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Slavery: A Short Story

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“Shick, shick” my landowner’s hoe turning up the soil as my bronze arms burned under the blazing sun.
Working on as a sharecropper was no better than being a slave after a few years of harvest the landowners have you so far in debt you have to give them 100% of the crop, little to no pay and then you are a slave. I hadn’t let that happen to my wife, daughter, and I, not yet. Everyday I was up at six and didn’t return home until nine except for supper. The sun slowly had begun to set and I had slowly begun to finish my work. My daughter’s head bobbed up and down as she picked crop and placed it in her wicker basket, my wife could barely be seen in the rows of wheat, the scythe in her hand moved swiftly, like me she worked like a bull trying …show more content…
I nearly hit the ceiling when I jumped out of bed. I crashed to the floor I tore the blankets filled with moth holes off the bed and threw it to the ground below me in a small attempt to muffle the clatter of my body against the floor. If I had owned a rifle I would have grabbed it, sadly a rifle or even a handgun from a store would have cost me half a years worth of crop, and was a luxury no African Americans experienced for many years. I crept into the room adjacent to what passed as a bedroom and slowly crept up to a rusty scythe still freshly coated in grains. I inched slower than a slug my dark skin blending in with the shadows. I continued to move until my hazel eyes could just barely peer through a window like hole in our cabin. My heart sunk, six men, two atop horses, dressed in billowing white cloaks and pointed hats illuminated the night sky like moons. Carrying torches and rifles, they stood as eight symbols of the inequality given through birth to all African …show more content…
A mother and father blue jay lay unconscious side by side beneath a cardinal; another cardinal held their daughter from flying away, four cardinals lay dead in a pool of familiar color. “Click” The sound of a gun being cocked awoken me. I was in a tree my wife lay beside me the both had nooses tied around our throats. I reached out and clasped her hand; it was beaded with both sweat and blood. Wet tears cleaned the blood on her face. I looked down below my, one man had a knife hugging my daughter neck, the horseman stood on the other side of the tree his barrel pointing at us.
“Goodbye Ella, goodbye honey, I will always love you.” My wife cooed choking back tears, and then she dove, time slowed down her body fell through the air, the horseman fired at my back in shock, the man on foot loosened his grip confused. The bullet tore through my skin and forced my back forward. Ella slipped free and began to sprint. I fell from the branch toward my limp wife’s body. Ella began to sprout wings of

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