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mirror rested. The mirror-slave was so much more tractable now that
Shivani kept the mirror completely unshrouded. As tenuous as his grip
on sanity was, she deemed it prudent not to push him any nearer to
the brink.
She picked it up and retired with it to her favorite corner. Curled
up among her cushions, with insect netting shielding her from flying
pests that came in the open windows and a cool breeze to calm her and
set the wind chimes singing softly, she spoke to the eager face,
changing with the swirling darkness in the glass, that looked up into
hers.
"Show me more of the girl," she commanded. "What has she done today
and yesterday, outside of her house?"
She didn't have to be any more specific than that. The slave knew
very well who she was, and immediately showed her the girl walking
out of her own doorway, perhaps to get a cab or find a 'bus.
But this time, Shivani paid no attention to the girl herself; now she
concentrated on her surroundings. She ordered the slave to show her
the street where the girl lived.
Not a wealthy place, though not quite as impoverished as this slum
where Shivani had hidden her people. Narrow buildings of brick and
stone, gray and brown, crammed together, three and four and even six
stories tall-the girl's little white-stone house seemed shrunken by
comparison. The men here wore rough, workingman's clothing, dungarees
and flannel shirts and heavy, laced boots. The women, with their
aprons and shabby little straw hats, their checked shirtwaists and
skirts worn shiny in places, were well enough off to show no visible
patches or mends, but clearly did not often see a new garment.
Working poor; hoping for better, but not likely to ever see it, and
far too foolish-proud to turn to charity or crime to save themselves.
So, so, so. This situation had some promise. She wasn't protected all
the time. "Show me the next portion of her day," she directed. The
slave showed the girl catching the 'bus which took her deeper into
the slums, to the place where her clinic lay. Shivani shook her head
when the path led there. There was no hope of getting at her in that
place. She had already tried to send her dacoits to the neighborhood
of the clinic, hoping that among the thieves and bandits, they would
be, if not invisible, at least inconspicuous. A vain hope; the
thieves and bandits were fiercely territorial, the beggars acting as
their eyes and ears, and the dacoits were swiftly driven out of
hiding places and sent off with a pack of brats in full cry at their
heels. In the teeming warrens where the girl had gone in her foolish
quest to help the poor, there were no unclaimed hiding places, and
any interloper was assumed to be another bandit trying to cut out a
territory for himself. Shivani had not appreciated until that moment
how lucky she had been to find this habitation in the quarter where
the immigrant Jews had collected; there were few outright thieves
here, and one set of foreigners was invisible in the midst of the
hordes of villagers uprooted from places like Russia and Belarus,
Slovakia and Serbia. Most here were Jews, who were incurious about
any other race. Her people were no darker in complexion than some of
these, nor were their accents and customs any stranger. So long as
they kept to themselves, the neighbors did the same.
But in the realm of that clinic, not only did the bandits drive out
anyone perceived as an interloper, they watched over the people who
worked at this clinic. Even as Shivani watched, several apparent
loafers moved in at the sound of a raised voice, and threw a
troublemaker out into the street. No, there was no hope of coming at
the girl in her own place. The people there were as fiercely loyal as
her own servitors. The very footpads saw to it that she was left
unmolested, curse her.
Shivani followed the girl's progress throughout her day, paying
careful attention to her surroundings and the people she came into
contact with. The hospital? Hopeless; there were far too many
English, and not even the lowliest scrubwoman was of any other color
than white. Going to and from the hospital, the girl took public
conveyances. The dacoits were skilled, but not at driving English
cabs, and Shivani's kind were not welcome on English 'buses. She was
not going to make even the ghost of an attempt in the presence of the
Man.
But the street just outside the girl's own door-now that had
promise...
Once more she called upon the mirror-slave. "I wish to see the girl's
street-just the street, as it is now, and continue to show it to me
as the day moves on."
It was not the most fascinating of studies. People came and went,
greeting each other, and parting. No hope of blending in among these,
for they all knew each other. Children looked up with recognition at
their neighbors, or with suspicion at strangers, and if the latter
appeared to pause for a moment, ran into their own doors to bring out
a mother or an older sister. Sellers of various items called at
houses-milk floats, men with blocks of ice, vendors of vegetables and
fruit, men with the bits and scraps of meat sold for feeding cats.
Women with baskets of bits and pieces; lace and ribbons,
needleworking tools, trinkets, apples, strawberries, cherries or
pears-
Shivani felt a surge of interest. The men with the pushcarts were all
young and vigorous, like her dacoits, and also like her dacoits, they [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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