said the little boy stoutly.
He took hold of one of the poles and raised it up, but then it slipped from his grasp and one end hit Nan on the shoulder.
"Oh, Freddie! do be careful!" she cried.
"I didn"t mean to hit you, Nan," he said contritely. "It didn"t hurt, did it?"
"Not very much. But I don"t want to get hit again."
"Freddie, you had better let the older folks set up that tent," said Mrs. Bobbsey. "Here, you and Flossie can help put these boxes and baskets away. There is plenty of other work for you to do."
A little later the second tent was in position, and everything about the camp was put in good shape.
Then Cousin Jasper, Mr. Bobbsey and the captain, taking Bert with them, started around for the other side of the island to look and call for the missing Jack.
"I want to come, too," said Freddie.
"Not now," his mother told him. "It is too far for a little boy. Perhaps you and Flossie may go to-morrow. You stay and help me make the camp ready for night."
This pleased Freddie and Flossie, and soon they were helping their mother, one of the sailors doing the heavy lifting.
Meanwhile Bert, his father and the others walked on through the woods, around to the other side of the island. They found the place where Cousin Jasper"s boat had struck the rocks and been wrecked, and Mr. Dent also showed them the place where he and Jack stayed while they were waiting for a boat to come for them.
"And here is where we set up our signal," cried Mr. Bobbsey"s cousin, as he found a pole which had fallen over, having been broken off close to the ground. On top was still a piece of canvas that had fluttered as a flag.
"But why didn"t Jack leave it flying, to call a boat to come and get him when he found you gone?" asked Mr. Bobbsey.
"I don"t know," said Cousin Jasper. "This is very strange. I thought surely we would find Jack as soon as we reached the island. It may be that he has been taken off by some fishermen, but I think I would have heard of it. And he was here about a week ago, for Captain Harrison saw him, you remember he told us. Well, we must look further."
"And yell and yell some more," added Bert. "Maybe he can hear us now."
So they shouted and called, but no one answered them, and Cousin Jasper shook his head.
"I wonder what can have happened to the poor boy!" he said.
They walked along the beach, and up among the palm and orange trees, looking for the missing boy. But they saw no signs of him.
CHAPTER XXII
FOUND AT LAST
When Bert, with his father, Cousin Jasper and Captain Crane, got back to the place where Mrs. Bobbsey had been left with Nan and the two smaller twins, the camp on Orange Island was nearly finished. The tents had been put up, and the oil-stove was ready for cooking.
"Didn"t you find that poor boy?" asked Mrs. Bobbsey.
"No, we saw no trace of him," her husband answered.
"Oh, isn"t that too bad?"
"Yes, I am very sorry," sighed Cousin Jasper. "But I have not yet given up. I"ll stay here until either I find him, or make sure what has happened to him. Poor Jack has no relatives, and I am his nearest friend. I feel almost as though he were my son. We will find him if he is on this island."
Bert and the others who had walked around to the other side of the island, hoping that Jack might be found, were tired from their trip, and when they got back were glad to sit on the beach in the shade. A meal was soon ready, and when they had eaten they all felt better.
"It is too late to do much more searching to-day," said Cousin Jasper, "but we will start early in the morning."
And this they did, after a quiet night spent on the island. As soon, almost, as the sun had risen, the Bobbsey twins were up, and Bert and Nan gathered oranges for breakfast.
"I wish we could live here always," said Freddie. "I"d never have to go to the store for any fruit."
"But if we stayed here we couldn"t have Snap or Snoop or Dinah or Sam, or anybody like that from Lakeport," put in Flossie.
"Couldn"t we, Mother?" asked the little boy.
"Course we couldn"t!" insisted Flossie.
"Well, I guess it would be hard to bring from Lakeport all the friends and all the things you like there," said Mrs. Bobbsey.
"Well, then we"ll go back home after we find Jack," decided Freddie.
Breakfast over, the search for the missing boy was begun once more, Mrs.
Bobbsey and the smaller twins going along.
In some places, however, the way was rough and steep, and once on top of a little hill, Freddie suddenly cried:
"Look out! I"m coming!"
And come he did, but in a queer way. For he slipped and fell, and rolled to the bottom, bringing up with a b.u.mp against a stump.
"Oh, my dear little fat fireman! Did you hurt yourself?" asked his father.
Freddie did not answer at first. He slowly got to his feet, looked up the hill down which he had rolled, and then at the stump, which was covered with moss.
"I--I guess I"m all right," he said.
"He"s so fat he didn"t get hurt," said Cousin Jasper. "Fat boys and girls are just the kind to bring to a place like this. They can"t get hurt easily."
Freddie laughed, and so did the others, and then they went on again.
They looked in different places for the missing boy, and called his name many times.
But all the sounds they heard in answer were those of the waves dashing on the beach or the cries of the sea-birds.
"It is very strange," said Captain Crane. "If that boy was here about a week ago, you"d think we could find some trace of him--some place where he had built a fire, or set up a signal so it would be seen by pa.s.sing ships. I believe, Mr. Dent, that he must have been taken away, and when we get back to St. Augustine he"ll be there waiting for us."
"Well, perhaps you are right," said Cousin Jasper, "but we will make sure. We"ll stay here a week, anyhow, and search every part of Orange Island."