The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 07, No. 44, June, 1861 Creator by Various
page 71 of 272 (26%)
page 71 of 272 (26%)
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right for you to go on living with that man, without knowing what he is.
And I for one have got up to the point of coming right over here and telling you of it to once." I could not help the involuntary question of-- "Is my husband an evil man?" "Evil! I should think he might be, when he has got"---- "Stay, Mrs. Carter!" I interrupted. "I will hear no news of my husband that he does not choose to give me. Only one question,--Do you know of any action that my husband has done that is wrong or wicked?" Aunt Carter forgot her blue eyes and her bluer yarn, for she stopped her knitting, and her eyes changed to gray in my sight, as she ejaculated,-- "He's got Indian blood in him! I should think you'd be afraid he'd scalp you, if you didn't do just as he told you to. Everybody in Skylight is just as sorry for you as ever they can be." Aunt Carter paused. An open door announced my husband's unexpected presence. Aunt Carter rolled up her twenty-fourth twin of a stocking, and, hastily declaring that "she'd always noticed that 't was better to visit people when they was alone," she made all possible effort to escape before Saul came in. My husband an Indian! I looked at him anew. He wore the same presence |
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