The Best Short Stories of 1921 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story by Various
page 39 of 818 (04%)
page 39 of 818 (04%)
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for her! But her heart almost sank when her father pulled out his purse
from his pocket and said: "Mehmet Ali, who is my best friend, has been so good to me these twenty years that I have thought to give him twenty gold pieces that he might buy himself a wife to keep his hut warm during the long winter. What say he to my friendship?" "That is wonderful! Only now, he is not concerned about that, but about the fairness of his friend who does not want to sell wives to the men whose women he buys. I offer five more gold pieces which makes thirty-five in all. And I do that not for Marcu but for his daughter that she may know that I will not harm her and will for ever keep her well fed and buy her silks and jewels." "Silks!" It occurred to the gipsy chief to look at his daughter at that moment. She turned her head away from his and looked at the Tartar, from under her brows. How had he known? "A bargain is a bargain only when two men agree on something, says the Koran," the gipsy chief reminded the Tartar boatman. "I don't want to sell her." "So we will travel downstream for a while," answered Mehmet Ali and crossed his arms. After a while the gipsy chief who had reckoned that they must be fully five miles away from his home across the water made a new offer. "A woman, Mehmet Ali, is a woman. They are all alike after you have |
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