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What does "they" refer to in the sentence?

It made me feel fine to be walking alone in the rain that day, alongside the tall, ordered rows of pines and birches, and I began to feel a kind of calm when I passed the townspeople. I couldn’t have placed it then, but now, looking back, there was peace in the absence of talk. We passed, and our eyes would meet briefly, the sound of my boot heels amplified by cobblestones or alley walls. Then they would fall away from one another, our eyes, and they would know me by my skin, tan and sun-beat to linen, an American, no reason to speak, he will not understand the words, and I thought, Thank you, I am tired and do not know what to say. By then, in every instance, we had passed each other. And it felt good, somewhere behind my breastbone, to sense that this separation was explicable, a mere failing of language, and my loneliness could proceed with a different cause for a little while longer.
What does "they" refer to in " Then they would fall away from one another, our eyes..."? "the townspeople", "the sound of my boot heels" or "our eyes"?
Thanks!

For learning: English
Base language: English
Category: Language

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    Best Answer - Chosen by the Asker
    My impression is that the first "they" refers to eyes and the second one refers to townspeople.

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