"That"s true. But the sailors on a boat often have to work outside on the deck when the weather is very rough."
"And that must be awfully dangerous," put in Bert.
"It does become dangerous at times, especially when there is a great storm on."
"Do you think we"ll run into a storm on this trip?" Nan questioned.
"I"m sure I hope not!" answered the mother quickly. "To run into a big storm with such a small boat as this would be dangerous."
"Maybe we"d be wrecked and become regular Robinson Crusoes," said Bert.
"Oh, please, Bert! don"t speak of such dreadful things!" said his mother.
"But that would be fun, Mother."
"Fun!"
"All right. We won"t be wrecked then." And Bert and his mother both laughed.
After dinner the Bobbsey twins sat out on the deck, and watched the blue waves. For some little time they could look back and see the sh.o.r.es of Florida, and then, as the _Swallow_ flew farther and farther away, the sh.o.r.es were only like a misty cloud, and then, a little longer, and they could not be seen at all.
"Now we are just as much at sea as when we were on the big ship coming from New York, aren"t we?" Bert asked his father.
"Yes, just about," answered Mr. Bobbsey.
It was a little while after this that Mrs. Bobbsey, who had gone down to the staterooms, to get a book she had left there, heard Flossie crying.
"What"s the matter, little fairy?" asked her mother, as she came up on deck.
"Oh, Mother, my nice rubber doll is gone, and Freddie took her and now he"s gone," said Flossie.
"Freddie gone!" cried Mrs. Bobbsey. "What do you mean, Flossie? Where could Freddie go?"
"I don"t know where he went. I guess he didn"t go to look at any colored ladies with baskets on their heads, "cause there aren"t any here. But he went downstairs, where the engine is, and he took my doll with him. I saw him, and I hollered at him, but he wouldn"t bring her back to me.
Oh, I want my doll--my nice rubber doll!" and Flossie cried real tears.
"I must find Freddie," said Mrs. Bobbsey. "I wonder where that boy could have gone this time?"
CHAPTER XIV
FREDDIE"S FISH
Although she was a little worried about Freddie, Mrs. Bobbsey felt quite sure nothing very serious could happen to him. He would not go near enough the railing of the deck to fall over, for he and Flossie, as well as Bert and Nan, had promised not to do this while they were on the _Swallow_. And if the little boy had gone "downstairs," as Flossie said, he could be in no danger there.
"Even if he went to the motor room," thought Mrs. Bobbsey, "he could come to no harm, for there is a man there all the while looking after the engine. But I must find him."
Flossie was still sobbing a little, and looking about the deck as if, by some chance, her doll might still be there.
"Tell me how it happened, Flossie," said Mrs. Bobbsey.
Her husband was down in the cabin, talking to Captain Crane and Cousin Jasper. The cook was getting things ready for supper, one of the men was steering, and another was looking after the engine. Nan and Bert were up in the bow of the boat, watching the waves and an occasional seagull flying about, and Flossie was with her mother. The only one of her family Mrs. Bobbsey did not know about was Freddie.
"It happened this way," said Flossie. "I was playing up here with my rubber doll, making believe she was a princess, and I was putting a gold and diamond dress on her, when Freddie came up with a lot of string. I asked him what he was going to do, and he said he was going to fish, and he asked me if I had a piece of cookie."
"What did he want of a piece of cookie?" asked Mrs. Bobbsey.
"He wanted it to fasten on his line for bait for the fishes, he said,"
went on Flossie. "But I didn"t have any cookie. I did have some before that, and so did Freddie. The cook gave them to us, but I did eat all my piece up and so did Freddie. So I didn"t have any for his fishline."
"Then what happened?" asked Mrs. Bobbsey, as she started down the companionway to look for Freddie.
"Well, Freddie asked me to go and get some more cookie from the cook, and I did, "cause I was hungry and I wanted to eat more. But I couldn"t find the cook, and when I came back upstairs again, and outdoors--here on deck, I mean--I saw Freddie grab up my doll, and run down the other stairs."
"Oh, well, maybe he only took it in fun," said Mrs. Bobbsey, and she was not at all worried now, feeling sure Freddie was safe, though he might be in some sort of mischief.
"Anyhow he took my doll," Flossie went on. "And he wouldn"t bring her back to me when I told him to. Then I--I cried."
"Yes, I heard you," said her mother. "But you mustn"t be such a baby, Flossie. Of course it wasn"t right for Freddie to take your doll, but you shouldn"t have cried about a little thing like that. I"ll tell him he mustn"t plague you."
"But, Mother! he was going to throw my doll into the ocean, I"m sure he was."
"Oh, no, Flossie! Freddie wouldn"t do a thing like that!"
"But I saw him tying a string to her, and I"m sure he was going to throw her into the ocean."
"Well, then he could pull her out again."
"Yes, but I don"t want my doll in the ocean. The ocean is salty, and if salty water gets in her eyes it might spoil them."
Mrs. Bobbsey wanted to laugh, but she did not dare, for that would have made Flossie feel worse than ever.
"What makes you think Freddie was going to toss your doll into the ocean?" asked Flossie"s mother.
""Cause, before that he wanted me to do it to give her a bath. He had a long string and he said, "let"s tie it to the rubber doll and let her swim in the ocean.""
"No, he mustn"t do that, of course," said Mrs. Bobbsey. "And I"ll tell him so when I find him. But perhaps he didn"t do it, Flossie."
"Oh, yes he did!" said the little girl. "When he ran downstairs with my doll, and wouldn"t come back when I hollered at him, he was tying a string on her then. Oh, dear!"
"Never mind! I"ll get your doll back," Mrs. Bobbsey said. "But first we must find Freddie."
"He went down those stairs," said Flossie, pointing to a flight that led to the motor room, where the engine was chug-chugging away, sending the _Swallow_ over the waves. "He went down there."
The engine room of the motor boat was a clean place, not like the engine room on a steamboat, filled with coal dust and a lot of machinery, and Mrs. Bobbsey knew it would be all right for her and Flossie to go down there and see what Freddie was doing.