“OF ALL YOUR LAME ideas, this is the lamest!”
Christina sat on the sofa in Ben’s office, stuffing a large pillow under her oversized blouse. “It is not lame! It could work!”
“Or it could get us both thrown in prison.”
“You supplied the idea,” Christina insisted. “All I did was analyze it and figure out how we’re going to get what we need: c’est à dire, Reynolds’s files.” She shoved the bulk of the pillow into the top part of the pillowcase, twisted the tail tight, and tucked it into her slacks. “You told me where the records are. And that Marjorie opens the office each morning and locks up at night. And most importantly, you told me she goes to a Lamaze class. All I did was come up with a plan for infiltration.”
“And a brilliant plan it is, too. Sets up our insanity defense nicely.” Ben paced back and forth. Since the office was only about fourteen by fourteen, he did as much turning as pacing.
“I wish I had a key to the office,” Christina said, “but I don’t. I never did. Only Reynolds and the receptionist do.”
“Are you certain her class is at St. Francis?” Ben asked.
“Oui. Besides, why would she go anywhere else? It’s just down the road from the office.”
Ben continued pacing and pondering. “Even if we do this, how will we get the records?”
“I can’t think of everything, Ben. Let’s just get in there, cuddle up to this woman, and see what happens.” She fixed the pillow into place with masking tape. “We’ll play it by ear.”
“But won’t Marjorie know you?”
“Nope. She started working at Swayze & Reynolds the day I was fired. I’ve barely even seen the woman.”
“I can’t believe you’re resorting to that old pillow-under-the-shirt gag. You’re not going to fool anyone.”
“Just give me another minute.” She adjusted the pillow, fluffed things up a bit, applied more tape, men let her blouse fall over the whole. “What do you think?”
Ben reconsidered. To tell the truth, she looked pregnant. “You’ll make a lovely mother one day, Christina.”
“Not at the rate I ‘m going. Help me with this scarf.”
Christina rolled up her hair while Ben pulled the dark scarf over her head. “I’m going to add some thick makeup, too,” she said. “Just to change my general look. Probably no one would recognize me anyway, but you never know. The Drug Princess has been in the papers lately.”
“Christina, I have serious misgivings about this. We could jeopardize your whole case.”
Christina didn’t answer. She opened her compact, studied her face in the mirror, and busied herself with her disguise.
Ben realized he was being purposely ignored. He’d been so wrapped up in his own worries that he’d forgotten the defendant might have a few of her own. If this case went bad, she was the one who would be on the receiving end of a lethal syringe.
“Are you sure you want to do this?” Ben asked.
Christina nodded her head.
“Then do it we will.” He smiled. “Finish putting on your disguise. But don’t wear the fake glasses with the Groucho mustache.”
Ben and Christina walked through the door marked LAMAZE—SEPTEMBER DELIVERIES. The room was decorated like a grade-school classroom: construction paper cutouts and pseudo-inspirational posters (WHEN LIFE GIVES YOU LEMONS, MAKE LEMONADE). There were photographs of babies everywhere, and all of them looked identical to Ben. Like little General Schwarzkopfs.
“She’s over there in the corner,” Ben whispered to Christina. “The blonde. Next to the guy in the tweed jacket.”
Christina nodded. “I can see why she caught your eye. Nursing should come naturally to her.”
They strolled to the other side of the room.
“Mr. Kincaid!” Marjorie said. “What are you doing here?”
“Well…” He cleared his throat. Get the story straight. “Our usual class at St. John’s was canceled. So we decided to sit in here.”
“Oh, I know how you feel,” Marjorie said. “I just hate to miss a session. I feel like I’m cheating the baby, you know?”
“Exactly.”
“Our obligations begin at the moment of conception, right?”
Without even time out for a cigarette? “Right.”
Marjorie gestured toward the gentleman standing behind her. “This is my husband, Rich.”
They shook hands. “Nice to meet you,” Ben said. Rich appeared to be about as happy to be here as Ben was.
“Conception is easy,” Marjorie said, expanding upon her theme. “It’s everything that comes afterward that’s difficult. If you can’t do something as simple as driving without a license, why should just anyone be permitted to have a baby? I think people should have to be licensed to have children. You know, a procreation license.”
Rich’s uneasy grin told Ben he dearly wished his wife would stop prattling on about conception and procreation.
“I didn’t realize you were expecting,” Marjorie continued. “I didn’t even know you were married.”
“Well, I’m not,” Ben said.
“Ohhh.” She glanced sideways at Christina’s protuberant tummy. “Well, of course, I didn’t mean to—”
“Ben’s filling in for my husband tonight,” Christina said. “We’re old friends.”
“I see,” Marjorie said. “How thoughtful of you. Well, I see the instructor’s here. We’d better get into position.”
The couples sat in a semicircle on the floor, men seated behind the women. The instructor (Ben could tell because she was wearing a large construction paper name tag: VICKIE—INSTRUCTOR) walked into the center of the circle and squatted in the lotus position. She was a petite, auburn-haired woman wearing a pink sweater and a short skirt. To Ben, she looked more like a cheerleader than an instructor. Vickie, the Childbirth Cheerleader.
“All right, everybody,” Vickie said perkily, “how do we feel today? Are we in love with our lives, our bodies, our babies, and most importantly, ourselves?”
There was a general chorus of assent. One disgruntled soul, however, mumbled that she was “sick of being fat.”
Vickie pointed her finger at the offender. “That’s the wrong feeling, Sarah—exactly the kind of negativism we want to stamp out. Remember, you’re not fat—you’re pregnant.”
“What’s the difference?” Ben whispered. Christina slapped his shoulder.
“I’ve got a special activity planned to break the ice for tonight’s session,” Vickie continued, “and to help us focus our positive energies on the new life that lies ahead.” She passed a stack of purple paper around the circle. “I want each of you to take a piece of construction paper and tear it into some shape that represents your feelings right now about the baby.”
“I am not an origami artist,” Ben whispered.
“Oh, Ben, don’t be such a stick-in-the-mud.” Christina handed him several sheets of construction paper. “Let’s see some joie de vivre.”
Marjorie tapped Christina’s leg. “Rich is balking, too,” she said with a giggle. “Aren’t men pathetic?”
“Truly,” Christina agreed. “As if construction paper posed a threat to their virility.” They laughed.
Ben began folding and ripping his paper. Aren’t we having a jolly time?
When they were done, Vickie directed the participants to explain what they had made and what its significance was. There were numerous hearts, some beds (representing the sleep the parents wouldn’t get anymore, or the act that had gotten them into this mess in the first place), and several houses (representing the family unit, or the second mortgage they were going to need to pay for this blessed event). Christina created a calendar because, she said, every single day from now on she would be grateful for this precious gift from God.
Good grief, Ben thought. She’s more sentimental than the real mothers.