Page:A Child of the Jago - Arthur Morrison.djvu/49



There was nobody in chase; but Dicky Perrott, excited by his novel exploit, ran hard; forgetting the lesson first learnt by every child of the Jago, to avoid, as far as may be, suspicious flight in open streets. He burst into the Old Jago from the Jago Row corner, by Meakin Street, and still he ran. A small boy a trifle bigger than himself made a sharp punch at him as he passed, but he took no heed. The hulking group at the corner of Old Jago Street, ever observant of weaklings with plunder, saw him and one tried to catch his arm, but he had the wit to dodge. Past the Jago Court passage he scudded, in at the familiar doorway and up the stairs. A pale hunchbacked child, clean and wistful, descended and him Dicky