The book they were reading was called "_The Castaways_," and Bo was listening to Yulee with the greatest attention. At last, just as the great clock in the hall struck three, Yulee finished; she had skipped some of the parts, especially the hard names and Miss Keenmark"s science, but she had read the book through and Bo had heard most of it.
"Bo!" said she, as she shut the book, "I"d like to be a castaway, wouldn"t you? It would be so fine to live on the top of a rock and have to go up a rope ladder, and keep goats, and save the lives of Africans, and sleep in an ox-cart!"
"Oh, but the lions!" said Bo, "and the--and the--what are those big things that live in the water, and most swallowed the canoe?--you know."
"I know what you mean," said Yulee. "The hippopotamuses. I said the word all the way going to school yesterday, so as to remember it."
"I shouldn"t like them," said Bo.
"Oh, but one of the men would fire right into his mouth, just as Albert did. I"ll find the place;" and turning over the leaves of the book, she came to the story, and read:--"But they had not been long seated when a tremendous shock was felt; the light canoe was thrown above the water, and capsized in a moment; and Albert, who was standing at the stern of the raft, watching the boat, saw, to his great horror, the huge head of a hippopotamus raised above the water, preparing to seize the canoe with its red open mouth. Calling for aid, he seized his gun and fired in the face of the ferocious beast, which with terrific roars, dived down and disappeared."
"But who"d you have to shoot the--pippi--what is it?" asked Bo.
"The hippopotamus," said Yulee, who liked to p.r.o.nounce the word; "why, of course, there must be some men wrecked with me: there"s the captain, and the doctor, and carpenter, and the pa.s.sengers--"
"A"n"t girls ever wrecked alone?" asked Bo; Yulee thought a minute; she tried to recollect the different stories she had read about people who were cast away. "No;" she said finally, "there is always the captain, and the doctor, and the carpenter, and some of the pa.s.sengers at least; and the carpenter finds his chest."
Bo had nothing to say against such a mode of shipwrecking, and Yulee continued: "But I think I"d rather be cast away on an island like Robinson Crusoe or The Little Robinson, where there was water all around, and canoes and pearls, just as it is in "The Swiss Family.""
"Bo!" she said suddenly, "I do declare! let"s be cast away on the island in the lake! We can get into the boat, you know, and be wrecked on the sh.o.r.e, and you can take your bow and arrows, and I"ll take my tea-set and my range, and we"ll build a little house, and perhaps there are some goats on the island! Wouldn"t it be grand!"
Bo opened his brown eyes wide at the idea. "Well let"s do it!" said he; it was enough for him that Yulee had proposed it; "I"ll go right off and get my bow and arrows."
"And I"ll get my tea-set and the range, and I"ll take Miss Phely," said Yulee. They jumped up from the flat door-step, and ran into the house, and up stairs to the play-room. There they began collecting what they thought they should need, and Yulee very soon pounced on Miss Phely who was in the corner of the room, sitting very stiffly upon a small willow rocking chair. Miss Phely"s face originally was black, but rather streaked with a doubtful colour now, as it had been washed somewhat vigorously at different times; her eyes were blue and very wide open, and her dress, which wanted a pin behind, was of spotted pink calico.
Her arms she held rather stiffly away from her clothes, and her fingers were stretched as far apart as they well could be. Yulee was in a hurry, and took her up unceremoniously by the waist, but Miss Phely did not seem at all disturbed, and did not even wink or shut her fingers together.
They hurried down stairs and out by the front door, pa.s.sing on tip-toe by their grandfather, Old Benjy Robin, who slept soundly in his chair, with his cane between his knees and the bandanna thrown over his head to keep away the flies. Even Juniper, the dog, never woke up, though Yulee was strongly tempted to add him to the party of castaways. They pa.s.sed through the garden gate, and crossing the road walked through the pasture, down the path that led to the sh.o.r.e of Clearwater. There, tied to a stake, was their father"s flat-bottomed boat, with keel-boats near by. Yulee chose the flat-bottomed boat, and they proceeded to put on board their various stores.
First, and head foremost, Miss Phely was deposited upon one of the seats; if her head had been less hard it must have disliked the wooden pillow that it was knocked down upon. After her came the box of cups and saucers, tea-pot, sugar-bowl and creamer; then some of Miss Phely"s clothes, in case a change were desirable; a little Shaker basket, never before used, which Yulee said was for berries; the bow and arrows; a pail for the goats" milk; a tin pump with a trough attached to it; little Bo carrying a pop-gun which was too valuable to be suffered out of his hands; and lastly, Yulee holding in one hand "The Castaways," to refer to in case of need, and in the other the most precious thing of all to her--a little complete leaden range with places for every thing, which had been given her for a present on her last birth-day, and in which it had ever since been her secret but firm determination to build a real fire. The range was altogether too valuable to be laid on the seat like Miss Phely, so Yulee kept it in her hands; and she had not forgotten either--prudent Yulee! to bring some matches wrapped up in a piece of newspaper, and which she kept her eyes on constantly, as they lay in the range, expecting every moment to see them start a-fire; indeed, they kept her very uneasy. However, everything was now aboard.
"Here, Bo," said she, "you sit down there, side of Miss Phely, and don"t let her tumble overboard, and I"ll go and untie the rope." Bo began to be a little frightened, but he had faith in Yulee, and Yulee had great faith in herself. When she had untied the end of the rope that was in the boat--and very hard work she found it--she said:
"Now we"re off, Bo! are you all ready?"
"Yes," said Bo.
"No; you must say, "aye aye, sir!"" said Yulee.
"But you a"n"t _sir_," said Bo.
"Yes I am," said Yulee, "I"m the Captain;" and she took her seat in the middle of the boat, where she said the Captain always sat. "This ship is the _Little Madras_, Bo," said she. "Where"s "The Castaways"? I"ll read about it." So she read how all the party, after their first shipwreck in the _Madras_, had embarked again in the ship"s long boat, which the Captain called the _Little Madras_.
"Are there any of those big animals here? you know that long name,"
asked Bo.
"Hippopotamuses?" said Yulee, promptly, delighted at the opportunity of using the word. "Oh, no! there are no hippopotamuses in Clearwater; the hippopotamuses only live in Africa."
"You never saw one, did you?" said Bo, who didn"t like to use the word.
"No," said Yulee. "I never saw a hippopotamus, but I"ve seen an elephant in the menagerie and I guess it"s something like it. There"s a picture of one in the Castaways," and she showed it to Bo.
While they were talking, the wind and the current had been gently drifting the boat away from the sh.o.r.e; they were quite a distance from the stake now, and really going toward the island, which lay in the lake not very far off. They had never been there for their father said there was nothing to see on it; but Yulee was very certain in her own mind that there was something on the island very wonderful. She had made up a great many stories about it, which she had told over to herself so often that she believed them as much as if some one else had told them to her.
She was sure that there were goats there at any rate and possibly a parrot; and she was ready to believe in a cave, and perhaps even a small mountain with a rope ladder up to the top like the one in "the Castaways," though she rather thought she would have seen that if there had been one, from the sh.o.r.e. The island could not be seen from the house, nor from the boat-landing; it was round a curve in the lake.
The boat followed the current which led it slowly toward the island, and Yulee was in ecstacies as they neared the sh.o.r.e. She sat in the bows of the boat looking eagerly toward the island and trying to make out a good place for a cave. But the land looked rather unpromising; it was low, rising but little above the water, and covered with gra.s.s, a few low bushes and one clump of trees. The boat did not seem able to get much nearer the island, after it was within a few yards of it, and even appeared to be drifting away. Yulee noticed this and began to be alarmed lest they should not be cast away after all.
"Why don"t we get wrecked?" asked Bo at this juncture, leaning over the boat side and looking into the water which was hardly a foot deep here.
"There ought to be a great wind," explained Yulee, "and a storm, and the ship ought to go to pieces, and then we should be thrown on sh.o.r.e, and in the morning we should go out to the wreck and get the carpenter"s chest and all sorts of things; at least that"s the way it usually happens, but we"re in a boat you see, and that makes a difference. I think, Bo," she added, "you"d better take off your shoes and stockings, and get out and pull the boat ash.o.r.e, or we never shall get there."
So Bo rolled up his trousers, and with some difficulty got over the side of the boat into the water. The boat moved easily, and Bo in great glee pulled it to the island, to a place where there was a little beach, till the bottom of the boat grated on the gravel.
"Here we are!" said Yulee. "Now, Bo, we must get the things ash.o.r.e before the _Little Madras_ goes to pieces." Bo stood on the beach by the boat while Yulee handed to him the various stores and provisions, not forgetting Miss Phely, who was still as wide awake as ever, staring before her without winking and keeping her fingers stiffly apart in the same uncomfortable fashion. Bo took her by the arm and tossed her upon the ground in a very unfeeling manner. Last of all came Yulee, holding fast her precious range and dividing her attention between the dangerous matches and the disembarking from the boat.
"Now, is the _Little Madras_ going to pieces?" asked Bo.
"It ought to," said Yulee, "or else it will drift away in the night time. We"ll tie it here, though, because you know we may want to sail round our island, and I don"t see any log of wood here to make a boat out of as Robinson Crusoe did. Where"s the rope, Bo?" she said, as she looked round in vain for it in order to tie the boat to the sh.o.r.e.
"You untied it," said he.
"So I did," said she, "but I must have untied the wrong end. Well, I guess the boat will stay here." Secretly Yulee hoped the boat wouldn"t stay; it would be so much more like a real wreck.
"Now, the first thing we must do," said Yulee, "is to explore our island and see if there are any savages on it. You give me the bow and arrows and take your gun, and if you see a savage you mustn"t fire at him, but must wait a moment to see if he won"t come and kneel down and be your slave."
Bo was frightened at this; he wasn"t prepared for savages. "Do you really think, Yulee," said he, "that there are savages here?"
"I don"t know," said she, "I"ve never been here before, but it"s best to be prepared. Don"t you be afraid, Bobo," she added encouragingly; "you know we can take to the boat if they chase us, and they"ll fire darts, but the darts will fall into the water all around us, and won"t hit us at all."
"Do you think it"s safe, Yulee, to leave the things so on the beach?"
asked Bo, as they started off on their tour of discovery.
"Oh, yes," said she, "n.o.body will touch them, they never do; besides, I"ve got the range with me." To be sure, she had the range in one hand, but she had left the matches upon the beach as causing too much anxiety.
Thus they set off. Yulee with the range and the bow and arrows, and Bo with his pop-gun. It did not take long to explore the island; it was only about an acre in all, and irregular in shape. They came to the clump of trees but did not dare go in, though Yulee was pretty sure that the cave must be in there. They left that, however, for a future tour, and came back without further adventure to their landing place, where they found their stores safe upon the beach, but the boat to Bo"s consternation had drifted off from the sh.o.r.e, and was now some distance away, floating down the Lake.
"Oh, Yulee!" said he, "what shall we do I see the boat is gone!"
"That is all right," said she cheerfully. "I wouldn"t have been half so much of a wreck if the boat had stayed. A"n"t you glad we have got all the things out? The next thing we must do is to build a house."
"I"m hungry," said Bo.
"Then we"ll have dinner first," said she. "We"ll have strawberries to-day, but to-morrow we"ll have fish, or you can shoot a goat."
"But there a"n"t any goats," said Bo.
"Yes there are; they"re in the cave in the clump of trees yonder." Bo couldn"t dispute that, but he demurred as to going in there to shoot them. At present, however, they satisfied themselves with eating strawberries, which were very plentiful upon the island.
When they had eaten their strawberries, and had become quite crimson about the mouth and finger-tips, they returned to the landing-place, where Miss Phely had been keeping watch over the stores. She had been placed in a sitting posture, leaning against a stone, and looking out upon Clearwater as wide awake as when she had been put into the boat, and with her arms and fingers extended as if she were delivering an oration. She paid not the slightest attention to the valuables placed under her guard. Bo began to look about for stones to throw into the water while Yulee thought it a good time to attend to Miss Phely"s toilet; so she set busily to work changing her frock; when she had finished this to her satisfaction and was debating whether it would be well to wash her face also, she remembered suddenly, what she had forgotten for the while, that she was a cast away.
"Bo!" she cried, "we ought to be building our house."