annie: annie griffith, annie griffifi. mrs., i am a married lady. flint: what part of the sosoh annie: there is so much going on here. i haven'n'been able to do much reading up. what do you know about the south? flint: the way it sounds, mostly. annie: the way it sounds. you are too plain, a aie. no one wants a plane woman -- plain woman, at least for a wife was about west, marrying is easy -- too easy. the marriage is hard. flint: did you lose your husband? annie: i am not looking for him. when you lose something, you try to find it. ? annie: if i was going to look for something, i would look for those babies. three of them, three years, all of them dead. annie: sorry? i did the burying alone. every time, alone. the last one was just a little while ago. flint: how long have you been alone? annie: y y mean this time? well, when the trails open to last spring, he was off. after the first year, he was onlylyere when he wanted. this time, when he comes back ii want the here to meet him. that is why i stole from you. i am going home. it pleasures me tha