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Cape Cod Stories by Joseph Crosby Lincoln
page 15 of 208 (07%)
subject. Your old chum, Catesby-Stuart, thought he was mast-high
so fur's sailing was concerned, anybody could see that, but he had
something to larn. He wasn't beginning to get out all there was in that
ice-boat. And just then along comes another feller in the same kind of
hooker and gives us a hail. There was two other chaps on the boat with
him.

"Hello, Phil!" he yells, rounding his flat-iron into the wind abreast of
ours and bobbing his night-cap. "I hoped you might be out. Are you game
for a race?"

"Archie," answers our skipper, solemn as a setting hen, "permit me to
introduce to you Cap'n Jonadab Wixon and Admiral Barzilla Wingate, of
Orham, on the Cape."

I wasn't expecting to fly an admiral's pennant quite so quick, but I
managed to shake out through my teeth--they was chattering like a box
of dice--that I was glad to know the feller. Jonadab, he rattled loose
something similar.

"The Cap'n and the Admiral," says Phil, "having sailed the raging
main for lo! these many years, are now favoring me with their advice
concerning the navigation of ice-yachts. Archie, if you're willing to
enter against such a handicap of brains and barnacles, I'll race you on
a beat up to the point yonder, then on the ten mile run afore the wind
to the buoy opposite the Club, and back to the cove by Dillaway's. And
we'll make it a case of wine. Is it a go?"

Archie, he laughed and said it was, and, all at once, the race was on.

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