Part Two-8
et. o led. treets rung ric ligood in laug eacion Army girl in tinkled a bell on t Singer obliged to drop a coin into t beside her.
te, y isements cast an orange glohe crowd.
onapoulos afternoon. tore aken every pay-day. ograp no toaken a picnic luncen in a field on her side.
Singer reet for about an last ook out curned tohe house where he lived.
Pero his room. he hoped so.
onapoulos a large box of presents for Cmas. Also ed gifts to eaco Mrs. Kelly. For all of toget a radio and put it on table by tor Copeland did not notice ticed it immediately and raised kept it turned on all time tation, and as alked o be sing above tood out on understand to t suited leaning forward in ing
very fast in emple. So listen all over to ernoon, and imes w work and few days w rumpled here was a look in her face he had never seen before.
One niger Cmas all four of to visit time. this had never happened before.
Singer moved about ts and did in teness to make s comfortable. But something was wrong.
Doctor Copeland sit do in o thers.
t opened t front. Mick Kelly listened to t on then becoming narrow and fixed.
Singer no toget. ed an outburst of some kind. In a vague o be thing.
But in train. ogether.
Jake Blount stood beside Doctor Copeland. I know your face.
e run into eaceps outside.’
Doctor Copeland moved ongue precisely as t a ed, iff body seemed to sepped back until outside t