he had pretty shabby clothes and a peaked cap and I
guess he was startled to hear us coming. In just a few seconds he was
gone in the woods and we all stood gaping there while the boat bobbed
up and down, on account of him jumping from it. But I got a squint at
his face all right, and I noticed the color of his cap and how he ran,
and I'm mighty glad I did, because that fellow was going to come into
our young lives again and cause us a lot of trouble, you can bet.
Mr. Donnelle said he was probably just a tramp that had been sleeping
in the boat and he didn't seem to mind much, only he said it would be
better to keep the door locked.
"Maybe he might have been a--" Pee-wee began.
"No siree," I said. "We've had enough of deep-dyed villains for one day,
if that's what you were going to say."
"Maybe we'd better track him," said Pee-wee, very serious.
"Nix on the tracking," I said, "I've retired from the 'detective
business, and now I'm going to be cook on a house-boat."
"We'll have a good anchor anyway if you make biscuits," Pee-wee said.
"They'll weigh more than you do anyway," I fired back.
And Mr. Donnelle began to laugh.
Well, we didn't bother our heads any more about the tramp, but I could
see that Pee-wee would have been happier if we'd have thought it was the
Kaiser or Villa, instead of just a plain ordinary tramp, looking for a
place to sleep. But oh, crinkums, you'll be surprised when you hear all
about that fellow and who he was and I suppose you'd like me to tell you
now, wouldn't you? But I won't.
I've got to go to camp meeting now, so goodbye, see you later--
CHAPTER V
LOST
Now I'm going to write until my sister begins playing the piano. Music
and literature don't mix--believe me. There are two cruises in this
book--a big one and a little one. You can take your pick. The little
one is full of mud and the big one is full of pep. Anyway you get your
money's worth, that's one sure thing.
This chapter is about the little cruise. But first I have to tell you
about the house-boat, because it turned out to be our home sweet home
for a couple of weeks. It didn't only turn out, but it turned in and
it turned sideways and every which way. But I'm not going to knock it.
It got knocks enough going through the creek and up Bridgeboro River.
It knocked into two bridges, and goodness knows what all. But what cared
we, yo ho? We cared not--I mean naught.
First Mr. Donnelle showed us throug
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