Mae Madden by Mary Murdoch Mason
page 82 of 138 (59%)
page 82 of 138 (59%)
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to take them from her in her own house. 'Though I am old, I have a good
life among my friends and neighbors here, and I fought a while in my own mind before I said to my sons: Go, my boys, your mother will die for you. But I did it. I bade them bind the soldiers and steal away. Then I sat guarding the men till you came. You will find them safe in my little house there. Now, take me to prison--kill me, but look in my eyes first, and then, whoever lays a hand on me, take La Madre Ilkana's curse.' "And the people all swore that there were two snakes coiled up in La Madre's eyes then, and they hissed, and struck out with their fiery tongues, and the crowd fell on their knees, and the neighbors all set up a great shout of 'La Madre Ilkana,' so that they quite drowned the voice of the man with the big feather." "Is that all?" asked Mae, as Lisetta paused. "What did the soldiers do?" "O, they hired a passing carriage to take the men whose horses were stolen back to Castellamare, and they all cantered off, without saying a word to La Madre, and when they had turned a corner of the road, she began to laugh. O, how she laughed! All the people laughed with her, and the children crowed and the dogs barked, for the rest of that whole day. "And a neighbor who passed La Madre's at midnight, said she was laughing out loud then." CHAPTER IX. |
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