[Good Indian by B. M. Bower]@TWC D-Link bookGood Indian CHAPTER XI 7/19
She was staring at the dust-cloud ahead, and chewing absently at the corner of her under lip, and she kept it up so long that Good Indian began to scowl and call himself unseemly names for making any overture whatever.
But, just as he turned toward her with lips half opened for a bitter sentence, he saw a dimple appear in the cheek next to him, and held back the words. "You told me you didn't like me," she reminded, looking at him briefly, and afterward fumbling her reins.
"You can't expect a girl--" "I suppose you don't remember coming up to me that first night, and calling me names, and telling me how you hated me, and--and winding up by pinching me ?" he insinuated with hypocritical reproach, and felt of his arm.
"If you could see the mark--" he hinted shamelessly. Evadna replied by pushing up her sleeve and displaying a scratch at least an inch in length, and still roughened and red.
"I suppose you don't remember trying to MURDER me ?" she inquired, sweetly triumphant. "If you could shoot as well as Jack, I'd have been killed very likely. And you'd be in jail this minute," she added, with virtuous solemnity. "But you're not killed, and I'm not in jail." "And I haven't told a living soul about it--not even Aunt Phoebe," Evadna remarked, still painfully virtuous.
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