The Mountain Girl by Emma Payne Erskine Chapter 28 Page 15

He smiled upon her out of the gathering dusk. For some minutes he had been regarding her, and the tumult within him had become riotous with long restraint. He came swiftly forward and, ere she could turn her head, his arms were about her, and his lips upon hers, and she felt herself pinioned in her chair — nor, for guarding her baby unhurt by his vehemence, could she use her hands to hold him from her; nor for the suffocating beating of her heart could she cry out; neither would her cry have availed, for there were none near to hear her.

“Stop, Frale! I am not yours; stop, Frale,” she implored.

“Yas, you are mine,” he said, in his low drawl, lifting his head to gaze in her face. “You gin me your promise. That doctah man, he done gone an’ lef’ you all alone, and he ain’t