Amanda — a Daughter of the Mennonites by Anna Balmer Myers
page 12 of 265 (04%)
page 12 of 265 (04%)
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"You just wait, Phil," Amanda called to him as she ran up-stairs,
"you're gettin' some good wettin' yet. I ain't done with you." "Cracky, who's afraid?" he called. A little later the girl appeared in dry clothes. "Ach," she said, "I forgot to wash my hands. I better go out to the pump and clean 'em so I don't get my new dresses dirty right aways." She ran to the pump on the side porch and jerked the handle up and down, while her brother followed and watched her, defiance in his eyes. "Well," she said suddenly, "if you want it I'll give it to you now." With that she caught him and soused his head in the tin basin that stood in the trough. "One for duckin' me in the crick, and another for stealin' that bird's egg, and a third to learn you some sense." Before he could get his breath she had run into the house and stood before her mother ready for the fitting. "I like this goods, Mom," she told the mother as the new dress was slipped over her head. "I think the brown goes good with my red hair, and the blue gingham is pretty, too. Only don't never buy me no pink nor red." "I won't. Not unless your hair turns brown." "My goodness, but you spoil her," came the unsolicited opinion of Aunt Rebecca. "When I was little I wore what my mom bought me, and so did you. We would never thought of sayin', 'Don't get me this or that.'" "But with red hair it's different. And as long as blue and brown and |
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