I waved at her and glanced through the open door across the hall. Most of Otto's lights had been turned off, and illumination from the television screen flickered over the form slumped in the easy chair. The neck of a Jack Daniel's bottle protruded from his crotch, and about half an inch of dark brown liquid remained in the glass beside his chair. I wondered if I should turn off his television and help him get to bed. When I took a step toward him, I smelled burning fabric.
A curl of smoke arose just beyond Otto's limp hand. From the tip of a half-smoked cigarette, a circle of sparks on the arm of his chair brightened and lengthened into flames.
I ran into the room and began beating the flames with my hands. Otto's head jerked up. Two scarlet- threaded eyes looked at me without recognition.
'Otto,' I said. 'You—'
'Get the heck out!' he yelled. 'Dang crook!'
I saw a big list traveling across his chest. The fist walloped into my shoulder, and I thumped onto the floor. A blaze roughly the shape and color of an autumn leaf arose from the sleeve of his sweater.
'Gol-durn robber!'
Otto planted his left hand in the midst of the flames and rocketed bellowing out of the chair. The Jack Daniel's bottle bounced to the floor. He staggered forward and noticed that his sweater was on fire.
I yelled, 'The sink, Otto!' and grabbed a sweatshirt from the bottom of his bed, hearing him rip off a series of six-gun curses worthy of Gabby Hayes.
A crowd of young people filled the doorframe, stubbing cigarettes on the floor and sipping from plastic cups. Otto and I were better than television.
I flattened the sweatshirt over the arm of the chair and smacked it.
The black-haired girl with the bangs edged forward. 'Mr. Bremen, he isn't a robber, he's the guy who moved into Mrs. Frahm's room.'
“I know, honey.'
She smiled at me. 'Hey, I'm Roxy Redman, and this is Charlie and Zip and my roommate, Moonbeam Challis.'
A pretty blond in what looked like a slip that showed her bra straps fluttered her fingers. 'My real name's Audrey, but everybody calls me Moonbeam.'
'Of course they do,' I said. 'My name is Ned, but everybody calls me Ned.'
Moonbeam tittered, and Charlie or Zip gave me a look that was supposed to make me pee in my pants.
Otto appeared beside me, holding a glass of water. Footsteps came pounding up the stairs. 'Peel her off.' I pulled the sweatshirt away, and Otto emptied the glass onto the blackened mess.
Invisible behind the throng, Helen Janette announced that the party was over. Mr. Tite's fedora floated into view. 'You heard the lady. Get on home.'
'Sorry, kid,' Otto said. 'Guess the stupid old man got a little fuzzy.' He picked the bottle up off the floor and dropped it in the wastebasket. 'Time to eat a hundred miles of you know what.'
Roxy, Moonbeam, and their friends drifted away in a cloud of muted laughter, allowing me a glimpse of Mr. Tite that explained the mirth. Beneath the fedora. Tite was wearing the mesh T-shirt I had seen that morning and striped boxer shorts stained yellow at the fly.
Cinched into a pink bathrobe over a nightgown, Helen Janette marched in and established a command post. “I demand an explanation.'
Otto did his best. He had fallen asleep while smoking, I had startled him, he was sorry for all the excitement. Nothing like this had ever happened before, and it would never happen again.
Mrs. Janette intensified her air of authority. “I am
'Right,' said the watchdog.
'This here was a one-time mistake. I'll take more care in the future.' Otto straightened up. I thought he looked like John Wayne. “Is there anything else you care to say?'
'Open your windows and let out the stink. This is supposed to be a decent house.'
'My windows are open already. If you want to run a decent house, you could get rid of Frank Tite. Just my humble advice.'
Tite lurched forward, and Mrs. Janette halted him with a raised hand. She glared at me. 'Mr. Dunstan, I want no further difficulties from you.'
“I did you a favor,' I said.
She stamped out.
Bremen looked at me and shrugged. We heard them march downstairs and close their separate doors. 'What's Tite's story?' I asked.
'Frank Tite's a bum who got thrown off the police force, that's his story.' He pulled off his sweater and tossed it in the direction of the wastebasket. 'There's another bottle of sour mash around here somewheres. Join me in a nightcap?'
I got out with a promise to visit him soon. Rinehart's book and the package from the safety-deposit box had been kicked into the corner near the window. I carried the package to my table and stripped off layers of brown paper until I uncovered a large, old-fashioned scrap-book in a quilted forest-green binding. Taped to its front cover was a notecard inscribed with my mother's handwriting:
•60
•I flipped through the pages of Laurie's Russian doll, my last, secret gift from my mother, growing more and more baffled. Glued front and back to more than half of its thick pages were . . . newspaper clippings about crimes? A few of them came from the
The headline above the first clipping readmidwife accused of baby-snatching, admits charges. Hazel Jansky, a local midwife, had come under suspicion when an administrator at St. Ann's Community Hospital noted that over the previous decade she had been present at nine stillbirths. Jansky had given plausible accounts of the incidents, but the hospital had asked nurses to monitor her performance. Two weeks later, one of the nurses learned that a patient of Jansky's had delivered a dead child moments before. A hospital maintenance man told her that he had seen the midwife rushing down the service stairs. Inspired, the nurse took the staff elevator to the basement, there to find Hazel Jansky trotting toward a flight of steps leading to a back door. She caught up with her outside the door and saw a waiting car speed off. The nurse conducted Jansky to the administrator's office, where the infant was discovered concealed inside her coat, bathed, swaddled, and unquestionably alive. At Police Headquarters, Jansky admitted participation in four transactions involving the sale of newborn infants to couples unable or unwilling to go through the normal adoption process. She denied having an accomplice or accomplices.
The story was dated March 3, 1965. Four months before my seventh birthday, my mother had opened the morning paper and discovered what she considered proof that she had delivered not a single child, but twins.
A day later, the
Her trial began in May and lasted three weeks. Of the four mothers whose children had been abducted and sold, one had been killed in a tavern brawl; another died in a drunken traffic accident that took two other lives; one disappeared without a trace; after hearing that her son was alive, the fourth complained that the defendant kept the money for herself instead of splitting it fifty-fifty.