
Полная версия
Linda Carlton's Island Adventure
It was Dot, however, who spoke instead. Rather, she cried out hysterically,
"Linda, I see a boat! A steam-boat! Coming towards us!"
"Where?" gasped the other girl, her heart beating wildly between hope and fear.
"Right ahead! Look! You can see her without the glasses now!"
Linda shot a swift glance at the approaching boat, then looked again at the floor, where the water was fast deepening. Would the rescue come in time? And would the boat stop at their signal of distress?
Wild with excitement, both girls raised their arms and waved desperately at the approaching craft, until it was only fifty yards away. Then they both shouted with a power and volume that they would not have believed they possessed.
The oncoming boat decreased its speed until it was almost beside the girls' sinking craft. To their overwhelming joy and relief, they saw that it was stopping. A man appeared on the deck, and called to them in a pleasant voice.
"In trouble, girls?"
"Our boat's sinking!" shouted Linda to Dot's amazement, for the latter was still unaware of the immediate tragedy that was threatening them. "Can you take us aboard?"
"Sure!" he replied. "Wait till I get a rope ladder."
While he was gone, Linda pointed to the water in the boat, which by this time Dot had seen, and signaled to the other girl to say nothing of their experiences to this man, until they learned more about him. Linda's recent association with criminals had made her exceedingly wary.
"Pull up closer," instructed the man, as he returned with the ladder. "Now, can you climb?"
"Easily!" Dot assured him. "We're in knickers, anyhow."
"May we throw our stuff on board first?" inquired Linda, picking up the bag which contained, besides their few possessions, all the bank's money.
"Sure! Anything breakable in it?"
"Only a couple of mirrors," returned Dot, who had regained her cheerfulness with amazing speed. "And we're not afraid of bad luck," she added.
A moment later the girls climbed to safety, and pressed their rescuer's hand in gratitude. It seemed like a miracle to them both, and the old seaman was like an angel from heaven.
"How soon will we get to the coast?" asked Linda eagerly.
The man shook his head.
"We can't go to the coast," he replied. "We're headed for Cuba."
"But we must get back as soon as possible," pleaded Linda, beginning to wonder whether she was about to be kidnapped again.
"You were headed for the open ocean," the seaman informed her, to both girls' consternation. "And that's where we have to go. I can't stop at the United States… I'm awfully sorry…"
Chapter XVIII
Luck for Ted and Louise
Linda and Dot stood still on the deck of the old boat, grasping the rail with their hands, and looking intently at their rescuer. He was a typical old seaman, with tanned, roughened face, a gray beard, and kindly blue eyes.
"That was a narrow escape," he remarked. "What do you girls mean by going out on a rough sea like this, in a shell like you had?"
"We couldn't help it," Linda replied. "And we thought the boat was safe. We didn't know it was going to spring a leak… Would it take very long to run us to the coast, Mr. – Captain – ?"
"Smallweed," supplied the man. "And everybody calls me 'Cap'n'."
"Well, would it, Captain Smallweed?" repeated Linda, amused at the name. He ought to be at home on the island they had just come from, she thought – there were so many "small weeds" growing there!
"Too long fer me to stop," he replied, to the girls' dismay. "I got to get back to my family, in Havana." His blue eyes twinkled. "Why? What have you girls got in that bag, that's so important to deliver in a hurry?"
"You think we're boot-leggers!" laughed Dot. "Don't you, Captain?"
"I wouldn't be surprised at anything," he answered, smiling. "I've seen just as nice lookin' girls as you – "
"I'm afraid we're not very nice looking," sighed Linda, surveying their drenched, bedraggled clothing. "But we're really not boot-leggers… We want to get back so that we can telephone to our families. They probably think that storm was the end of us."
"Well, I'm sorry, but I can't go off my course. Like to, if I had the time – "
"Well, if you can't, you can't – that's all there is to it," said Linda, philosophically. "We're glad to be alive at all, and I don't suppose a couple of days will make any difference."
"How long do you think it will take you to get to Cuba?" put in Dot anxiously. There was no use fussing, of course, but she could not forget that her mother and father would be frantic by this time.
"I'm reckonin' on dockin' at Havana the fourth of July. This is only the first, but these are stormy seas, and we have to expect delays… Now come on inside, out o' this drizzle. You girls are drenched – I'll have to give you the only cabin I got. To get yourselves dry in."
Stooping over, he picked up Linda's tool-box, and finding it heavy, eyed it suspiciously.
"You girls gangsters?" he asked, unexpectedly. "Got any guns on you?"
Both girls felt themselves growing red at this accusation, yet they could not deny it wholly.
"That box has the tools in it which I used to fix up the engine of the motor-boat," Linda finally explained. "And you can take our word that we're not gangsters."
But they were exceedingly nervous as they followed the Captain to the cabin where there were two bunks, one on top of the other. Suppose he should decide to search them – and find not only the two revolvers, but all that money besides! He would never believe their story!
"When you get dry, I'll take you over the whole boat," he said. "I carry tobacco up the coast every couple of months. Used to have a sail-boat – that was the real thing! But this little lady's speedy – and better in a storm like we just had."
"How can we ever thank you enough, Captain Smallweed?" cried Dot, suddenly overwhelmed by a sense of gratitude for their safety. "Our fathers will send you a handsome reward when we get back home."
"Never mind that," smiled the man. "I've got a girl of my own – she's married now – but she's still a kid to me, and I know how I'd want her treated… Now, you can bolt this door if you want to, so there won't be any danger of either of the two other fellows aboard coming in accidentally – and you can get yourselves dry."
"There's – there's just one thing, Captain," stammered Linda. "We're dreadfully hungry. Could we have a piece of bread, or anything to eat?"
"You poor kids!" he exclaimed, in a fatherly tone. "Come on down to the kitchen, and you can help yourselves."
Though the food he provided was not the steak dinner they had been dreaming about on the island, it tasted good to those two starved girls. Captain Smallweed made tea for them, and brought out bread and smoked sausages, and Linda and Dot ate every crumb of the repast.
"We were marooned on an island during that storm," Linda explained. "And we have had nothing but a couple of oranges and a few crackers for two days."
"Well, you'll get a good supper," the Captain promised them. "That's why I'm not givin' you more now. I'll knock on your door about eight o'clock, if you ain't awake before then. That's when we usually eat."
When the girls were finally alone in their cabin, they gazed first at their bag of money, then at each other, and suddenly started to laugh. It was such a ridiculous situation. During those lonely days of exile on the island they had pictured their return so differently. It would be a grand occasion, with exciting telephone calls to their families, a marvelous dinner at a hotel, perhaps a radio broadcast of their safe landing! Instead of all that, here they were, stowed away in a shabby boat, suspected of crime, and feasting on stale bread and hot dogs for their banquet! Worst of all there would be three weary days of waiting before informing the world of their safety! Yet they were thankful indeed that they had been rescued at all, and by a man as kind-hearted as the old sea captain.
"I don't really think he'll bother any more about that bag," said Linda, as she took off her wet shoes. "If only we can get it back to Jacksonville safely, from Cuba! If we only had the Ladybug!"
"It's a mystery where she could have vanished to," observed Dot. "But I suppose that is a small thing, compared to saving our lives."
"You'll never go anywhere with me again," sighed Linda. "Dot!" she exclaimed abruptly, "I'd forgotten all about my job!"
"I hadn't forgotten I was to start back North today," remarked the other girl. "Jim Valier was going to motor over and meet me at the station when my train came in."
"Poor Jim!" sighed Linda, little thinking that the young man had no intention of doing that. "He'll have a good wait. But Jim can always sleep, on any occasion."
"I guess he won't expect me… We must be reported as missing by now – in all the newspapers."
"Of course. I'd forgotten…"
The girls wrapped themselves in blankets and slept the rest of the afternoon, to waken in time to see the sun, which had appeared at last, just setting over the sea. Their clothing was still damp and disheveled, but they put it on and went up on deck to hunt their benefactor.
"We want you to let us cook," announced Dot, as she spied him. "We insist on making ourselves useful."
The man smiled pleasantly.
"All right," he agreed. "You can – tomorrow. But supper's ready now. Come on down."
They followed the Captain into the kitchen, where another man was placing a dish of potatoes on the wooden table, which did not boast of a cover.
"Meet Steve, ladies," her said – "my friend the pilot."
The girls nodded, and Dot asked, with anxiety, "But who's guiding the boat now, while Mr. Steve eats his supper?"
Both men laughed at her concern.
"There's another one besides us. He takes his turn, and so do I. We never all three eat or sleep at the same time."
It was a merry meal, though an exceedingly greasy one of fried potatoes and underdone bacon. The coffee, too, was none too good – for it was weak and muddy-looking. Nevertheless, both girls praised the supper extravagantly, for it tasted good to them, but they inwardly resolved to show the men the next day how food ought to be cooked.
The next two days passed pleasantly enough, for the girls were able to busy themselves with the meals, and the men's appreciation was plenty of reward for their efforts. In their off hours they relaxed by watching the ocean and scanning the sky for airplanes, the make of which Linda could often guess. Sometimes they played checkers with each other, or with Captain Smallweed, to the latter's delight. But never again was the suspicious-looking tool-box mentioned, until Linda herself handed it over to Steve, saying that she did not want to bother to take it to Havana.
By the time July third arrived, their boat was well out of the range of the yacht that was cruising in search of them, and on July fourth – the day that Jim Valier spotted the overturned motor-boat early in the morning – Captain Smallweed docked safely at Cuba.
"Where do you girls want to go now?" asked the Captain, as the party stepped ashore. "Want to come along home with me, and meet the wife? She can rig you up in some decent clothes."
"Thank you very much," replied Linda, "but we want to get to a telephone as soon as possible, so that we can get in touch with our families. So if you would just get us a taxi, and send us to the best hotel in Havana – "
"In those rigs?" inquired the other, in amazement. "Everybody will stare at you! They dress well in Cuba, you know."
"Oh, we're past caring about appearances," laughed Linda. "So stop that taxi for us, will you please, Captain?.. And thank you a thousand times for all you have done for us."
"You'll hear from our fathers soon," added Dot, as she too shook hands with the old man.
Cautiously protecting the bag, into which Linda had stuffed the revolvers under the money, the girls taxied to the best hotel in the city. The driver eyed them suspiciously, and the clerk at the desk stared at them as if they were hoboes. But he condescended to assign them a room when they showed evidence of paying in advance.
"We want a long-distance wire first of all," announced Linda. "We'd like to telephone from our rooms – "
She stopped abruptly, for two slender arms were suddenly thrust about her neck, and kisses were being pressed violently upon her lips and cheeks. Louise Mackay stood behind them! Louise, with her husband, both in flyers' suits.
Try as she could, the girl could not utter a word. The tears ran down her cheeks, and she continued to kiss first Linda and then Dot in the wildest ecstasy.
"I can't believe it!" she said at last. "Is it really, truly you, Linda darling?"
"What's left of us," replied Linda, laughing. "Did you ever see two such sights as we are?"
"I never saw anyone or anything in my life that looked half so good to me!" returned Louise, fervently. She stepped back and laid her hand on her husband's arm, for so far Ted had not had a chance to say anything, or be included in the welcome. "Tell me it's true, Ted – that I'm not dreaming!" she urged. "I simply can't believe it."
"It's the best, the truest thing in the world," the young man assured her.
"We were positive you were dead," Louise explained. "We had so much evidence to prove it – the empty island where you were marooned, the overturned motor-boat that Jim Valier spotted early this morning – "
"Jim Valier!" repeated Dot, in amazement. "Where would Jim see our old boat?"
"Jim and Ralph and your two fathers are on a yacht, searching for you. They broadcast by radio any news they get. And Ted and I have flown to every island anywhere near the coast. We finished searching them all, so we landed here this morning, just for a rest."
"Then you have a plane!" cried Linda, in delight. "You can take us back to Florida! I'd so hate to get into another boat – I simply loathe the sight of them."
"Do tell us what happened to you," urged Ted. "I don't understand how we missed you everywhere."
"It's a pretty long story," replied Dot. "I think we better phone our families first. They must be almost crazy."
"They are," agreed Ted. "You go up in your room and phone them while I go to a radio station and broadcast the news."
"And I'll tell you what I'll do in the meanwhile," offered Louise. "I'll go out and buy you some decent clothing!"
Chapter XIX
The Return
Until the second of July, Linda's aunt, Miss Emily Carlton, had managed, with Mrs. Crowley's help, to keep hoping that the girls were still alive. Then her brother's long-distance call from Jacksonville, informing her that he was going to sea in a yacht in search of Linda and Dot confirmed all the fears she was secretly cherishing. That night she collapsed and went to bed a nervous wreck.
After once mentioning the fact that Linda was still reported missing in the newspapers, Miss Carlton's housekeeper learned not to speak of the girl again. It seemed as if the older woman could not bear to talk about her niece; in the few days since her disappearance she had aged rapidly. She lay listlessly on her bed, not seeing anyone, not even her dear friend Mrs. Crowley.
It was about noon on the fourth of July that the telephone operator informed the housekeeper that Havana was calling Miss Carlton. The good woman replied that her mistress was sick in bed, and that she would take the message for her. Her hands trembled as she awaited what she believed would be the announcement of Linda's death.
Faint and far off came the astounding words: "Aunt Emily, this is Linda."
"Wait!" cried the woman, shaking as if she had heard a ghost. "I'll get your aunt, Miss Linda."
Rushing to the bed-room, she handed Miss Carlton the bed-side telephone.
"It's Miss Linda," she whispered.
Doubting her senses, the patient sat up and took the instrument.
"Hello," she said, doubtfully.
"Darling Aunt Emily! It's Linda!" was the almost unbelievable reply at the other end of the wire.
Miss Carlton sobbed; she could not say a word.
"Aunt Emily? Are you there?" demanded the girl.
"Yes, yes – dear! Oh, are you all right? Not hurt?"
"Not a bit. Dot and I are both fine – she's talking to her mother now. We're – in Cuba."
"Cuba!" repeated the startled woman. "I thought it was the Okefenokee Swamp, or the Atlantic Ocean! Your father and Mr. Crowley are looking for you."
"Yes, I know. Ted and Louise are here, and Ted's broadcasting the news of our safe arrival now… Probably Daddy has heard by this time."
"When will you be home, dear?" inquired Miss Carlton.
"Soon, I hope… But we have to stop in Jacksonville first… Aunt Emily, couldn't you and Mrs. Crowley come to Jacksonville? We're just dying to see you!"
Miss Carlton considered; she hated to tell Linda that she was sick in bed. But wait – was she? Wasn't it only nerves after all? Why, this good news made her feel like a different person!
"All right, dear," she agreed. "If Mrs. Crowley will, I'll try to arrange it. Shall I send a wire?"
"Yes," replied Linda. "To Captain Magee, at the City Hall, Jacksonville. I'll be there in a day or so… Now good-by, dear Auntie!"
While Linda waited for Dot to come back from her call, which the latter had put in from another instrument, she opened the bag and took out their few possessions that were covering the money. They must be very careful not to let anything happen to all that wealth, she thought – they must never go out of the room and leave it, if only for a minute. How dreadful it would be if it were stolen now, after they had successfully brought it through all their dangerous adventures!
Dot returned in a couple of minutes, and the girls got ready to enjoy the luxury of a real bath, in a real tub. How good the warm water felt, how wonderful the big, soft bath towels! They spent an hour bathing and washing their hair, and trying to make their nails presentable with Louise's manicure set.
They had scarcely finished when the latter returned, followed by a porter carrying innumerable boxes and packages in his arms.
"I've bought everything for you from the skin out," she announced gayly, as she put the load on the floor. "Even hats and shoes, though I knew I was taking a chance at them. But I remembered that you and I often wore each other's things at school, Linda, and I judged that Dot would wear a size smaller. I do hope you can wear them, just till you get to your trunks at Jacksonville."
"You're an angel, Lou!" cried Linda, excited at the prospect of looking clean and respectable again.
"See if you like them," urged Louise. "I got a blue dress for you, Linda, to match your eyes – and a pink one for Dot."
"To match my eyes?" teased the latter.
All three girls began immediately to untie the packages, and drew out the purchases one after another with exclamations of admiration. Dot said that she was so used to seeing dirty knickers that she had positively forgotten what dainty clothing looked like.
"Well, hurry up and dress!" urged Louise. "We want to eat lunch in about ten minutes. Ted means to take off at two o'clock, if you girls think you can be ready by then."
"We surely can!" cried Linda, joyfully. She couldn't wait to get back.
"You'll burn your old stuff, won't you?" asked Louise. "This bag's a sight, too – why not stuff your old clothing into it, and ask the porter to take it away!"
Linda and Dot let out a wild cry of protest at the same moment, and the other girl frowned.
"Why not?" she inquired.
"Sh!" whispered Linda. "That bag has thousands of dollars in it. Belonging to the Jacksonville bank."
"Oh! You really have that money? And kept it all this time?"
"Yes. But don't say a word about it out loud. We'll take it with us into the dining-room, and wear our new hats, so nobody will think it queer."
They found Ted in the lobby of the hotel as they got out of the elevator, and they went into the dining-room to order the meal that Linda and Dot had been longing for on the island. It tasted good to them, but not so good, they had to admit, as the sausages and stale bread and hot tea which Captain Smallweed provided, when they were almost starved.
It was during the meal that they pieced the story together. Linda began by telling of the finding of the money in the bags and the discovery of the last member of the gang on the island.
"But why he ran away without shooting us is a mystery to us," put in Dot.
"He thought that you had armed policemen with you," explained Louise. "We learned that later from Susie. She was captured a couple of days ago – in Panama."
"Where is she now?" demanded Linda, excitedly.
"In jail, of course."
"And the man they called the 'Doc'?"
"No," replied Ted. "Unfortunately he got away – fled the country. Lucky you girls got hold of the money, or the bank would never have seen it again… And by the way, there's a big reward – ten thousand dollars, I believe."
"Ten thousand dollars!" repeated Dot, in amazement. "What do you think of that, Linda?"
"Wonderful!" cried the latter, joyously. "Five thousand apiece. Well, I'm glad you're going to get something out of this dreadful experience, Dot – that I selfishly dragged you into. And my part will go towards a new autogiro."
"A new autogiro!" exclaimed Louise, in surprise. "You don't need one, Linda. The Ladybug's safe and sound – at the Jacksonville airport."
"What? You mean that?" Linda seized the other girl's hand in almost incredulous rapture. "How did it get there?"
"The police found it that day it stormed so. And a pilot flew it back to Jacksonville."
Linda and Dot gazed at each other in full realization at last of the mysterious disappearance of the plane which they had mourned as lost forever.
If Linda was eager to get back to Jacksonville before, she was doubly so now. She could hardly contain her excitement during that flight across the Gulf of Mexico and over the state of Florida to the northern part. She kept urging Ted to put on more speed, to let the motor out to its limit, but the young man, realizing the load he was carrying, was not to be tempted beyond his better judgment.
They arrived at Jacksonville just as it was growing dusk, and flew over the city, now so familiar to them all, to the airport on its outskirts. Gracefully the skillful pilot swooped down the field to his landing.
The usual number of employees came out to greet them, but hardly had the girls climbed out of the plane when a resounding shout went up over the field. Linda Carlton and Dorothy Crowley had been recognized!
A crowd collected immediately, a crowd that had been prepared by Ted's radio message that afternoon, to welcome the two popular girls back to civilization. It was all that Linda and Dot could do to wave and shout greetings in return.
"I just want one look at my Ladybug," said Linda. "If you good people will let me get through – "
At this request, an accommodating official picked her right up on his shoulder, and carried her, amid the laughter of the crowd, triumphantly to the hangar where the autogiro was housed.
"Oh, you dear Ladybug!" whispered Linda, not wanting anyone to think she was silly, but so overcome with joy that she had to say something. No one but a pilot could understand the genuine affection which she felt for her autogiro.
"I'll be over to fly you tomorrow," she added, under her breath. Then, turning to the man who had conducted her across the field, she asked him whether he could as easily take her to the waiting taxi-cab.
They were off at last, waving and smiling to the enthusiastic crowd.
"Be sure to stay in Jacksonville till Saturday," the people begged them. "We're going to celebrate for you then!"
The girls nodded, and the taxi driver sped away with orders to go straight to the City Hall.
Captain Magee, who had received a call from the airport, was ready and waiting for them. Ted carried the shabby, worn bag into his office, and Linda put it into the Captain's hands herself.
"The bank's money," she explained. "And the two revolvers. We never had to use them at all."
"But we'd have died without them," added Dot. "Of fright – if nothing else."
In vain Captain Magee tried to tell the girls how wonderfully brave he thought they had been, but he was so overcome by feeling that he groped for words and stammered – ending by pressing both Linda's and Dot's hands in silence.