she was taking her walk along the path by the tobacco field and saw her old friend leaving Bettâs cabinâbut another part frowned. Even before Miss Sarabeth drew near the cabin, she caught the scent of baking on the air. When she was small and she and Lillie would smell that smell, they would steal away from wherever they were supposed to be and run to see Bett, who would break off a piece of whatever bread or cake she was making and let them have someâalways taking care to brush the crumbs off their clothes before they left, so that the fact that theyâd been there at all would be a secret only the three of them shared. But after a time, Miss Sarabeth had begun to tire of the old baker woman. Bett always tried to give the girls equal helpings of bread, knowing that small children quarrel about such things. But the portions could never be exactly the same, and on those occasions that Lillie got the bigger one, Miss Sarabeth made her trade.
Lillie didnât appear to mind at firstâthat was how things were supposed to beâbut Bett sometimes did. A disapproving look would flash in her eyes that Miss Sarabeth found she didnât care for at all, especially because it became clearer and clearer that Bett wasnât trying to hide it. Worse still, Lillie began to behave the same way, flashing the same cross look Bett did. It would be there only for an instant, but Miss Sarabeth knew her friendâs face, and she didnât like what it told her. The last time the two of them visited the cabin, Miss Sarabeth didnât feel welcome at all, as Bett and Lillie chattered and baked and she sat sourly at the eating table, picking at the bread when it was done and wanting to be anywhere else at all. After that, she decided that it probably wasnât fitting for her to be visiting Bett anymore. Soon, she stopped visiting Lillie too.
As Sarabeth had first approached the cabin today, the baking smell had seemed especially strong and she had drawn it in, feeling sadder than she expected to. She sometimes missed the bread and missed the warm old cabin where she used to enjoy itâeven if she didnât miss the odd old woman who lived there. It was then that she heard the door open and turned to see Lillie emerge. Bett whispered something to her and the girl smiled and ran off to who knew where else. An uncertain smile crossed Sarabethâs face and she started to raise her hand in greeting, but neither Lillie nor Bett saw her. She had the strange feeling that even though everything around her as far as she could see belonged to her father and by rights to her too, she was tarrying somewhere she shouldnât be.
Sarabeth was surprised at the sense of melancholy that came over her. Still, she couldnât quite make out why Lillie would be there at all at this time of day, or what she and Bett had been whispering about. There was something going on that they didnât want anybody else to know about, and Sarabeth decided she did not like that. Her father looked after all these slaves, and if they were up to something improper, they were worse than disobedient, they were ungrateful. When Miss Sarabeth contemplated this, she did not feel quite as melancholy anymore. What she felt was cross and sourâand suspicious too.
Chapter Seven
CAL WAS ABOUT as happy as heâd ever been when he came to the tobacco field to do his work this morning. He believed he had plenty of cause to be so happyâbut the truth was, he had plenty of cause to fear for his life.
In recent months, Calâlike all slave boys his ageâhad begun to chafe at the kind of work heâd been doing since he was small. Bird chasing, which once seemed like such fun, was for babies, and weed pullingâwhich was the job heâd been doing for the last two seasonsâwas for old ladies. Neither was fitting for a boy like him anymore. Already two other boys just a little older than Cal had begun working the
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