"What do you mean--a poodle dog in a basket?" asked Bert.

Then Freddie explained, while Mr. Bobbsey went to tell the steward, or one of the officers of the ship, that the lost children had come safely back.

The smaller twins had seen one of the pa.s.sengers with a pet dog in a blue silk-lined basket, and they had followed her around the deck to the other side of the ship, away from their parents, to get a better look at the poodle. It was a pretty and friendly little animal, and the children had been allowed to pat it. So they forgot what their mother had said to them about not going away.

"Well, don"t do it again," warned Mr. Bobbsey, and Flossie and Freddie said they would not.

By this time the big ship was well on her way down New York Bay toward the Statue of Liberty, which the children looked at with wondering eyes.

They took their last view of the tall buildings which cl.u.s.ter in the lower end of the island of Manhattan, and then they felt that they were really well started on their voyage.

"Oh, I hope we have lots of fun in Florida!" said Nan. "I"ve always wanted to go there, _always_!"

"So have I," Bert said. "But maybe we won"t stay in Florida long."

"Why not?" his sister asked.

"Because didn"t father say Cousin Jasper wanted us to take a trip with him?"

"So he did," replied Nan. "I wonder where he is going."

"That"s part of the strange news he"s going to tell," said Bert. "Anyhow we"ll have a good time."

"And maybe we"ll get shipwrecked!" exclaimed Freddie, who, with his little sister Flossie, was listening to what the older Bobbsey twins were saying.

"Shipwrecked!" cried Bert. "You wouldn"t want that, would you?"

"Maybe. If we could live on an island like Robinson Crusoe," Freddie answered, "that would be lots of fun."

"Yes, but if we had to live on an island without anything to eat and no water to drink, that wouldn"t be so much fun," said Nan.

"If it was an island there"d be a lot of water all around it--that"s what an island is," Flossie said. "I learned it in geogogafy at school.

An island has water all around it, my geogogafy says."

"Yes, but at sea the water is salty and you can"t drink it," Bert said.

"I don"t want to be shipwrecked."

"Well, maybe I don"t want to, either," said Freddie, after thinking about it a little. "Anyhow we"ll have some fun!"

"Yes," agreed Bert, "I guess I will."

"Now I"m going to fish," remarked Freddie.

"You won"t catch anything," Bert said.

"Why not?" Freddie wanted to know, as he again took the ball of string from his pocket.

""Cause we"re not out at sea yet," Bert replied. "This is only the bay, and fish don"t come up here on account of too many ships that scare "em away. You"ll have to wait until we get out where the water is colored blue."

"Do fish like blue water?" asked Flossie.

"I guess so," answered Bert. "Anyhow, I don"t s"pose you can catch any fish here, Freddie."

However, the little Bobbsey twin boy had his own idea about that. He had been planning to catch some fish ever since he had heard about the trip to Florida. Freddie had been to the seash.o.r.e several times, on visits to Ocean Cliff, where Uncle William Minturn lived. But this was the first time the small chap had been on a big ship. He knew that fish were caught in the sea, for he had seen the men come in with boatloads of them at Ocean Cliff. And he had caught fish himself at Blueberry Island.

But that, he remembered, was not in the sea.

"Come on, Flossie," said Freddie, when Bert and Nan had walked away down the deck. "Come on, I"m going to do it."

"Do what, Freddie?"

"I"m going to catch some fish. I"ve got my string all untangled now."

"You haven"t any fishhook," observed the little girl; "and you can"t catch any fish lessen you have a hook."

"I can make one out of a pin, and I"ve got a pin," answered Freddie. "I da.s.sen"t ever have a real hook, anyhow, all alone by myself, till I get bigger. But I can catch a fish on a pin-hook."

He did have a pin fastened to his coat, and this pin he now bent into the shape of a hook and stuck it through a knot in the end of the long, dangling string.

"Where are you going to fish?" asked Flossie. She and her brother were on the deck not far from the two staterooms of the Bobbsey family. Mrs.

Bobbsey was sitting in a steamer chair near the door of her room, where she could watch the children.

"I"m going to fish right here," Freddie said, pointing to the rail at the side of the ship. "I"m going to throw my line over here, with the hook on it, just like I fish off the bridge at home."

"And I"ll watch you," said Flossie.

Over the railing Freddie tossed his bent-pin hook and line. He thought it would reach down to the water, but he did not know how large the boat was on which he was sailing to Florida.

His little ball of string unwound as the end of it dropped over the rail, but the hook did not reach the water. Even if it had, Freddie could have caught nothing. In the first place a bent pin is not the right kind of hook, and, in the second place, Freddie had no bait on the hook. Bait is something that covers a hook and makes the fish want to bite on it. Then they are caught. But Freddie did not think of this just now, and his hook had nothing on it. Neither did it reach down to the water, and Freddie didn"t know that.

But, as his string was dangling over the side of the ship there came a sudden tug on it, and the little boy pulled up as hard as he could.

"Oh, I"ve caught a fish! I"ve caught a fish!" he cried. "Flossie, look, I"ve caught a fish!"

Of course Flossie could not see what was on the end of her brother"s line, but it was something! She could easily tell that by the way Freddie was hauling in on the string.

"Oh, what have you got?" cried the little girl.

"I"ve got a big fish!" said Freddie. "I said I"d catch a fish, and I did!"

From somewhere down below came shouts and cries.

"What"s that?" asked Flossie.

"Them"s the people hollering "cause I caught such a big fish," answered Freddie. "Look, there it is!"

Something large and black appeared above the edge of the rail.

"Oh! Oh!" cried Flossie.

© 2024 www.topnovel.cc