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    Oernoon he had e to meet Antonapoulos at the fruit store when Charles Parker handed him a letter. The letter explaihat Charles Parker had made arras for his cousin to be taken to the state insane asylum two hundred miles away. Charles Parker had used his influen the town and the details were already settled. Antonapoulos was to leave and to be admitted into the asylum the , week.

    Singer read the letter several times, and for a while he could not think. Charles Parker was talking to him across the ter, but he did not even try to read his lips and uand. At last Singer wrote otle pad he always carried in his pocket:You ot do this. Antonapoulos must stay with me.

    Charles Parker shook his head excitedly. He did not know much Ameri. None of your business, he kept saying over and over.

    Singer khat everything was fihe Greek was afraid that some day he might be responsible for his cousin.

    Charles Parker did not know much about the Ameri language—but he uood the Ameri dollar very well, and he had used his money and influeo admit his cousin

    to the asylum without delay.

    There was nothing Singer could do.

    The  week was full of feverish activity. He talked and talked. And although his hands never paused to rest he could not tell all that he had to say. He wao talk to Antonapoulos of all the thoughts that had ever been in his mind a, but there was not time. His gray eyes glittered and his quick, intelligent face expressed great strain.

    Antonapoulos watched him drowsily, and his friend did not know just what he really uood.

    Then came the day when Antonapoulos must leave. Singer brought out Ms own suitcase and very carefully packed the best of their joint possessions. Antonapoulos made himself a lunch to eat during the journey. Ie afternoon they walked arm in arm dowreet for the last time together. It was a chilly afternoon in late November, and little huffs of breath showed in the air before them.

    Charles Parker was to travel with his cousin, but he stood apart from them at the station. Antonapoulos crowded into the bus aled himself with elaborate preparations on one of the fros. Singer watched him from the window and his hands began desperately to talk for the last time with his friend. But Antonapoulos was so busy cheg over the various items in his lunch box that for a while he paid no attention. Just before the bus pulled away from the curb he turo Singer and his smile was very b藏书网land ae—as though already they were many miles apart.

    The weeks that followed didnt seem real at all. All day Singer worked over his ben the back of the jewelry store, and then at night he returo the house alone. More than anything he wao sleep. As soon as he came home from work he would lie on his cot and try to doze awhile. Dreams came to him when he lay there half-asleep. And in all of them Antonapoulos was there. His hands would jerk nervously, for in his dreams he was talk-  ing to his friend and Antonapoulos was watg him.

    Siried to think of the time b<q></q>efore he had ever known his friend. He tried to ret to himself certain things that had happened when he was young. But none of these things he tried to remember seemed real.

    There was one particu<cite>藏书网</cite>lar fact that he remembered, but it was not at all important to him. Singer recalled that, although he had been deaf since he was an infant, he had not always been a real mute. He was left an orphan very young and placed in an institution for the deaf. He had learo talk with his hands and to read. Before he was nine years old he could talk with one hand in the Ameri way—and also could employ both of his hands after the method of Europeans. He had learo follow the movements of peoples lips and to uand what they said. Then finally he had been taught to speak.

    At the school he was thought very intelligent. He learhe lessons before the rest of the pupils. But he could never bee used to speaking with his lips. It was not natural to him, and his tongue felt like a whale in his mouth. From the blank expression on peoples faces to whom he talked in this way he felt that his voice must be like the sound of some animal or that there was something disgusting in his speech. It ainful for him to try to talk with his mouth, but his hands were always ready to shape the words he wished to say. When he was twenty-two he had e South to this town from Chicago a Antonapoulos immediately. Sihat time he had never spoken with his mouth again, because with his friend there was no need for this.

    Nothing seemed real except the ten years with Antonapoulos.

    In his half-dreams he saw his friend very vividly, and when he awakened a great ag loneliness would be in him.

    Occasionally he would pack up a box for Antonapoulos, but he never received any reply. And so the months passed hi this empty, dreaming way.

    In the spring a ge came over Singer. He could not sleep and his body was very restless. At evening he would walk monotonously around the room, uo work off a new feeling of energy. If he rested at all it was only during a few hours before dawn—then he would drop bluntly into   a sleep that lasted until the m light struck suddenly beh his opening eyelids like a scimitar.

    He began spending his evenings walking around the town. He could no loand the rooms where Antonapoulos had

    lived, and he rented a pla a shambling b-house not far from the ter of the town.

    He ate his meals at a restaurant only two blocks away. This restaurant was at the very end of the long main street and the name of the place was the New York Cafe. The first day he glanced over the menu quickly and wrote a short note and ha to the proprietor.

    Each m for breakfast I want an egg, toast, and coffee $.For lunch I want soup (any kind), a meat sandwich, and milk—$.Please bri dihree vegetables (any kind but cabbage), fish or meat, and a glass of beer— $.Thank you.

    The proprietor read the note and gave him a, tactful glance. He was a hard man of middle height, with a beard so dark and heavy that the lower part of his face looked as though it were molded of iron. He usually stood in the er by the cash register, his arms folded over his chest, quietly  all that went on around him. Singer came to know this mans face very well, for he ate at one of his tables three times a day.

    Each evening the mute walked alone for hours ireet.

    Sometimes the nights were cold with the sharp, wet winds of Mard it would be raining heavily. But to him this did not matter. His gait was agitated and he always kept his hands stuffed tight into the pockets of his trousers. Then as the weeks passed the days grew warm and languorous. His agitation gave way gradually to exhaustion and there was a look about him of deep calm. In his face there came to be a brooding peace that is seen most often in the faces of the very sorrowful or the very wise. But still he wahrough the streets of the town, always silent and alone. \_f N A black, sultry night in early summer Biff Brannon stood behind the cash register of the New York Cafe. It was twelve oclock. Outside the street lights had already been turned off, so that the light from the cafe made a sharp, yellow regle on the sidewalk. The street was deserted, but inside

    the cafe there were half a dozen ers drinking beer or Santa Lucia wine or whiskey. Biff waited stolidly, his elbow resting on the ter and his thumb mashing the tip of his long nose. His eyes were i. He watched especially a short, squat man in overalls who had bee drunk and boisterous. Now and then his gaze passed on to the mute who sat by himself at one of the middle tables, or to others of the ers before the ter. But he always turned back to the drunk in overalls. The hrew later and Biff tio wait silently behind the ter. Then at last he gave the restaurant a final survey aoward the door at the back which led upstairs.

    Quietly he ehe room at the top of the stairs. It was dark inside and he walked with caution. After he had gone a few paces his toe struething hard and he reached down a for the handle of a suitcase on the floor. He had only been in the room a few seds and was about to leave when the light was turned on.

    Alice sat up in the rumpled bed and looked at him. What you doing with that suitcase? she asked. t you get rid of that lunatic without giving him back what hes already drunk up?’

    Wake up and go down yourself. Call the cop a him get soused on the  gang with bread and peas. Go to it, Misses Brannon.’

    I will all right if hes dowomorrow. But you leave that bag alo dont belong to that sponger any more.’

    I know spongers, and Blounts not one, Biff said. Myself—I dont know so well. But Im not that kind of a thief.’

    Calmly Biff put down the suitcase oeps outside.

    The air was not so stale and sultry in the room as it was downstairs. He decided to stay for a short while and douse his face with cold water befoing back.

    I told you already what Ill do if you do rid of that fellow food tonight. In the daytime he takes them naps at the back, and then at night you feed him dinners and beer. For a week now he hasnt paid o. And all his wild talking and carrying-on will ruin a trade.’

    You dont know people and you dont know real business, Biff said. &quot;The fellow iion first came iwelve

    days ago and he was a stranger iown. The first week he gave us twenty dollars worth of trade. Twen<bdo></bdo>ty at the minimum.’

    And sihen o, Alice said. Tive days o, and so drunk its a disgrace to the business. And besides, hes nothing but a bum and a freak.’

    I like freaks, Biff said.

    I re you dol I just re you certainly ought to, Mister Brannon—being as youre one yourself.’

    He rubbed his bluish  and paid her no attention. For the first fifteen years of their married life they had called each other just plain Biff and Alice. Then in one of their quarrels they had begun calling each other Mister and Misses, and sihen they had never made it up enough to ge it.

    Tm just warning you hed better not be there when I e down tomorrow.’

    Biff went into the bathroom, and after he had bathed his face he decided that he would have time for a shave. His beard was blad heavy as though it had grown for three days. He stood before the mirror and rubbed his cheek meditatively. He was sorry he had talked to Alice. With her, silence was better.

    Being around that woman always made him different from his real self. It made him tough and small and on as she was. Biffs eyes were cold and staring, half-cealed by the ical droop of his eyelids. On the fifth finger of his calloused hand there was a womans wedding ring. The door en behind him, and in the mirror he could see Alice lying in the bed.

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