Page:Poor Cecco - 1925.djvu/88

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76
Poor Cecco

along the edge of the road, down in the ditch, ran a trickle of water. Not enough to launch a boat on, but there was plenty to cool their feet, and very soon Poor Cecco and Bulka had hopped down and were walking along in it, splashing merrily. It looked so cool that Jensina had to follow their example. Besides, as Poor Cecco said, in this way the rats would be unable to trace their footsteps.

Jensina, like many another young lady, recovered her spirits as soon as she felt she was getting her own way; she sang snatches of songs and dances, and was altogether a most cheerful companion. Once in a while, on the road above them, an automobile passed with a noise like thunder and the blowing of trumpets, and whenever this happened Jensina scrambled hastily up the side of the ditch, her legs working like a pair of compasses, but she was always too late to see anything but a vanishing cloud of dust.

“I shall walk on the edge of the road!” she called finally. “It is smoother up here, and one sees far more!”

So she walked along, tilting on her toes and turning her head from side to side as she went. But suddenly she came sliding in a great hurry down the side of the ditch again, very pale, her fingers on her lips.

“Sh-sh!” she whispered. “The rats are following us! I knew they would!”

“Where?” cried Poor Cecco. “Show me!”

Stealthily they all three climbed up the bank and peeped through the grasses. There, sure enough, coming at a