The Moccasin Maker by E. Pauline Johnson
page 19 of 208 (09%)
page 19 of 208 (09%)
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"You are not truthful. You stole it--you know you did. You shall be
punished for this falsehood," he stormed, and reached for the cat-o'-nine-tails. The child was beaten brutally and sent to her room until she could tell the truth. When she was released she still held that she had not taken the cooky. Another beating followed, then a third, when finally the stepmother interfered and said magnanimously: "Don't whip her any more; she has been punished enough." And once during one of the beatings she protested, saying, "Don't strike the child _on the head_ in that way." But the iron had entered into Lydia's sister's soul. The injustice of it all drove gentle Elizabeth's gentleness to the winds. "Liddy darling," she said, taking the thirteen-year-old girl-child into her strong young arms, "_I_ know truth when I hear it. _You_ never stole that cake." "I didn't," sobbed the child, "I didn't." "And you have been beaten three times for it!" And the sweet young mouth hardened into lines that were far too severe for a girl of seventeen. Then: "Liddy, do you know that Mr. Evans has asked me to marry him?" "Mr. Evans!" exclaimed the child. "Why, you can't marry _him_, 'Liza! He's ever so old, and he lives away up in Canada, among the Indians." |
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