"Come and help us!"
"The captain ought to go to their help," said Flossie"s mother. "It must be terrible to have to fight a big shark in a small boat."
"I guess we are going to rescue them," observed Bert. "Hark! There goes the whistle! And that bell means stop the engines!"
The blowing of a whistle and the ringing of a bell sounded even as he spoke, and the steamer began to move slowly.
Then a mate, or one of the captain"s helpers, came running along the deck with some sailors. They began to lower one of the lifeboats, and the Bobbsey twins and the other pa.s.sengers watched them eagerly. Out on the sea, which, luckily, was not rough, the men in the small boat were still fighting the shark.
"Are you going to help them?" asked Mr. Bobbsey of the mate who got into the boat with the sailors.
"Yes, I guess they are in trouble with a big shark, or maybe there are two of them. We"ll help them kill the big fish."
When the mate and the sailors were in the boat it was let down over the side of the ship to the water by long ropes. Then the sailors rowed toward the fishermen.
Anxiously the Bobbsey twins and the others watched to see what would happen. Over the waves went the rescuing boat, and when it got near enough the men in it, with long, sharp poles, with axes and with guns, began to help fight the shark. The waters foamed and bubbled, and the men in the boats shouted:
"There goes one!" came a call after a while, and, for a moment, something long and black seemed to stick up into the air.
"It"s a shark!" cried Bert. "I can tell by his pointed nose. Lots of sharks have long, pointed noses, and that"s one!"
"Yes, I guess it is," his father said.
"Then there must be two sharks," said Mrs. Bobbsey, "for the men are still fighting something in the water."
"Yes, they certainly are," her husband replied. "The fishermen must have caught one shark, and its mate came to help in the fight. Look, the fishing boat nearly went over that time!"
That really came near happening. One of the big fish, after it found that its mate had been killed, seemed to get desperate. It rushed at the fishermen"s boat and struck it with its head, sending it far over on one side.
Then the men from the steamer"s boat fired some bullets from a gun into the second shark and killed it so that it sank. The waters grew quiet and the boats were no longer in danger.
The mate and the sailors from the steamer stayed near the fishing boat a little while longer, the men talking among themselves, and then the sailors rowed back, and were hoisted upon deck in their craft.
"Tell us what happened!" cried Mr. Bobbsey.
"It was sharks," answered the mate. "The fishermen came out here to lift their lobster pots, which had drifted a long way from sh.o.r.e. While they were doing this one of them baited a big hook with a piece of pork and threw it overboard, for he had seen some sharks about. A shark bit on the hook and then rammed the boat.
"Then another shark came along and both of them fought the fishermen, who might have been drowned if we had not helped them kill the sharks.
But they are all right now--the fishermen, I mean--for the sharks are dead and on the bottom of the ocean by this time."
"Were they big sharks?" asked Bert.
"Quite large," the mate answered. "One was almost as long as the fishing boat, and they were both very ugly. It isn"t often that such big sharks come up this far north, but I suppose they were hungry and that made them bold."
"I"m glad I wasn"t in that boat," said Nan.
"Indeed we all may well be glad," Mrs. Bobbsey said.
"Will those fishermen have to row all the way to sh.o.r.e?" asked Freddie, looking across the waters. No land was in sight.
"No, they don"t have to row," said the mate of the steamer. "They have a little gasolene engine in their boat, and the land is not so far away as it seems, only five or six miles. They can get in all right if no more sharks come after them, and I don"t believe any will."
The fishermen waved their hands to the pa.s.sengers on the steamer, and the Bobbsey twins and the others waved back.
"Good-bye!" shouted the children, as loudly as they could. Whether the others heard them or not was not certain, but they continued to wave their hands.
It took some time to hoist the lifeboat up in its place on the steamer, and in this Freddie and the others were quite interested.
"I"d like to own a boat like that myself," said the little boy.
"What would you do with it?" questioned Flossie.
"Oh, I"d have a whole lot of fun," was the ready answer.
"Would you give me a ride?"
"Of course I would!"
At last the lifeboat was put in its proper place, and then the steamer started off again.
The Bobbsey twins had plenty to talk about now, and so did the other pa.s.sengers. It was not often they witnessed a rescue of that kind at sea, and Bert, who, like Freddie, had been hoping he might sight a shipwreck--that is, he wished it if no one would be drowned--was quite satisfied with the excitement of the sharks.
"Only I wish they could have brought one over closer, so we could have seen how big it was," he said.
"I don"t," remarked Nan. "I don"t like sharks."
"Not even when they"re dead and can"t hurt you?" asked Bert.
"Not even any time," Nan said. "I don"t like sharks."
"Neither do I," said Flossie.
"Well, I"d like to see one if daddy would take hold of my hand," put in Freddie. "Then I wouldn"t be afraid."
"Maybe there"ll be sharks when we get to Cousin Jasper"s house," said Flossie.
"His house isn"t in the ocean, and sharks is only in the ocean,"
declared Freddie.
"Well, maybe his house is _near_ the ocean," went on the little "fat fairy."
"Cousin Jasper is in the hospital," Nan remarked; "and I guess they don"t have any sharks there."
"Maybe they have alligators," added Bert with a smile.
"Really?" asked Nan.
"Well, you know Florida is where they have lots of alligators," went on her older brother. "And we"re going to Florida."