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Twenty-six and One and Other Stories by Maksim Gorky
page 80 of 130 (61%)
his left hand and gently pulled his moustache with his right.

Gavrilo stood gazing after him until he had disappeared in the rain
that still fell in fine, close drops, enveloping the steppe in a mist
as impenetrable and gray as steel.

Then Gavrilo took off his wet cap, made the sign of the cross, looked
at the money pressed tightly in his hand and drew a long, deep sigh; he
concealed his booty in his blouse and began to walk, taking long
strides, in the opposite direction to that in which Tchelkache had gone.

The sea thundered, threw great heavy waves upon the sand and broke them
into foam and spray. The rain lashed the sea and land pitilessly; the
wind roared. All the air around was filled with plaints, cries and
dull sounds. The rain masked sea and sky. . .

The rain and the breaking waves soon washed away the red spot where
Tchelkache had been struck to the ground; they soon effaced his
footprints and those of the lad on the sand, and the lonely beach was
left without the slightest trace of the little drama that had been
played between these two men.




Malva

BY MAXIME GORKY

The sea laughed.
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