At the first glow of daybreak Ma
turned into the driveway and flowed up the drive to the power shed. Morley Perkins, landlord of their farm on
Jericho, and master gardener, was tucked tight in behind Ma and before he'd
pulled to a stop, Claire James, with Trella Mead
beside her, pulled in past the little arborvitae tree that during the previous
day they’d named for Edith. Behind
Claire, Jane Toberton turned her heavy team of
stamping Percherons, their heads bobbing, nostrils
steaming, into the yard. Lorraine Benson
rode in astride a livery horse named Boliver. Boliver labored
under a prodigious pack tied behind the saddle and close on his tail, Clifford
James guided his husky Clydesdales.
Clydis and Clarence stood on their rear
stoop. Old Sniffer
had signaled 'friendly, all is well' and they'd looked from the kitchen
window. Clarence realized at once what
was taking place. "They're for
you," he said reaching her hand, "and Edith."
Clydis looked on in wonder. She felt her heart pounding at the base of her
throat. Her face white, she moved
tightly against him and he folded his arms about her. She wanted to cry, to shout with joy, to run
to them and to hug them. She hadn't
known them. She'd remained aloof from
them, but they were there, there in the yard for her, for Edith, for
Clarence. "Thank, God," she
breathed on his neck. "Oh, thank
God for such people."
The mere mention that "Edith
had no coat, no clothes for that matter," had started it. Grandma Emma had gone to Trella
Mead's house after she and Robert had left the farm on Jericho the previous evening. Hoping for an early start the next morning,
she'd expressed the need for cotton cloth for Edith's diapers. The truth of Clydis’
and Edith's condition emerged as Emma visited with Trella
who owned the yard goods store. Trella had taken it from there.
She telephoned Claire James first
because she guessed that Claire and Clydis were about
the same size and build. Claire
telephoned Lorraine Benson, asking her to take her shift at the shop so that
she could help Clydis. Lorraine would hear none of it, suggesting
that Trella close the store at least for the
morning. Trella
agreed, realizing at once Lorraine's compassion.
Lorraine had just finished a beautiful set
of percales for their bedstead. Without
hesitation, she spread one of the sheets on the floor and began pulling out
bureau drawers. Her very best under
things went onto the pile, and were followed by dresses and stockings and
shoes. "Tie these," she'd said
to Ed. The second sheet also became a
bundle, a bulky one, because it contained a high chair. The chair had been Naddy's,
loaned to Lorraine; Lorraine was four months pregnant.
Clydis clung to Clarence, her legs weak,
her back shivered, knowing her hair was a mess, not knowing what to do,
wondering how this'd all happened. Her
heart thumped and she tried to swallow its beat down from her throat.
In addition to Trella
Mead’s efforts, the Toberton household had been a
beehive since hearing that Clydis and Edith were in
trouble. Helgie
Perkins had arrived at the Toberton’s on that
afternoon to midwife for Billie. Billie
was okay now, but for being a bit surly because they told her to stay put, that
they would handle it, that she, they promised, would get to see Clydis and Edith soon enough.
***
pleading; help us, help us, please, we will
not let her die.
"Get Billie,"