FOR weeks the search for Andy
was kept up with unremitting vigilance, but no word
of him came to the anxious searchers. A few days
after the meeting with Mrs. Bray, the police report
mentioned the arrest of both Pinky Swett and Mrs.
Bray, alias Hoyt, alias Jewett, charged
with stealing a diamond ring of considerable value
from a jewelry store. They were sent to prison,
in default of bail, to await trial. Mr. Dinneford
immediately went to the prison and had an interview
with the two women, who could give him no information
about Andy beyond what Mrs. Bray had already communicated
in her hurried talk with Edith. Pinky could get
no trace of him after he had escaped. Mr. Dinneford
did not leave the two women until he had drawn from
them a minute and circumstantial account of all they
knew of Edith’s child from the time it was cast
adrift. When he left them, he had no doubt as
to its identity with Andy. There was no missing
link in the chain of evidence.
The new life that had opened to little
Andy since the dreary night on which, like a stray
kitten, he had crept into Andrew Hall’s miserable
hovel, had been very pleasant. To be loved and
caressed was a strange and sweet experience.
Poor little heart! It fluttered in wild terror,
like a tiny bird in the talons of a hawk, when Pinky
Swett swooped down and struck her foul talons into
the frightened child and bore him off.
“If you scream, I’ll choke
you to death!” she said, stooping to his ear,
as she hurried him from the mission-house. Scared
into silence, Andy did not cry out, and the arm that
grasped and dragged him away was so strong that he
felt resistance to be hopeless. Passing from
Briar street, Pinky hurried on for a distance of a
block, when she signaled a street-car. As she
lifted Andy upon the platform, she gave him another
whispered threat:
“Mind! if you cry, I’ll kill you!”
There were but few persons in the
car, and Pinky carried the child to the upper end
and sat him down with his face turned forward to the
window, so as to keep it as much out of observation
as possible. He sat motionless, stunned with
surprise and fear. Pinky kept her eyes upon him.
His hands were laid across his breast and held against
it tightly. They had not gone far before Pinky
saw great tear-drops falling upon the little hands.
“Stop crying!” she whispered,
close to his ear; “I won’t have it!
You’re not going to be killed.”
Andy tried to keep back the tears,
but in spite of all he could do they kept blinding
his eyes and falling over his hands.
“What’s the matter with
your little boy?” asked a sympathetic, motherly
woman who had noticed the child’s distress.
“Cross, that’s all.”
Pinky threw out the sentence in at snappish, mind-your-own-business
tone.
The motherly woman, who had leaned
forward, a look of kindly interest on her face, drew
back, chilled by this repulse, but kept her eyes upon
the child, greatly to Pinky’s annoyance.
After riding for half a mile, Pinky got out and took
another car. Andy was passive. He had ceased
crying, and was endeavoring to get back some of the
old spirit of brave endurance. He was beginning
to feel like one who had awakened from a beautiful
dream in which dear ideals had almost reached fruition,
to the painful facts of a hard and suffering life,
and was gathering up his patience and strength to
meet them. He sat motionless by the side of Pinky,
with his eyes cast down, his chin on his breast and
his lips shut closely together.
Another ride of nearly half a mile,
when Pinky left the car and struck away from the common
thoroughfare into a narrow alley, down which she walked
for a short distance, and then disappeared in one
of the small houses. No one happened to observe
her entrance. Through a narrow passage and stairway
she reached a second-story room. Taking a key
from her pocket, she unlocked the door and went in.
There was a fire in a small stove, and the room was
comfortable. Locking the door on the inside she
said to Andy, in a voice changed and kinder,
“My! your hands are as red as
beets. Go up to the stove and warm yourself.”
Andy obeyed, spreading out his little
hands, and catching the grateful warmth, every now
and then looking up into Pinky’s face, and trying
with a shrewder insight than is usually given to a
child of his age to read the character and purposes
it half concealed and half made known.
“Now, Andy,” said Pinky,
in a mild but very decided way—“your
name’s Andy?”
“Yes, ma’am,” answered
the child, fixing his large, intelligent eyes on her
face.
“Well, Andy, if you’ll
be a good and quiet boy, you needn’t be afraid
of anything—you won’t get hurt.
But if you make a fuss, I’ll throw you at once
right out of the window.”
Pinky frowned and looked so wicked
as she uttered the last sentence that Andy was frightened.
It seemed as if a devouring beast glared at him out
of her eyes. She saw the effect of her threat,
and was satisfied.
The short afternoon soon passed away.
The girl did not leave the room, nor talk with the
child except in very low tones, so as not to attract
the attention of any one in the house. As the
day waned snow began to fall, and by the time night
set in it was coming down thick and fast. As
soon as it was fairly dark, Pinky wrapped a shawl about
Andy, pinning it closely, so as to protect him from
the cold, and quietly left the house. He made
no resistance. A car was taken, in which they
rode for a long distance, until they were on the outskirts
of the city. The snow had already fallen to a
depth of two or three inches, and the storm was increasing.
When she left the car in that remote neighborhood,
not a person was to be seen on the street. Catching
Andy into her arms, Pinky ran with him for the distance
of half a block, and then turned into a close alley
with small houses on each side. At the lower
end she stopped before one of these houses, and without
knocking pushed open the door.
“Who’s that?” cried
a voice from an upper room, the stairway to which
led up from the room below.
“It’s me. Come down,
and be quiet,” answered Pinky, in a warning
voice.
A woman, old and gray, with all the
signs of a bad life on her wrinkled face, came hastily
down stairs and confronted Pinky.
“What now? What’s
brought you here?” she demanded, in no friendly
tones.
“There, there, Mother Peter!
smooth down your feathers. I’ve got something
for you to do, and it will pay,” answered Pinky,
who had shut the outside door and slipped the bolt.
At this, the manner of Mother Peter,
as Pinky had called her, softened, and she said,
“What’s up? What
deviltry are you after now, you huzzy?”
Without replying to this, Pinky began
shaking the snow from Andy and unwinding the shawl
with which she had bound him up. After he was
free from his outside wrappings, she said, looking
toward the woman,
“Now, isn’t he a nice
little chap? Did you ever see such eyes?”
The worn face of the woman softened
as she turned toward the beautiful child, but not
with pity. To that feeling she had long been
a stranger.
“I want you to keep him for
a few days,” said Pinky, speaking in the woman’s
ears. “I’ll tell you more about it
after he’s in bed and asleep.”
“He’s to be kept shut
up out of sight, mind,” was Pinky’s injunction,
in the conference that followed. “Not a
living soul in the neighborhood must know he’s
in the house, for the police will be sharp after him.
I’ll pay you five dollars a week, and put it
down in advance. Give him plenty to eat, and
be as good to him as you can, for you see it’s
a fat job, and I’ll make it fatter for you if
all comes out right.”
The woman was not slow to promise
all that Pinky demanded. The house in which she
lived had three rooms, one below and two smaller ones
above. From the room below a stove-pipe went up
through the floor into a sheet-iron drum in the small
back chamber, and kept it partially heated. It
was arranged that Andy should be made a close prisoner
in this room, and kept quiet by fear. It had only
one window, looking out upon the yard, and there was
no shed or porch over the door leading into the yard
below upon which he could climb out and make his escape.
In order to have things wholly secure the two women,
after Andy was asleep, pasted paper over the panes
of glass in the lower sash, so that no one could see
his face at the window, and fastened the sash down
by putting a nail into a gimlet-hole at the top.
“I guess thatt will fix him,”
said Pinky, in a tone of satisfaction. “All
you’ve got to do now is to see that he doesn’t
make a noise.”
On the next morning Andy was awake
by day-dawn. At first he did not know where he
was, but he kept very still, looking around the small
room and trying to make out what it all meant.
Soon it came to him, and a vague terror filled his
heart. By his side lay the woman into whose hands
Pinky had given him. She was fast asleep, and
her face, as he gazed in fear upon it, was even more
repulsive than it had looked on the night before.
His first impulse, after comprehending his situation,
was to escape if possible. Softly and silently
he crept out of bed, and made his way to the door.
It was fastened. He drew the bolt back, when
it struck the guard with a sharp click. In an
instant the old woman was sitting up in bed and glaring
at him.
“You imp of Satan!” she
cried, springing after him with a singular agility
for one of her age, and catching him by the arm with
a vice-like grip that bruised the tender flesh and
left it marked for weeks, drew him back from the door
and flung him upon the bed.
“Stay there till I tell you
to get up,” she added, with a cruel threat in
her voice. “And mind you, there’s
to be no fooling with me.”
The frightened child crept under the
bed-clothes, and hid his face beneath them. Mother
Peter did not lie down again, but commenced dressing
herself, muttering and grumbling as she did so.
“Keep where you are till I come
back,” she said to Andy, with the same cruel
threat in her voice. Going out, she bolted the
door on the other side. It was nearly half an
hour before the woman returned, bringing a plate containing
two or three slices of bread and butter and a cup
of milk.
“Now get up and dress yourself,”
was her sharply-spoken salutation to Andy as she came
into the room. “And you’re to be just
as still as a mouse, mind. There’s your
breakfast.” She set the plate on a table
and went out, bolting, as before, the door on the other
side. Andy did not see her again for over an
hour. Left entirely alone in his prison, his
restless spirit chafed for freedom. He moved about
the apartment, examining everything it contained with
the closest scrutiny, yet without making any noise,
for the woman’s threat, accompanied as it had
been with such a wicked look, was not forgotten.
He had seen in that look a cruel spirit of which he
was afraid. Two or three times he thought he
heard a step and a movement in the adjoining chamber,
and waited, almost holding his breath, with his eyes
upon the door, expecting every moment to see the scowling
face of his jailer. But no hand touched the door.
Tired at last with everything in the
room, he went to the window and sought to look out,
as he had already done many times. He could not
understand why this window, was so different from any
he had ever seen, and puzzled over it in his weak,
childish way. As he moved from pane to pane,
trying to see through, he caught a glimpse of something
outside, but it was gone in a moment. He stepped
back, then came up quickly to the glass, all the dull
quietude of manner leaving him. As he did so
a glimpse of the outside world came again, and now
he saw a little hole in the paper not larger than a
pin’s head. To scrape at this was a simple
instinct. In a moment he saw it enlarging, as
the paper peeled off from the glass. Scraping
away with his finger-nail, the glass was soon cleared
of paper for the space of an inch in diameter, and
through this opening he stood gazing out upon the
yards, below, and the houses that came up to them
from a neighboring street. There was a woman in
one of these yards, and she looked up toward the window
where Andy stood, curiously.
“You imp of Satan!” were
the terrible words that fell upon his ears at this
juncture, and he felt himself caught up as by a vulture.
He knew the cruel voice and the grip of the cruel
hands that had already left their marks in his tender
flesh. Mother Peter, her face red with passion
and her eyes slowing like coals of fire, held him
high in the air, and shook him with savage violence.
She did not strike, but continued shaking him until
the sudden heat of her passion had a little cooled.
“Didn’t I tell you not
to meddle with anything in this room?” and with
another bruising grip of Andy’s arms, she threw
him roughly upon the floor.
The little hole in the paper was then
repaired by pasting another piece of paper over it,
after which Andy was left alone, but with a threat
from Mother Peter that if he touched the window again
she would beat the life out of him. She had no
more trouble with him that day. Every half hour
or so she would come up stairs noiselessly, and listen
at the door, or break in upon the child suddenly and
without warning. But she did not find him again
at the window. The restlessness at first exhibited
had died out, and he sat or lay upon the floor in
a kind of dull, despairing stupor. So that day
passed.
On the second day of Andy’s
imprisonment he distinctly heard the old woman go
out at the street door and lock it after her.
He listened for a long time, but could hear no sound
in the house. A feeling of relief and a sense
of safety came over him. He had not been so long
in his prison alone without the minutest examination
of every part, and it had not escaped his notice that
the panes of glass in the upper sash of the window
were not covered with paper, as were those below.
But for the fear of one of Mother Peter’s noiseless
pouncings in upon him, he would long since have climbed
upon the sill and taken a look through the upper sash.
He waited now for full half an hour to be sure that
his jailer had left the house, and then, climbing
to the window-sill with the agility of a squirrel,
held on to the edge of the lower sash and looked out
through the clear glass above. Dreary and unsightly
as was all that lay under his gaze, it was beautiful
in the eyes of the child. His little heart swelled
and glowed; he longed, as a prisoner, for freedom.
As he stood there he saw that a nail held down the
lower sash, which he had so often tried, but in vain,
to lift. Putting his finger on this nail, he
felt it move. It had been placed loosely in a
gimlet-hole, and could be drawn out easily. For
a little while he stood there, taking out and putting
in the nail. While doing this he thought he heard
a sound below, and instantly dropped noiselessly from
the window. He had scarcely done so when the
door of his room opened and Mother Peter came in.
She looked at him sharply, and then retired without
speaking.
All the next day Andy listened after
Mother Peter, waiting to hear her go out. But
she did not leave the house until after he was asleep
in the evening.
On the next day, after waiting until
almost noon, the child’s impatience of confinement
grew so strong that he could no longer defer his meditated
escape from the window, for ever since he had looked
over the sash and discovered how it was fastened down,
his mind had been running on this thing. He had
noticed that Mother Peter’s visits to his room
were made after about equal intervals of time, and
that after she gave him his dinner she did not come
up stairs again for at least an hour. This had
been brought, and he was again alone.
For nearly five minutes after the
woman went out, he sat by the untasted food, his head
bent toward the door, listening. Then he got
up quietly, climbed upon the window-sill and pulled
the nail out. Dropping back upon the floor noiselessly,
he pushed his hands upward against the sash, and it
rose easily. Like an animal held in unwilling
confinement, he did not stop to think of any danger
that might lie in the way of escape when opportunity
for escape offered. The fear behind was worse
than any imagined fear that could lie beyond.
Pushing up the sash, Andy, without looking down from
the window, threw himself across the sill and dropped
his body over, supporting himself with his hands on
the snow-encrusted ledge for a moment, and then letting
himself fall to the ground, a distance of nearly ten
feet. He felt his breath go as he swept through
the air, and lost his senses for an instant or two.
Stunned by the fall, he did not rise
for several minutes. Then he got up with a slow,
heavy motion and looked about him anxiously. He
was in a yard from which there was no egress except
by way of the house. It was bitter cold, and
he had on nothing but the clothing worn in the room
from which he had just escaped. His head was bare.
The dread of being found here by Mother
Peter soon lifted him above physical impediment or
suffering. Through a hole in the fence he saw
an alley-way; and by the aid of an old barrel that
stood in the yard, he climbed to the top of the fence
and let himself down on the other side, falling a
few feet. A sharp pain was felt in one of his
ankles as his feet touched the ground. He had
sprained it in his leap from the window, and now felt
the first pangs attendant on the injury.
Limping along, he followed the narrow
alley-way, and in a little while came out upon a street
some distance from the one in which Mother Peter lived.
There were very few people abroad, and no one noticed
or spoke to him as he went creeping along, every step
sending a pain from the hurt ankle to his heart.
Faint with suffering and chilled to numbness, Andy
stumbled and fell as he tried, in crossing a street,
to escape from a sleigh that turned a corner suddenly.
It was too late for the driver to rein up his horse.
One foot struck the child, throwing him out of the
track of the sleigh. He was insensible when taken
up, bleeding and apparently dead. A few people
came out of the small houses in the neighborhood,
attracted by the accident, but no one knew the child
or offered to take him in.
There were two ladies in the sleigh,
and both were greatly pained and troubled. After
a hurried consultation, one of them reached out her
hands for the child, and as she received and covered
him with the buffalo-robe said something to the driver,
who turned his horse’s head and drove off at
a rapid speed.