country, but the perilous passage was safely negotiated. The expedition reached its unsavory goal intact.

The wop kid inhabited a small room at the very top of a building half-way down the street. He was out when John and Pugsy arrived.

It was not an abode of luxury, the tenement; they had to feel their way up the stairs in almost pitch darkness. Most of the doors were shut, but one on the second floor was ajar. Through the opening John had a glimpse of a number of women sitting on up-turned boxes. The floor was covered with little heaps of linen. All the women were sewing. Stumbling in the darkness, John almost fell against the door. None of the women looked up at the noise. In Broster Street time was evidently money.

On the top floor Pugsy halted before the open door of an empty room. The architect in this case had apparently given rein to a passion for originality, for he had constructed the apartment without a window of any sort whatsoever. The entire stock of air used by the occupants came through a small opening over the door.

It was a warm day, and John recoiled hastily.

“Is this the kid’s room?” he said. “I guess the corridor’s good enough for me to wait in. What the owner of this place wants,” he went on reflectively, “is scalping. Well, we’ll do it in the paper if we can’t in any other way. Is this your kid?”

A small boy had appeared. He seemed surprised to see visitors. Pugsy undertook to do the honors. Pugsy, as interpreter, was energetic, but not wholly successful. He appeared to have a fixed idea that the Italian language was one easily mastered by the simple method of saying “da” instead of “the,” and adding a final “a” to any word that seemed to him to need one.

“Say, kid,” he began, “has da rent-a-man come yet-a?”

The black eyes of the wop kid clouded. He gesticulated, and said something in his native language.

“He hasn’t got next,” reported Master Maloney. “He can’t git on to me curves. Dese wop kids is all bone-heads. Say, kid, look-a here.” He walked to the door, rapped on it smartly, and, assuming a look of extreme ferocity, stretched out his hand and thundered: “Unbelt-a! Slip-a me da stuff!”

The wop kid’s puzzlement in the face of this address became pathetic.

“This,” said John, deeply interested, “is getting exciting. Don’t give in, Pugsy. I guess the trouble is that your too perfect Italian accent is making the kid homesick.”

Master Maloney made a gesture of disgust.

“I’m t’roo. Dese Dagoes makes me tired. Dey don’t know enough to go upstairs to take de elevated. Beat it, you mutt,” he observed with moody displeasure, accompanying the words with a gesture which conveyed its own meaning. The wop kid, plainly glad to get away, slipped down the stairs like a shadow.

Pugsy shrugged his shoulders.

“Boss,” he said resignedly, “it’s up to youse.”

John reflected.

“It’s all right,” he said. “Of course, if the collector had been here, the kid wouldn’t be. All I’ve got to do is to wait.”

He peered over the banisters into the darkness below.

“Not that it’s not enough,” he said; “for of all the poisonous places I ever met this is the worst. I wish whoever built it had thought to put in a few windows. His idea of ventilation was apparently to leave a hole about the size of a lima bean and let the thing go at that.”

“I guess there’s a door on to de roof somewhere,” suggested Pugsy. “At de joint where I lives dere is.”

His surmise proved correct. At the end of the passage a ladder, nailed against the wall, ended in a large square opening, through which was visible, if not “that narrow strip of blue which prisoners call the sky,” at any rate a tall brick chimney and a clothesline covered with garments that waved lazily in the breeze.

John stood beneath it, looking up.

“Well,” he said, “this isn’t much, but it’s better than nothing. I suppose the architect of this place was one of those fellows who don’t begin to appreciate air till it’s thick enough to scoop chunks out with a spoon. It’s an acquired taste, I guess, like Limburger cheese. And now, Pugsy, old scout, you had better beat it. There may be a rough-house here any minute now.”

Pugsy looked up, indignant.

“Beat it?”

“While your shoe-leather’s good,” said John firmly. “This is no place for a minister’s son. Take it from me.”

“I want to stop and pipe de fun,” objected Master Maloney.

“What fun?”

“I guess you ain’t here to play ball,” surmised Pugsy shrewdly, eying the big stick.

“Never mind why I’m here,” said John. “Beat it. I’ll tell you all about it to-morrow.”

Master Maloney prepared reluctantly to depart. As he did so there was a sound of well-shod feet on the stairs, and a man in a snuff-colored suit, wearing a brown Homburg hat and carrying a small notebook in one hand, walked briskly up the stairs. His whole appearance proclaimed him to be the long-expected collector of rents.

CHAPTER XXV

CORNERED

He did not see John for a moment, and had reached the door of the room when he became aware of a presence. He turned in surprise. He was a smallish, pale-faced man with protruding eyes and teeth which gave him a certain resemblance to a rabbit.

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