Maybe I ought to let someone know.
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I figure I'll test Pop out, just casual like.
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"Some queer-looking types hanging around this neighborhood," I say at dinner.
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"I saw a tough-looking guy hanging around Number Forty-six this afternoon. Might have been a burglar, even."
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I figure Pop'll at least ask me what he was doing, and maybe I'll tell him the whole thing—about Cat and the cage.
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But Pop says, "In case you didn't know it, burglars do not all look like Humphrey Bogart, and they don't wear signs."
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"Thanks for the news," I say and go on eating my dinner. Even if Pop does make me sore, I'm not going to pass up steak and onions, which we don't have very often.
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However, the next day I'm walking along Twenty-first Street and I see the super of Forty-six standing by the back entrance, so I figure I'll try again.
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I say to him, "Us kids were playing ball here yesterday, and we saw a strange-looking guy sneak into your cellar. It wasn't a delivery boy."
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"Yeah? You sure it wasn't you or one of your juvenile pals trying to swipe a bike? How come you have to play ball right here?"
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"I don't swipe bikes. I got one of my own. New. A Raleigh. Better than any junk you got in there."
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"What d'you know about what I got in there, wise guy?"
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"Aw, forget it." I realize he's just getting suspicious of me.
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That's what comes of trying to be a big public-spirited citizen.
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I decide my burglar, whoever he is, is a lot nicer than the super, and I hope he got a fat haul.
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Next day it looks like maybe he did just that.
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The local paper, Town and Village, has a headline: "Gramercy Park Cellar Robbed." I read down the article:
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"The superintendent, Fred Snood, checked the cellar storage cages, after a passing youth hinted to him that there had been a robbery. He found one cage open and a suitcase missing. Police theorize that the youth may have been the burglar, or an accomplice
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The burglar stole a suitcase with valuable papers and some silver and jewelry in it.
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But the guy they were hunting for—I read the paragraph over and feel green. That's me.
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I get up and look in the mirror.
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In other circumstances I'd like being taken for sixteen instead of fourteen, which I am.
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I smooth my hair and squint at the back of it.
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The ducktail is fine.
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Slowly I peel off my black sweater, which I wear practically all the time, and stuff it in my bottom drawer, under my bathing suit.
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