infant, maybe a little older than three, looking up at them with large, vacuous eyes. He jammed a tiny finger in his nose and plucked out a nice gift for them.
Nurse, clearly unaware of Isabella and Randall standing on the doorstep, lumbered forward with squirming dirt-eater still trapped beneath her arm and a wet, dripping washcloth in her hand. âClose that door. Youâre⦠Oh heavens, callers,â she exclaimed with the same enthusiasm that one has for tax collectors.
Dirt-eater was more hospitable. He emitted a happy shriek and clapped his hands as his nurse set him down.
Randall yanked off his hat, placed it over his heart, and grabbed Isabellaâs elbow. âPardon me, maâam. Iâm Mr. Randy. A respectable, âardworking fellow I am. And this is me sister Izzy May. Iâm requesting an audience with the âonorable Mr. Busby.â He lowered his voice, leaned in, and raised a brow. âRegarding an extremely serious personal matter.â
The way the nurse looked at him, her eyes weary and battle-hardened, made Randall think that the only matters that swayed her were of the magnitude of houses burning, children falling in wells, and being down to her last drop of elderberry wine. Before the put-upon woman could speak, a loud, high-pitched voice pierced the hall. âWhy, sheâs increasing!â
Around the hefty nurse stepped a pretty brunette just a few years older than Isabella and Randall. She wore an expansive, bell-like skirt layered in ruffles, and her corset was laced so tightly that it pushed up her ample breasts, forming a shelf of flesh below her neck. In her arms she held a fat, gurgling baby, whose chubby red face looked as if it would burst out of its lace cap. âI just love babies. Yes, I dosy-wosy,â she told the infant. âI just adore the little-wittle things. Ouch! Donât pull Mamaâs hair! Stop!â She ripped one of her spiral curls from the babyâs grasp. âSo how much longer?â She gazed at Isabella with bright, happy eyes, unfettered by intelligence or self-awareness.
âLonger?â Isabellaâs brows curved in confusion.
âUntil you have the baby-waby, dearie.â
Isabellaâs lips quivered. She looked up at Randall, uncertainty in her eyes. He saw the gaping flaw in his brilliant schemeâneither he nor Isabella knew a thing about infants. Well, aside from how they were made. After all, she had explained the process to him years before, and he had done a great deal of practicing since thenâthat is, in the act of making babies, but never actually creating one.
âFive months?â Isabella ventured as she scratched her gown above the bulge.
âJust five?â the woman in the mountainous skirts exclaimed. âThis must not be your first little darling-warling. I was an absolute house at just the third month of my second dearsy. A house, I tell you. And what an active baby she was. I couldnât sleep for her kicking me. And mind you, that sweet little hunny-bunny decided to turn around just before she was born.â
âTurn around?â Isabella echoed.
âHer little broadside first,â the woman explained, and turned her bundle of lace and joy to illustrate. âSixteen hours I labored before the midwife got the forceps andââ
âMrs. Busby,â the nurse cut in, âremember what your husband said about sharing too many unnec essary details.â
But it was too late. Isabellaâs mouth had dropped in horror. She began to edge to the door, but Randall held her tight. No, love, we are in this folly together.
âOh, donât you fret now,â Mrs. Busby assured Isabella. âIt was nothing compared to the first, as you well know.â
The woman waited for a response. Isabella had none to give but a high, nervous squeak as a bead of perspiration rolled down the side of her face.
âWell,â Mrs. Busby continued, â I
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