Read The Orphan and the Mouse Online
Authors: Martha Freeman
Mrs. Dimitri sighed, sat up, rearranged her hospital gown. “All right. Show me again what this is.”
The page on the clipboard was typewritten on heavy legal stock. Mrs. Dimitri's full name had already been entered by Judge Mewhinney's clerk, as had the date. All the young
mother had to do was sign on the appropriate line. In fact, the wording had nothing to do with medical procedures. Rather, by signing it, Janet Rose Dimitri agreed to give up all parental rights to her newborn son and, under the laws of the City and County of Philadelphia, thereby release him for adoption.
For Mrs. George, this was the moment of truth. Should the girl actually read the documents, she might refuse to sign, might even call out and make a scene. In that case, Mrs. George was prepared to apologize, say she'd made a mistake, and beat a hasty retreat. She had never had to do that before . . . but she was ready.
Mrs. George felt her heart bump, but her voice was soothing. “Go ahead, dear.”
At last, Mrs. Dimitri took the pen, wrote her name in neat, round cursive, handed back the clipboard, and subsided into the pillows.
Seeing the signature, Mrs. George smiled a genuine smile. “I'll just take him, then.” She reached down, slid her soft, manicured hands beneath the warm bundle, and lifted.
Well fed and comfortable, the baby boy nestled into her shoulder.
“Good-bye, dear. And thank you,” said Mrs. George; then, in three quick strides, she was safe in the hallway.
“Nurse?” Mrs. Dimitri called after her. “Nurse?”
But it was too late. Looking straight ahead, the baby thief strode briskly toward the exit to the alley where her car was waiting.
Caro couldn't imagine why Mrs. George had called her into her office that afternoon. She was sure she hadn't done anything wrong. But Mrs. George was not in the habit of inviting children to her office to praise them.
Halfway down the corridor she figured it out, or thought she did. It was because she had rescued that mouse the other night. Had to be. Caro hadn't smiled since Miss Grahame's visit, but she did nowâeven if she was about to get in trouble. The mouse had been so dear, seemingly so grateful and polite. Caro knew how Mrs. George hated mice, and rescuing this one was the closest she had ever come to an act of rebellion.
As for the delayed consequences, maybe Matron Polly hadn't told Mrs. George till now?
Caro knew she owed Mrs. George everything. Without her, Caro would have been sent to some terrible place after her mother died. Grateful, Caro had repaid Mrs. George as best she could, doing small things, like wiping the jam off Annabelle's nose, but also more important onesâlike setting a good example at chores and at school.
This bargain between them was never spelled out, but Caro thought it created a bond. Not that Caro loved
Mrs. George, exactly. Mrs. George wasn't soft the way a person you loved would be. She was strong and independent instead. And she was one more thing, an important thing. She was good.
Caro knew that. Everybody knew that. There were plaques all over Mrs. George's office wall attesting to it, and photos of her with important people like the president's wife, Mrs. Truman, and the governor's wife, Mrs. Duff. There were cricles from newspapers and magazines articles by the dozen.
Once in a while, however, even good Mrs. George lost her temperâlike that time when she boxed Jimmy's ears.
This was on Caro's mind as she knocked on the office door.
“Come in,” said Mrs. George.
Caro opened the door, noticing as she did that the headmistress's expression was mild, even sympathetic. So it wasn't the mouse, then. But what?
“Sit down, Carolyn,” Mrs. George said. “I just wanted to tell you how sorry I am about the remark Miss Grahame made. It was thoughtless. I'm sure she did not intend to hurt your feelings.”
Caro was so taken aback she didn't reply right away. Finally, she said, “No, ma'am,” then, “Is that all, ma'am?”
“No.” Mrs. George rose from her chair. “Come with me. I have a little job for you to do.”
Baffled, Caro followed Mrs. George up the stairs to the second floor and down the hallway past the classrooms. When
at last they turned into the nursery, Caro saw that one of the bassinettes was occupied.
“Oh!” she gasped, and ran to look. “It's a tiny one! Boy or girl?”
“Boy,” said Mrs. George.
Caro studied the baby, who looked toward her with deep-blue unfocused eyes. His face was red and scrunched under a fuzzy thatch of pale hair. On the side of his head, just above the ears, were pale purple bruises. Caro knew what that meant. The doctor had used a forceps to help with delivery, and the forceps had left the marks.
Bruises and all, the boy was beautiful. “Why is he here at Cherry Street?” Caro asked.
Mrs. George pursed her lips. “A terrible thing. The police found him abandoned on the doorstep of one of the precinct houses. Not even a note. He's lucky a stray dog didn't take him.”
Caro shuddered, but she was not shocked. The children at Cherry Street knew bad things happened in the world. Some of the children had suffered very bad things themselves, or seen other children suffer, and they talked about it. How could they not?
“But now he's safe,” said Mrs. George briskly, “and just awakened from his nap. Matron Polly has changed his diaper, powdered him, and given him formula in a bottle. He'll be fed again at five p.m.”
“You mean I'm to take care of him till then?”
Among the items in the cupboard the Cherry Street Home provided for Caro's possessions was a baby doll given by church ladies four Christmases ago. She didn't play with it anymore. She couldn't without being teased. But every time she opened her cupboard and saw it, she thought of how it would have been to have a baby sister or brotherâa family of her own.
Now, at least for a little while, she'd have a baby to herself, something wriggly and warm and special, just for Caro.
“Matron Polly will assist if you need her,” said Mrs. George. “Keep him comfortable. Carry him if he's fussy. Lay him down in his crib if he's not. Young ones like this sleep most of the time.”
“May I show him to the other girls?” Caro asked.
“Yes, provided they don't have colds and they wash their hands,” said Mrs. George. “You don't have a cold, do you?”
“No, ma'am,” said Caro. “What's his name?”
“He doesn't have one,” said Mrs. George. “The birth certificate, when the clerk prepares it, will just say âBaby Boy,' the date he was found, and the location.”
“May I name him?” Caro asked.
“For the afternoon, I suppose you may.”
A few minutes later, Caro walked into the main parlor with a baby in her arms . . . and caused a commotion.
“Can I hold him?” “LuckyâI want a baby to play with!” “What's his name?”
“Charlie.” Caro had named him after her war hero father. “And you may hold him once you've washed your hands.”
The three intermediate girls went to the washroom and returned, still clamoring to hold the baby.
“Can I feed him?” Barbara took Charlie.
“No, me!” said Virginia.
“EwâI think he's stinky,” said Betty.
“He is not,” said Caro.
“What are those marks on his head? They look like ink spots,” Barbara said.
“It's from when he was born,” Virginia explained. “If there's trouble and the baby gets stuck, the doctor uses an instrument called forceps. Sometimes they leave a mark.”
Caro already knew this and had stopped listening to her friends. Instead, she was thinking. The use of forceps meant Charlie had been delivered in a hospital. Delivered in a hospital . . . then abandoned at a police station? It didn't make sense. Was Mrs. George mistaken?
The drowsy infant was passed from girl to girl under the watchful eye of Matron Polly, who did not interfere because she believed a quiet baby was a happy baby. Charlie himself dozed most of the time and made funny faces when he was awake. His best trick, the girls agreed, was yawning.
While Caro found Charlie endlessly fascinating, the other girls eventually grew bored. When he started to cryâa shrill, breathy, birdlike soundâthey went looking for other things to do. Caro found Matron Polly in the kitchen helping Mrs. Spinelli with dinner. Matron Polly looked at her watch. “Another forty-five minutes yet.”
“But he's hungry now,” Caro said.
Polly shrugged. “That can't be helped. If he doesn't have a schedule, he'll become a little tyrant.”
Caro knew hunger made your stomach hurt, and she couldn't bear the idea of that for Charlie. What did a tiny baby know about schedules?
Caro argued, but Matron Polly only shrugged. “I didn't make the world.”
To console him, Caro held the baby against her shoulder, went up the stairs, and walked in and out of the empty classrooms, narrating all that she saw: “This is the American flag, this is a map of Pennsylvania, these white things are called chalk, these are books, these are the letters of the alphabet . . .”
Baby Charlie listened for a while, whimpered, wailed, and settled down again. Finally, it was five o'clock, and Caro returned to the nursery, where Matron Polly placed a bottle in a silver contraption that warmed formula to precise body temperature.
Caro handed Charlie over reluctantly.
“Can I take care of him again tomorrow?” she asked.
Matron Polly shrugged. “I don't see why not.”
There had never been a Mr. George.
At twenty-one, the age when most women of her era married, pretty Helen George had had her share of suitors. But she didn't care much for any of them, and certainly had no intention of sharing her life with one. Having grown up in Pennsylvania coal country with too large a family and too little money, Helen believed she had had quite enough of sharing for one lifetime.
But this was 1925, and a single womanâa spinsterâwas seen as pitiable or suspect. Something must be wrong. Normal girls married. So when she left home for the big city of Philadelphia, Helen invented a handsome young husband, named him Douglas after her favorite film star, then killed him off with a rare, unpronounceable disease.
Voilà !
In the eyes of the world, Helen George was now a respectable young widow.
In Philadelphia, Mrs. George studied bookkeeping at a secretarial school, worked hard, and lived frugally in a rooming house where one of the other lodgers introduced her to a small-time bootlegger who was better at selling illegal rum than keeping track of profits.
The 1920s were the era of Prohibition, when the government made alcohol illegal to prevent people from drinking. Like a lot of good ideas, it didn't work. People continued to drink, but now they bought their beer, wine, and liquor from enterprising criminals who smuggled it from abroad or made it themselves.
If Helen George had any qualms about involving herself with crime, she got over them when she saw how much money she was making. All her life she had scrimped and saved. All her life she had been poor. Now the steadily increasing sums in her bankbook told her those days were over. She finished school, bought a small house and more fashionable clothes, then found a daytime job in a lawyer's officeâall while continuing to keep books for the bootlegger. By the time Prohibition ended in 1933, he had expanded operations to the point that he was a significant force in the Philadelphia underworld.