<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</SPAN><br/> <small>THE CRUISE BEGUN</small></h2>
<p>“All aboard!” sang out Jack, as he thrust
the paper containing such sensational news
into his pocket, to be glanced over at some
more convenient season, and little suspecting
how it would enter into the fortunes of the party
of fun-loving boys while on their Easter holidays’
cruise.</p>
<p>Everybody immediately seemed to be in
motion, and the way in which the various crews
stood by to cast off hawsers, while the skippers
looked to their engines, was well worth seeing.</p>
<p>“Let go!” called the commodore of the boat
club, when he saw that everything was ready.</p>
<p>The ropes were unfastened, and the three
lads sprang aboard, just as the current began
to grip each boat, and cause it to slowly start
upon the new voyage that appeared so mild
in the beginning, yet which was destined to be
written down as one of the most adventurous
of all those the six boys had enjoyed.</p>
<p>“Whoop! we’re off!” yelled Buster, as he
scrambled on board the Wireless, in his usual<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
clumsy way, that brought a word of warning
from George, and caused the boat to careen badly.</p>
<p>“You will be off, if you try that sort of racket
many times,” declared the skipper. “What
d’ye take this racer for, a canalboat? Be more
careful Buster, how you lounge around. I
guess they nicknamed you right when they called
you Hippopotamus, Pudding, and all that sort.
Now, sit down exactly in the middle, and when
you do have to move, be careful not to shift your
weight too sudden-like. No boat can do its
prettiest when it isn’t on an even keel.”</p>
<p>“Say, is my hair parted exactly in the middle,
George? If it ain’t, please let me get it straight
before you start!” observed the fat boy, with
a touch of satire in his voice, something Buster
seldom indulged in; but he had sailed the
stormy seas with George before and could look
back to many a sad time aboard that most uncomfortable
Wireless; still the three fellows
had drawn lots to see who would have to stand
for the agony on this new cruise, and it had
fallen to poor Buster to play the part of victim.</p>
<p>George did not reply to this shot. He was
busy with his engine, and both the other boats
were already moving off, with the rapid popping
of their exhausts announcing that everything
was working in apple-pie order.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Please don’t tell me that we’re all up the
flue, even before we get started, George?”
pleaded Buster, turning pale with apprehension.</p>
<p>“Keep still, won’t you, Buster; you bother
me,” replied the other, still working at his
engine. “It’s only a little thing, that don’t
matter much. And you see, it gives us a
chance to let the others get a lead. You know
how much I like to come up from behind, and
rush ahead? Well, that’s what we’re going
to do now. Be a sport, Buster, and don’t whine
so much. Everything’s going to be lovely,
and the goose will hang high, I can tell you.”</p>
<p>“I guess it will,” sighed the fat boy, with a
resigned expression on his face, as though he
realized that he was in for it, and might as
well make the best of a bad bargain.</p>
<p>The boat was floating down the current, as
Buster had pushed out from the shore with a
pole, after getting aboard. The other craft
had gotten some little distance away, and doubtless
those on board were indulging in the usual
“I told you so’s” that accompanied every mishap
on the part of the Wireless, for both Jimmie
and Josh could be seen looking back, and
even waving their hands, as though saying
good-bye.</p>
<p>Then all at once there came a quick series<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
of sharp sounds, and George looked up with a
proud expression on his face, as the little power-boat
began to rush through the water at racehorse
speed.</p>
<p>“What did I tell you, Buster?” he observed,
as he clutched the wheel, and turned the boat’s
head in a direct line with the others of the little
fleet; “and after this, please don’t act so impatient.
Leave it all to me. An engine’s a
delicate thing to handle, and as full of whims
as a girl. Even the weather affects them at
times; and they just have to be coaxed, and
led along. But I flatter myself I’ve got this
thing down fine, now, and we won’t have any
trouble with it on this trip, while I cut circles
around the other fellows.”</p>
<p>That was a pet hobby with George, making
speed, and “running rings” around his comrades.
Nothing tickled him more than to be
able to do this, even though it failed to bother
Jack or Herb in the least.</p>
<p>“Mebbe you’re right, George,” replied Buster,
meekly, “you see, when it comes to mechanics
my education has been sadly neglected,
and I couldn’t run an engine if my very life
depended on it. All I’ve noticed is, that the
other motors don’t seem to bother about
weather, or any old thing. They go plodding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
right along like they had business to do, and
didn’t mean to be halted.”</p>
<p>“That’s just it, Buster,” remarked the other
eagerly, “they never have troubles of their own
because they’re slow-pokes, like heavy farm
horses. It’s the highly bred racer that’s all
nerves, you know. But look at us eating up
space, will you? Don’t we fly along, though?
This is what I like, Buster. What are you
looking at me that way for?”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I’m going to sneeze, George, and
I hope it won’t—ker-chew! oh! my, it’s coming
again, ker-chew! Excuse me, George. I’ll try
and not let that happen often, if I can help it.”</p>
<p>George looked at his companion rather suspiciously.
He could not tell whether Buster
really meant what he said, or was speaking in
irony. But the gallant way in which the narrow
boat was cutting the water gripped his attention
again, and after that he could not bother himself
with minor things.</p>
<p>They soon overtook the other two boats
moving along in company. Jack could have
easily gone ahead of the beamy Comfort had
he wished, but he preferred to stay by Herb,
so that the crews could exchange opinions from
time to time. In his mind a large part of the
pleasure to be gotten out of cruising came from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
this sociability; whereas George would be rushing
off by himself, satisfied if only he could
make a mile in a fraction less time than at any
previous time.</p>
<p>In ten minutes George was far ahead, and
making the water fly out on either side as he
urged his engine on to do its prettiest.</p>
<p>“Up to his old tricks again,” remarked Josh,
as he tidied up a little aboard the Tramp,
secretly delighted that luck had given him a
berth with the commodore, whom he admired
greatly.</p>
<p>“Well, what did you expect?” replied Jack,
who was taking things easy, with his engine
working like a charm, “what’s bred in the bone
can never be beaten out of the flesh, they say;
and George, with his nervous ways, cares only
for racing, whenever he can coax anybody to
give him a go. But mark what I say, Josh,
it’s only a question of time before he rubs up
against his old motor troubles again. He’s
never satisfied when he’s got the thing running
smoothly, but has to go tinkering at it to see
if he can’t get another fraction of speed out,
and then all at once it balks, and refuses to work
at all.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” remarked Josh, with a wide grin,
“we may be towing the Wireless back home<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
yet; and it wouldn’t be the first time, either,
Jack.”</p>
<p>“Well, hardly,” mused the skipper, smiling
himself as memory carried him back to other
scenes connected with their numerous cruises
in these same boats.</p>
<p>“Does George know that we expect to tie
up at noon, and have a bite ashore; or will he
be silly enough to want to rush along that way,
and get to the island long before we think of
pulling in there?” Josh went on to ask.</p>
<p>“He knows our plans all right,” answered
the other, “though you can never tell what
George will do, he’s so full of notions. But as
stuff to eat is aboard the roomy Comfort, and
we’re carrying the rest, unless he wants to
starve poor old Buster, so as to cut down his
weight, and make less ballast for the speed-boat
to carry, I guess he’ll haul in about eleven
and wait for us.”</p>
<p>“Oh! I don’t envy Buster his job of holding
down that bucking broncho of a Wireless,”
Josh chuckled. “I c’n see him right now, sitting
there, holding on, and looking like he was tryin’
to accommodate his breathin’ with the panting
of the engine, while George he looks daggers
every time Buster gulps in a wad of air at the
wrong time.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Oh! come now, Josh, it isn’t quite so bad
as all that,” declared Jack, with a shake of his
head. “And even George couldn’t keep Buster
from having his own way, once he gets started.
It’s good he learned how to swim long ago,
because chances are, he’ll be overboard more
than once before this voyage is done.”</p>
<p>“Mebbe George’ll throw him over, when
he gets nervous, and Buster keeps wobbling
around, making the boat roll to beat the band,
eh, Jack?”</p>
<p>“Well, you know how that is yourself, because
that’s what happened when you had the
job of crew aboard his boat,” the skipper of the
Tramp went on to say; which reminder seemed
to afford Josh considerable amusement, to
judge from his laughter.</p>
<p>They went on steadily, putting mile after
mile behind them. Now and then some river
craft was encountered, though these were of
course not near so numerous as would have been
the case below the confluence of the Missouri
and Ohio with the Father of Waters. Sometimes
it was a steamboat that was breasting
the current; or it might be a plodding towboat,
with a barge or two alongside. And then again
they overtook a queer looking shantyboat,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
which had the appearance, with its cabin, of
a cheese box on a raft.</p>
<p>All these familiar sights were eagerly observed
by Jack and his companion, as well as the two
upon the other boat, for they recalled pleasant
memories.</p>
<p>George had gone so far ahead that his little
boat looked like a dot upon the water; but possibly
he would remember in time that he had no
means of satisfying hunger aboard the Wireless,
and might anchor to await their coming, giving
Buster a chance to wet a line, for the fat boy
had taken a great fancy for fishing, and was
always complaining that he did not get half
the opportunities to indulge in his favorite
sport that he would like.</p>
<p>Now and then they would pass a town upon
either shore of the river, although as a rule
these were not so plentiful in this section, where
the banks were inclined to be marshy.</p>
<p>The morning was gradually wearing away,
and everything seemed to be going smoothly.
Josh expressed himself as surprised that hours
had passed, and still the nettlesome speed-boat
continued to keep going along, as though George
had indeed finally mastered the secret of its
precious unreliable behavior.</p>
<p>“But when George is around, you c’n expect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
any old thing to happen,” he wound up with,
“and even when things are working smoothly,
he won’t be satisfied till he upsets the combination
again, you see if it ain’t so.”</p>
<p>Jack did not attempt to contradict his prediction,
because he also knew George like a book
and thought pretty much the same way.</p>
<p>Just about eleven, Josh declared that they
seemed to be gradually getting nearer the pilot
boat of the party, as George liked to have his
craft called; though for that part he would
have made a most unreliable guide, and had
the others chosen to follow him, they would
have been led into many more messes than
actually fell to their lot.</p>
<p>“That’s because Buster has rebelled,” Jack
observed, “there’s been a mutiny aboard that
craft; and George had been told that for one
Buster doesn’t mean to miss his lunch at noon,
just because the Wireless is making a record
run.”</p>
<p>“Oh! you mean they’ve thrown the old
mud hook over, and are waiting for us slow-pokes
to come along, eh, Jack?”</p>
<p>“Just about that; but we’re getting all the
fun we want out of making slower time; and
our engines won’t go back on us either, in
spite,” laughed the other.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, while we’re gliding along in this fine
way—I always like to use that word when
speaking of cruising, it sounds so fine—I’ll
be getting up the menu for our first dinner
ashore. It makes my mouth water just to
think of a campfire again, after all that time.
Brought your little old Marlin along, didn’t
you, Jack? P’raps we might get a few late
ducks while we’re out, if all of ’em ain’t gone
north by now. And if Buster only does his
duty, and grabs up a fish now and then, why,
it’ll be just great.”</p>
<p>So Josh, who used to be something of a cook
in times past, amused himself in a way that
suited his fancy, while they drew closer and
closer to the place where the speed-boat awaited
them.</p>
<p>George was full of boasting as usual, and
predicted a record run for his craft. None of
the others disputed his assertions, but they
exchanged looks, for they had heard all this
sort of talk before, and then seen poor disappointed
George only too glad to take a tow in
the end, with his engine stubborn, or broken
down.</p>
<p>Together they continued on down the river;
where they could readily tie to the bank, and
go ashore to cook dinner.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There was a great deal of climbing back and
forth, and everybody but George seemed bustling
with business; he sat there, and pottered
with his engine, as though some new idea had
seized hold of him, and he meant to try one of
his everlasting experiments that always ended
so disastrously.</p>
<p>Then the voice of Buster was heard in the
land, lamenting.</p>
<p>“It was there yesterday, because I put it in
away with my own hands; and George here
says he never opened that locker once; but
now that I want to put it on, my new sweater
has disappeared the funniest way ever. I
wouldn’t be surprised, fellers, if we found that
some thief got aboard our boats last night, and
couldn’t resist taking that bully sweater with
the red moon on the front; and that’s what!”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
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