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the policeman. A policeman wasn't a man to be afraid of when you knew him; why wouldn't I come and see this one? He--Willy, quite a hero that morning--would take care of me. Then away, with excited face and flying feet, downstairs again. And presently, a quieter step upon the stairs--a step I knew well then, hear often in the lonely silence now, shall surely know amid the sound of all the myriad feet that tread the golden floor when I hear it again--and my mother was in the room. "Where is my little girl, and what is she hiding away for? And what have you got in your lap, and why are you crying, Polly?" she asked. Then she turned back my little skirt which hid it, and there was the kitten; sobbing wildly, I flew up and pushed it into her arms. "The man--the man at the window--promised it," I cried, incoherently. "And I wanted it because it was so unhappy--and we left the window open--and I loved it so. And it had to walk the plank--and Willy and me thought it was asleep, and I picked it up--and it was dead." Soon, lying with the dead kitten in her arms, I had sobbed out something of the story. "It is a secret--a secret," I told her, wildly; "don't let Willy and the man at the window know I told!" She carried me away, before the policeman and my father had mounted to the attic. It was Willy, shaken and frightened now, who had to tell the story of the unscrewed screen, the open window, the plank laid across. They said it was the young man at the window who came over on the plank, sitting on it and pulling himself along; they said he brought the kitten, as he had promised, having first choked the life out of it lest it should mew, and wake the house. They said that when they caught the robber, Willy and I would have to go and look at him and say, "That is the man." We used to lie shaking in our beds at night, dreading the hour when we should be called on to do this duty. But they never got the jewellery back, they never caught the robber. As time went on, Willy, who was always brave for his age, grew braver, and would often declare he, if policemen were present, and the robber in hand-cuffs, would not be afraid to look upon him; but be sure that I, who thought of the murdered kitten, had never a wish to see the young man with the prominent black eyes and the runaway chin again. * * * * * I made a pilgrimage to that wide street the other day, and stopped befo
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