Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 109/241

All at once I heard a shrill warning cry, and looking to my right saw

the two young ruffians who had been the most obnoxious, while at the

same moment I saw that the warning had taken effect, the boy I chased

having started off afresh.

"I will catch you," I muttered through my teeth; and, determined not to

lose sight of him again, I ran on, in and out among carts and vans,

jostling and being jostled, running blindly now, for my sole thought was

to keep that boy in view, and this I did the more easily now, that

feeling at last that he could not escape me in the market, he suddenly

crossed the road, ran in and out for a minute in what seemed like an

archway, and then ran as hard as he could along a wide street and I

after him.

Suddenly he turned to the right into a narrow street, and along by a

great building. At the end of this he turned to the right again, past

the front and nearly to the bottom of the street, when he turned to the

left and followed a wide street till it became suddenly narrow, and

instead of being full of people it was quite empty.

Here he darted into a covered way with columns all along the side,

running very fast still, and I suppose I was too, and gradually

overtaking him, but he reached the end of the street before I could come

up with him, and as he turned the corner I felt quite despairing once

more at seeing him pass out of sight.

It was only a matter of moments before I too turned the corner, and

found myself in the dirtiest busiest street I had ever seen, with

unpleasant-looking people about, and throngs of children playing over

the foul pavement and in the road.

My boy seemed quite at home there and as if he belonged to the place. I

noticed that as I ran after him, wondering whether it would be of any

use to call to them to stop him, though if I had determined that it

would be I had not the breath, as I panted on at a much slower rate now,

and with the perspiration streaming down my face.

I kept losing sight of him, there were so many people grouped about the

pavement along which he ran, while I kept to the road, but he went in

and out among them as easily as a dog might have run, till all at once I

saw him dive in amongst a number of men talking at the entrance of a

narrow archway with a public-house on one side, and as I ran up I found

that it was a court, down which I caught a glimpse of the boy with the

rope still over his arm.