[The Just and the Unjust by Vaughan Kester]@TWC D-Link book
The Just and the Unjust

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
8/11

He slid down from the top rail and stood among the young pokeberry bushes and ragweed that luxuriated in the foulness of the slaughter-house yard.

It was not an especially inviting spot even in broad day, as he knew.

Now the moonlight showed him bleached animal bones and grinning animal skulls, while the damp weeds that clung about his bare legs suggested snakes.
"_Custer!_" cried Mr.Shrimplin again.
But it gained him no response from the boy, who disappeared from before his eyes without a single backward glance; whereat the little lamplighter cursed querulously in the fear-haunted solitude of the road.
Custer descended the steep bank that sloped down to the water's edge.
His eyes were fixed on a dense growth of willows and sycamores that lined the shore; it was from a spot within their black shadows that the cries for help seemed to come.

Presently he paused.
"Hullo!" he called, peering into the darkness ahead of him.
He listened intently, but this time his cry was unanswered; all he heard was the grunting of some pigs that fed among the offal.

The boy shivered and his heart seemed to stop beating.
"Hullo!" he called once more.
"Help!" came the answer.
And Custer stumbled forward.


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