"I have no name but Capitola, sir."
"Who is your father?"
"Never had any that I know, sir."
"Your mother?"
"Never had a mother either, sir, as ever I heard."
"Where do you live?"
"About in spots in the city, sir."
"Oh--oh--oh!" groaned old Hurricane within his hands.
"What is your calling?" inquired the clerk.
"Selling newspapers, carrying portmanteaus and packages sweeping before doors, clearing off snow, blacking boots and so on."
"Little odd jobs in general, eh?"
"Yes, sir, anything that I can turn my hand to and get to do."
"Boy--girl, I should say--what tempted you to put yourself into male attire?"
"Sir?"
"In boy"s clothes, then?"
"Oh, yes; want, sir--and--and--danger, sir!" cried the little prisoner, putting her hands to a face crimson with blushes and for the first time since her arrest upon the eve of sobbing.
"Oh--oh--oh!" groaned Old Hurricane from his chair.
"Want? Danger? How is that?" continued the clerk.
"Your honor mightn"t like to know."
"By all means! It is, in fact, necessary that you should give an account of yourself," said the clerk.
Old Hurricane once more raised his head, opened his ears and gave close attention.
One circ.u.mstance he had particularly remarked--the language used by the poor child during her examination was much superior to the slang she had previously affected, to support her a.s.sumed character of newsboy.
"Well, well--why do you pause? Go on--go on, my good boy--girl, I mean I" said the Recorder, in a tone of kind encouragement.
CHAPTER VI.
A SHORT, SAD STORY.
"Ah! poverty is a weary thing!
It burdeneth the brain, It maketh even the little child To murmur and complain."
"It is not much I have to tell," began Capitola. "I was brought up in Rag Alley and its neighborhood by an old woman named Nancy Grewell."
"Ah!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Old Hurricane.
"She was a washwoman, and rented one scantily furnished room from a poor family named Simmons."
"Oh!" cried Old Hurricane.
"Granny, as I called her, was very good to me, and I never suffered cold nor hunger until about eighteen months ago, when Granny took it into her head to go down to Virginia."
"Umph!" exclaimed Old Hurricane.
"When Granny went away she left me a little money and some good clothes and told me to be sure to stay with the people where she left me, for that she would be back in about a month. But, your honor, that was the last I ever saw or heard of poor Granny! She never came back again. And by that I know she must have died."
"Ah-h-h!" breathed the old man, puffing fast.
"The first month or two after Granny left I did well enough. And then, when the little money was all gone, I eat with the Simmonses and did little odd jobs for my food. But by and by Mr. Simmons got out of work, and the family fell into want, and they wished me to go out and beg for them. I just couldn"t do that, and so they told me I should look out for myself."
"Were there no customers of your grandmother that you could have applied to for employment?" asked the Recorder.
"No, sir. My Granny"s customers were mostly boarders at the small taverns, and they were always changing. I did apply to two or three houses where the landladies knew Granny; but they didn"t want me."
"Oh-h-h!" groaned Major Warfield, in the tone of one in great pain.
"I wouldn"t have that old fellow"s conscience for a good deal,"
whispered a spectator, "for, as sure as shooting, that gal"s his unlawful child!"
"Well, go on! What next?" asked the clerk.
"Well, sir, though the Simmonses had nothing to give me except a crust now and then, they still let me sleep in the house, for the little jobs I could do for them. But at last Simmons he got work on the railroad away off somewhere, and they all moved away from the city."
"And you were left alone?"
"Yes, sir; I was left alone in the empty, unfurnished house. Still it was a shelter, and I was glad of it, and I dreaded the time when it would be rented by another tenant, and I should be turned into the street."
"Oh! oh! oh, Lord!" groaned the major.
"But it was never rented again, for the word went around that the whole row was to be pulled down, and so I thought I had leave to stay at least as long as the rats did!" continued Capitola, with somewhat of her natural roguish humor twinkling in her dark-gray eyes.
"But how did you get your bread?" inquired the Recorder.
"Did not get it at all, sir. Bread was too dear! I sold my clothes, piece by piece, to the old Jew over the way and bought corn-meal and picked up trash to make a fire and cooked a little mush every day in an old tin can that had been left behind. And so I lived on for two or three weeks. And then when my clothes were all gone except the suit I had upon my back, and my meal was almost out, instead of making mush every day I economized and made gruel."