[The Air Trust by George Allan England]@TWC D-Link bookThe Air Trust CHAPTER XV 30/31
He studied them, a moment. "C. J. F." he read.
Then, yielding to a sudden impulse, he folded the kerchief and put it in his pocket. He entered the sugar-house, to make sure, before departing, that he had left no danger of fire behind him. Another impulse bade him sit down on a rough box, there, before the dying embers.
He gazed at the bed of leaves, a while, immersed in thought, then filled his pipe and lighted it with a glowing brand, and sat there--while the night came--smoking and musing, in a reverie. The overpowering lure of the woman who had lain in his arms, as he had borne her thither; her breath upon his face; the perfume of her, even her blood that he had washed away--all these were working on his senses, still.
But most of all he seemed to see her eyes, there in the ember-lit gloom, and hear her voice, and feel her lithe young body and her breast against his breast. For a long time he sat there, thinking, dreaming, smoking, till the last shred of tobacco was burned out in the heel of his briar; till the last ember had winked and died under the old sheet-iron stove. At last, with a peculiar laugh, he rose, slung the knapsack once more on his shoulders, settled his cap upon his head, and made ready to depart. But still, one moment, he lingered in the doorway.
Lingered and looked back, as though in his mind's eye he would have borne the place away with him forever. Suddenly he stooped, picked up a leaf from the bed where she had lain, and put that, too, in his pocket where the kerchief was. Then, looking no more behind him, he strode off across the maple-grove, through which, now, the first pale stars were glimmering.
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