his mother home?â She poured herself a glass of water.
Ingeborg nodded. âHe said heâd come back for you if you wanted.â She put a wedge of pie in front of her daughter without being asked.
âTakk, Mor. No, Iâll walk with Trygve and Miriam. Who won the game?â
âThe old guys did.â Manny shuddered and shook his head. âCan you believe that?â
âAnd the final score?â
âFive to three.â Trygve, glum as a grave digger, wagged his head. âWe had three innings with no scoring, tied up. And then Father Devlin hit a homer with one on base. End of game. Unbelievable.â
âWho woulda thought some duffer that old could hit so hard?â Manny took the final bite of his sandwich. âAnd that cow kicked the bucket over for Andrew tonight. I think she was getting even for us being late.â
Ingeborg looked at Dr. Astrid in amazement. âAll that was going on when we were in there? I never heard a thing.â
Dr. Astrid smiled. âWe were busy, Mor.â
âIf there is nothing else to be done, I should probably get back to the boardinghouse.â Miriam fought back a yawn. âI know Iâm not on regular duty tomorrow, but I would like to go in and catch up on things, if that is all right.â
âDid you sleep on the train?â Dr. Astrid asked.
âSome, but I think it is catching up with me.â
âWell, the milking is done, so Iâm sure Trygve wonât mind walking you back, unless you want a buggy ride.â
âOh no. Walking sounds wonderful. Are the mosquitoes still around?â Miriam tried to hide another yawn. âSorry.â
Trygve pushed back his chair. âAre you sure you can walk that far?â His grin said he was teasing.
âIâll check our patient first and then Iâll be ready.â
âIâll set Mr. Munro up with the cot and check your patient. Iâm going to sleep upstairs, so we donât have to disturb them. You go ahead.â Ingeborg gave Astrid and Miriam each a hug. âJust think, we had another baby born here, like you said. We are so very blessed.â
Miriam smiled back. âIâll never forget this.â
âNo, you wonât. Your first baby will always hold a specialplace in your heart. I remember mine, and it was clear back in Norway. Oh, so many years ago. I was in training to be a midwife. Thatâs all I ever really wanted to do.â
âGood night, Tante Ingeborg. Thank you for insisting we have dinner here and the ball game. Some things will never be forgotten.â
âLike Benny riding the horse?â She smiled at Manny. âAll thanks to you.â
Manny ducked his chin. ââTwarnât nothinâ.â He frowned and his head kept on wagging. âWe gotta help that boy.â
Trygve gave Ingeborg a raised-eyebrow look.
Ingeborg asked, âDo you want a lantern?â
âNo. Thereâs plenty of moonlight.â He stood up.
âIâd almost forgotten what the moon looked like when I was back in Chicago. You just never notice it much. Or maybe Iâm just not usually outside after dark.â Miriam accepted the shawl Ingeborg handed to her. âItâs that cold out?â
âThe sun goes down and it cools off fast. Iâll see you tomorrow. I have errands in town.â Ingeborg paused. âYou do a lot of sewing, Miriam. Right?â
âI have, but not lately. At least not since I started nursing school, other than the dress I sewed for myself when I was here. Mrs. Jeffers has a very nice sewing machine.â
âI thought so. Would you like to help me pick out some fabric for Emmy? All her clothes are way too small.â
âI want to go over to the hospital for a while but I would be pleased to help you. Iâve done a lot of sewing for my sisters.â She paused. âThatâs what I could do for Christmasâsew a dress for each of
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