Montlivet by Alice Prescott Smith
page 62 of 369 (16%)
page 62 of 369 (16%)
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her grace, or of the noise she made.
"And you sit here doing nothing!" she cried, quite as a white girl might have done. I pushed her down on the sand. "Stop!" I said. "I knew you would seek me here. Now answer briefly. Pemaou and his men would not let you get near the window?" "No." "They had seen you with me," I explained. "I feared it. Did Longuant and his men come?" "Like bees," she answered, with a fling of her arms. "They are everywhere. We can do nothing;" and she dropped her head in her arms and cried. Now what indeed could be her motive? "Never mind, Singing Arrow," I said experimentally. "What is it to you, after all?" She wriggled her head to throw me a wrathful look. "I always win at a game," she mumbled. She was as hard to read as a purring cat, but that did not matter. "We've not lost yet," I said, as slowly and coolly as if I did not see the disk of the moon looking at me. "I sent Longuant there. I was sure that Pemaou would keep you away, and I am playing for time. So long as the Ottawas and Hurons are squabbling with one another, Cadillac will not deliver the prisoner. But we must get them farther |
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