<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XII. CROOKS Vs. CROOKS </h2>
<p>It was not far. Shluker, hastening along, still muttering to himself,
turned into a cross street some two blocks away, and from there again into
a lane; and, a moment later, led the way through a small door in the fence
that hung, battered and half open, on sagging and broken hinges. Rhoda
Gray's eyes traveled sharply around her in all directions. It was still
light enough to see fairly well, and she might at some future time find
the bearings she took now to be of inestimable worth. Not that there was
much to remark! They crossed a diminutive and disgustingly dirty backyard,
whose sole reason for existence seemed to be that of a receptacle for old
tin cans, and were confronted by the rear of what appeared to be a
four-story tenement. There was a back door here, and, on the right of the
door, fronting the yard, a single window that was some four or five feet
from the level of the ground.</p>
<p>Shluker, without hesitation, opened the back door, shut it behind them,
led the way along a black, unlighted hall, and halting before a door well
toward the front of the building, knocked softly upon it—giving two
raps, a single rap, and then two more in quick succession. There was no
answer. He knocked again in precisely the same manner, and then a footstep
sounded from within, and the door was flung open. "Fools!" growled Shluker
in greeting, as they stepped inside and the door was closed again. "A pair
of brainless fools!"</p>
<p>There were two men there. They paid Shluker scant attention. They both
grinned at Rhoda Gray through the murky light supplied by a wheezy and
wholly inadequate gas-jet.</p>
<p>"Hello, Nan!" gibed the smaller of the two. "Who let you out?"</p>
<p>"Aw, forget it!" croaked Rhoda Gray.</p>
<p>Shluker took up the cudgels.</p>
<p>"You close your face, Pinkie!" he snapped. "Get down to cases! Do you
think I got nothing else to do but chase you two around like a couple of
puppy dogs that haven't got sense enough to take care of themselves?
Wasn't what I told you over the phone enough without me havin' to come
here?"</p>
<p>"Nix on that stuff!" returned the one designated as Pinkie imperturbably.
"Say, you'll be glad you come when we lets you in on a little piece of
easy money. We ain't askin' your advice; all we're askin' you to do is
frame up the alibi, same as usual, for me an' the Pug here in case we
wants it."</p>
<p>Shluker shook his fist.</p>
<p>"Frame nothing!" he spluttered angrily. "Ain't I tellin' you that the
orders are not to make a move, that everything is off for a few days?
That's the word I got a little while ago, and the Seven-Three-Nine is
goin' out now. Nan'll tell you the same thing."</p>
<p>"Sure!" corroborated Rhoda Gray, picking up the obvious cue. "Dat's de
straight goods."</p>
<p>The two men were lounging beside a table that stood at the extreme end of
the room, and now for a moment they whispered together. And, as they
whispered, Rhoda Gray found her first opportunity to take critical stock
both of her surroundings and of the two men themselves. Pinkie, a short,
slight little man, she dismissed with hardly a glance; he was the common
type, with low, vicious cunning stamped all over his face—an
ordinary rat of the underworld. But her glance rested longer on his
companion. The Pug was indeed entitled to his moniker! His face made her
think of one. It seemed to be all screwed up out of shape. Perhaps the
eye-patch over the right eye helped a little to put the finishing touch of
repulsiveness upon a countenance already most unpleasant. The celluloid
eye-patch, once flesh-colored, was now so dirty and smeared that its
original color was discernible only in spots, and the once white elastic
cord that circled his head and kept the patch in place was in equal
disrepute. A battered slouch hat came to the level of the eye-patch in a
forbidding sort of tilt. His left eyelid drooped until it was scarcely
open at all, and fluttered continually. One nostril of his nose was
entirely closed; and his mouth seemed to be twisted out of shape, so that,
even when in repose, the lips never entirely met at one corner. And his
ears, what she could see of them in the poor light, and on account of the
slouch hat, seemed to bear out the low-type criminal impression the man
gave her, in that they lay flat back against his head.</p>
<p>She turned her eyes away with a little shudder of repulsion, and gave her
attention to an inspection of the room. There was no window, except a
small one high up in the right-hand partition wall. She quite understood
what that meant. It was common enough, and all too unsanitary enough, in
these old and cheap tenements; the window gave, not on the out-of-doors,
but on a light-well. For the rest, it was a room she had seen a thousand
times before—carpetless, unfurnished save for the barest
necessities, dirt everywhere, unkempt.</p>
<p>Pinkie Bonn broke in abruptly upon her inspection.</p>
<p>"That's all right!" he announced airily. "We'll let Nan in on it, too. The
Pug an' me figures she can give us a hand."</p>
<p>Shluker's wizened little face seemed suddenly to go purple.</p>
<p>"Are you tryin' to make a fool of me?" he half screamed. "Or can't you
understand English? D'ye want me to keep on tellin' you till I'm hoarse
that there ain't nobody goin' in with you, because you am't goin' in
yourself! See? Understand that? There's nothing doin' to-night for anybody—and
that means you!"</p>
<p>"Aw, shut up, Shluker!" It was the Pug now, a curious whispering sibilancy
in his voice, due no doubt to the disfigurement of his lips. "Give Pinkie
a chance to shoot his spiel before youse injure yerself throwin' a fit! Go
on, Pinkie, spill it."</p>
<p>"Sure!" said Pinkie eagerly. "Listen, Shluk! It ain't any crib we're
wantin' to crack, or nothin' like that. It's just a couple of crooks that
won't dare open their yaps to the bulls, 'cause what we're after 'll be
what they'll have pinched themselves. See?"</p>
<p>Shluker's face lost some of its belligerency, and in its place a dawning
interest came.</p>
<p>"What's that?" he demanded cautiously. "What crooks?"</p>
<p>"French Pete an' Marny Day," said Pinkie—and grinned.</p>
<p>"Oh!" Shluker's eyebrows went up. He looked at the Pug, and the Pug winked
knowingly with his half-closed left eyelid. Shluker reached out for a
chair, and, finding it suspiciously wobbly, straddled it warily. "Mabbe
I've been in wrong," he admitted. "What's the lay?"</p>
<p>"Me," said Pinkie, "I was down to Charlie's this afternoon havin' a little
lay-off, an'—"</p>
<p>"One of these days," interrupted Shluker sharply, "you'll go out like"—he
snapped his fingers—"that!" "Can't you leave the stuff alone?"</p>
<p>"I got to have me bit of coke," Pinkie answered, with a shrug of his
shoulders. "An', anyway, I'm no pipe-hitter.</p>
<p>"It's all the same whatever way you take it!" retorted Shluker. "Well, go
on with your story. You went down to Charlie's dope parlors, and jabbed a
needle into yourself, or took it some other old way. I get you! What
happened then?"</p>
<p>"It was about an hour ago," resumed Pinkie Bonn with undisturbed
complacency. "Just as I was beatin' it out of there by the cellar, I hears
some whisperin' as I was passin' one of the end doors. Savvy? I hadn't
made no noise, an' they hadn't heard me. I gets a peek in, 'cause the
door's cracked. It was French Pete an' Marny Day. I listens. An' after
about two seconds I was goin' shaky for fear some one would come along an'
I wouldn't get the whole of it. Take it from me, Shluk, it was some
goods!"</p>
<p>Shluker grunted noncommittingly.</p>
<p>"Well, go on!" he prompted.</p>
<p>"I didn't get all the fine points," grinned Pinkie; "but I got enough.
There was a guy by the name of Dainey who used to live somewhere on the
East Side here, an' he used to work in some sweat-shop, an' he worked till
he got pretty old, an' then his lungs, or something, went bad on him, an'
he went broke. An' the doctor said he had to beat it out of here to a more
salubrious climate. Some nut filled his ear full 'bout gold huntin' up in
Alaska, an' he fell for it. He chewed it over with his wife, an' she was
for it too, 'cause the doctor 'd told her her old man would bump off if he
stuck around here, an' they hadn't any money to get away together. She
figured she could get along workin' out by the day till he came back a
millionaire; an' old Dainey started off.</p>
<p>"I dunno how he got there. I'm just fillin' in what I hears French Pete
an' Marny talkin' about. I guess mostly he beat his way there ridin' the
rods; but, anyway, he got there. See? An' then he goes down sick there
again, an' a hospital, or some outfit, has to take care of him for a
couple of years; an' back here the old woman got kind of feeble an' on her
uppers, an there was hell to pay, an'—"</p>
<p>"Wot's bitin' youse, Nan?" The Pug's lisping whisper broke sharply in upon
Pinkie Bonn's story.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray started. She was conscious now that she had been leaning
forward, staring in a startled way at Pinkie as he talked; conscious now
that for a moment she had forgotten—that she was Gypsy Nan. But she
was mistress of herself on the instant, and she scowled blackly at the
Pug.</p>
<p>"Mabbe it's me soft heart dat's touched!" she flung out acidly. "Youse
close yer trap, an' let Pinkie talk!"</p>
<p>"Yes, shut up!" said Pinkie. "What was I sayin'? Oh, yes! An' then the old
guy makes a strike. Can you beat it! I dunno nothing about the way they
pull them things, but he's off by his lonesome out somewhere, an' he finds
gold, an' stakes out his claim, but he takes sick again an' can't work it,
an' it's all he can do to get back alive to civilization. He keeps his
mouth shut for a while, figurin' he'll get strong again, but it ain't no
good, an' he gets a letter from the old woman tellin' how bad she is, an'
then he shows some of the stuff he'd found. After that there's nothing to
it! Everybody's beatin' it for the place; but, at that, old Dainey comes
out of it all right, an' goes crazy with joy 'cause some guy offers him
twenty-five thousand bucks for his claim, an' throws in the expenses home
for good luck. He gets the money in cash, twenty-five one-thousand-dollar
bills, an' the chicken feed for the expenses, an' starts for back here an'
the old woman. But this time he don't keep his mouth shut about it when
he'd have been better off if he had. See? He was tellin' about it on the
train. I guess he was tellin' about it all the way across. But, anyway, he
tells about it comm' from Philly this afternoon, an' French Pete an' Marny
Day happens to be on the train, an' they hears it, an' frames it up to
annex the coin before morning, 'cause he's got in too late to get the
money into any bank to-day."</p>
<p>Pinkie Bonn paused, and stuck his tongue significantly in his cheek.</p>
<p>Shluker was rubbing his hands together now in a sort of unctuous way.</p>
<p>"It sounds pretty good," he murmured; "only there's Danglar—"</p>
<p>"Youse leave Danglar to me!" broke in the Pug. "As soon as we hands one to
dem two boobs an' gets de cash, Pinkie can beat it back here wid de coin
an wait fer me while I finds Danglar an' squares it wid him. He ain't
goin' to put up no holler at dat. We ain't runnin' de gang into nothin'.
Dis is private business—see? So youse just take a sneak wid yerself,
an' fix a nice little alibi fer us so's we won't be takin' any chances."</p>
<p>Shluker frowned.</p>
<p>"But what's the good of that?" he demurred. "French Pete and Marny Day 'll
see you anyway."</p>
<p>"Will dey!" scoffed the Pug. "Guess once more! A coupla handkerchiefs over
our mugs is good enough fer dem, if youse holds yer end up. An' dey
wouldn't talk fer publication, anyway, would dey?"</p>
<p>Shluker smiled now-almost ingratiatingly.</p>
<p>"And how much is my end worth?" he inquired softly.</p>
<p>"One of dem thousand-dollar engravin's," stated the Pug promptly. "An'
Pinkie'll run around an' slip it to youse before mornin'."</p>
<p>"All right," said Shluker, after a moment. "It's half past eight now. From
nine o'clock on, you can beat any jury in New York to it that you were
both at the same old place—as long as you keep decently under cover.
That'll do, won't it? I'll fix it. But I don't see—"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray, as Gypsy Nan, for the first time projected herself into the
discussion. She cackled suddenly in jeering mirth.</p>
<p>"I t'ought something was wrong wid her!" whispered the Pug with mock
anxiety. "Mabbe she ain't well! Tell us about it, Nan!"</p>
<p>"When I do," she said complacently, "mabbe youse'll smile out of de other
corner of dat mouth of yers!" She turned to Shluker. "Youse needn't lay
awake waitin' fer dat thousand, Shluker, 'cause youse'll never see it. De
little game's all off—'cause it's already been pulled. See? Dere was
near a riot as I passes along a street goin' to yer place, an' I gets
piped off to wot's up, an' it's de same story dat Pinkie's told, an' de
crib's cracked, an' de money's gone—dat's all."</p>
<p>Shluker's face fell.</p>
<p>"I said you were fools when I first came in here!" he burst out suddenly,
wheeling on Pinkie Bonn and the Pug. "I'm sure of it now. I was wonderin a
minute ago how you were goin' to keep your lamps on Pete and Marny from
here, or know when they were goin' to pull their stunt, or where to find
'em."</p>
<p>Pinkie Bonn, ignoring Shluker, leaned toward Rhoda Gray.</p>
<p>"Say, Nan, is that straight?" he inquired anxiously. "You sure?"</p>
<p>"Sure, I'm sure!" Rhoda Gray asserted tersely. The one thought in her head
now was that her information would naturally deprive these men here of any
further interest in the matter, and that she would get away as quickly as
possible, and, in some way or other, see that the police were tipped off
to the fact that it was French Pete and Marny Day who had taken the old
couple's money. Those two old faces rose before her again now—blotting
out most curiously the face of Pinkie Bonn just in front of her. She felt
strangely glad—glad that she had heard all of old Dainey's story,
because she could see now an ending to it other than the miserable,
hopeless one of despair that she had read in the Daineys' faces just a
little while ago. "Sure, I'm sure!" she repeated with finality.</p>
<p>"How long ago was it?" prodded Pinkie.</p>
<p>"I dunno," she answered. "I just went to Shluker's, an' den we comes over
here. Youse can figure it fer yerself."</p>
<p>And then Rhoda Gray stared at the other—with sudden misgiving.
Pinkie Bonn's face was suddenly wreathed in smiles.</p>
<p>"I'll answer you now, Shluk," he grinned. "What do you think? That we're
nuts, me an' Pug? Well, forget it! We didn't have to stick around watchin'
Pete an' Marny; we just had to wait until they had collected the dough.
That was the most trouble we had—wonderin' when that would be. Well,
we don't have to wonder any more. We know now that the cherries are ripe.
See? An' now we'll go an' pick 'em! Where? Where d'ye suppose? Down to
Charlie's, of course! I hears 'em talkin' about that, too. They ain't so
foolish! They're out for an alibi themselves. Get the idea? They was to
sneak out of Charlie's without anybody seem' 'em, an' if everything broke
right for 'em, they was to sneak back again an' spend the night there. No,
they ain't so foolish—I guess they ain't! There ain't no place in
New York you can get in an' out of without nobody knowin' it like
Charlie's, if you know the way, an—"</p>
<p>"Aw, write de rest of it down in yer memoirs!" interposed the Pug
impatiently—and moved toward the door. "It's all right, Shluker—all
de way. Now, everybody beat it, an' get on de job. Nan, youse sticks wid
Pinkie an' me."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray, her mind in confusion, found herself being crowded hurriedly
through the doorway by the three men. Still in a mentally confused
condition, she found herself, a few minutes later—Shluker having
parted company with them—walking along the street between Pinkie
Bonn and the Pug. She was fighting desperately to obtain a rip upon
herself. The information she had volunteered had had an effect
diametrically opposite to that which she had intended. She seemed terribly
impotent; as though she were being swept from her feet and borne onward by
some swift and remorseless current, whether she would or no.</p>
<p>The Pug, in his curious whisper, was talking to her: "Pinkie knows de way
in. We don't want any row in dere, on account of Charlie. We ain't fer
puttin' his place on de rough, an' gettin' him raided by de bulls.
Charlie's all to de good. See? Well, dat's wot 'd likely happen if me an'
Pinkie busts in on Pete an' Marny widout sendin' in our visitin'-cards
first, polite-like. Dey would pull deir guns, an' though we'd get de coin
just de same, dere'd be hell to pay fer Charlie, an' de whole place 'd go
up in fireworks right off de bat. Well, dis is where youse come in. Youse
are de visitin'-card. Youse gets into deir bunk room, pretendin' youse
have made a mistake, an' youse leaves de door open behind youse. Dey don't
know youse, an', bein' a woman, dey won't pull no gun on youse. An' den
youse breaks it gently to dem dat dere's a coupla gents outside, an' just
about den dey looks up an' sees me an' Pinkie an' our guns-an' I guess
dat's all. Get it?"</p>
<p>"Sure!" mumbled Rhoda Gray.</p>
<p>The Pug talked on. She did not hear him. It seemed as though her brain
ached literally with an acute physical pain. What was she to do? What
could she do? She must do something! There must be some way to save
herself from being drawn into the very center of this vortex toward which
she was being swept closer with every second that passed. Those two old
faces, haggard in their despair and misery, rose before her again. She
felt her heart sink. She had counted, only a few moments before, on
getting their money back for them—through the police. The police!
How could she get any word to the police now, without first getting away
from these two men here? And suppose she did get away, and found some
means of communicating with the authorities, it would be Pinkie Bonn here,
and the Pug, who would fall into the meshes of the law quite as much as
would French Pete and Marny Day; and to have Pinkie and the Pug
apprehended now, just as they seemed to be opening the gateway for her
into the inner secrets of the gang, meant ruin to her own hopes and plans.
And to refuse to go on with them now, as one of them, would certainly
excite their suspicions—and suspicion of Gypsy Nan was the end of
everything for her.</p>
<p>Her hands, under her shawl, clenched until the nails bit into her palms.
Couldn't she do anything? And there was the money, too, for those two old
people. Wasn't there any—She caught her breath. Yes, yes! Perhaps
there was a way to save the money; yes, and at the same time to place
herself on a firmer footing of intimacy with these two men here—if
she went on with this. But—She shook her head. She could not afford
"buts" now; they must take care of themselves afterwards. She would play
Gypsy Nan now without reservation. These two men here, like Shluker, were
obviously ignorant that Gypsy Nan was Danglar's wife; so she was—Pinkie
Bonn's hand was on her arm. She had stumbled.</p>
<p>"Look out for yourself!" he cautioned under his breath. "Don't make a
sound!"</p>
<p>They had drawn into a very dark and narrow area way between two buildings,
and now Pinkie kept his touch upon her as he led the way along. What was
this "Charlie's"? She did not know, except that, from what had been said,
it was a drug dive of some kind, patronized extensively by the denizens of
the underworld. She did not know where she was now, save that she had
suddenly left one of the out-of-the—way East Side streets.</p>
<p>Pinkie halted suddenly, and, bending down, lifted up what was evidently a
half section of the folding trapdoor to a cellar entrance.</p>
<p>"There's only a few of us regulars wise to this," whispered Pinkie. "Watch
yourself! There's five steps. Count 'em, so's you won't trip. Keep hold of
me all the way. An' nix on the noise, or we won't get away with it inside.
Leave the trap open, Pug, for our getaway. We ain't goin' to be long. Come
on!"</p>
<p>It was horribly dark. Rhoda Gray, with her hand on Pinkie Bonn's shoulder,
descended the five steps. She felt the Pug keeping touch behind by holding
the corner of her shawl. They went forward softly, slowly, stealthily. She
felt her knees shake a little, and suddenly panic seized her, and she
wanted to scream out. What was she doing? Where was she going? Was she
mad, that she had ventured into this trap of blackness? Blackness! It was
hideously black. She looked behind her. She could not see the Pug, close
as he was to her; and dark as she had thought it outside there at the
cellar entrance, it appeared by contrast to have been light, for she could
even distinguish now the opening through which they had come.</p>
<p>They were in a cellar that was damp underfoot, and the soft earth deadened
all sound as they walked upon it—and they seemed to be walking on
interminably. It was too far—much too far! She felt her nerve
failing her. She looked behind her again. That opening, still discernible
to her straining eyes, beckoned her, lured her. Better to...</p>
<p>Pinkie had halted again. She bumped into him. And then she felt his lips
press against her ear.</p>
<p>"Here we are!" he breathed. "They got the end room on the right, so's they
could get in an' out with out bein' seen, an so's even Charlie'd swear
they was here all the time. You're too old a bird to fall down, Nan. If
the door's locked, knock—an' give 'em any old kind of a song an'
dance till you gets 'em off their guard. The Pug an' me 'll see you
through. Go it!"</p>
<p>Before Rhoda Gray could reply, Pinkie had stepped suddenly to one side. A
door in front of her, a sliding door it seemed to be, opened noiselessly,
and she could see a faintly lighted, narrow, and very short passage ahead
of her. It appeared to make a right-angled turn just a few yards in, and
what light there was seemed to filter in from around the corner. And on
each side of the passage, before it made the turn, there was a door, and
from the one on the right, through a cracked panel, a tiny thread of light
seeped out.</p>
<p>Her lips moved silently. After all, it was not so perilous. Nobody would
be hurt. Pinkie and the Pug would cover those two men in there—and
take the money—and run for it—and...</p>
<p>The Pug gave her an encouraging push from behind.</p>
<p>She moved forward mechanically. There were many sounds now, but they came
muffled and indeterminate from around that corner ahead—all save a
low murmuring of voices from the door with the cracked panel on the right.</p>
<p>It was only a few feet. She found herself crouched before the door—but
she did not knock upon it. Instead, her blood seemed suddenly to run cold
in her veins, and she beckoned frantically to her two companions. She
could see through the crack in the panel. There were two men in there,
French Pete and Marny Day undoubtedly, and they sat on opposite sides of a
table, and a lamp burned on the table, and one of the men was counting out
a sheaf of crisp yellow-back banknotes—but the other, while
apparently engrossed in the first man's occupation, and while he leaned
forward in apparent eagerness, was edging one hand stealthily toward the
lamp, and his other hand, hidden from his companion's view by the table,
was just drawing a revolver from his pocket. There was no mistaking the
man's murderous intentions. A dull horror, that numbed her brain, seized
upon Rhoda Gray; the low-type brutal faces under the rays of the lamp
seemed to assume the aspect of two monstrous gargoyles, and to spin around
and around before her vision; and then—it could only have been but
the fraction of a second since she had begun to beckon to Pinkie and the
Pug—she felt herself pulled unceremoniously away from the door, and
the Pug leaned forward in her place, his eyes to the crack in the panel.</p>
<p>She heard a low, quick-muttered exclamation from the Pug; and then
suddenly, as the lamp was obviously extinguished, that crack of light in
the panel had vanished. But in an instant, curiously like a jagged
lightning flash, light showed through the crack again—and vanished
again. It was the flash of a revolver shot from within, and the roar of
the report came now like the roll of thunder on its heels.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray was back against the opposite wall. She saw the Pug fling
himself against the door. It was a flimsy affair. It crashed inward. She
heard him call to Pinkie:</p>
<p>"Shoot yer flash on de table, an' grab de coin! I'll fix de other guy!"</p>
<p>Were eternities passing? Her eyes were fascinated by the interior beyond
that broken door. It was utterly dark inside there, save that the ray of a
flashlight played now on the table, and a hand reached out and snatched up
a scattered sheaf of banknotes; and on the outer edge of the ray two
shadowy forms struggled and one went down. Then the flashlight went out
She heard the Pug speak:</p>
<p>"Beat it!"</p>
<p>Commotion came now; cries and footsteps from around that corner in the
passage. The Pug grasped her by the shoulders, and rushed her back into
the cellar. She was conscious, it seemed, only in a dazed and mechanical
way. There were men in the passage running toward them—and then the
passage had disappeared. Pinkie Bonn had shut the connecting door.</p>
<p>"Hop it like blazes!" whispered the Pug, as they ran for the faint glimmer
of light that located the cellar exit. "Separate de minute we're outside!"
he ordered. "Dere's murder in dere. Pete shot Marny. I put Pete to sleep
wid a punch on de jaw; but de bunch knows now some one else was dere, an'
Pete'll swear it was us, though he don't know who we was dat did de
shootin'. I gotta make dis straight right off de bat wid Danglar." His
whispering voice was labored, panting; they were climbing up the steps
now. "Youse take de money to my room, Pinkie, an' wait fer me. I won't be
much more'n half an hour. Nan, youse beat it fer yer garret, an' stay
dere!"</p>
<p>They were outside. The Pug had disappeared in the darkness. Pinkie was
closing, and evidently fastening, the trap-door.</p>
<p>"The other way, Nan!" he flung out, as she started to run. "That takes you
to the other street, an' they can't get around that way without goin'
around the whole block. Me for a fence I knows about, an' we gives 'em the
merry laugh! Go on!"</p>
<p>She ran—ran breathlessly, stumbling, half falling, her hands
stretched out before her to serve almost in lieu of eyes, for she could
make out scarcely anything in front of her. She emerged upon a street. It
seemed abnormal, the quiet, the lack of commotion, the laughter, the
unconcern in the voices of the passers-by among whom she suddenly found
herself. She hurried from the neighborhood.</p>
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