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CHAPTER III. A DREARY DAY
 Daniel Dwight's Emporium, the general store was called, and it was in a very populous1 part of the town of Crawberry. Old Daniel was a driver, he seldom had clerks enough to handle his trade properly, and nobody could suit him. As general helper and junior clerk, Hiram Strong had remained with the concern longer than any other boy Daniel had hired in years.  
When the early Monday morning rush was over, and there was moment's breathing space, Hiram went to the door to re-arrange the trays of vegetables which were his particular care. Hiram had a knack2 of making a bank of the most plebeian3 vegetable and salads look like the display-window of a florist4.
 
Now the youth looked out upon a typical city street, the dwellings5 on either side being four and five story tenement6 houses, occupied by artisans and mechanics.
 
A few quarreling children paddled sticks, or sailed chip boats, in the gutters7.
 
“Come on, now! Get a move on you, Hi!” sounded the raucous8 voice of Daniel Dwight the elder, behind him in the store.
 
Hiram went at his task with neither interest nor energy.
 
All about him the houses and the street were grimy and depressing. It had been a gray and murky9 morning; but overhead a patch of sky was as blue as June. He suddenly saw a flock of pigeons wheeling above the tunnel of the street, and the boy's heart leaped at the sight.
 
He longed for freedom. He wished he could fly, up, up, up above the housetops and the streets, like those feathered fowl10.
 
He knew he was stagnating11 here in this dingy12 store; the deadly sameness of his life chafed13 him sorely.
 
“I'd take another job if I could find one,” he muttered, stirring up the bunches of yellowing radish leaves and trying to make them look fresh. “And Old Daniel is likely to give me a chance to hunt a job pretty sudden—the way he talks. But if Dan, Junior, told him what happened yesterday, I wonder the old gentleman hasn't been after me with a sharp stick.”
 
From somewhere—out of the far-distant open country where it had been breathing all night the quivering pines, and brown swamps, and the white and gray checkered14 fields that would soon be upturned by the plowshares—a vagrant15 wind wandered into the city street.
 
The lingering, but faint perfume wafted16 here from God's open world to die in this man-made town inspired in the youth thoughts and desires that had been struggling within him for expression for days past.
 
“I know what I want,” said Hiram Strong, aloud. “I want to get back to the land!”
 
The progress of the day was not inducive to a hopeful outlook for Hiram. When closing time came he was heartily17 sick of the business of storekeeping, if he never had been before.
 
And when he dragged himself home to the boarding house, he found the atmosphere there as dreary18 as the street itself. The boarders were grumpy and Mrs. Atterson was in a tearful state again.
 
Hiram could not stay in his room. It was a narrow, cold place at the end of the back hall at the top of the house. There was a little, painted bureau in it, one leg of which had been replaced by a brick, and the little glass was so blue and blurred19 that he never could see in it whether his tie was straight or not.
 
There was a chair, a shelf for books, and a narrow folding bed. When the bed was dropped down for his occupancy at night, he could not get the door open. Had there ever been a fire at Atterson's at night, Hiram's best chance for escape would have been by the window.
 
So this evening, to kill the miserable20 stretch of time until sleep should come to him, the boy went out and walked the streets.
 
Two things had saved Hiram Strong from getting into bad company on these evening rambles21. One was the small amount of money he earned, and the other was the naturally clean nature of the boy. The cheap amusements which lured22 on either hand did not attract him.
 
But the dangers are there in every city, and they lurk23 for every boy in a like position.
 
The main thoroughfare in this part of the town where Hiram boarded was brightly lighted, gaudy24 electric signs attracting notice to cheap picture shows, catch-penny arcades25, cheap jewelry26 stores, and the ever present saloons and pool rooms.
 
It looked bright, and warm, and lively in many of these places; but the country-bred boy was cautious.
 
Now and then a raucous-voiced automobile27 shot along the street; the electric cars made their usual clangor, and there was still some ordinary traffic of the day dribbling28 away into the side streets, for it was early in the evening.
 
Hiram was about to turn into one of these side streets on his way back to Mrs. Atterson's. Turning the corner was a handsome span of horses attached to a comfortable but mud-bespattered carriage. It was plainly from the country.
 
The light at the corner of the street shone brightly into the carriage. Hiram saw a well-built man in a gray greatcoat and slouch hat, holding the reins29 over the backs of the spirited horses.
 
Beside him sat a girl. She could have been no more than twelve or fourteen—not so old as Sister, by a year or two. But how different she was from the starved-looking, boarding house slavey!
 
She was framed in furs—rich, gray and black furs that muffled30 her from top to toe, only leaving her brilliant, dark little face with its perfect features shining like a jewel in its setting.
 
She was talking laughingly to the big man beside her, and he was looking down at her. Perhaps this was why he did not see what lay just ahead—or perhaps the glare of the street light blinded him, as it must have the horses, as the equipage turned into the darker side street.
 
But Hiram saw their peril31. He sprang into the street with a cry of warning. And he was lucky enough to seize the nigh horse by the bridle32 and pull both the high-steppers around.
 
There was an excavation33—an opening for a water-main—in this street. The workmen had either neglected to leave a red lantern, or malicious34 boys had stolen it.
 
Another moment and the horses would have been in this excavation and even now the carriage swayed. One forward wheel went over the edge of the hole, and for the minute it was doubtful whether Hiram had saved the occupants of the carriage by his quick action, or had accelerated the catastrophe35.
 
 


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