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    Maggie Now

    Page 42
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    from which she extracted a little book and a pencil.

      Maggie-Now, who had continually scrubbed, polished and

      painted the "nursery" while

      [ 54 1

     

      waiting for the nurse to call, greeted the woman

      cordially.

      "Will you have a cup of coffee?" asked.

      "O-o-oh, no!" said the nurse with a rising and falling

      inflection. Her tone implied that she ~ ouldn't be bribed.

      "Excuse me," said Maggie-Now, embarrassed.

      The nurse made a thorough inspection of everything.

      She asked how the nursery room was heated. Maggie-Now

      explained that, since it opened off the front room, it was

      heated by the parlor stove. The nurse made a notation.

      Maggie-Now started to worry. Finally the nurse put her

      book and pencil away, straightened her coat and said:

      "Now, I'll have that cup of coffee."

      Maggie-Now knew it was all right, then.

      Maggie-Now waited: one week, two weeks, three

      weeks.... Then Father Flynn came to see her. "Margaret,"

      he said, "I've had a conference with Mother Vincent de

      Paul." He saw worry lines deepen in her forehead. "The

      home nurse turned in her report on your premises." She

      held her breath. "The word 'Immaculate' appeared four

      times in her report." Maggie-Now relaxed. "However,"

      again the worried lines appeared on her forehead,

      "Mother and I agreed to put off giving you the children

      until spring."

      "Why, Father, oh, why? ' she pleaded.

      "Your husband will be returning soon. He knows

      nothing of the foster children. It may be hard for him to

      adjust . . . then, the children will not have had time to be

      adjusted to the home and you. There may be emotional

      strain. In the spring, when he has gone, you will have the

      children. You'll have the spring, summer and fall, and

      when your husband visits you . . . returns in the following

      fall, you will have become accustomed to the children,

      there will be a settled routine...."

      She was badly disappoints d but she saw the logic of the

      matter.

      "You can w air, Margaret " he asked.

      "I can wait," she said.

      It was just as well. One morning after breakfast, instead

      of leaving for work, Pat settle d himself in the chair by the

      front windoNv.

      "Aren't you working today, Papa?" she asked.

      "Me working days is over. I put in me full time and today

      I

      ~ 341 ]

     

      start me retirement. Today I start drawing me pension."

      Her first foolish thought was. Now I don't have to wash

      those heavy, dirty uniforms any more. She said: "But, Papa,

      you didn't tell me."

      "Must I tell you everything?" he said.

      "But, Papa, you're still young, just a little over fifty.

      What are you going to do with yourself all day?"

      "Rest!" he said.

      And he did. He slept late and Maggie-Now had to make

      a separate and lavish breakfast for him at ten in the

      morning. Then he sat by the window in his stocl.ing feet,

      getting up only to go to the bathroom and tr, eat lunch,

      which now had to be dinner with meat, vegetables and

      potatoes instead of a simple lunch. After dinner he

      napped on the couch in the front room, and if she so

      much as turned on the tap to get a glass of water he

      shouted for quiet. After his nap, he took up his useless

      vigil at the window. When she came into the room, he

      asked her what she wanted now.

      Maggie-Now was almost a prisoner. She had been used

      to having the house to herself most of the day. While

      dressing, she had often walked out to the kitchen in her

      slip to check on something that was cooking. Now she

      could never leave her bedroom unless she Was fully

      dressed. When she went out, he asked her where she was

      going. When she came back, he examined her purchases

      and criticized the price she had paid and claimed she was

      cheated. When Denny went out, he gave him hell when he

      came back. When he stayed home, he asked what the hell

      he was hanging around the house for. In short, he was a

      pest.

      When November came, Maggie-Now started to worry.

      Claude would be home soon, and with her father in the

      house all day, feuding with Claude, life would be

      intolerable. Claude would leave after a few days, she

      knew. She remembered the Christmas pipe incident.

      One night she said: "Papa, when Claude comes you

      must go and board at Mrs. O'Crawl~ y's while he's here."

      "Oh, no, me girl."

      "Yes, Papa. I mean it. You and Claude just don't get

      along. And for the little time that he's here . . ."

      "I won't leave this house," he shouted, "till I'm carried

      out feet first! So help me God!"

      [ ,4-' ]

     

      It was the last week in November. The newspaper

      forecast snow for the next day. As Pat got up from the

      supper table, Maggie-Now said: "Papa, Claude will be

      coming back most any night now and . . ."

      "And I'll throw him out the minute he steps foot in me

      door," he said.

      She ignored that. "So I went over to Mrs. O'Crawley's

      today and rented a room for you "

      "What!" he roared.

      "A nice room and she likes you so much she's only

      asking seven dollars a week for room and board. And little

      Mick Mack can hardly wait. You can come back again

      when Claude leaves."

      Pat made a terrible, hoarse cry. He tore open his shirt

      and gasped and his face turned purple. He spun around

      and would have fallen if Maggie-Now hadn't caught him.

      "Run, Denny. Run for the doctor! No, wait! Let's get

      him to bed first." They got him into the hall but couldn't

      get him up the stairs. "My room! My room!" gasped

      Maggie-Now. They put him in Maggie-Now's dainty bed.

      "Now, get the doctor and hurry."

      "No doctor," gasped Pat "Too late. The priest! The

      priest! I want the priest! The priest!" he gasped faintly.

      When Father Flynn arrived, a pale Maggie-Now with

      smudges under her eyes greeted the priest with a lighted

      candle. She genuflected and preceded him into the house.

      She took him into the room. He looked around with a

      glance of approval. Everything was in order. Pat lay pale

      and still in a clean nightshirt. She had washed his face and

      hands and feet. There was a clean linen towel on the bed

      table. On it stood a crucifix with a lighted candle on either

      side. There was a vial of holy water, a dish of salt, a

      saucer with clean bits of cotton for the holy oil, a tumbler

      of water and all the necessary things. There was a cushion

      on the floor at the head of the bed for the priest to kneel

      on. Father Flynn placed his small black leather bag and

      the Host on the cleared dressing table.

      "Leave us, my daughter," he said. Maggie-Now left,

      walking backward out of the room, still holding the lighted


      candle.

      Father Flynn performed the solemn last rites of the

      church. When it was all over, Pat said weakly, "I would not

      be calling

      ~ 343 1

     

      you out in the cold of the night but the way me

      daughter . . ."

      "You have been shriven of all your worldly sins, my son.

      Speak no more." When Pat would speak again, Father

      Flynn said: "Be at peace, my son."

      He started packing his bag. "I will send the doctor," he

      said.

      "No doctor," whispered Pat. "I am at peace."

      "To sign the death certificate," said Father Flynn. "It is

      the law."

      Father Flynn went cut to ~laggie-Now and Denny and

      prayed with them and left, after speaking words of

      comfort.

      Maggie-Now, trembling and with tears falling unchecked

      from her eyes, went in to her father.

      She found him frantically getting into his pants.

      "Papa!" she cried out, shocked. "What are you doing?"

      "I'm getting out of here!" he yelled. "Between you and

      the priest and the doctor, youse'll have me buried before

      I'm dead! I'm going to the widder's house where I'm

      safe!"

      Maggie-Now had a beautiful, beautiful winter with her

      Claude.

      ~ CHIC P T ER FOR TY-NI NE ~

      CLAUDE had come home. While they sat in the kitchen

      waiting for the two chickens he had brought to roast, he

      asked her, as was his custom, to tell him everything she

      had done during his absence. She told him everything

      except that she had made an application to take in

      children from the home. When she actually had the

      children, it would be time enough to tell him, she thought.

      Then there was always the hope that she'd become

      pregnant. She never gave up hope. Her mother hadn't

      given up hope and had had a child in her forties.

      However, she had sounded Claude out, hoping to get his

      reaction to having the children from the home.

      "Claude, wouldn't you like children in the house?"

      He gave a typical Claudian answer. "Every man lilies

      children of his OWn about the house."

      Unduly sensitive to his every reaction, she thought he

      stressed

      [344]

     

      the "of his own" too much, and she didn't say anything

      more.

      When he came home, he had brought her a dozen

      Dutch tulip bulbs. They were in a box marked Tulips fro7n

      Holland, Michigan, so she knew he had been there. For his

      last three returns he'd brought her gifts with labels. It was

      as though he wanted her to know where he'd been but

      didn't want to tell her in so many words.

      He said he'd wait a week before going to look for a job

      because he wanted to plant the bulbs in the yard. First, he

      said, he had to whitewash the old board fence. The tulips

      were red and needed a white background, he said

      He was whitewashing the boards one Sunday morning

      (he had one side of the fence done), when the tenant

      upstairs opened her window and called down to hin`..

      "Mr. Bassett?"

      He gave that quick turn of his l cad' which gave the

      woman a thrill, and looked up.

      "That's going to look real nice. '

      "Thank you," he said and gave her his charming smile.

      She closed the window. "I had to be halfway nice to

      him,'' she told her husband, "so's they don't raise the rent

      on us saying they made improveme7`tsd'

      "Aw, you just wanted an exctisc to, talk to the bum," he

      said.

      "He's not a bum. He's a pentlcman."

      "A bum!" he said. As an afterthought, he added: "Shut

      up!"

      The ground was not frozen under the snow but it was as

      hard and barren as cement. Claude had to chop it up with

      an ax. He planted the bulbs. All during the winter, he

      garnered MaggieNow's coffee grounds and tea leaves and

      potato peelings and the dottle from Pat's pipe and the

      ashes from the stove and other things and made a

      compost pile in the yard.

      "In the spring," he said, 'we'll plant zinnia and marigold

      seeds . . . things that come up the first year . . . later,

      perennials . . ."

      He spoke as though he wasn't going away in the spring.

      Her heart lifted; then fell. If he stayed, would he let her

      have the foster children?

      For Christmas, he gave her a big, beautiful garden

      encyclopedia. It had hundreds of colored plates. (It must

      have cost ten dollars.) He and Maggie-Now pored over it

      and he made a garden on

      t347 1

     

      paper and the list of seeds they'd need. He seemed

      obsessed by the garden. "This summer," he said, "we'll sit

      together in our garden in the evening--flowers smell better

      after dark, you know. . . ." Yes, it seemed that he wasn't

      going to wander any more.

      But by January he had completely lost interest in the

      garden. Now when she got the book out, he frowned and

      said he guessed he'd go for a little walk. Once he asked

      her why she bothered. "Nothing will ever grow in that

      soil," he said. "It's hard as cement and just as barren." She

      didn't get the book out any more after that.

      But it was a beautiful vinter. He was a tender and

      loving husband, and, as always, it was as though they were

      newly married.

      That llarch day can e and that softly demanding faraway

      wind blew over Brooklyn again. And Claude listened and

      gave his silent promise to something that was not tangible,

      and went away again.

      This time her grief tat his going was gentle and mixed

      with a tremulous inner excitement. She cried a little, but

      smiled as she cried and was stirred bv a great anticipation.

      I'll wait until twelve, she thought, to see if hi comes back.

      But she waited only until eleven o'clock. She ran around

      to the furniture store and told the man he could deliver

      right away the two cribs and high chair she had been

      making weekly payments on since the fall. She went to

      another store and bought two thick white china bowls and

      two little spoons.

      The store sent the cribs over. There was a two-drawer

      chest in the room that Maggie-Now had bought in the fall

      and enameled white. From a drawer, she took crib sheets

      she'd made from the best parts of worn household sheets

      and clean, worn blankets that had, so far, warmed two

      generations of babies: Widdy and Widdy's twins. (Lottie

      had said: "I forgot I still had those blankets until Timmy

      reminded me.") Maggie-Now was in a kind of ecstasy as

      she made up the little beds.

      When Denny came home at noon, she gave him a

      makeshift lunch of bologna sandwich, milk and a wedge of

      crumb cake. She herself was too excited to eat.

      "Did Claude go away3" he asked.

      "Why, yes." Then she was dumbfounded! Claude had left

      [ ~ Is ]

     


      only two hours ago and she had all but forgotten that she

      wouldn't see him again until fall.

      "The flowers he planted in the yard are up. Did he see

      them?"

      "Are they?" She went to the window. Yes, there were a

      dozen inch-high clubby spikes showing. "No, I guess he

      didn't see them."

      As soon as Denny went back to school, she rushed over

      to Father Flynn's house. "Now, Father?" she asked. "Now?

      Please, now? "

      He matched her tone. "Now!" he said.

      "Honest, Father?"

      "Honestly, Margaret. Mother Vincent de Paul has two

      little boys all ready for you."

      "Honest, Father? Honestly?"

      "One is four, I believe, and the other a babe in arms."

      "When can I have them, Father? When?"

      "I'll phone Mother and tell her you're on your way to

      the home."

      She was out of the house and down the steps like a flash.

      "Margaret!" he called. She paused in her flight.

      "Remember! In two years, you'll have to give up the first

      one."

      "Yes, Father."

      "And when you are sixty, you will have to give them all

      back."

      "It will be forever till I'm sixty," she called back.

      I used to think so too, thought the priest.

      Maggie-Now loved the beautiful ritual of getting

      breakfast for the children. Denny had gone off to school

      and her father was still sleeping. The sunshine poured in

      through the kitchen windows and the tulips were in bud in

      the yard and Timmy in his bamboo cage sang so lustily

      that the cage jiggled.

      Mark, the four-year-old, sat in the high chair eating his

      bowl of oatmeal with soft sliced bananas on top. From

      time to time, gently and patiently, she transferred the

      spoon from his left hand to his right. Just as patiently, the

      little boy transferred the spoon back to his left hand.

      John, not quite a year old, was in her arms. She fed him

      with a spoon. He inhaled the oatmeal, gummed the soft

      banana and tried his best to drink milk from his mug with

      a sucking motion.

      ~ 347 ~

     

      lye never took his eyes off Maggie-Now's face. He stared

      at her unblinkingly, moving his eyes only when she leaned

      over to change Mark's spoon.

      The children were quiet children. Mark seldom spoke

      and the baby seldom cried. Mark obeyed any order

      instantly. The instant they were put in their cribs, they

      closed their eyes. They had been well trained at the home.

      Maggie-Now had been astonished at the way Pat took

      the news of the foster children. She'd had them three days

      when he came home from Mrs O'Crawley's. She told him

      all in one sentence and all in one breath. She ended up

      saying she would get five dollars a week to buy their food.

      "For the two of them"' he asked.

      "Five dollars each."

      "Say! That's all right," he said. "Them two kids won't eat

      up ten dollars of food a week."

      "The money is for the children and the children only,"

      she said firmly.

      Who knew the workings of Pat's mind? He got the idea

      that Maggie-Now got the babies to take the place of

      Claude and that now Claude was out of her life forever.

      He explained it to Mick Mack:

      "Me daughter says: '1 got the chilthren in place of you.

      And now when you go away don't come back no more.'

      And he says: 'So now the chilthren have taken me place

      and I am no longer wanted."'

      "And you living at the O'Crawleys' the time he says

      that!" said Mick Mack. He was not doubting his friend's

      veracity. It was merely one of the little man's automatic

      compliments.

      "I don't have to be Johnny-on-the-spot," said Pat icily,

      "to know what goes on in me own home. Anyways, warm

      weather comes and the bastid says: 'Nooky!' NO, that

      ain't the word. Yeah! 'Chinook! "'

      "And what would that be ~meaning?"

      Pat had to think quick. "Why . . . why, it would mean 'so

      long!' In the Eskimo language," he added. The little man

      looked as though he doubted that, but Pat clinched it. "It

      stands to reason: First he says: 'Chinook!' Then he goes

     


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