Page:Augusta Seaman--Jacqueline of the carrier pigeons.djvu/93

Rh loss of flesh would be noticeable! What hast thou been doing?”

“Nothing, nothing, child!” exclaimed the woman hastily. “I eat as heartily as our supply of food will permit, but the hot  weather always did reduce my flesh. Hurry away now, and see what thou canst purchase  at the market, but try not to be seen too  prominently. Young people are not too safe in the streets in these wild times. Art going to visit old Jan to-day?”

“Yes,” answered Jacqueline. “He grows worse and worse, though I do my best to aid  him. There seems to be something else ailing him beside just his lumbago, but I cannot quite make out what it is, and he will not  see a physician. I will go out and gather some fresh herbs now to take with me.”

The girl took her little basket and went out to her patch of garden at the back of the  house. Gay flowers bloomed in one half of it, but the other was devoted to the