49 pages • 1 hour read
Sharon M. DraperA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
The three slaves run frantically and “after what seemed like miles…[stop] by a shallow river to rest” (235). They help themselves to the food in Clay’s bag, and Tidbit, seeing the bread that his mother had made, cries for her.
“They did not stop for two days, moving even during the day” (237). There is no sign of Clay, but when they are about to cross a shallow river, they see a boy their age on the other side. He calls to Polly, asking who she is, and Amari and Tidbit try to hide. Polly tries to play coy, and the boy seems kind. He notices that she’s “dirty…hungry, and [that she looks] lost” (238). He tells her they aren’t far from Savannah, Georgia and asks her where the others are; he admits he saw the “slave girl. The little boy. The dog” (239). He knows that she is an indentured servant and that Amari and Tidbit are runaways. He tells them that his father would turn them in for the reward money but that he thinks “slavery is stupid” and so is willing to help. They follow him.
He hides them in a barn and then brings them a bit of food: bread, cheese, dried meat and apples.
By Sharon M. Draper
Blended
Sharon M. Draper
Darkness Before Dawn
Sharon M. Draper
Double Dutch
Sharon M. Draper
Fire from the Rock
Sharon M. Draper
Forged By Fire
Sharon M. Draper
Just Another Hero
Sharon M. Draper
November Blues
Sharon M. Draper
Out of My Heart
Sharon M. Draper
Out of My Mind
Sharon M. Draper
Romiette and Julio
Sharon M. Draper
Stella by Starlight
Sharon M. Draper
Tears of a Tiger
Sharon M. Draper
The Battle of Jericho
Sharon M. Draper
We Beat the Street: How A Friendship Pact Led to Success
George Jenkins, Rameck Hunt, Sampson Davis, Sharon M. Draper