6th Aprm

My Stomach in a Great Burst of Generosity

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:53 am

August 30

My stomach, in a great burst of generosity, gave up its morning exercise and I woke up feeling wonderful. Not ill, not pregnant. And what a day! The end of summer and the whole world singing, the river burbling down below the house, a nice warm breeze trickling down the back of my neck, and a simply gorgeous breakfast of hot cakes on the terrace overlooking the river. And much gay laughter with our week-end guests. They are old friends and among the very, very few left who know nothing of my spilled secret. (They live in Washington, D. c., and, with all the secrets there, why should they worry about mine?)

Some other dear friends-more than dear friends since they chartered a forty-foot yacht for the season-called us right after breakfast and invited us for a cruise. They don’t know about the little mother to be, either; they’ve been living at sea. I wore my most fetching shorts, and I’m sure no one suspected as I held my breath and my stomach in and stood poised at the prow, the wind blowing back my hair just like in the movies. Guest AI, who considers himself quite a sailor, and Captain Bill, and Pat, who early perfected a neat system of doing darn little while appearing to do much, got us out.

Once free from the marker buoys in the harbor channel, AI, the old salt, with a nonchalant “I’ll take over, Skipper,” headed our good ship across the Sound. With a fine wind we were running smoothly, I and my stomach at peace with the world.

Suddenly there was a terrifying scraping and crunching underneath us and we lurched drunkenly to port.

“We’ve hit something!” I said, clearing up the case neatly.

The ship had stopped dead, still lurched, and the boys got the sails down. AI, very red and silent, climbed out into Long Island Sound. We were miles from shore but there was AI, walking about in an ocean that only came up to his waist. Man overboard! It seems we had run aground on a pile of rocks. They were marked plainly enough on the chart but Al is more accustomed to road maps and the State Highway Department hadn’t got around to putting up a “Dangerous Grade” sign.

Our crew tried a “sea anchor” (correct me if I’m wrong) but that didn’t do any good. They would have tried the motor and backed up, if the reverse gear had been working that weekend. The tide was falling fast, and the more it fell the more the ship lurched, and the less I liked the idea of Jake and me swimming back home to dear old Connecticut.

The day got later, and the crew got hungrier and hungrier. So did the passengers, including Jake.

“Oh, well,” said AI, making the best of it, “the tide will turn about six and if we don’t capsize by then, it’ll float us off.”

Came four o’clock and that familiar emptiness, that well-known galloping stomach feeling,’ but there was nothing to drown the horrid sounds. Water, water everywhere, but not a shower in sight! Glamorous shorts and all, over I went and swam out into the chilly distance. Then, far, far away, treading water like mad, I preserved my secret.

Came six o’clock, and everything got black and I was sprawled out like a starfish with tons of sea water cascading over my head. A real “faint” at last …. Oh, well, who cares about a secret, anyway?

At II P.M. the tide had risen sufficiently to float us. With Captain Bill at the helm we made for shore, all of us hanging over the prow searching with flashlights for the channel buoys. The boat and I were slightly the worse for wear, but the hamburgers at the diner were manna from heaven.

Morning Sickness

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:50 am

August 18

I guess I must have laid it on too thick, for Patrick, feeling the responsibilities of fatherhood resting heavily upon him, called the doctor today and got a first-hand report. It’s guffaws now, I get, instead of concern.

August 21

Sick!

This can’t be me, it must be two other people.

Anyway, two. people.

Sick. Sea-sick, air-sick, car-sick. Sick morning, afternoon and night. My stomach, the same that I used to boast about, seems to be on a see-saw. The slightest little thing-and the slightest little thing is the sight of one of these darn pills. Just to hold it in one hand and a glass of water in the other is enough. Pat says it’s all mental. Could be! So I decided to fool it, sneak up on it in fact.

August 25

Sick. And I took no pill at all.

It seems that early in the morning when my stomach is empty, I’m going to be sick no matter what I do. At the toothbrush stage of dressing (whether it’s 7 or I I) along comes a feeling of my strong-as-a-horse stomach galloping down the stretch. I can feel it flying through the air. I can feel it distinctly! It finally settles behind an ear and nothing I can do will send it back where it belongs. But this is not the kind of morning sickness the books tell about. My stomach seems to suffer from perpetual frustration. It struggles for self-expression but never gets beyond the stage of wishful thinking. It produces a horrid symphony of queer gurgles, choking coughs, and retching gags (which I hide from Lucretia by turning the shower on at full speed). But that’s all. Having exhausted itself in the effort to accomplish something notable it tires of the whole thing and goes back where it belongs. Just another weak character.

I read how a dry cracker before rising would do away with all this. ‘Tain’t true! Breakfast in bed, with puffing Lucretia glaring over the tray and looking mighty suspicious, doesn’t do the least bit of good. Nor does rushing down to a hearty breakfast with the inevitable gay morning music reeling out of the radio.

Lucretia looks suspiciouser and suspiciouser with me bustling down to a breakfast of orange juice, cereal, tea and toast, dashing upstairs again to play the shower, and then reappearing with a coy request for more orange juice, cereal, tea and toast. Up to date she hasn’t said anything and now that my stomach has resumed its original, or near original size, I have hopes of fooling her a while longer. But now there’s the business of the kitchen. The books say I should eat six times a day, but every time I sneak out in the kitchen, quiet as a mouse, and slide open the cupboard door-Lucretia catches me. At this rate she won’t be long for our life. I’ve got to get away from it all. Maybe Pat will take me somewhere.

August 27

Lucretia, my lorgnette! Dr. Reiner really meant what he said that day in the middle of my swan dive. He wants us to live in his house while he conducts the Pittsburgh orchestra this winter. Me in that colossal Normandy castle, with its Olympicsize swimming pool, twenty-seven landscaped acres, two streams, two waterfalls and half a mile of drive-way! Half a mile, half a mile- Too bad it’s not a mile, but I suppose we can’t have everything. It’ll be a break for Pat, though, with only half a mile of driveway to shovel snow off. And I can see the expressions of some of my friends as they pull up to our “little place in the country”. They won’t need to know we’re living rent free. (Dr. Reiner doesn’t like to have the house empty while he’s away and he seems to think the Government can go on doing without Pat, but I dunno.) And Michael, our little wandering Michael, who has recently graduated to the stage of taking an interest in blondes and has had to be tied up. In that twenty-seven-acre park he could run his head off and still be far from temptation. But, Michael or no Michael, I won’t turn landed gentry unless we can rent our barns. So why not be a landlord and collect some rent?

Visions of life as millionaires darn near make me forget I’m still being sick. It’s getting to be such a routine that I don’t seem to mind much any more. I’ve discovered it’s simpler to let my stomach have its exercise before breakfast than to battle against it, and then really live up to the scheduled pregnancy symptoms after breakfast.

As for W.P.B., nothing new has been added.

Just drifting along.

I’m I Pregnant

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:49 am

August 17

Today was the day.

The books all say that most people wait a nice safe eight weeks before seeking out a physician. But, with a stomach that looks at least three months “gone” (as the women of the town put it) and a heck of a stomach-ache to boot, who am I to stand on tradition?

And about this wonder-working specialist I wanted, this maternity magician, this prestidigitator of the delivery rooms who would bring Jake into the world hale and hearty while I slept in peace, whose customers were all movie stars, yet whose charges were all reasonable, and who had never lost a m~ther’s figure-there I had a gem of an idea. No long labored search for me, no Stanley and Livingstone business through the trackless wastes of Physicians’ Buildings. No relying, either, on the advice of gals with only one birth to their experience, or on the advice of friends with only one doctor to theirs. I’m going to the biggest and shiniest hospital in New York City, and ask the advice of the Superintendent who knows all about hundreds of doctors and thousands of babies.

Later

The hospital didn’t look like a hospital; it didn’t even smell like a hospital. It was more like a hotel with a convention meeting in the lobby. “Visiting hours” I noted, so I’m just another visitor.

The brave hotel face the hospital was putting on slipped a little, however, when a new mother came by followed by a beaming new father, a “bellboy” with bags, mountains of flowers, stuffed pink animals, baby blankets, and a miniature pink potty, and a nurse gingerly carrying a roll of pink blankets.

The desk clerk beamed after them-a very hushed little man practically hidden behind a colossal counter that was equipped with all the paraphernalia of hotels, including register and a pigeonholed mail backdrop.

The hushed little man repeated “Hospital superintendent?” after me and said: “He’s a very busy man, Miss, what do you want of him?”

I mumbled something about advice on selecting an obstetrician.

Then, suddenly breaking his whispering vows, the little man bellowed: “Obstetrician? Why didn’t you say so? He’s over there.”

It was like a public address system and it must have penetrated the furthest recesses of the most hushed and distant visitor. I was blown across the walnut-paneled lobby to a business-like desk with a business-like girl behind it. She was the girl who recommended doctors to girls who had brilliant ideas like mine.

“Sure, we do it every day!” she told me. “Thousands of women ask our advice about choosing their doctor.” She picked a name out of a hat. “Now, how about -”

I was going to give her an argument but there was that pain, and that bulge, and that long ride back to my little house on the river. So I meekly followed her through tiled corridors, waited in paneled waiting rooms, gave my name and my “disease” to very bored clerks, and was finally ushered into an office that must have been shipped in one lot from Hollywood. There, at a huge desk that was all glistening white and glittering chromium, sat a red-faced young man in an austere white gown and a bedside manner that was a nice blend of disinterest and commiseration.

So this was the end of the trail. “Dr. Kildare, I presume,” I murmured inaudibly and my quarry turned on me a smile as bright as his desk.

“Sit down, won’t you?” He picked up Form No. 20-786 ByZ 47, unclipped a fountain pen from a breast pocket filled with a neat row of pens, pencils, thermometers, and stethoscope ends, and swung upright in his swivel chair. “First, your name, please.”

He seemed a little young to me. “Look,” I said, edging toward the door, “are you married?”

The swivel chair rocked upright. “Well, uh - yes!”

“Do you have any children?”

“Yes.” His bedside manner was coming undone. “Now that’s what 1 was getting at.” 1 mentally rubbed my hands together. “Who was your wife’s doctor, Doctor?”

“I was my wife’s doctor’s wife’s doctor.”

Maybe he wasn’t so young. 1 advanced gingerly and sat down on the edge of the chair. Thinning hair, I noted. Maybe that ruddy, just-off-the-rowing-team face had misled me.

“How old are you?”

“Thirty-six.” He refastened his bedside manner.

“How old are you?”

“Twenty-four,” 1 said mechanically but when 1 saw him enter the figures on that magnificent form I thought I’d better be careful. “I’m really twenty •. six,” I corrected. “Look, have you a lot of experience? Do you have any movie stars among your patients-I mean do you guarantee that 1 get my figure back?”

The doctor was getting his second wind. “That’s rather up to you.”

“My skin isn’t as clear as it was two weeks ago.

It looks bumpy.”

“Yes, that sometimes happens to brunettes.”

Here was a man of aplomb, fearless, unhurried, without nerves. “Occasionally,” he amplified, “dark blotches appear over the nose or under the eyes. It’s called the mask of pregnancy.”

“Let’s get back to you,” I said. “Are you modern?”

The chair teetered slightly.

“What I mean is,” I rushed on, “are you painless like the stories I’ve read? Do I just go to sleep and, bingo, there’s Jake-or are you one of those doctors who believe in the old-fashioned business of pain and suffering?”

He unclipped another fountain pen and wrote at great length in red ink. My question must have tipped him off to something pretty significant. When he was through with the red ink, he said, “We’ll make you as comfortable as possible.” But it was only routine; his heart wasn’t in it.

This didn’t sound so promising. But it occurred to me that having a baby isn’t something you can change your mind about, and, anyway, there was that bulge and that ache. So I let the doctor have his innings and told all about my great-aunt’s diabetes; the history of my tonsillectomy; how much Pat weighed when he was born; whether my mother had had a difficult time when I arrived. I couldn’t answer that one, but there was something else to be settled before I got in any deeper.

“Just a moment, Doctor,” I interrupted. “How much does it cost to have a baby?”

He gave me a subtly polite once-over, swiveled to upright, red fountain pen poised and asked:

“What is your husband’s income?”

I hastily divided Pat’s salary by three and he instantly multiplied the result by six and told me what Jake was going to cost.

At that it wasn’t so bad. The hospital I had picked was one of the most expensive in New York, and yet I could squeeze the baby into the budget-for everything, including the doctor’s fee and fifteen days in the hospital. Of course that was the very peak of the budget, but it would do.

“One more thing, Doctor! I have a pain and a bulge. It’s serious. It hurts.”

“Yes, that often happens.” He wasn’t going to let my stomach worry him. “Just a gas pain. Digestion is somewhat disturbed, you know.”

“But it hurts!”

“I’ll give you something for after meals. It’ll relieve the pain in a few days.”

“Yes, but it hurts now!”

“It will. And now if you’ll just step into the other room…”

I had been dreading this; but to the nurse, bored with a parade of bulging women, it was nothing at all. She led me into a small room where I stripped to my slip, shoes and stockings. I weighed in officially for the nine-round bout at 113.

She gestured me to a formidable leather couch table, and I climbed up and stretched out on it. First she produced a giant pair of steel ice tongs, an ominous weapon if I ever saw one. Then she delicately draped the upper half of me with sheeting and-you’ll never believe this, but it’s true, so help me-why would I lie about it?-she stood up a little screen upon my chest. I could hear the doctor washing his hands on the far side that he was sharing with the other half of me, but I couldn’t see him so I gathered the screen must have something to do with womanly modesty. A weird manifestation in sooth!

I was going to say a few words about this, but the nurse was too quick for me. She jabbed my arm with a long needle and drained most of the blood out while I yelled blue murder. I still couldn’t see the doctor for the “modesty-screen”, but now I heard him remark conversationally, “I certainly like a good patient, don’t you?”

Peering around the corner I discovered him waving the ice tongs over my abdomen. It seemed they were a measuring device, so I popped my head over the screen to say, “I know I have narrow hips, Doctor, do you think a Caesarean will be necessary? I’ve heard they don’t hurt a bit.”

There was no reply, but I heard him murmur to the nurse, who was jotting figures down in a notebook, “Good pelvic formation. Plenty roomy.”

It was a thorough examination, all right-eyes, ears, nose, throat, thyroid, heart, lungs, kidneys, blood pressure. Much thumping of my chest and back, too, and my last few drops of blood drained out-from the little finger this time.

When it was all over, I asked, “Am I pregnant?”

Fingertips on nose, he allowed cautiously, “I’d say so … yes … but it’s practically impossible to be sure this early. However, take these calcium and vitamin pills, eat a balanced diet, drink a lot of milk, and don’t overdo. Don’t do anything you’re not used to doing …. And don’t do much riding in a car:”

Damn! That’ll please Pat and the Ration Board. “Oh, yes! Call me if you’re very nauseated.” “Don’t worry about that,” I said. “I’ve never

been ill in my life that way. My stomach is as strong as a horse.”

I pranced out and bought me a very chic bunny-lined topcoat. Nice and roomy, I noted practically, and a darned cute coat to boot. I also made an appointment with the dentist. The books all say to have your teeth checked over and I’m following the law to its last letter.

Then back to Connecticut to tell the tale of the day to a clucking Patrick, who astounds me by fussing like a mother hen. I laid it on thick, though. Somebody’s got to appreciate my sufferings, by golly!

Stomach has Puffed out like a Souffle

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:33 am

August 15

My God, I have a PAIN!

It woke me in the night. It’s in the very middle of my stomach and it’s a pain of amazing proportions. It hurts worse tonight, and with it has arrived the most surprising development. The W.P.B. sheet reports (in inches):

Measurements: Waist: Stomach: Hips: Bust:
August 6 25″ 27″ 35¾” 32″
August 13 25″ 27″ 35¾” 32″
August 13 25″ 32″ (!) 35¾” 32″

My stomach has puffed out like a souffle, Five inches in two days!

The books don’t say anything about this. It feels like a gas pain-colic, maybe, under other circumstances-but considering the dates, I’m scared!

Also shielded stomach, casual-like, with the new Vogue when talking to Lucretia. As for my mother, if this keeps up that problem is solved.

August 16

This is a real old-fashioned green-apple stomachache and, brother, it aches. So back to the library for more books, wearing aeoat despite the blistering heat, but could find nothing that makes any mention of a stomach as de trap as this in less than eight weeks. Well, it’s no use trying to blink this issue-I’ve got to go to the doctor.

Ten Dollars in a Rabbit Test

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 3:24 am

August 11

The book may be right, after all, though it could be just the power of suggestion. Anyway, twice every night and untold times every day I have been trekking to the l.g.r. Maybe it’s only the orange juice but it’s a nuisance, especially at night.

Once during our two years in this two-hundred-ear-old house I was tete-a-tete with a mouse. That was the time I inadvertently tore two handfuls of hair right out of my head, and the memory lingers. So every night at two, and again about five, I turn on the light between the beds, shake Pat into a semblance of wakefulness, and then creep cautiously, with Mike as advance guard and Pat sleepily cheering me on across the creaking floor. I scoot back to bed unconvoyed, however, for by that time Mike and Pat are sound asleep again. That’s the kind of protection womanhood gets in our house. And here I am going down into the valley of the shadow to another man into the world!

August 12

It’s strange how the news spread out from that one yelp in the parking lot. Telephone calls come morning and night from wives all over town, dying to tell me how they suffered and what I should do and what doctor I should see. I just dangle the receiver beside Michael’s ear and let him listen while I murmur appropriate How dreadfuls. It’s going to be a lesson for Michael, all right. No pups for him, if he remembers in the Spring what he heard in the Fall.

Visits are more difficult, with the merry wives of Westport telling me about Susie who “had lapses of memory and had to carry her name and address on a card so she could shove it at a passing taxi to be sure of getting home.” And then there was Mary, who “simply forgot how to write-she just didn’t know what to do with a pencil, but it all came back as soon as the baby was born.” And Allie, who was “in labor for sixteen hours, but I always say that doctor just doesn’t-” How often did I listen to the deep heaved sigh and the longdrawn “We-el!” that preceded the familiar, “What ! went through - ”

The difficulty is to make my guests keep their confidences down to a whisper. With the servant problem what it is, and my cooking ability what it is, I’m taking no chances.
I only hope that yelp of mine or its attendant rumors don’t reach my family in Chicago. If I could just dodge them for nine whole months, think of all the clucking and fussing and free advice I could avoid. But I fear they’ll begin to wonder if they don’t see me, as usual, in the Fall.

August 13

Measurements: Waist: Stomach: Hips: Bust:
August 6 25″ 27″ 35¾” 32″
August 13 25″ 27″ 35¾” 32″

That can’t be right! Maybe I ought to invest ten dollars in a rabbit test after all. Yet my Scottish ancestry reminds me that time will tell more accurately and less expensively. So never mind the form charts.

I even went swimming. Not in our no doubt germ-ridden river, which might be perilous, but in Fritz Reiner’s swimming pool that’s big enough to put his Pittsburgh Symphony in, which, of course, I don’t recommend. And what a house! I’d almost give ours back to the British soldiers for a chance to live there. When I was in the middle of a dive, Maestro Reiner suggested just that-that we live at Rambleside for the winter!
Could he mean it?

Later

There were no ill effects even from the swimming. This can’t be right! Everything is still Jake. Tremendous changes are taking place inside of me. A great factory is beginning its work, and there ought to be something to show for it. Of course, there’s the heart-warming example of Peggy, down the road, who is now going into her third month and hasn’t had a pain or an ache. But she does have a bulge. I guess this whole business has been over-publicized. It looks like duck soup to me.

Twins or Triplets in the Family Tree

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 2:30 am

August 10

At last, I know all. Early signs of pregnancy, the Department of Labor unblushingly advises, arc morning sickness and more frequent visits to the little girls’ room. (The Government sure stops at nothing.)

The next chapter deals with the necessity of an early visit-after the eighth orninth week, it suggests-to the doctor. And it pictures the beaming mother-to-be in a “fields-of-clover” bonnet, with father in tow, making their early visit. I can just see Patrick…

But the book’s probably right. I ought to go to a doctor soon, only what doctor? We have two awfully good friends who are obstetricians, but the fact that they’re friends rules them out. What I want is the most up-to-date doctor there is, a specialist, crammed to his toupee with all the latest news. And, while I’m at it, I’d just as soon he didn’t have any quaint ideas about the “beauty of the pain of bringing a child into the world.”

But how silly to be working myself up over that, when I’m still not sure. If only I had a symptom, any old symptom! But everything is still Jake.

Of course it’s going to be a boy, a freckle-faced little redhead who’ll come tearing home to tell me, “Yeah, I got a black eye, Mom, but you oughta see Tommy!”

Just where the red hair is coming from is a matter for conjecture. Mine is black and Pat’s is blacker. Heritage, I fear plays an important part there. And that reminds me, I must ask Pat if there are any twins (or triplets) on his family tree.

I must ask Pat if there are any twins (or triplets) on his family tree.

Pre-Natal Care

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 2:28 am

August 9

I know I’m too healthy, so today I braved the town’s growing interest in my stomach and took our new gas-saving bus down to the library. There . wasn’t a soul that I know in the reading room and I marched boldly toward the shelves and started investigating. Medicine, medicine, where would the medical books be?

I was just up to History when a girlish titter fluttered up behind me, the Third Assistant Librarian. “My, you’re looking well! Can’t I help you find the book?”

“I’m looking for ‘The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire’,” I said firmly.

She found it before I could even locate the medical department. And then ado or die spirit swept over me. Airily I asked, “By the way, have you any books on medicine? You see, I’m writing a, murder story-”

“Right here, on the top shelf,” she interrupted gleefully. “No, no, you mustn’t reach! I’ll get them. Here are a couple you might be interested in.”

I grabbed the two books, dropped “The Decline”, and fled. I had caught a glimpse of the title of one of those books and I hugged them, titles down, to my shirt front till I was in the car.

At home in the bathroom, safe from Lucretia’s curious eye, I tore the heart out of them. One was a paper-bound volume put out in some pre-Rooseveltian era by the United States Department of Labor. (The Government is rather wonderful when you get on to it.) The cover was a riot of flowers practically smothered in pollen-but no bees-and the title was “Pre-Natal Care”. The other cover had a picture of a very maternal young woman in a late nineteenth-century dress with an early Italian cherub in her arms. This was called “Infant Care”.

Bunny Tests

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 2:26 am

August 7

Maybe I ought to have one of those bunny tests.

Nothing seems to be happening to me. Time flows over me like a river, but it leaves no bruises, no abrasions, no swelling, no bulges. And, most important, no morning sickness! These calculations must be screwy. I’ve taken my measurements religiously every morning but they’re still identically the same. Twenty times a day I’ve climbed up on a chair to examine my figure in the dressing-table mirror, and it looks just the way it always did.

To be on the safe side I’ve been walking miles!

August sun and all. I’ve even given up swimming. And I’ve drunk quarts of orange juice. (I hope it’s orange juice that has calcium in it. I remember reading somewhere, “For every child a tooth,” and I’d like to keep all of mine.) I can’t think of anything else to do. But I just have to start out right, for this is going to be the most perfect, the most scientific, the most carefully scheduled, the most medically approved baby ever born …. I wish something would happen to convince me!

Pat is a disappointment. Instead of bringing me violets, or breakfast in bed, or at least a little awe watered with sympathy, all he does is call up now and then to say, “Hey, is everything Jake?”

August 8

Last night Patrick carne horne with this, undoubtedly culled from confirmed fathers at work:

“No more cocktails for you. From now on you’ll just have to sit in the corner and think pleasant thoughts. No more driving, either!”

But a neat saving on gasoline, when you consider us three million nearly mothers.

We’re Having a Baby

Filed under: 1st Month — admin @ 2:24 am

Groceries and a tape measure I had to have. So, next morning, right after the fiasco, I made myself go to the village. Chin up and stomach sucked in I marched determinedly down Main Street-sand almost the first thing I saw was a girl who never could have sucked in her stomach. She dodged a station-wagon with cumbersome agility and went on her way with amazing nonchalance. “Quite a turkey in the oven!” I heard a matronly voice observe in the condescending tone of an expert approving the first attempt of a new apprentice.

With my ears aflame I ducked into the drugstore for a coke, but something had got into Al and he insisted on serving me a double banana split. I don’t remember seeing him in the bar last night!

Pushing on to the dry goods store, I had to circle a church-social that was in session on the sidewalk. The ladies stopped talking to let me pass, and if ever I saw a bevy of significant glances that’s what they shot at me. Then they all started gabbling like mad. Just to confound them, I ran the quarter-block to the store for my tape measure. When I got back to the gas station I found the car nicely backed out and waiting. Joe even tipped his hat.

It was darned good to get out of town and back on the seven miles of road home. Only yesterday, with the gas shortage “looming” I had been cursing this remoteness, but now our house seemed wonderful-so far away from everybody else’s! It’s built near the road, but on the other side it hangs over the Saugatuck and everything is beautifully private. The eels come up to the river bank at night and we feed them with pieces of Pat’s leftover breakfast toast. The house is really just two old barns pushed together, but inside we have hand-hewn beams, field-stone fireplaces and a living room twenty-seven feet high. We only rent the place but we love it like a son.

Automatically I started to haul the bags of groceries out of the car, but a voice seemed to whisper, “Don’t lift heavy weights!” I shoved the parcels back in.

“Lucretia,” I screamed, “come and take the groceries.”

Lucretia waddled out of the door, amazement plastered all over her Aunt Jemimah face. “What’d you say?”

I explained the project.

“You wants me to take the groceries in!” Her voice rose an octave. “Why for?”

“Er, I’m tired,” I said lamely. “I’ve been all over town and I’m going down to the river to cool off.”

Grumbling to herself, Lucretia shuffled out to the car, her felt house slippers flapping with every step. Those slippers! But you should taste her peach dumplings, or her pancakes and honey butter. “I was jes’ plannin’ on doin’ a little fishin’. Got my worms dug-”

I ducked around the corner of the house and went down to the swimming-hole. Alone at last! (The bathers don’t arrive until around four and this is not the Constable’s day-he soaps himself once a week just below the bridge and the suds float past our door and circle lazily on the deep water where we swim when there are no suds.) Not a human in sight and not a voice to be heard. Only the babbling of the water against the stones. This is the perfect place for anyone with a past to review it, so I reviewed mine…

If only I weren’t so good at arithmetic! But yesterday I made the final calculations and decided that they meant what they said. No more asking Pat what the date is and how long is it since the day he played those thirty-six holes and I got so mad waiting that I drew pictures of him on the car windows on the way home and the people in the back seat thought they were cute? No, the shadow of things to come has caught up with me. In the middle of the war, too! (Pat has filed his application for a commission and I had just about decided I wanted to see the world with the W AAC-and then my higher calculus reveals this.) 1 can start sewing on little garments any day now,

I’m still not used to the idea, but I’ve decided one thing. Nobody, but nobody, is to know except us. No maternity-klatsches, no clucking and fussing for me, thank you! I won’t tell a soul until I have to. Or until I don’t have to.

I wonder if there’s something wrong with me that I don’t feel more maternal. Oughtn’t I to be having thrills instead of worrying about not seeing Africa in uniform? Anyway, I knew I could count on Patrick to come all over maternal, so last night I decided to put on a good show for him.
If I had only had some lavender-and-lace, or even a fluffy negligee-but I did the best I could with my tailored red pajamas. There I was, the little mother, all starry-eyed with hope, curled up in the biggest chair I could find, the blue-satin comforter from the guest-room tucked around me to give a little glamour to the pajamas. The firelight was flashing on my knitting needles. (It was only the sweater I started six months ago, but it’s white and Pat would never know the difference.)

At 7 P.M. I was still sitting, still clicking, but the starry-eyed look was beginning to wear thin.

At 8 P.M. there was a great thumping on the door. Michael, with his Irish terrier bounce, made it in two jumps, but I stayed where I was. My clicking went into high. I lifted my head wanly, smiled my sweetest martyr smile –

“For crying out loud, what’s wrong with you?”

In stalked Pat at the head of a small army. “Here’s Ed and Bob and Lee-we’re going to do some work tonight, so I brought them home to dinner. D’ya mind?” He scowled at the comforter. “What’s that for? You weren’t going to bed-I’m not that late.”

I leaped to my feet, stumbled over the comforter, shouted a welcoming hello to the army, and galloped out to the kitchen to rustle a bigger salad.

“Look, Lucretia,” I coaxed, “you’ll have to give your chop to Mr. Sotheby-after all, I’m giving mine to Mr. Henderson. You can give my husband’s second to Mr. Donovan.”

Lucretia sighed gustily, “Okay, I’ll starve if I got to.” She shuffled over to the stove and I whisked the can-opener out of the drawer, rolled up the sleeves of the lavender-and-lace and began opening cans.

After dinner, Ed decided too much work and no play tended to make Ed a dull boy and how about a quickie at the town’s sole and hence populous bar.

“Now,” I decided, “when we get rid of the mob, I can faint in peace and quiet. Just as we’re getting into the car ought to be about right. That’ll get him! Maybe it’s even better than the fireside scene,” So I drank a couple of my favorite quickies, shouted greetings to the populace, and waited for Pat’s pals to depart for their own homes and their own undoubtedly irate wives. Meanwhile I was busy gloating over the great moment to come. Mentally I rehearsed the scene. Smiling a brave smile as I lay in a limp heap on the car seat, I would whisper my secret to an alarmed and awe-stricken Patrick. I could just picture him, speechless with astonishment, tears of tenderness and joy welling to his honest eyes.

At two or three or so we all departed, with practically the whole of Westport filing out to the line of parked cars. I was carefully picking my way toward the . curtain of Act I when my heel caught in a pothole. Down I came with an awful crash and sprawled on the gravel.

Pat doubled up with laughter.

And I - what did I do? I threw my dramatic scene and my shy little secret to the four winds of night. “You dope,” I yelled, “I’ve fainted! You’re going to have a baby!”…

The river, caring nothing about my communion with the past, meandered on. I was getting fed up with it, too, so I climbed the bank back up to the house. I had just got as far as the library when Lucretia shuffled in. “Here’s your tape measure.

What you fixin’ on sewin’?”

I could have kissed her-one of the few remaining people in Westport who hadn’t learned my secret. And she mustn’t learn it, either; Lucretia must be kept in the dark, or we’ll lose her.

I snatched the tape measure. “Oh, I’m just measuring something,” I said airily, and ran upstairs. There, behind locked doors, I went to work.

First I took a huge sheet of paper. In big black letters at the top I wrote: W.P.B. (The Government and I are just like that.) I ruled off nine spaces, and across the top I marked out nine months. Down the left side I printed neatly:

Waist:
Stomach:
Hips:
Bust:

Then I found one of Pat’s red pencils and added in big red capitals:

Weight:

I stripped, and began taking measurements, With quite a sense of pride I filled in:

Waist: 25 inches

Stomach: 27 inches

Because my hips begin there and not because my stomach sticks out.

Hips: 35 ¾ inches

Bust: 32 inches

When I had them all down, I pasted the chart on the back of the closet door. I didn’t bother with thigh and calf measurements. I’m not so proud of those, and any spreading there will be all right with me. The weight had to be left blank. I had meant to get weighed in town, but the only scale was in the drugstore and I can’t go back there.

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