His Family eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about His Family.

His Family eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about His Family.
he do?  If he tried making love to Deborah he’d simply be killing his chances.  Not the slightest doubt in the world.  She can’t think of anything but her career.  Yes, sir, when all’s said and done, to marry a modern woman is no child’s play, it means thought and care.  And A. Baird has made up his mind to it.  He has made up his mind to marry her by playing a long waiting game.  He’s just slowly and quietly nosing his way into her school, because it’s her life.  And a mighty shrewd way of going about it.  You don’t need any help from me, my friend; all you need is to be let alone.”

In talks at home with Deborah, and in what he himself observed at school, Roger began to get inklings of “A.  Baird’s long waiting game.”  He found that several months before Allan had offered to start a free clinic for mothers and children in connection with the school, and that he alone had put it through, with only the most reluctant aid and gratitude from Deborah—­as though she dreaded something.  Baird took countless hours from his busy uptown practice; he hurt himself more than once, in fact, by neglecting rich patients to do this work.  Where a sick or pregnant mother was too poor to carry out his advice, he followed her into her tenement home, sent one of his nurses to visit her, and even gave money when it was needed to ease the strain of her poverty until she should be well and strong.  Soon scores of the mothers of Deborah’s children were singing the praises of Doctor Baird.

Then he began coming to the house.

“I was right,” thought Roger complacently.

He laid in a stock of fine cigars and some good port and claret, too; and on evenings when Baird came to dine, Roger by a genial glow and occasional jocular ironies would endeavor to drag the talk away from clinics, adenoids, children’s teeth, epidemics and the new education.  But no joke was so good that Deborah could not promptly match it with some amusing little thing which one of her children had said or done.  For she had a mother’s instinct for bragging fondly of her brood.  It was deep, it was uncanny, this queer community motherhood.

“This poor devil,” Roger thought, with a pitying glance at Baird, “might just as well be marrying a widow with three thousand brats.”

But Baird did not seem in the least dismayed.  On the contrary, his assurance appeared to be deepening every week, and with it Deborah’s air of alarm.  For his clinic, as it swiftly grew, he secured financial backing from his rich women patients uptown, many of them childless and only too ready to respond to the appeals he made to them.  And one Saturday evening at the house, while dining with Roger and Deborah, he told of an offer he had had from a wealthy banker’s widow to build a maternity hospital.  He talked hungrily of all it could do in co-operation with the school.  He said nothing of the obvious fact that it would require his whole time, but Roger thought of that at once, and by the expression on Deborah’s face he saw she was thinking, too.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
His Family from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.