"Yes, Tina, I am glad," said the boy, with a steady, quiet, inward sort of light in his eyes; "but, baby, we can't stop to say so much, because we must walk fast and get way, way, way off before daylight; and you know Miss Sphyxy always gets up early,don't she?"
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"O dear, yes! She always poked me out of bed before it was light,hateful old thing! Let's run as fast as we can, and get away!"
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And with that she sprang forward, with a brisk and onward race, over the pebbly road, down a long hill, laughing as she went, and catching now at a branch of sweetbrier that overhung the road, and now at the tags of sweet-fern, both laden and hoary with heavy autumnal dews, till finally, her little foot tripping over a stone, she fell and grazed her arm sadly. Her brother lifted her up, and wiped the tears from her great, soft eyes with her blue check apron, and talked to her in that grandfatherly way that older children take such delight in when they feel the care of younger ones.
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"Now, Tina, darling, you should n't run so wild. We'd better go pretty fast steadily, than run and fall down. But I'll kiss the place, as mother used to."
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"I don't mind it, Hensel,I don't mind it," she said, controlling the quivering of her little resolute mouth. "That scratch came for liberty; but this," she said, showing a long welt on her other arm,"this was slavery. She struck me there with her great ugly stick. O, I never can forgive her!"
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"Don't let's talk any more, baby; let's hurry on. She never shall get you again; I'll fight for you till I die, first!"
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"You'd kill 'em all, would n't you? You would have knocked her down, would n't you?" said Tina, kindling up with that inconsiderate exultation in the powers of an elder brother which belongs to childhood. "I knew you would get me away from here, Harry,I knew you would."
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"But now," said Harry, "you just keep hold of my hand, and let's run together, and I'll hold you up. We must run fast, after all, because maybe they will harness up the wagon when daylight comes, and come out to look for us."
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"Well, if it's only Sol comes," said the little girl, "I sha'n't care; for he would only carry us on farther."
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