“Only Tommy and I thought maybe you might be like Robinson Crusoe,” said Freddie, “and we were going in a ship to look for you on the island, only I haven’t money enough saved up in my bank.”
“Bless your heart!” said Mr. Todd.
“I think this is what we will do,” said Mr. Bobbsey. “We will stop at your mother’s house, get her and Tommy, and bring you all to my house.”
“Oh, that is too much trouble!” said Mr. Todd.
“No, not at all. I want you to have a happy time, and we shall be happy with you.”
The automobile was stopped at the house by the dumps.
“I will go in first,” said Mr. Bobbsey, “and tell your mother and boy that I have good news for them. If she were to see you too suddenly, your mother, who has not been well, might be taken ill again. I will prepare her for the good news.”
You can imagine how happy Tommy and his grandmother were when they learned that Mr. Todd was alive. And when the shipwrecked sailor entered the house Tommy fairly threw himself into his father’s arms, while Mr. Todd kissed him and kissed his mother in turn. Oh! they were very happy.
“We found him!” cried Freddie. “And he found us! And now everybody found everybody else and nobody’s lost!” Freddie was very much excited.
“Only I’m hungry,” said Flossie.
The Todds and Mr. Bobbsey and the twins were soon at the Bobbsey home, talking over what had happened. Mrs. Bobbsey became worried when Flossie and Freddie did not come home after the storm started, and she sent Bert to Mrs. Todd’s house after them. But they had already left, and had become lost.
“Well, now Freddie and I won’t have to get a ship and go looking for you,” said Tommy, as he sat close to his father.
“No, indeed. All our troubles are over now.”
And so they were. Mr. Todd had plenty of money to look after his mother and son and a few days later he rented a nice house into which they moved. He said he was never going to sea again. Then began happy days for those who had spent so many unhappy ones.
Tommy no longer had to run errands for Mr. Bobbsey, to get money to help support his grandmother. He often came to play with Bert, Nan, Flossie and Freddie, and the Bobbsey twins never grew tired of hearing Mr. Todd tell of how he was shipwrecked.
The Winter wore on. Christmas came. And what a happy one it was for the Todd family, as well as for the Bobbsey twins!
“We had as much fun at home this Winter as we did in the Summer at Meadow Brook,” said Nan.
Winter or summer, these lively children manage to have a good time. Their next adventure will be called “The Bobbsey Twins in a Great City.”
Now as they gathered in the living room Freddie said, “I’m glad we found Mr. Todd.”
“And he found us,” added Flossie.
Snap, the big dog, thumped his tail on the floor in front of the fire. Snoop, the black cat, purred in her sleep. Outside the snow was falling and Freddie cried:
“Now we can have more coasting!”
“And there’ll be more skating, too,” said Bert.
“But I’m not going to fall in again,” said Tommy Todd.
And now, as every one is happy, we will say good-bye to the Bobbsey twins.
THE BOBBSEY TWINS IN A GREAT CITY
CHAPTER I
The Ice-Boat
“Oh, there comes my skate off again! Freddie, have you got any paste in your pocket?”
“Paste, Flossie! What good would paste be to fasten on your skate?”
“I don’t know, but it might do some good. I can’t make the strap hold it on any more,” and a plump little girl shook back her flaxen, curling hair, which had slipped from under her cap and was blowing into her eyes, sat down on a log near the shore of the frozen lake and looked sorrowfully at the shining skate which had become loosened from her shoe.
“Come on, Flossie!” called the small, plump boy, just about the size of his sister, and with her same kind of light hair and blue eyes. “There go Bert, Nan and Tommy Todd ’way ahead of us. We’ll never catch up to ’em if you sit here. Come on!”
“I can’t help sitting here, Freddie Bobbsey! How am I going to skate on only one skate?” asked the little girl.
“Put on the other, and come along.”
“I have put it on, lots of times, but it comes off every time I skate a little bit. That’s why I want some paste. Maybe I could paste the strap fast around my shoe.”
“I don’t believe you could, Flossie,” and this time the small, plump boy stopped skating around in a ring—“grinding the bar,” as it is called—and glided toward his sister seated on the log. “Anyhow, I haven’t any paste. What made you think I had?”
“Oh, you carry so much stuff in your pockets I thought maybe you’d have paste.”
“I might if it was summer, Flossie, and I was making kites with Bert. But I haven’t any paste now.”
“Then have you got a postage stamp?”
“A postage stamp? Of course not! What good would a postage stamp be to fasten your skate strap?”
“Well, a postage stamp has paste on it, hasn’t it? Anyhow, it’s sticky, ’cause I got some on my tongue once, and I just know if I could only fasten down the end of this skate strap, to keep it from flopping up, and coming out of the buckle, I’d be all right. It’s the flopping end that comes loose.”
“Well, pooh! a postage stamp wouldn’t be any good!” cried Freddie. “If you did stick it on it wouldn’t last more than three strokes. A postage stamp wouldn’t go far at all!”
“Some postage stamps do!” exclaimed Flossie. “Mother got one on a letter the other day and it had stuck itself on half-way round the world—she told me so. And if a stamp sticks half-way around the world I should think it would stick while I skated down to the end of the lake.”
“Huh! That’s different!” half grunted Freddie, for, just then, he was stooping over tightening one of his straps. “Anyhow, I haven’t got a stamp.”
“Well, maybe you could fix my skate so it wouldn’t come off,” suggested Flossie. “I’ve tried and tried, but I can’t, and I don’t want to stay here all alone.”
“Why Flossie Bobbsey! I’m with you!”
“I know, but Nan and Bert are away down at the other end, with Tommy Todd, and Bert is going to buy hot chocolates. I know he is, ’cause he said so. I don’t want to miss them.”
“Me neither! Wait and I’ll see if I can’t fix your skate, Flossie.”
Freddie was small—he and Flossie were the smaller pair of Bobbsey twins—but he was a sturdy little chap, and living out of doors, and playing games with his older brother Bert had taught Freddie how to do many things. He put Flossie’s skate on her shoe, tightened the strap, and then made it still tighter by putting some pieces of wood under the leather loop.
“There!” he exclaimed, as he stood up, having been kneeling in the snow on the edge of the lake. “I guess that will hold, Flossie. Now come on, and we’ll see how fast we can skate.”
Together the brother and sister started off. This time Flossie’s skate seemed to be all right, needing neither paste nor a postage stamp to hold it on, and in a little while the smaller twins had caught up to Bert and Nan, their brother and sister, who, with a boy neighbor, named Tommy Todd, had slowed up to wait for them.
“What kept you?” asked Nan. “Did you try to do some fancy skating, Flossie?”
“I guess Freddie stopped to see if there wasn’t a crack in the ice where he could get some water to play fireman,” remarked Bert with a smile, for his small brother was very fond of this game, and his best-liked toy was a small fire engine, which, when a spring was wound, could squirt real water.
“No, I didn’t stop at any cracks!” exclaimed Freddie earnestly. “Cracks in the ice is dangerous—Daddy said so. It was Flossie’s skate.”
“That’s right—it kept coming off,” explained the blue-eyed girl. “But Freddie fixed it, and he didn’t have to use a postage stamp, either. Did you, Freddie?�
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“Nope.”
“Well, I guess they know what it means, but we don’t!” laughed Nan, taking her small sister’s hand. “Come on, now, you little twins. I We waited for you, so we could all have hot chocolate together. You didn’t get cold, I hope, stopping to fix your skate, Flossie?”
“Nope! I’m as warm as butter!”
“What does she mean by that?” asked Tommy Todd. “I often hear my grandmother say she’s as warm as toast, but butter—”
“Well, when it’s Winter, like it is now, you have to warm your butter so you can spread it on your bread,” explained Flossie. “So I’m as warm as butter now.”
“I wish I was!” cried Bert. “I’m getting a chill standing here waiting for you two! Come on, now. Skate lively, and we’ll soon be there,” and he pointed to a little candy and soda-water stand near the lower end of Lake Metoka, on the frozen surface of which the children were skating.
In the little cabin, which in Winter was built over the stand to make a warm place for skaters, hot chocolate and other drinks could be had, and Bert had promised to treat his brother and sisters, as well as Tommy Todd.
“Don’t skate too fast,” begged Flossie. “My skate might come off again, though Freddie fixed it pretty good.”
“If it comes off again I’ll skate and carry you on my back the rest of the way!” cried Bert. “I want something hot to drink. But mind you!” he cried, as he saw a mischievous look on his little sister’s face, “don’t dare make your skate come off on purpose! I don’t want to carry you unless I have to.”
“All right, Bert. I’ll skate as fast as I can,” promised Flossie.
The five started off, Tommy Todd skating beside Flossie to help her if she should need it. Tommy was a sort of chum of both pairs of twins, sometimes going with the older ones, Nan and Bert, and again with Flossie and Freddie. In fact, he played with these latter more often than with Nan and her twin, for Flossie and Freddie had played a large part in helping Tommy at one time, as I’ll explain a little later.
It was a fine Winter’s day, not too cold, and the sun was shining from a clear sky, but not warmly enough to melt the ice. The steel skates of the five children rang out a merry tune as they clicked over the frozen surface of the lake.
“Hurrah! Here we are!” cried Bert at last, as he skated on ahead and sat down on a bench in front of the “Chocolate Cabin,” as they called the place. He began taking off his skates.
“Come on!” he called to the others. “I’ll order the chocolate for you and have it cooling,” for there was more trouble with Flossie’s skate and Nan had stopped to help her fix it.
“Don’t order chocolate for me, Bert!” called Nan. “I want malted milk. The chocolate is too sweet.”
“Guess you’re afraid of your complexion, Sis!” laughed Bert, as he went inside the little wooden house.
“Oh, Flossie, take both your skates off and walk the rest of the way,” advised Nan, after she had tried, without much success, to fix the troublesome strap. “We’ll get there sooner.”
“All right,” agreed Flossie. “It’s a bother—this skate. I’m going to get a new pair.”
“Maybe a new strap is all you need,” said Tommy. “You can get one in there,” and he nodded toward the little cabin.
A little later the five children were seated on stools in front of the counter, sipping the warm drinks which made their cheeks glow with brighter color and caused a deeper sparkle in their eyes.
“This is great!” cried Tommy Todd.
“That’s what!” murmured Freddie, his nose deep in his cup.
“Don’t forget about my strap,” came from Flossie.
“Oh, yes,” agreed Bert. “We don’t want to have to drag you all the way home.” The man who sold the chocolate and candy in the cabin also had skate straps for sale and one was soon found that would do for Flossie.
“Now my skate won’t come off!” she cried, as once more they were on the ice. “I can skate as good as you, Freddie Bobbsey!”
“Let’s have a race!” proposed Freddie. “Bert and Nan can give Flossie and me a head start, ’cause they’re bigger than us. Will you?” he asked his brother.
“Yes, I guess so. A race will get us home quicker, and we’re a little late.”
“We’ll let Flossie and Freddie start ahead of me,” suggested Tommy, who, being a little elder than the two smaller twins, was a little better skater.
“All right,” agreed Bert. “Any way you like. Go ahead, Floss and Fred. Skate on until I tell you to wait. Then I’ll give Tommy a starting place and, when we’re all ready, I’ll give the word to begin.”
Flossie and Freddie, hand in hand, skated ahead a little way. But Freddie’s skate went over a little piece of wood on the ice and he tripped and fell, pulling Flossie down with him. The two plump twins were in a heap on the ice.
“Hurt yourself?” asked Bert, as he started toward them, to help them up.
“No—no—I—I guess not,” answered Flossie, who was the first to get up.
“We’re all right,” replied Freddie. “The ice was soft right there.”
“I guess it’s because they’re so fat, that they’re soft, like a feather pillow,” laughed Tommy. “They’re getting fatter every day.”
“That’s what they are,” agreed Nan with a smile. “But they are pretty good skaters for such small children.”
“Everybody ready?” asked Bert, when the two small twins had taken their places, and Tommy Todd was between them and Bert and Nan.
“All right,” answered Freddie.
“I am, too,” came from Tommy.
“Then go!” cried Bert, suddenly.
The skating race was started. Merrily clicked the runners on the hard ice, leaving long white streaks where the children passed over. Flossie and Freddie were skating as fast and as hard as they could.
“They are very anxious to win,” said Nan, who was skating beside her brother.
“Yes, but they can’t keep going as fast as that all the way home.”
“You’re going to let them win, aren’t you?” asked Nan.
“Sure I am! But they’re so sharp we don’t dare lag much behind. We must make a spurt toward the end, and pretend we did our best to beat them. Tommy Todd may come in ahead of them, though.”
“We can skate up to him and tell him not to,” suggested Nan.
“Good idea!” declared Bert. “We’ll do it.”
The older twins skated a little faster to overtake Tommy, who was some distance behind Flossie and Freddie, when suddenly Nan gave a cry and clutched Bert by the arm.
“Look!” she exclaimed, pointing with her hand.
“An ice-boat,” remarked Bert. “And going fast, too!”
“Yes, but see! It’s coming right toward Flossie and Freddie, and they’re skating with their heads down, and don’t see it! Oh, Bert! Yell at them! Tell them to look out! Yell at the man in the ice-boat!”
It did indeed seem a time of danger, for a swift ice-boat—one with big white sails and runners, like large skates under it, was skimming over the frozen lake straight for the smaller twins.
CHAPTER II
Building the “Bird”
Flossie and Freddie, anxious to win the skating race, were bending over with heads down, as all skaters do who wish to go fast and keep the wind from blowing on them too hard. So they did not see the ice-boat coming toward them, for the craft, blown by the wind, made hardly any noise, and what little it did make was taken up by the clicking of the skates of the smaller twins.
“Oh, Bert! Do something!” cried Nan.
“Yes, yes! I will—of course!”
Bert shook off Nan’s hand, for it was still on his arm, and started to skate toward the twins as fast as he could. He hoped to reach them in time to stop them from skating right into the path of the oncoming ice-boat.
But he soon saw that he was not going to be able to do this. The ice-boat was coming toward the small twins faster than Bert
could ever hope to skate and reach them.
“Yell at them!” shouted Nan. “That’s the only way to stop them! Yell and tell them to look out!”
Bert himself had decided this was the best thing to do. He stopped skating and, making a sort of funnel, or megaphone, of his hands, he cried out:
“Flossie! Freddie! Look out! Danger—the ice-boat!”
Just at this moment, whether it was because of Bert’s shouts or because they were tired of going so fast and wanted a rest, the two children leading the skating race stood up straight and looked back. They saw Bert pointing toward them and then they glanced at the ice-boat. It was very close, and Flossie screamed.
At the same time the man who was steering the boat saw the children. With a shout that echoed the one given by Bert, and the screams of Nan and Flossie, the man steered his boat to one side. But he made such a sudden change that, though he steered out of the way of Flossie and Freddie, he nearly ran into Tommy Todd. That small boy, however, was a good skater and stopped just in time, for he had seen the ice-boat coming.
Then with a whizz and a clink of ice, as the runners of the boat scraped big chips from the frozen lake, the skimming boat shot past Nan and Bert, not doing a bit of harm, but scaring all five children very much.
“Sorry! Didn’t see you! Next time—”
This was what the man in the ice-boat shouted as he whizzed by. His last words seemed whipped away by the wind and the children did not know what he meant.
“Maybe he meant next time he’d be sure to run into us,” said Tommy Todd.
“Oh, he wouldn’t do that!” declared Bert “That was Mr. Watson. He buys lumber from my father. I guess he meant that next time he’d give us a ride.”
“Oh, my!” exclaimed Nan. “Would you ride in one of those dangerous things, Bert Bobbsey?”
“Would I? Well, just give me the chance! How about you, Tommy?”
“I should say so! They’re great!”
“Oh, I can’t bear them!” went on Nan. “Please let’s stop and rest. My heart is beating so fast I can’t skate for a while.”
The Bobbsey Twins Megapack Page 95