But now we will fish for hard-sh.e.l.led crabs."
Cousin Tom and Daddy Bunker had rowed the boat about a mile up the inlet, and now the anchor was tossed over the side, to keep the craft from drifting with the tide.
"Now each one of you take a string, and toss the meat-end of it over the side," said Cousin Tom. "Keep hold of the stick-end, or tie that end to the boat. If you lose that you can"t pull in your crab. Each one of you keep watch of his or her string. When you see it beginning to be pulled, or when you feel a little tug or jerk on it, as if a fish were nibbling, then pull up very slowly and carefully. And look as you pull.
Don"t pull it all the way to the top, or the crab, if there is one on it, will see you, let go, and swim away."
The six little Bunkers did as they were told. Of course Margy and Mun Bun were too little to know how to catch crabs, but they each had a line, and Mother Bunker said she would catch them for the small tots.
"Oh, I think I have one!" suddenly exclaimed Russ in a whisper. "Look at my line move!"
"Yes, you may have a crab on there," returned Cousin Tom. "Pull up very gently."
Russ did so, while his cousin reached forward with the long-handled net ready to scoop it under the crab, if it should happen to be one.
Up and up Russ pulled his line. Every one was eagerly watching, for they wanted to see the first crab caught. And then, as the chunk of meat on Russ"s string came near the top of the water, Rose, from the other end of the boat, cried:
"Oh, it"s only a piece of seaweed!"
And so it was! How disappointed Russ was! The bit of green seaweed, catching on his line, had wiggled and tugged, as the tide swayed it, just as a crab would have done.
"Oh, I have one! I have one!" suddenly called Laddie, from his end of the boat. "He"s a big one! He"s pulling like anything!"
"Well, don"t get excited and fall overboard," said Daddy Bunker. "Keep still, pull up slowly, and I"ll get him in the net for you."
Slowly Laddie pulled up. Every one was watching. Would his "bite," too, prove to be only seaweed?
"Yes, you have one!" said Mother Bunker in a low voice, so as not to frighten the crab. I don"t really know whether loud noises frighten crabs or not, but generally every one keeps quiet when fishing.
"Yes, Laddie has a crab," said Daddy Bunker. "Wait, now, I"ll get it in the net!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE CRAB HAD HOLD OF LADDIE"S BAIT IN BOTH CLAWS.
_Six Little Bunkers at Cousin Tom"s._--_Page 120_]
Laddie"s father dipped the net down into the water, shoved it under the crab, chunk of meat and all, and lifted it suddenly out of the water.
The crab had hold of Laddie"s bait in both claws, and before the creature could let go it had been caught.
"Oh, look at him wriggle!" cried Rose.
"Now I"ll dump him into the basket," said Daddy Bunker. He turned the net upside down over the peach basket. Out dropped Mr. Crab, letting go of the chunk of meat, which Laddie pulled out by the string. The crab crawled about sideways on the bottom of the basket, raising its claws into the air and clashing them together, at the same time opening and shutting the pinching part.
"That"s the way a crab fights," said Cousin Tom. "And sometimes two big crabs will fight so hard that one pulls a claw off the other. You have caught a fine, big one, Laddie."
"A dandy," agreed Laddie.
"And I"ve got one, too!" cried Vi. "Oh, he"s pulling like anything!"
She really had a crab on her line. Cousin Tom netted it for her, and it turned out to be larger than Laddie"s.
"I think the crab fishing will be good to-day," said Daddy Bunker.
And so it turned out. From then on each one began to catch the pinching creatures, the older folks using the net when the children had bites.
Once Russ tried to use the net himself, but he was not quick enough with it, and the crab let go of the chunk of meat and swam quickly away.
"He was a dandy big one, too!" said Russ regretfully.
Mun Bun and Margy each one caught a crab, with the help of their mother, and Rose, Violet and Laddie had good luck, also. Cousin Tom and Daddy Bunker, of course, caught the most. Mother Bunker helped the children land theirs in the net. And, after about an hour of fishing, the peach basket was full of the big-clawed crabs.
"I think we have enough," said Cousin Tom. "We will take them home and cook them. Then we can eat them cold-boiled with lemon juice on them, or they can be made into a salad."
"Catching crabs is lots of fun," said Russ.
"Eating them is good, too," said his father.
They rowed back home, and found Cousin Ruth waiting for them at the bungalow.
"Oh, you did have good luck," said Cousin Tom"s wife. "A whole basketful! Well, I"ll soon have the water boiling and we"ll cook them."
The basket full of live crabs was set in the kitchen, and the six little Bunkers and the others went out on the porch to rest and wait for the water to boil. Russ, a little later, wanted a drink, and, going into the kitchen, he turned to go to the sink. He was barefooted, and suddenly he felt a sharp pain on one toe.
"Oh, I"m bit! I"m bit!" he cried. "Something pinched me!"
And then, as he looked at the kitchen floor, he cried:
"Oh, come quick! Come quick! They"re loose! They"re all loose!"
CHAPTER XIII
IN THE BOAT
Every one out on the porch of the bungalow jumped up on hearing Russ"s cries.
"What"s the matter?" asked Mother Bunker.
"What happened?" Daddy Bunker wanted to know.
"Oh, they"re all loose, and one of "em bit me," wailed Russ, and now came sounds which seemed to indicate that he was hopping about on one foot, and holding the other in his hands. And he really was doing this, as they found out afterward.
"Loose? They"re all loose? What does he mean?" asked Rose.
"It"s the crabs!" exclaimed Cousin Tom, as he made a run for the kitchen. "I guess some of them got out of the basket. They will do that once in a while."
Daddy and Mother Bunker, with Cousin Ruth, followed Cousin Tom to the kitchen, where Russ was still hopping about and yelling:
"Oh, they"re all loose! They"re all loose, and one of "em pinched me!
Oh, dear!"