I was to be away for three days, and when I returned I should
look by the door-sill for her answer. If none was there, it was all I
had a right to expect. If one was there--I quit writing then--it
seemed so hopeless.
* * * * * *
Tip and I crossed Thunder Knob at noon. As we turned the crest of the
hill and began the descent into the wooded gut, my companion looked
back and waved his hand.
"Good-by to Black Log," he cried. "It's the last I'll ever see of you."
He turned to me and tried to smile, but a deep-set frown took
possession of his face, and he hung his head in silence, watching the
wheels as we jolted on and on.
We wound down the steep way into the gut, following a road that at
times seemed to disappear altogether, and leave us to break our way
through the underbrush. Then it reappeared in a broken corduroy that
bridged a bog for a mile, and lifted itself plainly into view again
with a stony back where we began to climb the second mountain. The sun
was ahead of us when we reached the crest of that long hill.
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