Roy Blakeley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 182 pages of information about Roy Blakeley.

Roy Blakeley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 182 pages of information about Roy Blakeley.

I guess nobody said anything more all the way up, until we came near the Field Club landing.  The shore is like low cliffs here and after we got her over against it, a couple of the fellows got out and towed her along with ropes, till we came to the long float.

“Are we going to tie her at the float?” Connie Bennett asked, very sober like.  Gee, it sounded funny to hear someone speak.  Doc Carson said, “Yes.”  He was kind of like head of the three patrols now, because he has the most sense of all of us, I guess, and Tom Slade, who is head of the Elks, is away and I decided, all of a sudden, that I wasn’t much of a patrol leader, and Artie—­he was—­he wasn’t there.

“Look out for that canoe,” somebody said, just as we were coming alongside the float.  “They shouldn’t have left it there,” Connie said; “that’s no place for a canoe.”  I guess we were all kind of nervous and cranky like.  Then I saw that there was a black figure sitting on the lowest step of the boathouse.  I was just going to call “Who’s there?” when Doc said, “Pull that canoe out of the way before we smash it in.”

So I jumped off onto the float and grabbed the canoe, and g-o-o-d night! it was my Indian dugout.

CHAPTER XII

ARTIE’S ADVENTURE

Then I heard one of the fellows shouting “Look who’s here!” and I saw the fellow who had been sitting on the steps coming toward the float and I could tell it was Artie Van Arlen.  Then I could hear Pee-wee dancing on the cabin roof and screaming, “The plot grows thicker!  The plot grows thicker!”—­good night, the kid was almost having a fit.

“If it wouldn’t be too much trouble,” I said to Artie, “would you please relate your adventures, I see that you’re not dead.”

“Well, not so you’d notice it,” he said, “but I guess I came pretty near it.”

Then I could see he was all in and must have had a pretty hard time of it, but I couldn’t help kidding him, because I was feeling so good to know he was safe.  Believe me, that fellow had some adventure.

“It was lucky for me,” he said, “that you tied this crazy canoe or whatever you call it-”

“That is an Indian dugout, if anyone should ask you,” I said, “and if I wanted to sell it to an antiquary—­”

“A what?” Pee-wee shouted down from the cabin roof.

“An antiquary,” I said; “comes from the Latin word aunt and the Chinese word query, meaning to ask questions—­otherwise the same as Pee-wee.  As I was saying, if I wanted to sell it to an antiquary I could get a large check for it.”

“How large?” Pee-wee shouted.

“About eight inches by two and a half inches; now, shut up!” I said.

Cracky, you should have heard those fellows laugh.

“Well, whatever it is,” said Artie, “it’s lucky for me that you tied it just under the cabin window, because I fell into it—­I fell in good and hard.”

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Roy Blakeley from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.