Authors: Lisa Colozza Cocca
The smell coming from Baby Girl’s diaper took over the conversation. “I need to change her diaper,” I said. This time it was Lily’s turn to nod her head.
“I bet a year ago you would never have pictured yourself doing that so many times a day,” Lily smiled. “Raising a baby is a lot of work,” she said, walking out the door.
With Lily gone and Baby Girl with a clean bottom, I sat down in the rocking chair. I got to thinking about Lily’s words. They seemed odd coming from a woman who didn’t cook her own food, do her own laundry, or even open her own door. I changed a baby diaper for the first time when I was seven years old, and from that day on it was my job at home. Mama did it when I was at school, but once I got home it was one of my duties. Looking back, school was a real break for me from wiping bottoms, filling bottles, and looking out for my little brothers and sisters. I didn’t see it that way back then, but then again, I didn’t give a whole lot of thought to all my chores, either. It was just the way it was, and Mama and my brother Joseph didn’t have it much better than me.
The biggest difference between Mama, Joseph, and me was that for the past year I’d known my life would be different someday. I don’t believe Mama or Joseph ever held that idea in their heads. I’m sure if Mama saw me here rocking a sleeping baby in my arms, she would laugh at the idea that I had escaped my old life. In some ways, she would be right. I still wasn’t seeing the world, or having adventures with friends. My days were mainly spent taking care of others. But some things had changed. The people around me wanted to help me; they wanted better for me. I needed to keep reminding myself of that.
A tap at the door pulled me out of my head. I laid Baby Girl down in her crib and went to the door. “Miss Lily would like you to come to her study now,” Mrs. Harper said. I looked back toward the crib. “I brought you a baby monitor,” Mrs. Harper said. “You put this piece near the crib and carry this piece with you. Then you’ll be able to hear the baby from any room in the house.”
I thanked her and set up the monitor on the table next to the rocking chair. I was surprised to see Mrs. Harper still in my doorway when I turned around. I guess she had orders to make sure I showed up in the study. I was nervous about the meeting, so as usual I started babbling on about anything. “Those baby monitors are a real clever idea,” I said. “Now I need someone to invent a Rosie monitor. Her room is about a mile away from mine. I don’t like the feeling she can’t talk to me if she needs me. I know she has that nurse, but still …”
“The house has an intercom system.” Mrs. Harper patted my arm. “Later, I’ll show you how to use it. You can call her room, and she can call yours.”
I was trembling by the time I walked into Lily’s office. Lily introduced me to her lawyer, but I was so nervous I didn’t hear the name and was too embarrassed to tell them I missed it. After shaking my hand, he nodded in the direction of a chair and said, “Please, be seated.” I did as I was told, balancing my behind on the edge of the chair. “I need you to write down some basic information for me,” the lawyer said. “I need your full name, date and place of birth, parents’ names, and your mother’s maiden name. List the schools you’ve attended, and the year you stopped attending.” He handed me a pad of paper and a pen.
“I don’t know my mother’s maiden name,” I whispered.
“Just do the best you can,” he said.
When I finished, I handed the pad back to him. He looked it over for a minute and said, “Very good. Now comes the hard part. I need you to tell me everything you can remember about finding the baby. Where and when did you find her? What was she wearing? Did you find anything else in the vicinity of the baby? Did you notice anyone else hanging around?”
I took a deep breath and looked at Lily. She crossed the room and sat in a chair next to me. She held my hands in hers. “If my being here helps you tell your story, then I’ll stay. If it would be easier for you without me here, then I’ll leave. You decide.”
I didn’t believe there was anything that could make telling my story easy. “You can stay,” I said. I was surprised to hear those words come out of my mouth, but the truth was Lily was trying to help me, despite learning about my lies. No matter what her words were saying, I knew she wanted to stay, and I owed her that much. I rubbed my finger back and forth across my half of the baby monitor before speaking again. Then I started my story and I didn’t stop for as much as a deep breath until I got it all out.
“So you have no idea who the baby’s birth mother is?” the lawyer asked.
“No, sir,” I answered.
“None whatsoever?”
“No, sir,” I repeated.
The lawyer rubbed his chin with one hand and tapped the desktop with the other. “How old was the baby when you found her?”
“Maybe a few hours. Maybe a few days,” I shrugged. “She couldn’t have been older than that. She still had her belly button stump, and she still had the new baby sleepiness.”
“And you saw no references to a missing baby in any of the papers you checked?”
I shook my head. “No, sir.”
The lawyer turned his attention to Lily. “As I told you before, getting Becky’s documentation should not prove difficult. Straightening out the situation with the baby is another matter. Give me a day or two to see what I can come up with, and we can proceed from there.” He stood up and looked at me again. “Are you sure you don’t want to go home to your family? Do you want someone to let them know you are safe and well? We wouldn’t have to disclose your location.”
When I told my story, I had left out the part about Daddy telling me he didn’t need to hear from me anymore. I had an ache inside of me from wanting to see Mama and the kids. Daddy had made up his mind, though, and reaching out to any of them would just stir Daddy’s anger. They didn’t need me bringing more trouble down on them. I looked at the lawyer. “No, sir. No one needs to hear from me.”
While Lily accompanied her lawyer to the door, I made my way down to Rosie’s room. Rosie’s eyes lit up when I came in. “I was hoping you would come by for a visit,” she said. “This house is so big it hardly feels like we’re living together. Where’s Georgia Rose?”
“She’s napping,” I said. I showed her the baby monitor and told her what Mrs. Harper had said about the intercom system.
“Well, I like that idea,” she said. “But I prefer sitting face to face with you over talking to you through the walls. What have you been up to this morning? I hope you’re getting some rest. You’ve been carrying too heavy a load for months now. You deserve a little time to catch your breath.”
I told Rosie about my meeting with Lily and her lawyer. She wanted an instant replay of the meeting, and I did my best to accommodate her. When I had finished, she asked, “That’s it? He didn’t say anything else?”
“I don’t think so,” I answered. “I was real nervous, so I hope I didn’t miss anything important.”
Rosie reached over and patted my hands. “Of course, you were nervous,” she said. “From now on, I want to be there when you meet with that lawyer. I have a few questions of my own for him, and two sets of ears are always better than one.”
I looked at Rosie for a moment before shifting my glance to the floor. Rosie wanted things between us to be business as usual, but I couldn’t help but feel like a wall had been built between us. No matter how many times she explained her actions, it all came back to the fact she’d betrayed my trust. Who knew what other promises would be broken?
Baby Girl’s voice came through the monitor and stopped the conversation. She had woken up from her nap like a lamb, and was cooing and making all kinds of happy sounds. “I need to get upstairs,” I said.
Rosie pulled herself up out of the chair and wrapped her arms around me. “I know I’ve hurt you, and I’m truly sorry. I’ve told you why I had to tell Lily, but there’s no excuse for not trusting you enough to talk it over with you before I shared your secrets. You should have been a part of the decision-making process. We can’t undo what’s done, but I hope you can find it in your heart to forgive me.”
Tears welled in my eyes. Rosie was right, but I knew it might take some time for forgiveness to take hold of my heart.
We split the next couple of days between Lily’s house and the Second Hand Rose. I collected the cash and important papers Rosie needed from the store, and boxed the remaining merchandise to donate to the church. Mornings I spent tending to Baby Girl and Rosie, and after lunch Baby Girl and I rode into town with John. I packed up boxes, and John hauled them over to the church.
On the first day, Baby Girl seemed as happy as I was to be back in the store. By the second day, I was spending most of my time packing with one hand and holding her on my hip with the other. By late afternoon, I was questioning the wisdom of my bringing her with me. Lily and Rosie had offered to keep watch over her at home, but I had refused their help. Rosie wasn’t up to changing and carrying a baby around, and I couldn’t picture Lily knowing how. I figured the work would fall on the shoulders of Mrs. Harper, and she had enough to do without adding diaper duty to her chore list. I knew I might have been thinking unfairly of Lily. After all, she had been planning on becoming a mama. But the truth is the
idea
of taking care of a baby is real different from actually taking care of one, and I didn’t think Lily knew that yet.
We were finishing up for the day when Dottie came through the door. “Ray said I should leave you be so you can get your work done, but I needed to see how everybody is doing. How is Rosie? Is she getting stronger? You girls moving out to Lily’s house must be a real blessing for Lily. How is she doing? I don’t need to ask how this little one is doing. Georgia looks as happy as a hound on the trail of a jackrabbit. How about you? You look a little tired. Do you need some help with all this packing up? I guess the rumor’s true, then. The Second Hand Rose really is closing down. The reverend’s looking for volunteers to figure out what goes to families, what goes to the rummage sale, and what goes to the church nursery. You know, that’s a real nice cash register. I can’t imagine the church will have any use for that. You know who would, though? Pete Garcia, that’s who. I don’t think he has anything in that bike shop but an old tin box to keep his money and receipts in.” Dottie paused to catch her breath.
I took advantage of the moment. “We’re all fine,” I said. “We were just finishing up for the day. I appreciate your idea about the register. I think Rosie would want Pete to have it. I’ll let Rosie and Lily know you were asking after them. I don’t want to keep you; I know you must be getting ready for the dinner crowd.” I started walking toward the door. As I reached for the handle, Dottie stopped me in my tracks.
“Lily’s lawyer stopped in the diner for coffee the other day. He was asking about you.”
“How do you know Lily’s lawyer?” I asked.
“I don’t, really,” Dottie said. “When he started asking questions about you, I asked him who he was and what business you were of his. He told me he was Lily’s lawyer and that he had just met you. He said he was just wondering how a young girl like you got along in this town. I told him you have lots of friends here, and he won’t find a single soul in town with a bad word to say about you. He seemed happy to hear that.”
I looked at Dottie. Here I was wishing she hadn’t noticed me in the store, and there she was defending me to a stranger. I moved over and hugged her with my free arm. “I noticed the same fellow’s car driving straight through town a few minutes before I came over here,” Dottie said. “You make sure Rosie knows if she needs help with anything, Ray and I will do everything we can for her. Do you need a ride out to the house?”
“No,” I said. “John will be back from the church in a minute or two. Thank you anyway.” I watched Dottie walk back across the street before I bundled up Baby Girl and walked to the bike shop. Pete greeted me like a long-lost relative. He hugged me so tight, I was afraid Baby Girl might get squashed between us. He was grateful for the offer of the cash register and wasted no time finding a wagon to load it into. A little wooden fence surrounded the back half of the wagon. Pete spread a blanket across the bottom and said, “Why don’t we give Georgia a ride back to the Second Hand Rose? It will be fun for her, and it will give you a little break. She looks like she is glued to your hip.”