"I guess the molasses is getting low, ain't it?" said Pa
Sloane insinuatingly. "S'pose I'd better drive up to Carmody
this afternoon and get some more."
"There's a good half-gallon of molasses in the jug yet," said
ma Sloane ruthlessly.
"That so? Well, I noticed the kerosene demijohn wasn't very
hefty the last time I filled the can. Reckon it needs
replenishing."
"We have kerosene enough to do for a fortnight yet." Ma
continued to eat her dinner with an impassive face, but a
twinkle made itself apparent in her eye. Lest Pa should see
it, and feel encouraged thereby, she looked immovably at her
plate.
"Didn't I hear you say day before yesterday that you were out
of nutmegs?" he queried, after a few moments' severe
reflection.
"I got a supply of them from the egg-pedlar yesterday,"
responded Ma, by a great effort preventing the twinkle from
spreading over her entire face. She wondered if this third
failure would squelch Pa. But Pa was not to be squelched.
"Well, anyway," he said, brightening up under the influence of
a sudden saving inspiration. "I'll have to go up to get the
sorrel mare shod. So, if you've any little errands you want
done at the store, Ma, just make a memo of them while I hitch
up."
The matter of shoeing the sorrel mare was beyond Ma's
province, although she had her own suspicions about the sorrel
mare's need of shoes.
"Why can't you give up beating about the bush, Pa?" she
demanded, with contemptuous pity. "You might as well own up
what's taking you to Carmody. I can see through your design.
You want to get away to the Garland auction. That is what is
troubling you, Pa Sloane."
"I dunno but what I might step over, seeing it's so handy. But
the sorrel mare really does need shoeing, Ma," protested Pa.
"There's always something needing to be done if it's
convenient," retorted Ma. "Your mania for auctions will be the
ruin of you yet, Pa. A man of fifty-five ought to have grown
out of such a hankering. But the older you get the worse you
get. Anyway, if I wanted to go to auctions, I'd select them
as was something like, and not waste my time on little one-
horse affairs like this of Garland's."
"One might pick up something real cheap at Garland's," said Pa
defensively.
"Well, you are not going to pick up anything, cheap or
otherwise, Pa Sloane, because I'm going with you to see that
you don't. I know I can't stop you from going. I might as well
try to stop the wind from blowing. But I shall go, too, out of
self-defence. This house is so full now of old clutter and
truck that you've brought home from auctions that I feel as if
I was made up out of pieces and left overs."
Pa Sloane sighed again. It was not exhilarating to attend an
auction with Ma. She would never let him bid on anything. But
he realized that Ma's mind was made up beyond the power of
mortal man's persuasion to alter it, so he went out to hitch
up.
Pa Sloane's dissipation was going to auctions and buying
things that nobody else would buy. Ma Sloane's patient
endeavours of over thirty years had been able to effect only a
partial reform. Sometimes Pa heroically refrained from going
to an auction for six months at a time; then he would break
out worse than ever, go to all that took place for miles
around, and come home with a wagonful of misfits. His last
exploit had been to bid on an old dasher churn for five
dollars--the boys "ran things up" on Pa Sloane for the fun of
it--and bring it home to outraged Ma, who had made her butter
for fifteen years in the very latest, most up-to-date barrel
churn. To add insult to injury this was the second dasher
churn Pa had bought at auction. That settled it. Ma decreed
that henceforth she would chaperon Pa when he went to
auctions.
But this was the day of Pa's good angel. When he drove up to
the door where Ma was waiting, a breathless, hatless imp of
ten flew into the yard, and hurled himself between Ma and the
wagon-step.
"Oh, Mrs. Sloane, won't you come over to our house at once?"
he gasped. "The baby, he's got colic, and ma's just wild, and
he's all black in the face."
Ma went, feeling that the stars in their courses fought
against a woman who was trying to do her duty by her husband.
But first she admonished Pa.
"I shall have to let you go alone. But I charge you, Pa, not
to bid on anything--on anything, do you hear?"
Pa heard and promised to heed, with every intention of keeping
his promise. Then he drove away joyfully. On any other
occasion Ma would have been a welcome companion. But she
certainly spoiled the flavour of an auction.
When Pa arrived at the Carmody store, he saw that the little
yard of the Garland place below the hill was already full of
people. The auction had evidently begun; so, not to miss any
more of it, Pa hurried down. The sorrel mare could wait for
her shoes until afterwards.
Ma had been within bounds when she called the Garland auction
a "one-horse affair." It certainly was very paltry, especially
when compared to the big Donaldson auction of a month ago,
which Pa still lived over in happy dreams.
Horace Garland and his wife had been poor. When they died
within six weeks of each other, one of consumption and one of
pneumonia, they left nothing but debts and a little furniture.
The house had been a rented one.
The bidding on the various poor articles of household gear put
up for sale was not brisk, but had an element of resigned
determination. Carmody people knew that these things had to be
sold to pay the debts, and they could not be sold unless they
were bought. Still, it was a very tame affair.
A woman came out of the house carrying a baby of about
eighteen months in her arms, and sat down on the bench beneath
the window.
"There's Marthy Blair with the Garland Baby," said Robert
Lawson to Pa. "I'd like to know what's to become of that poor
young one!"
"Ain't there any of the father's or mother's folks to take
him?" asked Pa.
"No. Horace had no relatives that anybody ever heard of. Mrs.
Horace had a brother; but he went to Mantioba years ago, and
nobody knows where he is now. Somebody'll have to take the
baby and nobody seems anxious to. I've got eight myself, or
I'd think about it. He's a fine little chap."
Pa, with Ma's parting admonition ringing in his ears, did not
bid on anything, although it will never be known how great was
the heroic self-restraint he put on himself, until just at the
last, when he did bid on a collection of flower-pots, thinking
he might indulge himself to that small extent. But Josiah
Sloane had been commissioned by his wife to bring those
flower-pots home to her; so Pa lost them.
"There, that's all," said the auctioneer, wiping his face, for
the day was very warm for October.
A laugh went through the crowd. The sale had been a dull
affair, and they were ready for some fun. Someone called out,
"Put him up, Jacob." The joke found favour and the call was
repeated hilariously.
Jacob Blair took little Teddy Garland out of Martha's arms and
stood him up on the table by the door, steadying the small
chap with one big brown hand. The baby had a mop of yellow
curls, and a pink and white face, and big blue eyes. He
laughed out at the men before him and waved his hands in
delight. Pa Sloane thought he had never seen so pretty a baby.
"Here's a baby for sale," shouted the auctioneer. "A genuine
article, pretty near as good as brand-new. A real live baby,
warranted to walk and talk a little. Who bids? A dollar? Did I
hear anyone mean enough to bid a dollar? No, sir, babies don't
come as cheap as that, especially the curly-headed brand."
The crowd laughed again. Pa Sloane, by way of keeping on the
joke, cried, "Four dollars!"
Everybody looked at him. The impression flashed through the
crowd that Pa was in earnest, and meant thus to signify his
intention of giving the baby a home. He was well-to-do, and
his only son was grown up and married.
"Six," cried out John Clarke from the other side of the yard.
John Clarke lived at White Sands and he and his wife were
childless.
That bid of John Clarke's was Pa's undoing. Pa Sloane could
not have an enemy; but a rival he had, and that rival was John
Clarke. Everywhere at auctions John Clarke was wont to bid
against Pa. At the last auction he had outbid Pa in
everything, not having the fear of his wife before his eyes.
Pa's fighting blood was up in a moment; he forgot Ma Sloane;
he forgot what he was bidding for; he forgot everything except
a determination that John Clarke should not be victor again.
"Thirty," shrieked Pa. He nearly bust a blood-vessel in his
shrieking, but he had won. Clarke turned off with a laugh and
a shrug, and the baby was knocked down to Pa Sloane by the
auctioneer, who had meanwhile been keeping the crowd in roars
of laughter by a quick fire of witticisms. There had not been
such fun at an auction in Carmody for many a long day.
Pa Sloane came, or was pushed, forward. The baby was put into
his arms; he realized that he was expected to keep it, and he
was too dazed to refuse; besides, his heart went out to the
child.
The auctioneer looked doubtfully at the money which Pa laid
mutely down.
"Not a bit of it," said Robert Lawson. "All the money won't
bee too much to pay the debts. There's a doctor's bill, and
this will just about pay it."
Pa Sloane drove back home, with the sorrel mare still unshod,
the baby, and the baby's meager bundle of clothes. The baby
did not trouble him much; it had become well used to strangers
in the past two months, and promptly fell asleep on his arm;
but Pa Sloane did not enjoy that drive; at the end of it; he
mentally saw Ma Sloane.
Ma was there, too, waiting for him on the back door-step as he
drove into the yard at sunset. Her face, when she saw the
baby, expressed the last degree of amazement.
"Pa Sloane," she demanded, "whose is that young one, and there
did you get it?"
"I--I--bought it at the auction, Ma," said Pa feebly. Then he
waited for the explosion. None came. This last exploit of Pa's
was too much for Ma.
With a gasp she snatched the baby from Pa's arms, and ordered
him to go out and put the mare in. When Pa returned to the
kitchen Ma had set the baby on the sofa, fenced him around
with chairs so that he couldn't fall off and given him a
molassed cooky.
"Well, we're not. I brought up one boy and that's enough. I
don't calculate to be pestered with any more. I never was much
struck on children _as_ children, anyhow. You say that Mary
Garland had a brother out in Mantioba? Well, we shall just
write to him and tell him he's got to look out for his nephew."
"But how can you do that, Ma, when nobody knows his address?"
objected Pa, with a wistful look at that delicious, laughing baby.
"I'll find out his address if I have to advertise in the
papers for him," retorted Ma. "As for you, Pa Sloane, you're
not fit to be out of a lunatic asylum. The next auction you'll
be buying a wife, I s'pose?"
Pa, quite crushed by Ma's sarcasm, pulled his chair in to
supper. Ma picked up the baby and sat down at the head of the
table. Little Teddy laughed and pinched her face--Ma's face!
Ma looked very grim, but she fed him his supper as skilfully
as if it had not been thirty years since she had done such a
thing. But then, the woman who once learns the mother knack
never forgets it.
After tea Ma despatched Pa over to William Alexander's to
borrow a high chair. When Pa returned in the twilight, the
baby was fenced in on the sofa again, and Ma was stepping
briskly about the garret. She was bringing down the little cot
bed her own boy had once occupied, and setting it up in their
room for Teddy. Then she undressed the baby and rocked him to
sleep, crooning an old lullaby over him. Pa Sloane sat quietly
and listened, with very sweet memories of the long ago, when
he and Ma had been young and proud, and the bewhiskered
William Alexander had been a curly-headed little fellow like
this one.
Ma was not driven to advertising for Mrs. Garland's brother.
That personage saw the notice of his sister's death in a home
paper and wrote to the Carmody postmaster for full
information. The letter was referred to Ma and Ma answered it.
She wrote that they had taken in the baby, pending further
arrangements, but had no intention of keeping it; and she
calmly demanded of its uncle what was to be done with it. Then
she sealed and addressed the letter with an unfaltering hand;
but, when it was done, she looked across the table at Pa
Sloane, who was sitting in the armchair with the baby on his
knee. They were having a royal good time together. Pa had
always been dreadfully foolish about babies. He looked ten
years younger. Ma's keen eyes softened a little as she watched
them.
A prompt answer came to her letter. Teddy's uncle wrote that
he had six children of his own, but was nevertheless willing
and glad to give his little nephew a home. But he could not
come after him. Josiah Spencer, of White Sands, was going out
to Manitoba in the spring. If Mr. and Mrs. Sloane could only
keep the baby till then he could be sent out with the
Spencers. Perhaps they would see a chance sooner.
"There'll be no chance sooner," said Pa Sloane in a tone of
satisfaction.
The winter passed by. Little Teddy grew and throve, and Pa
Sloane worshipped him. Ma was very good to him, too, and Teddy
was just as fond of her as of Pa.
Nevertheless, as the spring drew near, Pa became depressed.
Sometimes he sighed heavily, especially when he heard casual
references to the Josiah Spencer emigration.
One warm afternoon in early May Josiah Spencer arrived. He
found Ma knitting placidly in the kitchen, while Pa nodded
over his newspaper and the baby played with the cat on the
floor.
"Good afternoon, Mrs. Sloane," said Josiah with a flourish. "I
just dropped in to see about this young man here. We are going
to leave next Wednesday; so you'd better send him down to our
place Monday or Tuesday, so that he can get used to us, and--"
"Oh, Ma," began Pa, rising imploringly to his feet.
Then Ma glared at the smiling Josiah, who instantly felt as
guilty as if he had been caught stealing sheep red-handed.
"We are much obliged to you, Mr. Spencer," said Ma icily, "but
this baby is ours. We bought him, and we paid for him. A
bargain is a bargain. When I pay cash down for babies, I
propose to get my money's worth. We are going to keep this
baby in spite of any number of uncles in Manitoba. Have I made
this sufficiently clear to your understanding, Mr. Spencer?"
"Certainly, certainly," stammered the unfortunate man, feeling
guiltier than ever, "but I thought you didn't want him--I
thought you'd written to his uncle--I thought--"
"I really wouldn't think quite so much if I were you," said Ma
kindly. "It must be hard on you. Won't you stay and have tea
with us?"
But, no, Josiah would not stay. He was thankful to make his
escape with such rags of self-respect as remained to him.
Pa Sloane arose and came around to Ma's chair. He laid a
trembling hand on her shoulder.