The Battle Ground by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow
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page 10 of 470 (02%)
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"You kin sell me ter Marse Minor--but Lawd, Lawd, you cyarn mek mammy leave
off whuppin' me. You cyarn do dat widout you 'uz a real ole marster hese'f." "I reckon I can," said Champe, indignantly. "I'd just like to see her lay hands on you again. I can make mammy leave off whipping him, can't I, Betty?" But Betty, with a toss of her head, took her revenge. "'Tain't so long since yo' mammy whipped you," she rejoined. "An' I reckon 'tain't so long since you needed it." As she stood there, a spirited little figure, in a patch of faint sunshine, her hair threw a halo of red gold about her head. When she smiled--and she smiled now, saucily enough--her eyes had a trick of narrowing until they became mere beams of light between her lashes. Her eyes would smile, though her lips were as prim as a preacher's. Virginia gave a timid pull at Betty's frock. "Champe's goin' home with us," she said, "his uncle told him to--You're goin' home with us, ain't you, Champe?" "I ain't goin' home," responded Betty, jerking from Virginia's grasp. She stood warm yet resolute in the middle of the road, her bonnet swinging in her hands. "I ain't goin' home," she repeated. Turning his back squarely upon her, Champe broke into a whistle of unconcern. "You'd just better come along," he called over his shoulder as he started off. "You'd just better come along, or you'll catch it." |
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