Motion Picture Magazine (Feb-Jul 1915)

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32 ACCORDING TO THEIR LIGHTS hands. "Yo'-all hain't nawthin' ag'in that thar stranger-man!" she cried. "Yo'-all shant tech he! Hain 't yo ' got 'nuff dirt on yore souls a 'ready t' hender yo' a-sleepin' in th' dark o ' the moon ? ' ' There was something uncanny about her gesturing, and more than one of the rough men, watching, blanched under their tan. ■ ' How 'bout th ' miser over on the bottoms? How 'bout Nelse Purdy, an' old man Brown? Yo' aint even stopped at women-folks — oh, I could tell a thing or two! I'm jest achin' to! Now, yo' leave this strangerfeller plumb alone ! ' ' "Shet th' shrew's mouth, Nate!" growled Bud Tracey, with an oath of fury. "Her aint th' fust gal t' lose her head over a measly smirk ! ' ' ' ' Aye, lock her up ! " growled another, taking his gun from the rack on the wall. "We-all got man-work t' do!" Nate Tracey picked up his daughter as easily as he might have handled some scratching, snarling kitten, and swung her above his head into the opening of the loft. With another powerful wrench of his hand, he jerked away the ladder, and tossed it to the sod floor. "Stay thar, yu wildcat!" he grinned contemptuously. "Yore spittin' wont hurt no one, I reckon. I 'low I'll lam th' hide from yore back when we-all come back. Now, boys, rustle yore guns right peart. Hit's moondown a 'ready, an' we got t' git t' th' Forks afore th' rev'noo man!' Meg, lying, bruised and spent, on the rough floor of the loft, listened to the heavy tramp of their feet thru the underbrush and their retreating cries. "Go get Jed— down at the still!" "Aye — an' tell he t' tote his gun along!" As the voices grew fainter, she sprang to her feet and across to the window, opening on the branches of a straggling oak-tree. She slid out along the nearest limb, swung down, THE MOONSHINERS PREPARE TO PROTECT THEIR OWN