The water made a sound like kittens lapping.
A rain frog sang a moment and then was still. There was an
instant when the boy hung at the edge of a high bank made of the
soft fluff of broom-sage, and the rain frog and the starry
dripping of the flutter-mill hung with him. Instead of falling
over the edge, he sank into the softness. The blue, white-tufted
sky closed over him. He slept.
When he awakened, he thought he was in a place other than the
branch bed. He was in another world, so that for an instant he
thought he might still be dreaming. The sun was gone, and all the
light and shadow. There were no black boles of live oaks, no
glossy green of magnolia leaves, no pattern of gold lace where
the sun had sifted through the branches of the wild cherry. The
world was all a gentle gray, and he lay in a mist as fine as
spray from a waterfall. The mist tickled his skin. It was
scarcely wet. It was at once warm and cool. He rolled over on his
back and it was as though he looked up into the soft gray breast
of a mourning dove.
He lay, absorbing the fine-dropped rain like a young plant.
When his face was damp at last and his shirt was moist to the
touch, he left his nest. He stopped short. A deer had come to the
spring while he was sleeping. The fresh tracks came down the east
bank and stopped at the water’s edge. They were sharp and
pointed, the tracks of a doe. They sank deeply into the sand, so
that he knew the doe was an old one and a large. Perhaps she was
heavy with fawn. She had come down and drunk deeply from the
spring, not seeing him where he slept. Then she had scented him.
There was a scuffled confusion in the sand where she had wheeled
in fright. The tracks up the opposite bank had long harried
streaks behind them. Perhaps she had not drunk, after all, before
she scented him, and turned and ran with that swift,
sand-throwing flight. He hoped she was not now thirsty, wide-eyed
in the scrub.
He looked about for other tracks. The squirrels had raced up
and down the banks, but they were bold, always. A raccoon had
been that way, with his feet like sharp-nailed hands, but he
could not be sure how recently. Only his father could tell for
certain the hour when any wild things had passed by. Only the doe
had surely come and had been frightened. He turned back again to
the flutter-mill. It was turning as steadily as though it had
always been there.
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