Dozens of seemingly scared and confused kids were seen Wednesday afternoon being hustled out of the Harlem foster care agency that’s looking after migrant children who’ve been separated from their parents.

Workers wouldn’t say if these were the same youngsters who’d been separated — but the lost-looking grade school-aged children spoke Spanish and sported fresh clothes and backpacks as they were ushered out of a Cayuga Center facility on West 125th Street and into vans.

Earlier Wednesday, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Cayuga is caring for 239 traumatized kids who’d been bused to New York after being torn from their parents under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” border policy.

The kids are placed with foster families but come to Cayuga in the day for classes and services, he said.