him.â
âWhatâs he going to do with him?â Mitt asked anxiously. He had never heard of Earl Hadd doing anything good with anything.
âThrow him in the harbor, of course. For luck,â explained Canden.
Mitt was horrified. Earl Hadd must be quite heartless. He thought of Poor Old Ammet being tipped into the harbor just like the bucket of muck Mitt tipped in daily, and Poor Old Ammet sinking, soaking, drowning, his ribbons getting spoiled. âDoesnât he float?â he asked tensely.
âNot too often,â Canden said, quite unaware of Mittâs state of mind. âMostly he falls to pieces and sinks in the harbor or just outside it.â
âHe doesnât!â Mitt said frantically.
There was another friend of Mittâs fatherâs standing beside Canden. He was called Dideo, and his face was a mass of tiny lines. Mitt thought Dideoâs eyes looked like two shiny fish caught in the net of his skin. Dideo said, âHe doesnât always fall to bitsâOld Ammet. If the tideâs right, he goes out on the tide in one piece. Or they say he does. Floats for miles. And those in a boat that can find him and pick him out have a lucky boat ever after, they say.â
If anything, Mitt found it even more distressing to think of Poor Old Ammet floating, floating, all on his own out to sea. He tried to change the subject. âWho are those boys with rattles?â
Canden glanced at the procession, where boys in red and yellow trousers were having great fun whirling their rattles under the noses of cruddle players. âBoys from the Palace. All them in the procession come from the Palace,â he told Mitt, and turned to Dideo again. âIâve never seen Old Ammet float. He goes down almost as quick as Libby Beer.â
âWould they let me run about with a rattle?â Mitt interrupted desperately.
âNo. Youâre born a nobody,â said Dideo. âHe does float,â he said to Canden. âYouâve not been in Holand long enough to know, but he was picked up once, a good ten miles out, by the old Sevenfold, and I heard every man on that ship made a fortune afterward. That was the only time I ever knew it happen, though,â he added regretfully. âI was about Mittâs age at the time.â Here he looked up at Mitt and, finding him inexplicably white and tearful, nudged Canden.
Canden took Mitt down and peered at his face. âWhatâs the matter? Would you like an Ammet of your own?â
âNo!â said Mitt.
Nevertheless, he arrived in front of a stall where dozens of tiny straw Ammets were for sale. With them came another friend of Mittâs fatherâs, a man with a dour, blank face, called Siriol, who stood by without saying anything while Canden and Dideo bent over Mitt, doing their best to please him. Would Mitt have this Ammet here? Or how about this one with blue ribbons? And when Mitt firmly refused to have anything to do with Poor Old Ammet in any color ribbons, Canden and Dideo tried to buy him a wax model of Libby Beer instead. But real and enticing though the wax fruit looked, Mitt did not want Libby either. She was thrown into the sea just like Poor Old Ammet. He burst into tears and pushed her away.
âBut theyâre lucky!â Canden said, quite mystified.
Dour-faced Siriol picked up one of the toffee apples from the other end of the stall and stuffed it into Mittâs damp fist. âThere,â he said. âThatâll please you best, you see.â He was quite right. Mitt forgot his distress, somewhat, in the difficulty of getting his teeth through the toffee into the apple underneath.
There was some mystery about these friends of Mittâs fatherâs. Mitt knew his mother did not care for them. He heard her objecting to them every night when his parents quarreled. Her objections seemed to mount steadily through that winter, until around the new year, when Mitt heard