The delirium had passed, and Judy was lying with wide-open eyes
gazing in a tired way at the rafters.
She smiled up at them as they gathered round her. "If Mahomet won't
come to the mountain," she said, and then coughed for two or three
minutes.
"What have you been doing, Ju, old girl?" Pip said, with an odd
tremble in his voice. The sight of his favourite sister, thin,
hollow-checked, exhausted, was too much for his boyish manliness.
A moisture came to his eyes.
"How d'you come, Ju?" he said, blinking it away.
And the girl gave her old bright look up at him. "Sure and they
keep no pony but shank's at school," she said; "were you afther
thinkin' I should charter a balloon?"
She coughed again.
Meg dropped down on her knees and put her arms round her little thin
sister.
"Judy," she cried, "oh, Judy, Judy! my dear, my dear!"
Judy laughed for a little time, and called her an old silly, but she
soon broke down and sobbed convulsively. "I'm so hungry," she said,
at last pitifully.
They all four, started up as though they would fetch the stores of
Sydney to satisfy her. Then Meg sat down again and lifted the
rough, curly head on her lap.
"You go, Pip," she said, "and bring wine and a glass, and in the
meat-safe there's some roast chicken; I had it for my lunch, and
Martha said she would put the rest there till tea; and be quick, Pip.
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