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Yankee Girl at Fort Sumter by Alice Turner Curtis
page 58 of 162 (35%)
Sylvia admiringly; "and I was just thinking that the servants did
everything in the world."

Flora laughed. "You never lived on a plantation, or you couldn't think
that. Why, my mother works more than Mammy ever did. She has to tell all
the house darkies what to do, and see that all the hands have clothes,
and that the fruits are preserved. Why, she's always busy," replied
Flora. "And of course ladies have to know how to do things," she
concluded.

When Grace and Sylvia went to their own room Flora went with them. "I'll
show you where that secret staircase is," she said, and opening the
closet door pressed on a broad panel which moved slowly.

"There," and Flora drew Sylvia near so she could look down a dark narrow
stairway.

"But that isn't seeing a ghost," Grace said laughingly.

It was rather late when Mrs. Hayes led the way back to the house, and
Grace declared that she was almost too sleepy to walk up-stairs. But
Sylvia was not at all sleepy. After the colored girl had helped them
prepare for bed, blown out the candle, and left the room, she lay
watching the shadows of the moving vines on the wall. She wished she was
at home, for who knew but that Estralla's master might sell her before
she returned. Sylvia wondered what she could do to protect the little
girl. "I might hide her," she thought; but what place would be secure?
Suddenly she remembered something that she had heard Captain Carleton
say when she was eating luncheon on that unlucky trip to Fort Sumter.
"This fort could make South Carolina give up slavery," he had said. Why,
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