"Mamma!"
"Yes, darling, I am here!"
"Oh, dear! I am all wet!"
"Be thankful that your life has been spared."
"That boy brought me out of the water."
"Yes, dear--and he was brave to do it," answered the mother and beamed on Randy to such an extent that he had to blush.
By this time the two men had also come ash.o.r.e. The steam was still blowing off on the tug but the danger appeared to be over. Later the engineer announced that a valve and a connection had broken, and the craft would have to remain where she was until towed off.
"I am glad to see you are all safe," said the man who ran the tug.
"There wasn"t very much danger on board."
"It looked bad enough," said one of the men who had leaped overboard.
"I didn"t want to get scalded."
"And neither did I," added the other.
It appeared that neither of the men knew the lady excepting by name.
She was, however, fairly well known to the tug captain, and had gone up the river on the craft to please her little girl.
"I am sorry for this, Mrs. Shalley," said the tug owner. "I must say, I don"t know what to do."
"I must get dry clothing on Helen pretty soon."
"The tug is wet from end to end from the escaped steam."
"If I was down at Riverport I could go to the hotel," went on Mrs.
Shalley.
"We can take you down in our rowboat," said Jack. "It won"t take very long."
"Can I trust myself in the boat?"
"Certainly, if you"ll only sit still."
The matter was talked over, and it was decided that the lady and her little girl should be taken down to Riverport by Randy and Jack. The party was soon on the way.
"My name is Mrs. Andrew Shalley," said the lady. "My husband is a steamboat owner. May I ask your names?"
"Mine is Jack Bartlett. I live in Riverport, but I am going to move to Albany."
"And my name is Randy Thompson," added our hero. "I live over there--in the little cottage by that clump of trees."
"I am pleased to know you," said the lady. "It was more than kind of both of you to come to the a.s.sistance of myself and my daughter."
"It wasn"t so much to do," answered Randy. "We were close by."
"You are soaking wet."
"It"s an old working suit and I don"t mind the water," laughed our hero.
"What a nice lot of fish," said little Helen, who had now completely recovered.
"I feel I should reward you both," went on Mrs. Shalley.
"I don"t want anything," said Jack, promptly.
"And neither do I," added our hero.
The hotel at which the lady was stopping was built close to the river bank. Mother and child landed at the dock and Randy and Jack bade them good-by.
"I shall try to see you again," said Mrs. Shalley, as she started for the hotel.
"Evidently a very nice lady," remarked Jack, as he and Randy rowed away.
"Yes."
"I think she wanted to reward us, Randy."
"I think so myself, but I don"t want any reward."
"Neither do I, although I shouldn"t mind, say ten thousand dollars,"
went on Jack, by way of a joke.
"Or the Presidency of the United States," added Randy, in an equally light tone.
The boys had caught so many fish Randy decided to sell some from his share. He found a purchaser on the dock where they landed and started home richer by fifty cents.
"If I can"t get anything else to do, I can do some fishing later on,"
he mused. "I can get at least two or three dollars" worth of fish a week, and that would be better than nothing--and I could keep right on with the farm, too."
When Randy returned home he had quite a story to tell, to which both his father and his mother listened with interest.
"Randy, you must be careful in the water," said Mrs. Thompson, with an anxious look in her eyes. "Supposing that girl had dragged you down?"
"I was on my guard, mother."
"Randy is a good swimmer," said his father. "I was a good swimmer myself, in my younger days."
The fish proved acceptable, and Randy readily got Jerry Borden to trade him some bacon for a mess, and also give him some fresh vegetables.
"Gosh! Wish I"d gone fishing," said Sammy. "I like to catch big fish."
"Well, I am not going to stop you," said our hero.