The Mountain Girl by Emma Payne Erskine Chapter 5 Page 15

she said simply.

There lay three quail, and a large sweet potato, roasted in the ashes on their hearth as he had seen the corn pone baked the evening before, and a few round white cakes which he afterwards learned were beaten biscuit, all warm from the fire.

“How am I ever to repay you people for your kindness to me?” he said. “Come in and dry your feet. Never mind the mud; see how I’ve tracked it in all the morning. Come.”

He led her to the fire, and replenished it, while she sat passively looking down on the hearth as if she scarcely heeded him. Not knowing how to talk to her, or what to do with her, he busied himself trying to bring a semblance of order to the cabin, occasionally dropping a remark to which she made no response. Then he also relapsed into silence, and the minutes dragged —