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Pee-Wee Harris Adrift by Percy Keese Fitzhugh
page 22 of 161 (13%)

The game in the middle of the large field must have become exciting, for
its votaries were gathered into a close group. None of the players
seemed able now to spare so much as a cautious glance toward the street.
Once, during his intense preoccupation, Slats Corbett gave a quick,
furtive glance afar, but it was only in a sort of sub-consciousness that
he glimpsed a figure sitting on the fence, its back toward him. That was
enough.

The group gathered closer, voices were heard in excited altercation,
there were long intervals of silence. The group had shrunken and become
compact. All were stooping. Their preoccupation seemed intense. They
had forgotten all about the lookout. Occasionally some civilian passed
along the distant alley and guilty instinct caused one or another of the
group to glance thither to give a hasty appraisal of his mission and
character. And so the wicked game went on. And the sports of Barrel
Alley never knew that their stronghold had been invaded by the boy scouts.

Then around the distant corner appeared two figures in civilian clothes,
strangers in Barrel Alley. They were County Detectives Slippett and
Spotson. They strolled down the alley innocently. Keekie Joe, whose
activities were chiefly local, knew them not. But Pee-wee Harris, Scout,
knew them. On one of his long hikes he had seen them arrest a motorist
in Northvale. He had seen them loitering in the post office at Little
Valley.

They did duty in the various municipalities of the county where the
familiar faces of the local officials were a stumbling block to the
apprehension of wrongdoers. They were going to break up this ring of
gambling rowdies, and so forth and so forth and so forth . . .
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