"I won"t look," she laughed. "You look, Elly Precious!"

The bath-times were the pleasantest to Miss Theodosia. Getting things together--little tub and powders and soaps and the fresh little clothes--was a beautiful beginning, and after that--after that, the deluge! The practice she had had washing that little ancient baby, in her former incarnation, stood Miss Theodosia in good stead! As she had bathed and rubbed and powdered her first baby eons ago, she bathed and rubbed and powdered this second one now. For she called Elly Precious her baby. That was their beautiful play.

"We"ll keep it a secret, won"t we?--just between you and me, dear! We won"t even tell Evangeline that you"re my darlin" dear," she crooned over this second baby. Elly Precious played the game; he was a little sport, was Elly Precious.

The morning after the little new-nightgown episode, the bath progressed thrillingly. That was, it seemed, the morning set by Elly Precious to give this new mother a glorious surprise. It could not be said that he had it up his little sleeve, being innocent of any manner of garment, but he had it prepared.

Miss Theodosia dried the tiny body and set it far forward on her knees, facing her, and began as usual:

"Now, baby, watch--watch hard! Make exactly the same noise I do." She put her lips in position for clear enunciation.

"Mam--m-ma."

Customarily, Elly Precious sat and chuckled gleefully and nakedly. This was a favorite play. But, oh, to-day--

"Mum--mum," said Elly Precious distinctly. Miss Theodosia caught him to her, slippery and sweet, with a cry of rapture.

"You said it! You said it, Elly Precious--darlin" dear! Now I shall wrap you in a beautiful soft blanket and sing you a jiggy tune! Before I dress you in horrid, bothery sleeves, we"ll rock, and rock, you and make-believe mum-mum!"

The big chair creaked delightsomely to the ears of Elly Precious. To its accompaniment sang Miss Theodosia.

"Darlin" Dear! Darlin" Dear, Mum-Mum"s here--oh, Elly Precious, I shall send you to college! Of course, to college. You shall be a doctor--" Was that the chair creaking, or a door? It was a door. On the doorsill stood the Reformed Doctor, gazing in. The blanket had slipped away and it was a beautiful, bare Elly Precious in Miss Theodosia"s arms, against her breast. The little picture stood out, distinct. But so soon it faded.

She was on her feet and facing that treacherous doorway. Flames burned on her cheeks.

"Is it anything to be ashamed of to pretend he is my baby! Well, I"ve done it--I"m pretending now. We were having a beautiful time till--"

"Till I came."

"Till you came. You heard what I said about making a doctor of him, I suppose?"

He nodded. "I heard," he said meekly.

"But you didn"t give me time to say it all. I was going to say he"d stay a doctor and not reform!" With which Parthian shot, delivered with spirit, Miss Theodosia turned her back and Elly Precious" back to the intruder. What was left for him to do but retire, vanquished and diminished? The business of the bath went on, but joyless now. There was no further putting off of the horrid, bothery sleeves that Elly Precious abhorred. He set up indignant wails, and Miss Theodosia"s soul wailed in unison.

"All our dear good time spoiled! We"re not pretending any more; you"re Evangeline"s darlin" dear. I"ll put you on the bed and give you your bottle." So abruptly had the beautiful game come to an end. Miss Theodosia went away to prepare the bottle. As she went, a glint of white underneath the door to out-of-doors caught her attention. Evangeline had not tucked it under as far as usual. Perhaps it was not unnatural, considering her new mood, that Miss Theodosia picked up the little letter almost impatiently.

"He says he can come home day after to-morrow if he don"t colapse, so Stefana is cleaning the house and I"m helping and we can"t hardly wait.

We"ve got a new cloesbasket Stefana"s going to make bows for the handles, tell Elly Precious.

"P. S. Pink bows."

Miss Theodosia was not impatient as she folded the little letter again.

Tears stood in her eyes. She hurried back, bottleless, to Elly Precious, to tell him. That he had fallen asleep made no difference.

"You are going home day after to-morrow! Dream it in a little dream, dear. When you wake up, it will be true. They can"t hardly wait and there"s a new "cloesbasket" with bows--P. S., pink bows. Oh, Elly Precious, you know you"re glad to go home! You"ve been pretending, too!"

Game little Elly Precious, to pretend! She stooped and kissed his eyes, close shut in that dream of going home. "They are cleaning the house,"

she whispered, "they can"t hardly wait."

A prescience of awful loneliness swept over her. She saw Theodosia Baxter--lone and babyless again--set back in her empty house. The curtain had gone down--would go down day after to-morrow--on the last beautiful act.

"But I have two days left! I demand my pound--fifteen little pounds of flesh!" Elly Precious" little pink flesh. She would play that last act of the little game of make-believe. Intruders or no intruders, she would play it! At once, she began again where they had left off.

"You will have to go to college very young, dear," she said. "They are going to take you away from me day after tomorrow. A day and a half is such a little college course; you"d be such a little Freshman, Elly Precious! So we will have to give it up, dear. We"ll just spend our last days together. Who wants to know Latin and Greek anyway? I"ll teach you to pat little cakes in English!" Surely, surely she must have taught her first baby to pat-a-cake. The blundering little hands in hers felt strangely familiar. The first baby had been just as funny and sweet as Elly Precious at that little lesson.

"If I only had a little more time!" sighed Miss Theodosia. "There is so much left for us to do; it is cruel to hurry us so! We might--we might run away, dear! You and I. To Europe and Asia and Africa! I"d show you all the wonders of the world. Listen, Elly Precious,--the _pyramids_!

Wouldn"t you love to see the pyramids? You could play in the warm sand, anyway,--bury your little twelve toes deep! We would keep watch all the time and _run_ when we saw Evangeline coming. We would never stop to put on our shoes and stock--Elly Precious, you"ve gone to sleep!" So little was he thrilled at the prospect of pyramids.

Miss Theodosia rocked him gently in her arms. Perhaps she would rock him the whole day and a half--they could not prevent her! She would not stop rocking if twenty Reformed Doctors came and looked at her. She would rock in their faces!

A sudden and queer thought came to her of Cornelia Dunlap standing in the doorway, looking in as John Bradford had done.

She saw the wreck of Cornelia"s plump calm--Cornelia"s wide-eyed amazement. After she had reluctantly deposited the small, limp body upon the couch to finish out the nap, she got her writing materials and wrote to Cornelia Dunlap, with a whimsical little smile playing about her lips. Her pen moved fast across the sheet.

"The baby is having a beautiful nap. While he is asleep, I can write to you. Of course my time is limited--"what with" scalding and filling bottles and giving little baths--Cornelia Dunlap, go and get a little baby and wash him! In a tub, with your sleeves rolled up. Let him splash the water into your face--over your dress--hear him laugh! Give him the soap for a little ship a-sailing. Oh, Cornelia, teach him to pat-a-cake!

Get a baby with the measles if there"s no other way. You will love him in between all his little measles. But, listen to me; _take this advice_: Don"t let them take him back! Hold on to both his little hands.

Run away to Africa with him if there is no other way--he will love to play in the sand beside the pyramids. Send him to college, Cornelia, and I think--yes, make a doctor of him. Doctors are best.

"Morituri salutamus--we who are about to lose our babies and die wish you happiness with yours, is the free translation. _Hold on to yours_.

He is a dear, I know. He may be as dear as mine, but he hasn"t twelve toes!"

"Mercy gracious!"

It was the two days later and it was Evangeline. The child"s radiant face lighted up the room.

"He let me come! I promised Stefana I wouldn"t kiss him till I got him home so"s she could, too. He said to kiss his neck or behind his ears."

As usual no confusion of personal p.r.o.nouns troubled Evangeline.

"Mercy gracious!--oh, mercy gracious, he"s improved! He"s fatter! I never thought measles"d be fattenin"! You"re glad to see me, aren"t you, darlin" dear? I"m Evangeline! I"ve come to take you home. We"ve got everything ready, only one bow, an" Stefana"s piecin" that. Oh--my darlin" dear!"

The curtain had gone down. Theodosia Baxter stood quite alone in her big room. In her ears was suddenly the shriek of a steam whistle of welcome; it died away, and the silence ached. A crumpled something half under a chair caught her eye and she openly sobbed. It was a forgotten little nightgown.

"I"m going to Rome--I"m going to Paris--to Anywhere! I can"t stand this!" she wailed. And then the creak of a door again.

He stood on the door-sill looking in.

CHAPTER V

"I"ve done it again!" came from the doorway repentantly, "but this time I knocked, honest to goodness. Regular bangs! You ought to have heard,"

his tone a.s.suming an injured cadence.

Miss Theodosia had recovered herself. She was unfeignedly glad to see him this time.

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