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<h2> XIV. A RAY OF HOPE </h2>
<p><span>T</span>HE Marcy's Run Road, on which Peter's sister lived, led into Riverbank
past the cemetery, and near the cemetery stood a group of small stores.
One of these, half grocery and half saloon, was even more unkempt than the
others, but before its window Peter stopped. A few small coins—the
residue after his purchasing trip of the day before—remained in his
pocket, and in the window was a square of cardboard announcing “Hot Beef
Soup To-day.”</p>
<p>Hot beef soup, when a man has tramped many miles carrying a heavy child,
is a temptation. Buddy himself would be glad of a bowl of hot soup, and
Peter opened the door and entered.</p>
<p>The store was narrow and dark. A few feet, just inside the door, were
occupied by the scanty stock of groceries, tobacco and cheap candy, and
back of this was the bar, with two small tables in the space before it.
The whole place was miserably dirty. It was no gilded liquor palace, with
mirrors and glittering cash-registers. The bar was of plain pine, painted
“barn-red,” and the whole arrangement was primitive and cheap. Beyond the
bar room a partition cut off the living room, and this completed “Mrs.
Crink's Place.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Crink had a bad reputation. During the stringent prohibition days she
had run a “speak-easy” without paying the town the usual monthly
disorderly house fine, and had served her term in jail. After that she was
strongly suspected of boot-legging whisky, and she had purchased this new
place but a few days since. She was a thin, sour-faced, angular woman,
ugly alike in face and temper. When Peter opened the door a bell sounded
sharply, but the high voice of Mrs. Crink in the living room drowned the
bell. She was scolding and reviling at the top of her voice—swearing
like a man—and a child was sobbing and pleading. Peter heard the
sharp slap of a hand against a face, and a cry from the child, and Mrs.
Crink came into the bar room, her eyes glaring and her face dark with
anger.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you want?” she snarled.</p>
<p>“I'd like to get two bowls of soup for me and the boy, if it ain't too
much trouble,” said Peter.</p>
<p>“Everything's trouble,” whined Mrs. Crink. “I don't expect nothing else. A
woman can't make a living without these cranks tellin' her what she shall
and what she shan't. Shut up that howlin', you little devil, or I'll come
in there and bat your head off.”</p>
<p>She went into the living room and brought out the two bowls of soup,
placing them on one of the small tables. Peter lifted Buddy into a chair.
Mrs. Crink began wiping off the beer-wet bar.</p>
<p>“I wonder if you could let me have about a dime's worth of crackers and
cheese?” he asked, and Mrs. Crink dropped the dirty rag with which she was
wiping the bar.</p>
<p>“Come out here, and shut up your bawlin', and swab off this bar,” she
yelled, and the door of the back room opened and a girl came out. She was
the merest child. She came hesitatingly, holding her arm before her face,
and the old hag of a woman jerked up the filthy, wet rag and slapped her
across the face. It was none of Peter's business, but he half arose from
his chair and then dropped back again. It made his blood boil, but he had
not associated with shanty-boat men and women without learning that in the
coarser strata of humanity slaps and blows and ugly words are often the
common portion of children. He would have liked to interfere, but he knew
the inefficiency of any effort he might make, and like a shock it came to
him that it was for things like this that Briggles rescued,—or
pretended to rescue—little children. It was not so bad then, after
all. If he must give up Buddy there would be some compensation in telling
Briggles of this poor child, who deserved far more the attention of his
Society. All this passed through his mind in an instant, but before he
could turn back to his bowl of soup Buddy uttered a cry of joy and,
scrambling from his chair, ran across the floor toward the weeping girl.</p>
<p>“Oh! Susie! Susie! My Susie!” he shouted and threw himself upon her.</p>
<p>The impetus of his coming almost threw the child off her feet, and she
staggered back, but the next instant she had clasped her arms around the
boy, and was hugging him in a close, youthful embrace of joy.</p>
<p>“My Buddy! My Buddy!” she kept repeating over and over, as if all other
words failed her, as they will in an excess of sudden surprise. “My Buddy!
My Buddy!”</p>
<p>The woman stared for an instant in open-mouthed astonishment, and then her
eyes flashed with anger. She reached out her hand to grasp the girl, but
Peter Lane thrust it aside.</p>
<p>His own eyes could flash, and the woman drew back.</p>
<p>“Now, don't you do that!” he said hotly.</p>
<p>“You git out of my store, then!” shouted Mrs. Crink. “You take your brat
and git out!”</p>
<p>“I'll get out,” said Peter slowly, “as soon as I am quite entirely ready
to do so. I hope you will understand that. And I'll be ready when I have
ate my soup.”</p>
<p>The woman glared at him. She let her hand drop behind the bar, where she
had a piece of lead pipe, and then, suddenly, she laughed a high, cackling
laugh to cover her defeat, and let her eyes fall. She slouched to the
front of the shop for the crackers and cheese and Peter seated himself
again at the small table, and looked at the children.</p>
<p>“Where's Mama?” he heard the girl ask, and Buddy's reply: “Mama went
away,” and he saw the look of wonder on the girl's face.</p>
<p>“Come here,” Peter said, and the girl came to the table.</p>
<p>“I guess you 're Buddy's sister he's been tellin' me about, ain't you?”
said Peter kindly, “and I'm his Uncle Peter He's been staying with on a
shanty-boat. Your ma”—he hesitated and looked at the girl's sweet,
clear eyes—“your ma went away, like Buddy said, Susie, but you don't
want to think she run away and left him, for that wouldn't be so, not at
all! She had to go, or she wouldn't 've gone. I guess—I guess she'd
've come and got you. Yes, I guess that's what she had on her mind. She
spoke of you quite a little before she went on her trip.”</p>
<p>“I want you should take me away from here,” said the girl suddenly.</p>
<p>“Well, now, I wish I could, Susie,” said Peter, “but I don't see how I
can. Maybe I can arrange it—” He poised his soup spoon in the air.
“Did Reverend Mr. Briggles bring you here?”</p>
<p>“Not here,” said Susie. “Mrs. Crink didn't live here, then.”</p>
<p>“Well, that's all the same,” said Peter. “I just wanted to enquire about
it. You'd better eat your soup, Buddy-boy. Well, now, let me see!”</p>
<p>Peter stared into the soup, as if it might hold, hidden in its muggy
depths, the answer to his riddle.</p>
<p>“Just at present I'm sort of unable to do what I'd like to do myself,” he
said. “I'd like to take you right with me, but I've got a certain friend
that was quite put out because I didn't bring your ma to—to see her
when your ma stopped in at my boat, and I guess maybe”—Mrs. Crink
was returning with the crackers and cheese, and Peter ended hurriedly—“I
guess maybe you better stay here until I make arrangements.”</p>
<p>It was a strange picture, the boy eating his soup gluttonously, Peter Lane
in his comedy tramp garb of blanket and blanket-strips, and the little
girl staring at him with big, trustful eyes. Mrs. Crink put the crackers
and cheese on the table.</p>
<p>“If you've got through takin' up time that don't belong to you, maybe I
can git some work out of this brat,” she snapped.</p>
<p>“Why, yes, ma'am,” said Peter politely. “It only so happened that this boy
was her brother. We didn't want to discommode you at all.”</p>
<p>Susie turned away to her work of swabbing the bar, and Peter divided the
crackers and cheese equally between himself and Buddy.</p>
<p>“I don't care much to have tramps come in here anyway,” said Mrs. Crink.
“I never knew one yit that wouldn't pick up anything loose,” but Peter
made no reply. He had a matter of tremendous import on his mind. He felt
that he had taken the weight of Susie's troubles on his shoulders in
addition to those of Buddy, and he had resolved to ask Widow Potter to
take the two children!</p>
<p>The parting of the two children had for them none of the pathos it had for
Peter. When Buddy had eaten the last scrap of cracker he got down from his
chair.</p>
<p>“Good-by, Susie,” he said.</p>
<p>“Good-by, Buddy,” she answered, and that was all, and Peter led the boy
out of the place.</p>
<p>There are, in Riverbank, alleys between each two of the streets parallel
with the river, and Peter, now that he had once more resolved not to allow
Briggles to have Buddy, took to the alleys as he passed through the town.
The outlandishness of his garb made him the more noticeable, he knew, and
he wished to avoid being seen. He traversed the entire town thus, even
where a creek made it necessary for him to scramble down one bank and up
another, until the alleys ended at the far side of the town. There he
crossed the vacant lot where a lumber mill had once stood, and struck into
the river road.</p>
<p>The boy seemed to take it all as a matter of course, but Peter kept a wary
eye on the road, ready to seek a hiding-place at the approach of any rig
that looked as if it might contain the Reverend Briggles, but none
appeared. A farmer, returning from town with a wagon, stopped at a word
from Peter, and allowed him to put Buddy in the wagon and clamber in with
him. They got out again at Mrs. Potter's gate.</p>
<p>The house was closed, and the doors locked. Peter tried them all before he
was convinced he had had the long tramp for nothing, and then he led Buddy
toward the barn. As he neared the barn the barn door opened and a man came
out, carrying a water bucket. He stared at Peter.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Potter is not at home, I guess?” said Peter.</p>
<p>“Nope,” said the man. “Anything I can do for you?”</p>
<p>“It's business on which I'll have to see her personally,” said Peter. “She
wasn't expecting I'd come. Is she going to be back soon?”</p>
<p>“Well, I guess she won't be back to-day,” said the man. “She only hired me
about a week ago, so she ain't got to telling me all her plans yet, but
she told me it was as like as not she'd go up to Derlingport to-day, and
maybe she might come home to-morrow, and maybe not till next day. Want to
leave any word for her?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Peter slowly, “I guess there's no word I could leave. I guess
not. I'm much obliged to you, but I won't leave no word. Come on,
Buddy-boy, we got to go back to town now, before night sets in.”</p>
<p>“Where are we going now, Uncle Peter?” asked the boy.</p>
<p>“Now? Well, now we 're going to see a friend I've got. You never slept in
a great, big stable, where there are a lot of horses, did you? You never
went to sleep on a great big pile of hay, did you? That'll be fun, won't
it, Buddy-boy?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Uncle Peter,” said the child cheerfully, and they began the long,
cold walk to town.</p>
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