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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer
Capítulo 30, Página 4
“Could
you
see
the
rags
by
the
light
of
the
cigars?”
This
staggered
Huck
for
a
moment.
Then
he
said:
“Well,
I
don’t
know—but
somehow
it
seems
as
if
I
did.”
“Then
they
went
on,
and
you—”
“Follered
’em—yes.
That
was
it.
I
wanted
to
see
what
was
up—they
sneaked
along
so.
I
dogged
’em
to
the
widder’s
stile,
and
stood
in
the
dark
and
heard
the
ragged
one
beg
for
the
widder,
and
the
Spaniard
swear
he’d
spile
her
looks
just
as
I
told
you
and
your
two—”
“What!
The
deaf
and
dumb
man
said
all
that!”
Huck
had
made
another
terrible
mistake!
He
was
trying
his
best
to
keep
the
old
man
from
getting
the
faintest
hint
of
who
the
Spaniard
might
be,
and
yet
his
tongue
seemed
determined
to
get
him
into
trouble
in
spite
of
all
he
could
do.
He
made
several
efforts
to
creep
out
of
his
scrape,
but
the
old
man’s
eye
was
upon
him
and
he
made
blunder
after
blunder.
Presently
the
Welshman
said:
“My
boy,
don’t
be
afraid
of
me.
I
wouldn’t
hurt
a
hair
of
your
head
for
all
the
world.
No—I’d
protect
you—I’d
protect
you.
This
Spaniard
is
not
deaf
and
dumb;
you’ve
let
that
slip
without
intending
it;
you
can’t
cover
that
up
now.
You
know
something
about
that
Spaniard
that
you
want
to
keep
dark.
Now
trust
me—tell
me
what
it
is,
and
trust
me—I
won’t
betray
you.”
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Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer — C1 Inglés | Cuentana