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"Hard to say," replied Ed, in rather a mournful tone. "If we had gone down the bay, we would not have been alone, but I thought this upper end so much more attractive to-night. However, we need not despair.
We can wait for the tide."
"Till morning!" almost shouted Belle.
"It's due at three-thirty," announced the imperturbable Walter.
"Oh! what shall we do?" wailed Bess.
"We might walk," suggested Cora. "It isn't very far to that sh.o.r.e, and it's shallow."
"Mercy, no!" exclaimed Belle. "There are all sorts of holes in the mud here. I would stay forever before I would try walking."
Cora laughed. She had no idea of being taken seriously.
"Now, you see," said Walter, "my wisdom in curtailing the chaperon.
Just imagine her now," and he rolled laughingly over toward Jack.
"Easy there! No need for artificial respiration or barrel-rolling just yet," declared Jack. "In fact, if we had a bit of water, we'd be thankful. Let me work the engine, Ed. Maybe I can give luck a turn and get more push out of it."
Ed left his place, and Jack took it, but the sand bar held the little launch like adamant, and it seemed useless to exert the gasoline power further.
"Suppose we have the little ditty again," suggested Ed, taking a seat near Cora. "What was it? 'Love's Lat.i.tude?'"
"No, 'Love's Luxury,'" a.s.serted Walter, as he made a comical move toward Belle. But Belle was disconsolate, and she only looked at the moon. It was almost funny, but the humor was entirely lost on the frightened girl.
"When in doubt play 'The Gypsy's Warning,'" suggested Cora, picking up her guitar. "There is something bewitching about that tune."
"See if we can bewitch a wave or two with it," remarked Jack. "That would fetch us in a little nearer to sh.o.r.e."
But the situation was becoming more serious each moment. There they were--high though not exactly dry upon a big sand bar! Not a craft was in sight, and none within call!
"If we only could trust the bottom, we fellows might get out and push her off," suggested Walter, "but it wouldn't be nice to get right in the line with Davy Jones' locker."
"Oh, please don't do that," begged Bess. "It will be better to stay safely here and wait for the tide than to take any chance of losing----"
"Wallie. Sometimes he's Walter, but when it comes to the possibility of our losing him, he's Wallie," declared Jack, clasping his arms around the other boy's neck. "Starboard watch ahoy!"
"Right about face, forward march!" called Walter ridiculously.
"That's not the same set," corrected Jack. "This was another kind of a watch--stem winder."
The jollying of the boys kept the girls from actually feeling the seriousness of their plight. But to wait until morning for the tide!
CHAPTER IV
TO THE RESCUE
"Don't tell the girls, but I am going to swim ash.o.r.e," whispered Walter to Jack. "A nice fix we would be in if Mrs. Robinson came home and found the girls missing."
"Swim ash.o.r.e!" repeated Jack in surprise. "Why, Walter, it's a mile!"
"Can't help it. I can do it, and I see a light directly opposite here.
You give Ed the tip to keep the girls busy, while you stay back here with me. I'll be overboard in no time."
Jack tried to persuade his friend not to take the risk, but Walter was determined; so, un.o.bservedly divesting himself of his heaviest garments, he dropped over the side of the launch and was soon stroking for the sh.o.r.e.
For some time the girls did not miss him, but Belle, keen to scent danger, abruptly asked if Walter had fallen asleep.
"Yes," drawled Jack, "he is the laziest fellow."
Cora pinched Jack's arm, and he in return gave her two firm impressions. She instantly knew that something was going on, and did her best to divert Belle's attention from it.
"But where--is--he!" exclaimed Belle, for her gaze had traveled to the end of the launch and back again without seeing Walter. "He--is gone!"
Realizing that the young man was actually not aboard the boat, she sank down in abject terror, ready to cry.
"Don't take on so," said Ed. "He is all right. He has gone ash.o.r.e to get help."
"Gone ash.o.r.e!" exclaimed both Belle and Bess in a breath.
"Girls, do you imagine we would sit here calmly and try to quiet you if there was anything actually wrong?" asked Cora. "Why don't you give the boys credit, once in a while, for having a little common sense?"
Looking across the water, the movement of the swimming youth could be seen, where the moonlight reflected on the waves.
"Oh, I am so frightened!" exclaimed Belle. "I felt that something would happen!"
"Something always does happen when it is expected," Cora told her, "but let us hope it will be nothing worse than what we already are conscious of. It was splendid of Walter to go, and I am sure he will return safely."
"He's a first-rate swimmer," declared Ed, looking anxiously at the little rippling motion that marked Walter's progress. "He can easily go a mile."
Then quiet settled upon the party. It was, indeed, a gloomy prospect.
Stranded--Walter swimming in the bay--and nothing but sky above and water beyond them, just far enough away to be out of the reach of the launch.
All the thoughts of the young folks seemed to follow Walter. Belle hid her face in her hands, Bess clung to Cora, and the two young men watched the progress of the swimmer.
It seemed hours when, suddenly, a movement in the water, not far from them both, was noticed by Bess.
"Oh! what is that?" she called. "Can it be----"
"Oh, it's Walter!" shrieked Belle, clasping her hands.
"It can't be!" answered Ed, at the some moment raising a lantern above his head to see, if possible, what was making the splash in the water.
"It's as big--as--a----," began Belle.