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СКАЧАТЬ cold, hunger, and loneliness, but he felt that he had no talent for being robbed, beaten, and starved; while lately he had fully decided upon a dog for company, when he could find the right one.

      Mickey unlocked his door, entering for his water bucket. Such was his faith in his environment that he relocked the door while he went to the water tap. Returning to the room he again turned the key, then washed his face and hands. He looked at the slip nailed on the wall where she had put it. He knew every word of it, but always it comforted him to see her familiar writing, to read aloud what to do next as if it were her voice speaking to him. Evening: "Make up your bed." Mickey made his. "Wash any dirty dishes." He had a few so he washed them. "Sweep your floor." He swept. "Always prepare at least one hot thing for supper." He shook the gasoline tank to the little stove. It sounded full enough, so he went to the cupboard his mother had made from a small packing case. There were half a loaf of bread wrapped in its oiled paper, with two bananas discarded by Joe of the fruit stand. He examined his pocket, although he knew perfectly what it contained. Laying back enough to pay for his stock the next day, then counting in his twenty-five cents, he had forty cents left. He put thirty in the rent box, starting out with ten. Five paid for a bottle of milk, three for cheese, two for an egg for breakfast.

      Then he went home. At the foot of the fire-escape that he used in preference to the stairs, he met a boy he knew tugging a heavy basket.

      "Take an end for a nickel," said the boy.

      "Thanks," said Mickey. "It's my time to dine. 'Sides, I been done once to-day."

      "If you'll take it, I'll pay first," he offered.

      "How far?" questioned Mickey.

      "Oh, right over here," said the boy indefinitely.

      "Sure!" said Mickey. "Cross my palm with the silver."

      The nickel changed hands. Mickey put the cheese and egg in his pocket, the milk in the basket, then started. The place where they delivered the wash made Mickey feel almost prosperous. He picked up his milk bottle and stepped from the door, when a long, low wail that made him shudder, reached his ear.

      "What's that?" he asked the woman.

      "A stiff was carried past to-day. Mebby they ain't took the kids yet."

      Mickey went slowly down the stairs, his face sober. That was what his mother had feared for him. That was why she had trained him to care for himself, to save the pennies, so that when she was taken away, he still would have a home. Sounded like a child! He was halfway up the long flight of stairs before he realized that he was going. He found the door at last, then, stood listening. He heard long-drawn, heart-breaking moaning. Presently he knocked. A child's shriek was the answer. Mickey straightway opened the door. The voice guided him to a heap of misery in a corner.

      "What's the matter kid?" inquired Mickey huskily.

      The bundle stirred, while a cry issued. He glanced around the room. What he saw reassured him. He laid hold of the tatters, beginning to uncover what was under them. He dropped his hands, stepping back, when a tangled yellow mop and a weazened, bloated girl-child face peered at him, with wildly frightened eyes.

      "If you'd put the wind you're wastin' into words, we'd get something done quicker," advised Mickey.

      The tiny creature clutched the filthy covers, still staring.

      "Did you come to 'get' me?" she quavered.

      "No," said Mickey. "I heard you from below so I came to see what hurt you. Ain't you got folks?"

      She shook her head: "They took granny in a box and they said they'd come right back and 'get' me. Oh, please, please don't let them!"

      "Why they'd be good to you," said Mickey largely. "They'd give you"—he glanced at all the things the room lacked, then enumerated—"a clean bed, lots to eat, a window you could be seeing from, a doll, maybe."

      "No! No!" she cried. "Granny always said some day she'd go and leave me; then they'd 'get' me. She's gone! The big man said they'd come right back. Oh don't let them! Oh hide me quick!"

      "Well—well—! If you're so afraid, why don't you cut and hide yourself then?" he asked.

      "My back's bad. I can't walk," the child answered.

      "Oh Lord!" said Mickey. "When did you get hurt?"

      "It's always been bad. I ain't ever walked," she said.

      "Well!" breathed Mickey, aghast. "And knowing she'd have to leave you some day, your granny went and scared you stiff about the Home folks taking you, when it's the only place for you to be going? Talk about women having the sense to vote!"

      "I won't go! I won't! I'll scratch them! I'll bite them!" Then in swift change: "Oh boy, don't. Please, please don't let them 'get' me."

      Mickey took both the small bony hands reaching for him. He was so frightened with their hot, tremulous clutch, that he tried to pull away, dragging the tiny figure half to light and bringing from it moans of pain.

      "Oh my back! Oh you're hurting me! Oh don't leave me! Oh boy, oh dear boy, please don't leave me!"

      When she said "Oh dear boy," Mickey heard the voice of his mother in an hourly phrase. He crept closer, enduring the touch of the grimy claws.

      "My name's Mickey," he said. "What's your?"

      "Peaches," she answered. "Peaches, when I'm good. Crippled brat, when

       I'm bad."

      "B'lieve if you had your chance you could look the peaches," said

       Mickey, "but what were you bad for?"

      "So's she'd hit me," answered Peaches.

      "But if me just pulling a little hurt you so, what happened when she hit you?" asked Mickey.

      "Like knives stuck into me," said Peaches.

      "Then what did you be bad for?" marvelled Mickey.

      "Didn't you ever get so tired of one thing you'd take something that hurt, jus' for a change?"

      "My eye!" said Mickey. "I don't know one fellow who'd do that, Peaches."

      "Mickey, hide me. Oh hide me! Don't let them 'get' me!" she begged.

      "Why kid, you're crazy," said Mickey. "Now lemme tell you. Where they'll take you looks like a nice place. Honest it does. I've seen lots of them. You get a clean soft bed all by yourself, three big hot meals a day, things to read, and to play with. Honest Peaches, you do! I wouldn't tell you if it wasn't so. If I'll stay with you 'til they come, then go with you to the place 'til you see how nice it is, will you be good and go?"

      She burrowed in the covers, screeching again.

      "You're scared past all reason," said Mickey. "You don't know anything. But maybe the Orphings' Homes ain't so good as they look. If they are, why was mother frightened silly about them getting me? Always she said she just had to live until I got so big they wouldn't 'get' me. And I kept them from getting me by doing what she told me. Wonder if I could keep them from СКАЧАТЬ