Whenever possible during the lunch-hour rush, Jane stopped to smile and talk to the child. Once she asked, "Don't you know where your mama and daddy are?"
He just stared at her, unblinking, his big eyes soft and sad-looking.
The girl studied him for a moment, then she picked up a cookie and gave it to him. "Can you tell me your name?" she asked hopefully.
His lips parted. Cookie crumbs fell off his chin and from the corners of his mouth, but he spoke no words.
She sighed, turned, and went out to the clattering throng with laden plates of food.
For a while Jane was so busy she almost forgot the young one. But finally people began to linger more over their food, the clinking of dishes grew quieter and Pete took time for a cup of coffee. His sweating face was haggard. He stared sullenly at the little boy and shook his head.
"Shouldn't be such things as kids," he muttered. "Nothing but a pain in the neck!"
Jane came through the door. "It gets worse all the time," she groaned. She turned to the little boy. "Did you have something to eat?"
"I didn't know what to fix for him," Pete said. "How about some beef stew? Do you think he'd go for that?"
Jane hesitated. "I—I don't know. Try it."