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"I . . ." Tyl gulped. "I did want to find out something," she said, but I don't know quite how to go about it. I was going to ask your little boy, but Tm afraid he's too little to remember."

"Remember what?"

"Just. . . whether a certain car went by yesterday morning."

"He wouldn't know," said the mother sternly.

“No, I guess he wouldn't," said Tyl. She turned away.

"You come right in and let me wash those hands," she heard the woman saying. "Where in the world ... ! You didn't get into any more chocolate, did you?"

"Uhuh," said Gigi.

"You didn't pick anything up and put it in your mouth today?"

"Uhuh."

"You remember what Mommy told you? Did you?"

"Umum."

"He doesn't know," said the woman apologetically to Tyl, who still stood uncertainly on the sidewalk. "Lord, hell pick up any old thing and it's so dangerous. Gigi, I told you to throw that paper away.

The woman pulled something out of the little pocket and threw on the ground.

Gigi bawled protest.

"You cannot have it! You mustn't keep dirty old things other people have thrown away. How many times . . . ?"

But Mathilda was at her elbow now, breathless, demanding. "When did he find the chocolate? Was it yesterday?"

"Yes, it was," the woman said in surprise.

"Oh, thank you!" cried Mathilda. "Thank you so much! That's just what I wanted to know!"

She swooped down and picked up the bit of bright metallic paper, gaudy enough to attract a child, bright enough to see in the grass. She flattened it out with eager fingers. There was the Dutch name hidden in the pattern. It was a wrapper from one of Grandy's

chocolates!

Francis, in her room that night, had taken a handful. He'd put them in his pocket. No one on earth but Francis or Grandy could have dropped one of those candies. And there was a car that had turned on Dabney Street, that had picked up a man who had waited for a bus.

Francis! It was a trail! It was going to be a paper chase! Oh. clever Francis!

"Oh, thank you! Thank you so much!" Tyl flew back down the path. The woman stood in belated curiosity.

But Tyl went off down Dabney Street with the paper in her pocket and her fingers tight on it. Oh, clever Francis! But this showed he hadn't got into that car because he wanted to. Or why drop clues?

Chapter Twenty-eight

Perhaps he bad taken it out to eat it Perhaps he had dropped it by accident. Perhaps somebody else, after all, had Dutch chocolates. But no, no, no. At least, she thought, I've got to go on down Dabney Street and keep looking.

She kept her eyes along the curb, remembering that Francis would have been the passenger, would have been sitting on this side. Still, it was yesterday. Other children on the street might have found other candies, and how would she know? She thought of

Hansel and Gretel, of the birds that ate the crumbs and spoiled the trail home.

She came to the next corner and stopped to think it out. A car turning a corner keeps to the right. Francis sat on the right. She went around the corner to the right, searching the inside curb. Nothing. Then she thought that if the car turned left, he would be on the outside. The middle of the intersection was no good. She crossed over and searched along the curb near which Francis would have been carried had the car turned left. Nothing.

Now what to do? She saw the search branching out hopelessly. Now she had a choice of three, and each corner she would reach on each of three routes would have, in turn, a choice of three. The thing multiplied violently. It was impossible.

She went along Dabney Street, walking on down on the right side, watching the curb. He had dropped a clue, hadn't he, after they'd turned a corner? He wouldn't drop a clue at every cross street. So, at every intersection she searched, after the turns. Six blocks along, she saw a bit of burnished purple. Intact. Candy and all. Another one! The car had turned right on Enderby Street. Oh, clever Francis! Oh, clever Mathilda! She walked along jauntily, happy and pleased and excited. She knew where to look now, for sure.

She found a green wrapper twisted up, empty, on the brink of a sewer. Her lip began to bleed where she'd bitten it, thinking how near that clue had been to being lost. Head down, she plodded on. She spotted a blue one from all the way across the road. She thought, My eyes are good. They'll last as long as the candies do. She wondered how many there could have been in that handful. And how many more corners—

She plodded on. Ten blocks on the same street. She stopped, then, and went back in a panic. She'd missed it. Or it was gone. She came along the same ten blocks again, almost despairing. Nothing.

On the eleventh corner there was a purple one shining under a hedge. To the left, then. Yes, Francis. Eyes aching, she went on. The trail had led her into a meaner part of town, a poorer part, at least, A part where she'd never been. Not on foot. Not alone. Surely the

afternoon must be wearing along. This street seemed to have uneasy shadows. The trail had been so long. She looked at her watch. No, it was not even two o'clock.

She stopped in her tracks. Her eye just caught it. She would have been by in another second. Inside the driveway, inside the straggly border of barberry bushes, there was a little heap of five or six candies all together. Bright and gay, like Christmas, they sparkled

on the dull grass. Inside the drive. Inside the property line.

The house was a dirty white, an old frame house, respectable enough, closed looking. No sign of children here, no flowers, no outdoor life at all. A bleak porch, a tall door with old-fashioned hardware.

She made herself walk by, hiding as well as she could her sudden stop by pretending to search in her purse, as if she'd thought of something. She walked two doors beyond. Shrubs, just leafing out, hid her now. She stopped again. That was the house! In there. The thing to do was to call the police, of course. But would they come? Would they believe her? Would they be quick enough? Would they go into the house? Could she convince them there was enough to warrant going in?

She thought, If I could only get closer.

She dared not go to the door and ring and make an excuse. If Francis was in there, he would not, in any case, be sitting in the front parlor to be seen by a caller. He would not answer the door, either. That wouldn't be any good.

She turned slowly back and went, instead, up the walk to the neighbor house. There was a deep shrub border between the plots. She had an idea.

The lady of the house was at home.

"I beg your pardon," Tyl said with all the charm she could muster. " I want to ask you a strange kind of favor. You see, the other day my little boy and I were coming by, and he lost his ball. His favorite ball."

"Isn't that a shame," said the woman. She had a long flat jaw, and she pulled it far down, as if she were making a face. She meant well, Mathilda realized.

"Yes, it was too bad," she continued, "and I was just going by again, and I thought perhaps you'd let me look in among your shrubs there. I'll be very careful. I won't injure them; really I won't."

"Well, I guess you won't," the woman said rather grudgingly.

"Then you don't mind if I poke around in there a little? If I could find it, he'd be so happy. He's three," she babbled. "His name is Gigi. That's what I call him. I would be so grateful to you."