He was the greatest apple thief the world had ever known... |
I ran down the alley, chose the middle trashcan, hit it perfectly and jumped over the fence. Normally I very skillfully knock all three trashcans over as I do it, but I missed them all this time. Even the “Greatest Apple Thief in the Entire World isn’t perfect. The cop was still chasing me. I heard the heavy clang of his foot onto the same can, and he too pulled himself over the fence right behind me. I was all out running on St. Pete Street now. It was five O’clock and the traffic was the normal snarl. I ran between pedestrians. I passed the hot-dog-stand, “Hi Al!” Gus called. “Hi, Gus!” I said, waving. I dashed across St. Pete and almost got clobbered by a Bud truck. He honked his horn at me as I continued down St Pete, going East now. I heard the same honking of the same truck behind me. This cop was impressive! I had to give him that. I ran up the Martelli’s driveway, opened and slammed the gate, slid the dead-bolt over, patted Mack the pit-bull, and waved at Mr. Martelli, who was raking his back yard. “Hey, Mr. Martelli!" I said, and in a practiced leap cleared the fence, grabbed the tire-swing rope, swung up onto the Gustaff’s side fence and landed on Parker Street. Somehow, the cop was still behind me! One day soon, I thought, I’m going to have to meet this guy! “You’re good, Copper!” I called back as I ran down along Parker. “We can’t keep doing this!” the copper said. It’s rare for “The Greatest Apple Thief in the Entire World” to ever agree with a cop, but as we were both hoofing it down Parker Street, I found myself agreeing with this particular one. 300 words-- |