He stepped toward her and she backed away and asked him what he wanted. The room behind her was a warren of vague shapes, the only source of light far in the back by a curtain that spanned the room.
“I want to give you your baby back,” he said.
She looked at him more closely, then opened her mouth in silent exclamation, then slowly smiled. “How’d you know where I lived?”
“I followed you.”
“Why? Did something happen to it already?”
“No, but I don’t want to take it with me.”
She seemed truly puzzled. “Why not? It’s on your way, isn’t it? Almost?”
He ignored the question. “I want to know some more about the baby.”
“Like what?”
“Like whose is it? Yours?”
Iris frowned and nibbled her lower lip. “Sort of.”
“What do you mean, ‘sort of’? Did you give birth to it?”
“Not exactly.” Iris combed her hair with her fingers, then shook it off her face with an irritated twitch. “What are you asking all these questions for?”
“Because you asked me to do you a favor and I think I have the right to know what I’m getting into. That’s only fair, isn’t it?”
She paused. Her pout was dubious. “I guess.”
“So where did you get the baby?” he asked again.
“Marvin got it.”
“From whom?”
“Those people in Hurley City. So I don’t know why you won’t take it back, seeing as how it’s theirs and all.”
“But why …”
His question was obliterated by a high glissando, brief and piercing. He looked at Iris, then at the shadowy interior of the cabin.
There was no sign of life, no sign of anything but the leavings of neglect and a spartan bent. A fat gray cat hopped off a shelf and sauntered toward the back of the cabin and disappeared behind the blanket that was draped on the rope that spanned the rear of the room. The cry echoed once again. “What’s that?” he asked her.
Iris giggled. “What does it sound like?”
“Another baby?”
Iris nodded.
“Can I see it?”
“Why?”
“Because I like babies.”
“If you like them, why won’t you take the one I gave you down to Hurley City?”
“Maybe I’m changing my mind. Can I see this one?”
“I’m not supposed to let anyone in here.”
“It’ll be OK. Really. Marvin isn’t here, is he?”
She shook her head. “But he’ll be back any time. He just went to town.”
He summoned reasonableness and geniality. “Just let me see your baby for a second, Iris. Please? Then I’ll go. And take the other baby with me. I promise.”
She pursed her lips, then nodded and stepped back. “I got more than one,” she suddenly bragged. “Let me show you.” She turned and walked quickly toward the rear of the cabin and disappeared behind the blanket.
When he followed he found himself in a space that was half kitchen and half nursery Opposite the electric stove and Frigidaire, along the wall between the wood stove and the rear door, was a row of wooden boxes, seven of them, old orange crates, dividers removed, painted different colors and labeled A to G. Faint names of orchards and renderings of fruits rose through the paint on the stub ends of the crates. Inside boxes C through G were babies, buried deep in nests of rags and scraps of blanket. One of them was crying. The others slept soundly, warm and toasty, healthy and happy from all the evidence he had.
“My God,” he said.
“Aren’t they beautiful? They’re just the best little things in the whole world. Yes they are. Just the best little babies in the whole wide world. And Iris loves them all a bunch. Yes, she does. Doesn’t she?”
Beaming, Iris cooed to the babies for another moment, then her face darkened. “The one I gave you, she wasn’t happy here. That’s because she was a B Box baby. My B babies are always sad, I don’t know why. I treat them all the same, but the B babies are just contrary. That’s why the one I gave you should go back. Where is it, anyway?”
“In the car.”
“By itself?”
He nodded.
“You shouldn’t leave her there like that,” Iris chided. “She’s pouty enough already.”
“What about these others?” he asked, looking at the boxes. “Do they stay here forever?”
Her whole aspect solidified. “They stay till Marvin needs them. Till he does, I give them everything they want. Everything they need. No one could be nicer to my babies than me. No one.”
The fire in the stove lit her eyes like ice in sunlight. She gazed raptly at the boxes, one by one, and received something he sensed was sexual in return. Her breaths were rapid and shallow, her fists clenched at her sides. “Where’d you get these babies?” he asked softly.
“Marvin gets them.” She was only half-listening.
“Where?”
“All over. We had one from Nevada one time, and two from Idaho I think. Most are from California, though. And Oregon. I think that C Box baby’s from Spokane. That’s Oregon, isn’t it?”
He didn’t correct her. “Have there been more besides these?”
“Some.”
“How many?”
“Oh, maybe ten. No, more than that. I’ve had three of all the babies except G babies.”
“And Marvin got them all for you?”
She nodded and went to the stove and turned on a burner. “You want some tea? It’s herbal. Peppermint.”
He shook his head. “What happened to the other babies? The ones that aren’t here anymore?”
“Marvin took them.” Iris sipped her tea.
“Where?”
“To someone that wanted to love them.” The declaration was as close as she would come to gospel.
The air in the cabin seemed suddenly befouled, not breathable. “Is that what this is all about, Iris? Giving babies to people that want them?”
“That want them and will love them. See, Marvin gets these babies from people that don’t want them, and gives them to people that do. It’s his business.”
“Does he get paid for it?”
She shrugged absently. “A little, I think.”
“Do you go with Marvin when he picks them up?”
“Sometimes. When it’s far.”
“And where does he take them? To Idaho and Nevada, or just around here?”
She shrugged again. “He doesn’t tell me where they go. He says he doesn’t want me to try and get them back.” She smiled peacefully. “He knows how I am about my babies.”
“How long have you and Marvin been doing this?”
“I been with Marvin about three years.”
“And you’ve been trading in babies all that time?”
“Just about.”
She poured some more tea into a ceramic cup and sipped it. She gave no sign of guile or guilt, no sign that what he suspected could possibly be true.
“Do you have any children of your own, Iris?”
Her hand shook enough to spill her tea. “I almost had one once.”
“What do you mean?”
She made a face. “I got pregnant, but nobody wanted me to keep it so I didn’t.”
“Did you put it up for adoption?”
She shook her head.
“Abortion?”
Iris nodded, apparently in pain, and mumbled something. He asked her what she’d said. “I did it myself,” she repeated. “That’s what I can’t live with. I scraped it out of there myself. I passed out. I…”
She fell silent. He looked back at the row of boxes that held her penance. When she saw him look she began to sing a song. “Aren’t they just perfect?” she said when she was through. “Aren’t they all just perfect?”
“How do you know where the baby you gave me belongs?” he asked quietly.
“Marvin’s got a book that keeps track. I sneaked a look at it one time when he was stoned.”
“Where’s he keep it?”
“In the van. At least that’s where I found it.” Iris put her hands on his chest and pushed. “You better go before Marvin gets back. You’ll take the baby, won’t you? It just don’t belong here with the others. It fusses all the time and I can’t love it like I should.”