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Gregory, Jackson, 1882-1943

"Daughter of the Sun A Tale of Adventure"

Kendric arranged the
boughs for Betty and made her lie down. By the time he had carved and
fitted a plug into their "water bottle" Betty was asleep.


CHAPTER XIX
HOW ONE WHO HIDES AND WATCHES MAY BE WATCHED BY ONE HIDDEN
But Kendric himself did not sleep. He sat by their dead fire and
watched the gradual thinning of the darkness about him as the vague
light filtered in from the awakening outside world. He looked at Betty
sleeping, only to look away with a frown darkening his eyes. She would
sleep heavily and long; she would awake refreshed and--hungry. He was
hungry already.
"It's open and shut," he told himself. "It's up to me to forage."
And it was as clear that there was always a risk of being seen as he
left their hiding place. That risk would increase as the day
brightened. Hence, since he must go, it were best not to tarry. He
found in his pocket a stub of pencil and an old envelope. On it he
wrote a brief message, placing it on the ground near her outflung hand,
laying Bruce's pistol upon it.

"I'm off to fill the larder. Stick close until I come back. If I'm
long gone it will be because I can't help it. But be sure I'll be back
all right and bring something to eat. Jim."

He left her, not without uneasiness, but eager to hurry away so that,
if all went well, his return might be hastened. He took the rifle and
slipped cautiously through the bushes, stopping to make what assurance
he could that he was not being seen, crawling for the most part across
the open places, keeping as much as possible where boulders or trees
hid him.


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