"Go on," says I. "Tell me the worst. What is it?"
"But no, M"sieur," says he. "It is only that M"sieur appears in so strange attire."
"Oh! These?" says I. "Never mind my costume, Leon. What about Vee?"
"Ah!" says he, his eyes beamin" once more and his hands washin" each other. "Madame is excellent. She herself will tell you. Come!"
Upstairs I went, two steps at a time.
"S-s-sh!" says the nurse, meetin" me at the door.
But I brushes past her, and the next minute I"m over by the bed and Vee is smilin" up at me. It"s only the ghost of a smile, but it means a lot to me. She slips one of her hands into mine.
"Torchy," she whispers, "did you drop down out of--of the air?"
"That was about it," says I. "I got here, though. Are you all right, girlie?"
She nods and gives me another of them sketchy, happy smiles.
"And how about the--the----" I starts to ask.
She glances towards the corner where the nurse is bendin" over a pink and white basket. "He"s splendid," she whispers.
"He?" says I. "Then--then it"s a boy?"
She gives my hand a little squeeze.
And ten minutes later, when I"m shooed out, I"m feelin" so chesty and happy that I"m tingly all over.
Down in the livin"-room Leon is waitin" for me, wearin" a broad grin. He greets me with his hand out. And then, somehow, because he"s so different, I expect, I remembers Barnes. I was wonderin" if Leon was just puttin" on.
"Well," says I, "how about it?"
"Ah, Monsieur!" says he, givin" me the hearty grip. "I make to you my best congratulations."
"Then you don"t feel," says I, "that bein" a parent is kind of a sad and solemn business?"
"Sad!" says he. "_Non, non!_ It is the grand joy of life. It is when you have the best right to be proud and glad, for to you has come _la bonne chance_. Yes, _la bonne chance!_"
And say, there"s no mistakin" that Leon means every word of it, French and all.
"Thanks, Leon," says I. "You ought to know. You"ve been through it yourself. I"ll bet you wouldn"t even feel bad at being a grandfather.
No? Well, I guess I"ll follow through on that line. Maybe I don"t deserve so much luck, but I"m takin" it just as though I did. And say, Leon, let"s us go out in the back yard and give three cheers for the son and heir of the house of Torchy."
CHAPTER XVI
TORCHY GETS THE THUMB GRIP
I expect a lot of people thought it about me; but the one who really registered the idea was Auntie. Trust her. For of course, with an event of this kind staged in the house we couldn"t expect to dodge a visit from the old girl. She came clear up from Miami--although, with so much trouble about through sleepers and everything, I kept tellin" Vee I was afraid she wouldn"t think it worth while makin" the trip.
"How absurd, Torchy!" says Vee. "Not want to see baby? To be sure, she will."
You see, Vee had the right hunch from the very first--about the importance of this new member of the fam"ly, I mean. She took it as a matter of course that everybody who"d ever known or heard of us would be anxious to rush in and gaze awe-struck and reverent at this remarkable addition we"d made to the population of Long Island. Something like that. She don"t have to work up to it. Seems to come natural. Why, say, she"d sit by and listen without crackin" a smile to these regular gushers who laid it on so thick you"d "most thought the youngster himself would have turned over and run his tongue out at "em.
"Oh, the dear, darling "ittle cherub!" they"d squeal. "Isn"t he simp-ly the most won-der-ful baby you ev-er saw?"
And Vee would never blink an eye. In fact, she"d beam on "em grateful, and repeat to me afterwards what they"d said, like it was just a case of the vote bein" made unanimous, as she knew it was bound to be all along.
Which wasn"t a bit like any of the forty-seven varieties of Vee I thought I was so well acquainted with. No. I"ll admit she"d shown whims and queer streaks now and then, and maybe a fault or so; but nothing that had anything to do with any tendency of the ego to stick its elbows out. Yet, when it comes to listenin" to flatterin" remarks about our son and heir--well, no Broadway star readin" over what his press-agent had smuggled into the dramatic notes had anything on her. She couldn"t have it handed to her too strong.
As for me, I guess I was in sort of a daze there for a week or so.
Gettin" to be a parent had been sprung on me so sudden that it was sort of confusin". I couldn"t let on to be a judge of babies myself. I don"t know as I"d ever examined one real near to before, anyway--not such a new one as this.
And, between me and you, when I did get a chance to size him up real close once,--they"d all gone out of the room and left me standin" by the crib,--I was kind of disappointed. Uh-huh. No use kiddin" yourself. I couldn"t see a thing wonderful about him, or where he was much different from others I"d glanced at casual. Such a small party to have so much fuss made over! Why, one of his hands wasn"t much bigger"n a cat"s paw.
And his face was so red and little and the nose so sketchy that it didn"t seem likely he"d ever amount to much. Here he"d had more"n a week to grow in, and I couldn"t notice any change at all.
Not that I was nutty enough to report any such thoughts. Hardly. I felt kind of guilty at just havin" "em in my head. How was it, I asked myself, that I couldn"t stand around with my hands clasped and my eyes dimmed up, as a perfectly good parent should when he gazes at his first and only chee-ild! Wasn"t I human?
All the alibi I can put up is that I wasn"t used to bein" a father.
Ain"t there something in that? Just think, now. Why, I"d hardly got used to bein" married. Here, only a little over a year ago, I was floatin" around free and careless. And then, first thing I know, without any special coachin" in the act, I finds myself pushed out into the center of the stage with the spot-light on me, and I"m introduced as a daddy.
The only thing I could do was try to make a noise like one. I didn"t feel it, any more"n I felt like a stained-gla.s.s saint in a church window. And I didn"t know the lines very well. But there was everybody watching,--Vee, and the nurse, and Madame Battou, and occasional callers,--so I proceeds to bluff it through the best I could.
My merry little idea was to be familiar with the youngster, treat him as if he"d been a member of the fam"ly for a long time, and hide any embarra.s.sin" feelin"s I might have by addressin" him loud and joshin". I expect it was kind of a poor performance, at that. But I seemed to be gettin" away with it, so I stuck to that line. Vee appears to take it all right, and, as n.o.body else gave me the call, I almost got to believe it was the real thing myself.
So this particular afternoon, when I came breezin" in from town, I chases right up to the nursery, where I knew I"d find Vee, gives her the usual hail just behind the ear, and then turns hasty to the crib to show I haven"t forgot who"s there.
"h.e.l.lo, old sport!" says I, ticklin" him in the ribs. "How you hittin"
"em, hey? Well, well! Look at the fistses doubled up! Who you goin" to hand a wallop to now? Oh, tryin" to punch yourself in the eye, are you?
Come there, you young rough-houser, lay off that grouchy stuff and speak some kind words to your daddy. You won"t, eh? Goin" to kick a little with the footsies. That"s it. Mix in with all fours, you young----"
And just then I hears a suppressed snort that sounds sort of familiar. I glances around panicky, and gets the full benefit of a disgusted glare from a set of chilled steel eyes, and discovers that there"s someone besides Vee and the nurse present. Yep. It"s Auntie.
"May I ask," says she, "if this is your usual manner of greeting your offspring?"
"Why," says I, "I--I expect it is."
"Humph!" says she. "I might have known."
"Now, Auntie," protests Vee, "you know very well that Torchy means----"
"Whatever he means or doesn"t mean," breaks in Auntie, "I am sure he has an astonishing way of showing parental affection. Calling the child an "old scout," a "young rough-houser"! It"s shocking."
"Sorry," says I; "but I ain"t taken any lessons in polite baby talk yet.