inaldi said when David told him of Braddock's sudden change of front. It was a se
aid David gloomily. "But
the business after you get safely over into Indiana or Illinois. That'll stave 'im off.
ristine. He was thinking of her wonderfully sympathetic eyes, of the live touch of her hand on his arm, of the soft music in her voice, of the delicious words
ve him when he passed her in the dressing-tent! The world seemed to have grown brighter for him all of a sudden. Fo
st a high board fence. David recalled this figure at once: a squat, hunchback lad who was to be seen at times behind the counter of the "snack stand." More than o
s teeth like a vicious dog. The most appalling flow of profanity came shrieking through his white lips. David was shocked. Ne
llowing the act with a name so vile that the other le
ht-hander on the jaw of the enraged bully, sending him to the ground
, four in number, stood undecided. Then, wi
fect. Two of his assailants reeled away under the savage impact of his blows. A stone, hurled by one of the young ruffians, struck him on the shoulder; another reached his face with a cutting blow of the fist. He fe
onflict. A whirlwind figure dashed out of an alley
cowering cripple, the fierc
out the newcomer, slash
lads. So you'd jump on
mas gift for yo
n expected boot-toe; the fifth was being soundly polished off by the exhilarated David. In less time than it takes to tell it, five terrified hoodlums were "streaking it" in as many directions, their chi
all, angry rescuer, whining petulantly: "Why didn't you come soo
f he was doing business all right when I came up. Hello! They got to you, did they? Bleeding like a pig, you are
heek. The tall young man came over an
ay, you're the new clown, ain't you? I saw you last night. Put it t
vid with keen gray eyes, narrowed by the odd intentness of his gaze. David had the feelin
ath. "They were teasing him, and then one of the brutes struck him. I like f
't have to interfere, but you did. Plucky thing to do. They say you come from Virginia. Well, you've proved it. Thank you for doing
ground, his black eyebrows almost mee
d 'em if you hadn't com
t's no way to act. Mr.-er-this you
hump yesterday. He laughed a
k. "Laughed at you?" he cried. "I neve
emanded the unfortunate boy, made ov
laughed," said David, p
u did," d
f profound embarrassmen
r him, though he could
id. "And I am happy to have come to you
ntly but firmly. The hunchbac
t," he sa
be along here directly. Let's get back to the lot.
most mysterious way, a
en a deep flush spread o
e you are with m
ething to mind. "I didn't mean anything like that," he hastened to explain. "As f
battle and toss them over the high board fence. Three of their late enemies
ontemptuous remark as he started off br
s shining. David announced that he would p
honor, I believe, to land one of us in jail. The darned rubes talk about it for weeks afterwards, telling how they nailed a desperate character. Everybody connected w
xed David with airy comments on the methods employed by rustic police in their efforts to preserve the
eyes. He seemed to be taking in everything as they ambled through the alley. When they approached the intersectin
s are still at the cor
left without look
ned to t
f a cop ever stops you and begins asking questions, just you tell him you're a performer. You can always prove it, whether you are one or n
out of the corner of his eye at the long, s
bars for the past two weeks. Not the horizontal bars, mind you. Banks and
u m
oth the nonchalant philosopher. It was sharpl
ck, his chin elevated, his long legs stepping out freely, confidently. His stiff black hat was cocked airily over his right ear. He was rather flashily dressed, but he had the ease of manner that enabled him to carry his cloth
s. His dark hair grew rather low on his wide forehead; it always looked straight and damp. The nose was long and pointed. When he whistled-which was almost incessantly-the tip of it appeared to prot
est of the summer?" asked David hesitati
He wants too much in the divvy. There's plenty of shows nowadays that don't ask anything off of u
r life he ain't going to leave the s
easily. David instinctively knew t
knack of "spotting" a p
lity in him was p
wall," he said to David. "I g
smell," said
d the tall youth with a shout of joy. He shook hands with all of them, from the hostler to the
boy!" was the un
d their hands gayly at him; some of them wafted kisses-which he gallantly returned. Old Joey N
to see you again, Dicky
better than the chuck
pinched in th
speak to some one. When he looked
?" he asked
by this time," said
s he,
pickpocket-in the United States. He's the king of all the glue-fingers, that boy is. My eye, 'ow he can do wot he does, I
e with him?" cried Da
dest lawyer in ten states. Wot he don't know about the law nobody else does. Experience is a wonderful teacher. He comes by 'is name rightly, he does,-Artful Dick. I've larfed myself sick many a time listening to 'ow he lifted things. Once he actually took a feller's pocket-book out of 'is inside westcut pocket, removed the bills, signed a little receipt for 'em, and then returned the leather to the gent's westcut. Later on he 'eard the chap was going to use the money to pay off a morgidge and tha
e never knowed 'im to do a mean or dishonorable thing," said Joey with perfect complacency. And yet Joey Noakes
s that kind,"
d provide for Ernie all 'is life. It seems that he's responsible for the deformity. When Ernie was five years old, Dick, who 'ad a wery disagreeable temper in them days, kicked the little cuss downstairs. The kid was laid up for months and he came out of it all twisted up-just as you see 'im now. Well, Dick never got mad at anybody after that. He wery properly swore he'd take care of Ernie and try to make up for wot he'd done to 'im. He said he'd beg or steal or kill if he 'ad to, to provide for 'im. He's never 'ad to beg or kill, I'm tha
unbeli
ll 'im afore he got out, he was that enraged at 'im for being so inconsiderate as to get caught. They say Ernie has several thousand dollars in a bank in New York,
at is to become of him?" crie
as he calls it. He says he's going to be 'anged some
morbid
mily, so to speak. His father was 'anged for murder when Dick w
d David, in a lowered tone. A
gentle wife who prayed for 'im every night and tried to get 'im to give up the life on account of the children. One night he got drunk and shot a perfectly 'elpless old
k brothers were engaged in earnest conversation, low-toned and serious,
Ernie," said tall Dick, almost pla
s teeth. "You got more than twenty dollars out of
od, Ernie, I
fifty dollars
got to, then. I nipped
do you a dirty trick li
the misshapen lad. "If it hadn't been for
Ain't you ever going to give me a rest on that? Ain
if I was straight she'd look at me, too. She wouldn't look the other way every time I come around. Oh, you don't know how it feels! She'd go out walkin
tterness dwelt in t
her." With the inconsistency of the selfishly irrational he added: "I've got plenty of money. I could give h
of him, and yet a heart of stone would have been touched by the mi
her anyhow, Ernie. Mayb
s voice and in its place came shrill blasphemy. After he had cursed Dick and David Jenison to his heart's co
ing you got from the fe
till g
to give to Ruby Noakes, eh? That's it, is it? Cheating me
oing to do anything of the sort. Why-why, I cou
t, am I? I'm not as good as she is, am I? Well, say, lemme tell you
d speaking very slowly, "you sometimes
! Then they'd
g to put his arm around his brother, on
scoffed the other. "Say
n him to carry the smallest part of his gains on
ng to give it to
d Dick quietly, dropping the ring into his brother's hand. It
ne will take it fr
y it, Braddock would
n't offer to kick me last night when I told him she'd been out walking with that guy
st the stand in the dir
istine and the guy you mean talking over there by the
stared for a full minute without blinking.
straight and handsome lik
he knew that the tears wer
about it, Ern
bbed twice, and then burst forth in a shrill tirade of abuse. Quivering with ungov
stion, not only of his lung power but in the matter of epithets, the tall martyr took his hands ou
ginning to gather at t
olling among 'em,
gerly, his mood ch
k," he said, hi