{"id":"01KG6FHT9JFAN1F7AS9YP5837V","cid":"bafkreid4r34s6ga5h3pkiq6sh5p3ryyd36gfgx63kapednszlsdvadxiai","type":"file","properties":{"cid":"bafkreih3hzy3resvfjvrularqqfv54rsnjssvmlmfakwno2xg3cdxeszqu","content_type":"image/jpeg","filename":"Rye_page_0064.jpg","height":2400,"key":"pdf-page-1769744163162-u8ngvose07","label":"Rye_page_0064.jpg","page_number":64,"pdf_type":"born_digital","size":714363,"text":"them. It made you depressed, and every once in a while, for no reason, you got goose\nflesh while you walked. It didn't seem at all like Christmas was coming soon. It didn't\nseem like anything was coming. But I kept walking over to the Mall anyway, because\nthat's where Phoebe usually goes when she's in the park. She likes to skate near the\nbandstand. It's funny. That's the same place I used to like to skate when I was a kid.\nWhen I got there, though, I didn't see her around anywhere. There were a few kids\naround, skating and all, and two boys were playing Flys Up with a soft ball, but no\nPhoebe. I saw one kid about her age, though, sitting on a bench all by herself, tightening\nher skate. I thought maybe she might know Phoebe and could tell me where she was or\nsomething, so I went over and sat down next to her and asked her, \"Do you know Phoebe\nCaulfield, by any chance?\"\n\"Who?\" she said. All she had on was jeans and about twenty sweaters. You could\ntell her mother made them for her, because they were lumpy as hell.\n\"Phoebe Caulfield. She lives on Seventy-first Street. She's in the fourth grade,\nover at--\"\n\"You know Phoebe?\"\n\"Yeah, I'm her brother. You know where she is?\"\n\"She's in Miss Callon's class, isn't she?\" the kid said.\n\"I don't know. Yes, I think she is.\"\n\"She's prob'ly in the museum, then. We went last Saturday,\" the kid said.\n\"Which museum?\" I asked her.\nShe shrugged her shoulders, sort of. \"I don't know,\" she said. \"The museum.\"\n\"I know, but the one where the pictures are, or the one where the Indians are?\"\n\"The one where the Indians.\"\n\"Thanks a lot,\" I said. I got up and started to go, but then I suddenly remembered\nit was Sunday. \"This is Sunday,\" I told the kid.\nShe looked up at me. \"Oh. Then she isn't.\"\nShe was having a helluva time tightening her skate. She didn't have any gloves on\nor anything and her hands were all red and cold. I gave her a hand with it. Boy, I hadn't\nhad a skate key in my hand for years. It didn't feel funny, though. You could put a skate\nkey in my hand fifty years from now, in pitch dark, and I'd still know what it is. She\nthanked me and all when I had it tightened for her. She was a very nice, polite little kid.\nGod, I love it when a kid's nice and polite when you tighten their skate for them or\nsomething. Most kids are. They really are. I asked her if she'd care to have a hot\nchocolate or something with me, but she said no, thank you. She said she had to meet her\nfriend. Kids always have to meet their friend. That kills me.\nEven though it was Sunday and Phoebe wouldn't be there with her class or\nanything, and even though it was so damp and lousy out, I walked all the way through the\npark over to the Museum of Natural History. I knew that was the museum the kid with\nthe skate key meant. I knew that whole museum routine like a book. Phoebe went to the\nsame school I went to when I was a kid, and we used to go there all the time. We had this\nteacher, Miss Aigletinger, that took us there damn near every Saturday. Sometimes we\nlooked at the animals and sometimes we looked at the stuff the Indians had made in\nancient times. Pottery and straw baskets and all stuff like that. I get very happy when I\nthink about it. Even now. I remember after we looked at all the Indian stuff, usually we\nwent to see some movie in this big auditorium. Columbus. They were always showing","text_extracted_at":"2026-01-30T03:36:03.162Z","text_extracted_by":"pdf-processor","text_has_content":true,"text_source":"born_digital","uploaded":true,"width":1855},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KFHMJM2J9JHQAQM1Q9SKBJWF","predicate":"derived_from"},{"peer":"01KFF1K6A8V452X8SQKY55DD16","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6FHSK9BWC31GGGDTQJN844","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG6FHSKN8Z2HSD371X8X4AGX","predicate":"next"},{"peer":"01KG6FM11MMXKYD2V1G0D4WVPA","peer_label":"Rye_page_0064_medium.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6FM4DPWMSZACM19W9QZ3AZ","peer_label":"Rye_page_0064_thumb.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6FT59BXAZ3C5HRJ6SW8F58","predicate":"has_assembly"}],"ver":6,"created_at":"2026-01-30T03:36:05.170Z","ts":"2026-01-30T03:40:41.642Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFFC4A8W8939TXGEXCK439ZK"}}