[Freckles by Gene Stratton-Porter]@TWC D-Link book
Freckles

CHAPTER III
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He was bending the rank grass with his cudgel, and thinking of the shade the denser swamp afforded, when he suddenly dodged sidewise; the cudgel whistled sharply through the air and Freckles sprang back.
From the clear sky above him, first level with his face, then skimming, dipping, tilting, whirling until it struck, quill down, in the path in front of him, came a glossy, iridescent, big black feather.

As it touched the ground, Freckles snatched it up with almost a continuous movement facing the sky.

There was not a tree of any size in a large open space.

There was no wind to carry it.

From the clear sky it had fallen, and Freckles, gazing eagerly into the arch of June blue with a few lazy clouds floating high in the sea of ether, had neither mind nor knowledge to dream of a bird hanging as if frozen there.


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