grandmother, did you?â Loringâs smile widened. âGreat character, isnât she? You ought to try to pin her down, sometime; ask her which James is her forefather. Sheâll begin to hedge, get on her dignity, imply that itâs a question of world politics, and snub the life out of you.â
âThrones would shake if she told all she knew?â
âThey would; like jelly.â
âLoring ran me down there afterâafterwards, to look at the boy,â said Bartram.
âSo thatâs where you got to?â Georgeâs face expressed surprise. âWe couldnât imagineââ
âYes. He would do it. I donât think thatâs much of a place for a little fellow to convalesce in. Mrs. Stuart seems willing to hand him over.â
âYouâre weakening,â said Loring, triumphantly.
âWell, I am. Oh, bring him along, bring him along! That is, if Miss Ridgeman will stand by, and youâll let your Serena and her husband come over and do the housework. Iâm not going to leave Annie here when I leave; sheâs heading for a breakup, or Iâm much mistaken.â
Loring and Miss Ridgeman exchanged glances of mutual pleasure and congratulation, and the nurse, evidently heartened by her employerâs reference to her, came forward and offered him the tumbler; it contained a thick, yellowish fluid from which Bartram winced away in disgust.
âWhatâs that?â he inquired.
âOnly your malted milk, Mr. Bartram.â
âTake it out of my sight, for goodnessâ sake! Iâll consider a drink of rye whisky.â
âDoctor Loringââ
âBother Doctor Loring. I wonât have that stuff.â
âOh, yes, you will, old boy; no whisky for you, this morning; that caffeine I shot into you is all the stimulant you need for a while. Down with it, now; you havenât eaten a mouthful of solid food forâdays, is it, Miss Ridgeman?â asked Loring.
âNot much food, Doctor.â
âDown with it.â
Bartram took the glass, frowned at it, and emptied it. Miss Ridgeman removed it, and herself, from the room. Mr. George Bartram, who had been sitting as if dumfounded, asked: âWhatâs all this about the gypsy?â
âOhâLoring thinks I might take him in.â
âTake him in?â George Bartram stared at Loring.
âYes. Adopt him, you know.â
âOne of my prescriptions.â Loring looked down at his patient with a smile, patted him on the shoulder, and said in a low voice, âGood for you.â
âAdopt that kid?â George Bartramâs face was a mask of incredulity.
Mrs. Bartram, who had seemed almost as greatly taken aback as her husband showed himself to be, intervened:
âWhat a perfectly lovely idea, Carroll! Perfectly lovely. But do you know all about him? They are so careful in the hospitals, and nurseries, and places; they never let people adopt children if they donât know the inheritance. It might be so bad.â She, also, glanced with surprise and reproof at Loring, who answered cheerfully:
âI think itâs much more sporting to take them sight unseen, as you might say. If he turns out a horse thief or a nitwit, Carroll can turn the psychiatrists on him. Whatever happens to him, heâll be the dickens of a lot better off than heâd be in a Boston slum.â
âWell, I think itâs just lovely. Donât you think itâs lovely, George?â
The warning note in his wifeâs voice was not unheeded by her husband. He said: âCertainly, certainly,â and looked bewildered.
âAnd now to the real business in hand.â Bartram turned to a small table at his elbow, and lifted therefrom a good-sized leather box, which he placed on Mrs. Bartramâs lap. âHere you are, Adèle; I hereby appoint you guardian of this on behalf of your daughter, Irma Bartram, and I hope youâll get
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