The Submarine Boys and the Middies - The Prize Detail at Annapolis by Victor G. Durham
page 16 of 225 (07%)
page 16 of 225 (07%)
|
"Eph can generally take care of himself," added Hal Hastings. "He
rarely falls into any kind of scrape that he can't climb out of." "But this is a bad time for him to take the 'Farnum' and cruise away," objected the owner of the yard. "The 'Hudson' may be here at any hour, you know, and we ought to be ready for orders." As he spoke, Mr. Farnum scanned the horizon away to the south, out over the sea. "There's a line of smoke, now, and not many miles away," he announced "It may, as likely as not, be smoke from the 'Hudson's' pipe." "Going out with us, sir!" inquired Captain Jack Benson, as Hal took his place at a pair of oars. "Yes," nodded the owner of the yard, dropping into a seat at the stern of the boat, after which Benson pushed off at the bow. Down on the seashore, on this day just past the middle of October, the air was keen and brisk. There had been frost for several nights past. Sleighing might be looked for in another month. "Cable's gone from this buoy," declared Captain Jack, as Hal rowed close. "Over to the other one, old fellow." Here, too, the cable was missing. Evidently the "Farnum" had made a clean get-away. If there had been any accident, it must have taken place after the new submarine boat had slipped away from her moorings. |
|