baby interrupted.
"Baby love pritty--Baby love--" she held out two beseeching dimpled 
hands toward the red balloon. 
"Patience, you can't have it," cried Lydia. "It--it'll make your tummy 
ache. I'll buy you one when you're older." 
The black-eyed child, holding the red balloon, suddenly kissed little 
Patience, who was the pet of all the children in the neighborhood, and 
put the string of her balloon into the dimpled hand. "I had the 
circus--you can have the balloon," she said. 
Lydia jerked the string away and held it out to the owner. 
"We're no cheerity charities, Margery," she said. "I'll get Patience a 
balloon." 
"You're an awful liar and a cruel beast, Lydia!" cried Margery. She 
snatched the string and tied it about the baby's wrist. "You know you 
can't buy her one and you know she'll cry herself sick for one, now 
she's seen mine, and I guess I love her as much as you do." 
Lydia looked from the cherub in the perambulator, crowing ecstatically 
over the red bubble that tugged at her wrist, to the defiant Margery. 
"I'll let her have it, Margery," she said reluctantly. "I'll make you a 
doll's high chair." 
"All right," said Margery, nonchalantly. "Face tag! So long!" 
Lydia ran the perambulator along the board walk. The street was 
macadamized and bordered with thrifty maple trees. Back of the maple 
trees were frame houses, of cheap and stupid construction. Before one 
of these Lydia paused. It was a dingy brown house, of the type known 
as "story and a half." There was a dormer window at the top and a bow 
window in the ground floor and a tiny entry porch at the front. 
Lydia opened the gate in the picket fence and tugged the perambulator 
through and up to the porch.
"There, baby mine, shall Lydia take you in for your supper?" 
"Supper," cooed little Patience, lifting her arms. 
Lydia lifted her to the porch with surprising ease. The little two year 
old should have been no light weight for the little mother of twelve. 
She stood on the porch, watching Lydia arrange Florence Dombey in 
her place in the perambulator. Her resemblance to Lydia was marked. 
The same dusty gold hair though lighter, the square little shoulders, and 
fine set of the head. The red balloon tugging at her wrist, her soiled 
little white dress blowing in the summer breeze, she finally grew 
impatient of Lydia's attentions to Florence Dombey. 
"Baby eat now," she cried with a stamp of her small foot. 
Lydia laughed. She ran up the steps, took the baby's hand and led her 
through the entry into a square little room, evidently the parlor of the 
home. It was dusty and disorderly. The center-table of fine old 
mahogany was littered with pipes and newspapers. A patent rocker was 
doing duty as a clothes rack for hats and coats. A mahogany desk was 
almost indistinguishable under a clutter of doll's furniture. The sunset 
glow pouring through the window disclosed rolls of dust on the faded 
red Brussels carpet. 
Lydia disgorged the contents of her blouse upon the desk, then 
followed little Patience into the next room. This was larger than the 
first and was evidently the dining-room and sitting-room. A huge old 
mahogany table and sideboard, ill kept and dusty, filled the bow 
window end of the room. Opposite the sideboard was a couch, draped 
with a red and green chenille spread. The floor was covered with oil 
cloth. 
A short, stout old woman was setting the table. She had iron gray hair. 
Her face was a broad wreath of wrinkles, surrounding bespectacled 
black eyes and a thin mouth that never quite concealed a very white and 
handsome set of false teeth. 
"See! Liz! See!" cried little Patience, pattering up to the old woman
with the tugging balloon. 
"Ain't that grand!" said Lizzie. "Where'd you git the money, Lydia? 
Baby's milk's in the tin cup on the kitchen table. Your father's home. 
You'd better fry the steak. He complains so about it when I do it." 
Lydia left the baby clinging to Lizzie's skirts and went on into the 
kitchen. Her father was washing his hands at the sink. 
"Hello, Dad!" she said. The child had a peculiar thread of richness in 
her voice when she spoke to little Patience and it was apparent again as 
she greeted the man at the sink. He turned toward her. 
"Well, young woman, it's about time you got home," he said. "Baby all 
right?" 
Lydia nodded and turned toward the litter of dishes and paper parcels 
on the kitchen table. Amos Dudley at this time was about forty years 
old,--a thin man of medium weight, his brown hair already gray at the 
temples. Lydia evidently got from him the blue of her eyes and the 
white    
    
		
	
	
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