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Page:Nella Larson - Quicksand.pdf/134

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Quicksand

Outside, rain had begun to fall. She walked bare-headed, bitter with self-reproach. But she rejoiced too. She didn‘t, in spite of her racial markings, belong to these dark segregated people. She was different. She felt it. It wasn‘t merely a matter of color. It was something broader, deeper, that made folk kin.

And now she was free. She would take Uncle Peter‘s money and advice and revisit her aunt in Copenhagen. Fleeting pleasant memories of her childhood visit there flew through her excited mind. She had been only eight, yet she had enjoyed the interest and the admiration which her unfamiliar color and dark curly hair, strange to those pink, white, and gold people, had evoked. Quite clearly now she recalled that her Aunt Katrina had begged for her to be allowed to remain. Why, she wondered, hadn‘t her mother consented? To Helga it seemed that it would have been the solution to all their problems, her mother‘s, her stepfather‘s, her own.

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