both Pinky Swett and Mrs. Bray, _alias_ Hoyt, _alias_ Jewett, charged with stealing a diamond ring of considerable value from a jewelry store. They were sent to prison, in default of bail, to await trial. Mr. Dinneford immediately went to the prison and had an interview with the two women, who could give him no information about Andy beyond what Mrs. Bray had already communicated in her hurried talk with Edith. Pinky could get no trace of him after he had escaped. Mr. Dinneford did not leave the two women until he had drawn from them a minute and circ.u.mstantial account of all they knew of Edith"s child from the time it was cast adrift. When he left them, he had no doubt as to its ident.i.ty with Andy. There was no missing link in the chain of evidence.
The new life that had opened to little Andy since the dreary night on which, like a stray kitten, he had crept into Andrew Hall"s miserable hovel, had been very pleasant. To be loved and caressed was a strange and sweet experience. Poor little heart! It fluttered in wild terror, like a tiny bird in the talons of a hawk, when Pinky Swett swooped down and struck her foul talons into the frightened child and bore him off.
"If you scream, I"ll choke you to death!" she said, stooping to his ear, as she hurried him from the mission-house. Scared into silence, Andy did not cry out, and the arm that grasped and dragged him away was so strong that he felt resistance to be hopeless. Pa.s.sing from Briar street, Pinky hurried on for a distance of a block, when she signaled a street-car.
As she lifted Andy upon the platform, she gave him another whispered threat:
"Mind! if you cry, I"ll kill you!"
There were but few persons in the car, and Pinky carried the child to the upper end and sat him down with his face turned forward to the window, so as to keep it as much out of observation as possible. He sat motionless, stunned with surprise and fear. Pinky kept her eyes upon him. His hands were laid across his breast and held against it tightly.
They had not gone far before Pinky saw great tear-drops falling upon the little hands.
"Stop crying!" she whispered, close to his ear; "I won"t have it! You"re not going to be killed."
Andy tried to keep back the tears, but in spite of all he could do they kept blinding his eyes and falling over his hands.
"What"s the matter with your little boy?" asked a sympathetic, motherly woman who had noticed the child"s distress.
"Cross, that"s all." Pinky threw out the sentence in at snappish, mind-your-own-business tone.
The motherly woman, who had leaned forward, a look of kindly interest on her face, drew back, chilled by this repulse, but kept her eyes upon the child, greatly to Pinky"s annoyance. After riding for half a mile, Pinky got out and took another car. Andy was pa.s.sive. He had ceased crying, and was endeavoring to get back some of the old spirit of brave endurance. He was beginning to feel like one who had awakened from a beautiful dream in which dear ideals had almost reached fruition, to the painful facts of a hard and suffering life, and was gathering up his patience and strength to meet them. He sat motionless by the side of Pinky, with his eyes cast down, his chin on his breast and his lips shut closely together.
Another ride of nearly half a mile, when Pinky left the car and struck away from the common thoroughfare into a narrow alley, down which she walked for a short distance, and then disappeared in one of the small houses. No one happened to observe her entrance. Through a narrow pa.s.sage and stairway she reached a second-story room. Taking a key from her pocket, she unlocked the door and went in. There was a fire in a small stove, and the room was comfortable. Locking the door on the inside she said to Andy, in a voice changed and kinder,
"My! your hands are as red as beets. Go up to the stove and warm yourself."
Andy obeyed, spreading out his little hands, and catching the grateful warmth, every now and then looking up into Pinky"s face, and trying with a shrewder insight than is usually given to a child of his age to read the character and purposes it half concealed and half made known.
"Now, Andy," said Pinky, in a mild but very decided way--"your name"s Andy?"
"Yes, ma"am," answered the child, fixing his large, intelligent eyes on her face.
"Well, Andy, if you"ll be a good and quiet boy, you needn"t be afraid of anything--you won"t get hurt. But if you make a fuss, I"ll throw you at once right out of the window."
Pinky frowned and looked so wicked as she uttered the last sentence that Andy was frightened. It seemed as if a devouring beast glared at him out of her eyes. She saw the effect of her threat, and was satisfied.