Page 212 - LEIBY-2
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212204  LeibLyei–bBy o–rBdeorrdSemr uSgmgulegrgler

dark“nNeos,sI. ’m enotrtaaucmcuastiinzgedyoLue,i”btyheleftaromuteraafpeaorlsoogmizeds.h“rIite’skjtuhsattthat
echotheedcboamckmautnhiismts hfraovme mthaedbeaoruerwbaelllosn. gings public property, and

    anyone can take what they want.”

    Leiby assured the farmer that he was on his way to friends who
    were waiting for him and would provide him with all his needs,
    thanked him and bade him farewell, then continued on his way.

    Leiby surveyed the area ahead of him and checked the map that
    he had taken with him. He turned in the direction of the farm.

    After several hours of walking, interspersed with short rides
    now and then from kindhearted passing farmers, he nally
    stood at the entrance of “his” farm. To his disappointment, he
    found it totally desolate. Leiby entered the kitchen and looked
    inside the huge empty vats of milk. He noticed that the few
    drops of milk that remained on the sides of the vat were still
    fresh and realized that the group that had been there had left
    just a few hours previously. Leiby was famished after his long
    trek. He rummaged around in the cabinets, but they were
    completely empty too. It looked as if a crowd of starving people
    had ransacked the place and cleared it out totally. He ran his

     nger around the inside of the milk vat and licked it clean from
    the drops of milk, but they didn’t assuage his hunger in the
    slightest. A pot that had previously been used to cook potatoes
    stood on the counter, and Leiby scraped out the remnants that
    were stuck on the bottom of the pot, but still, he remained
    hungry as before.

    He made his way to the o ce, remembering that a bowl of
    sugar cubes had stood there on the table sometimes, but the
    door was locked. He banged on it as hard as he could, and when
    it didn’t open, began kicking on it. He even tried sawing around
    the lock with his pocketknife, but the sturdy door withstood all
    his e orts.

    “If I can’t get in through the door, I’ll have to try the window,”
    Leiby decided, and ran down to the yard. He examined the
    o ce windows from the outside but they were all barred. e
    windows to the adjacent room,however,were unbarred,and gave
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