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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer
Capítulo 26, Página 12
Tom
and
Huck
rose
up,
weak
but
vastly
relieved,
and
stared
after
them
through
the
chinks
between
the
logs
of
the
house.
Follow?
Not
they.
They
were
content
to
reach
ground
again
without
broken
necks,
and
take
the
townward
track
over
the
hill.
They
did
not
talk
much.
They
were
too
much
absorbed
in
hating
themselves—hating
the
ill
luck
that
made
them
take
the
spade
and
the
pick
there.
But
for
that,
Injun
Joe
never
would
have
suspected.
He
would
have
hidden
the
silver
with
the
gold
to
wait
there
till
his
“revenge”
was
satisfied,
and
then
he
would
have
had
the
misfortune
to
find
that
money
turn
up
missing.
Bitter,
bitter
luck
that
the
tools
were
ever
brought
there!
They
resolved
to
keep
a
lookout
for
that
Spaniard
when
he
should
come
to
town
spying
out
for
chances
to
do
his
revengeful
job,
and
follow
him
to
“Number
Two,”
wherever
that
might
be.
Then
a
ghastly
thought
occurred
to
Tom.
“Revenge?
What
if
he
means
us,
Huck!”
“Oh,
don’t!”
said
Huck,
nearly
fainting.
They
talked
it
all
over,
and
as
they
entered
town
they
agreed
to
believe
that
he
might
possibly
mean
somebody
else—at
least
that
he
might
at
least
mean
nobody
but
Tom,
since
only
Tom
had
testified.
Very,
very
small
comfort
it
was
to
Tom
to
be
alone
in
danger!
Company
would
be
a
palpable
improvement,
he
thought.
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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer — C1 Inglés | Cuentana