"I am strong enough now--stronger than you think. Tell me of the plan,"

and Hugh urged the request until Alice told him of Terrace Hill and

Adah's wish to go there.

"I have heard something of this plan before," he said at last. "Ad spoke

of it in her letter. Miss Johnson, you know Dr. Richards, I believe. Do

you like him? Is he a man to be trusted?"

"Yes, I know Dr. Richards. He is said to be fine looking. I suspect

there is a liking between him and your sister. Suppose for your benefit

I describe him," and without waiting for permission, Alice portrayed the

doctor, feature by feature, watching Hugh narrowly the while, to see if

aught she said harmonized with any likeness he might have in his mind.

But Hugh was not thinking of that night which ruined Adah, and Alice's

description awakened no suspicion. She saw it did not, and thought once

to tell him frankly all she feared, but was deterred from doing so by a

feeling that possibly she might be wrong in her conjectures. Adah's

presence at Terrace Hill would set that matter right, and she asked if

Hugh did not think it best for her to go.

Hugh could only talk in a straightforward manner, and after a moment he

answered: "Yes, best on some accounts. Her going may do good and prevent a wrong.

Yes, Adah may go."

He continued: "she surely cannot go alone. Would Sam do? I hear her now.

Call her while I talk with her."

Adah came at once, and heard from Hugh that he was willing she should

go, provided Spring Bank were still considered her home, the spot to

which she could always turn for shelter as to a brother's house.

"You seem so like a sister," he said, smoothing her soft brown hair,

"that I shall be sorry to lose you, and shall miss you so much, but Miss

Johnson thinks it right for you to go. Will you take Sam as an escort?"

"Oh, no, no; I don't want anybody," Adah cried, "Keep Sam with you, and

if in time I should earn enough to buy him, to free him. Oh, will you

sell him to me,--not to keep," she added, quickly, as she saw the

quizzical expression of Hugh's face,--"not to keep. I would not own a

slave--but to free, to tell him he's his own master. Will you, Hugh?"

He answered with a smile: "I thought once as you do, that I would not own my brother, but we get

hardened to these things. I've never sold one yet."

"But you will. You'll sell me Sam," and Adah, in her eagerness, grasped

his hand.

"I'll give him to you," Hugh said. "Call him, Miss Johnson."




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