The next morning the Johnstown ferry began operations, at least theoretically. As a matter of fact, no one had appeared by nine o’clock, and, after pondering the matter, the boys decided to omit the first trip, arguing that if there were no passengers at this end there’d be none at the other, or, if there were, it wouldn’t hurt them to wait until 11.30! Toby was disappointed and showed it. He hadn’t expected that the capacity of the Urnove would be taxed on its maiden voyage as a ferryboat, but he had looked forward to having at least one passenger. Sitting idly there in the hot sun on the hard seats of the little gray launch made one feel decidedly flat! Arnold, though, was not in the least downcast. He had more perfectly plausible reasons for the lack of patronage than Toby, in an unnaturally pessimistic frame of mind, could counter. “You wait until eleven,” said Arnold cheerfully. “Bet you we’ll have three or four then!” When it was evident that there was to be no “As mustard,” interjected Toby helpfully. Arnold accepted the simile doubtfully. “Well, he was some peeved, anyhow. He says you didn’t play fair, but I told him——” “I didn’t,” responded Toby. “Well, no more did we.” “That wasn’t any reason for my pulling that raw trick, though. The trouble was that I got mad at being caught off third like that, and wanted to get square.” “Well, I don’t blame you. That hide-the-ball business was got up by Frank and Phillips. I didn’t know anything about it until they pulled it. I don’t like that sort of piffle. Toby, I say if you’re going to play ball, why, play ball!” “Yes, we both—both teams, I mean—played baby. I wished afterward I hadn’t done it. Even when you win like that you don’t really feel right about it. Anyway, I don’t.” “Shucks, what’s the odds! I’ll own I was sort of sore yesterday, but now I’m glad you did it. It was only what we deserved. Besides, it’s made Frank so grouchy he can’t see straight. He’s going to keep the team going and try to get you fellows to play again. He called me a quitter and got quite nasty about it.” “If he keeps at it long enough,” observed Toby dryly, “he’s bound to beat us. What time is it?” “Twenty-five to ten,” answered Arnold. “We don’t have to sit here, so let’s go over and see how the boat’s getting on. Say, I wish we could think of a name for her.” “All names I like you don’t,” said Toby as they ascended the lane to Harbor Street. “Why don’t you do the way we did with the Turnover? Knock off the first and last letters, I mean.” Arnold stared blankly. “Knock off—— But we haven’t got any letters yet, you idiot!” “That’s so,” replied Toby demurely. “Let’s go to the postoffice.” Arnold swung about obediently before he thought to ask, “What for?” “To get some letters,” said Toby. Arnold tried to reach him with the toe of one water-stained white buckskin shoe, but was foiled by Toby’s agility, and they went on again. “There “How well did you know her?” asked Toby. “You’re too bright for anything today!” said the other, in a grieved tone. “If you’re so smart why don’t you think of a name for me?” “I didn’t know you wanted one. I can think of several,” said Toby significantly, “but you mightn’t like them.” “I mean for the boat, you chump! It’ll be ready to launch before we know it, and you just can’t launch a boat without a name!” “All right, Arn, I’ll put my giant intellect at work tonight. I always think better after I’m in bed, don’t you?” “No, I don’t. When I get to bed I go to sleep.” “So do I after a while, but I always think things over first.” “Now don’t forget that we ought to be back at the landing at a quarter to eleven. The trouble with you is that when you get in there looking at that knockabout you forget everything.” “There’s one thing I don’t forget,” chuckled Arnold, “and that’s dinner!” They were back on the float at a little past the half-hour and Toby seized a rag and performed a lot of quite unnecessary polishing during the ensuing “I will,” said Toby. “I’ll take one of you over and back for fifty-seven or I’ll take you both one way for it. Which do you choose?” “Oh, go on, Toby! Have a heart! Honest, we’ll pay you the other eighteen, won’t we, Chuck? I’ll give it to you tomorrow, or maybe next day.” “This is business, Snub,” answered Toby emphatically. “If you fellows want to make the trip over and back I’ll take you this once for nothing. But the next time you’ll have to pay full fare, friends or no friends.” “All right,” agreed Snub cheerfully. “I guess we won’t ever want to go again! Anybody else coming?” Toby looked at the town clock and shook his head, trying not to appear disappointed. “I guess not this trip,” he replied. “Better wait five minutes more,” said Arnold, “in case some one’s late, you know.” But Toby shook his head resolutely. “They’ve got to be on time if they’re coming with me. This ferry sails right on the hour. Cast off that line, Arn, will you?” And so, after all, the Urnove made its first trip, if not without passengers, at least without profit. But when she was out of the harbor, with the waves slapping at her bow and the fresh breeze ruffling damp hair, both boys forgot to be downcast and they had a very merry sail across the smiling blue water. They tied up at the little spindly pier at Johnstown promptly at eleven-twenty and waited. Now and then, ostensibly to get the cooler breeze above, Toby climbed to the pier. The approach to it was in sight for a couple of hundred yards and always, before returning to the float, Toby’s gaze wandered anxiously and longingly up the road. But eleven-thirty came without a passenger and the Urnove cast off again and began her homeward voyage. By that time Toby was frankly despondent, and he had little to say on the way back. It was becoming painfully evident that the Johnstown ferry was not to be a financial success! But when he got home for dinner—Arnold had Phebe made the trip across with them at two, and again at four, and if it hadn’t been that Toby was horribly disappointed over the absence of patronage they’d have had a pretty good time. Even as it was they enjoyed it. Between trips they sat, the three of them, in a shady and breezy corner of the boat yard, from where, by craning their necks a bit, they could see the town landing, and “There aren’t any more names, I guess,” he said. “Not unless you get a city directory and go through it. I think Slap-Dash is the best. Don’t you, Phebe?” “I like Foam better. It’s prettier.” “Girls,” said Toby sententiously, “always want something pretty. Gee, I’ll bet there are eighty-eleven million boats called Foam!” “That doesn’t matter, does it?” asked Phebe. “I suppose there are lots of boats called Slap-Dash, too.” “Not near so many. Besides——” “I don’t like either of those names much,” said Arnold apologetically. There was a discouraged silence then until Phebe observed: “I don’t see why you don’t call it the Arnold. Arnold’s a pretty name——” “Wow!” jeered Toby. “There’s one for you, Arn. A pretty name for a pretty boy, eh?” Arnold threw a chip at him. “A fellow wouldn’t want to name a boat after himself,” he demurred. “There was a man around here a couple of years ago,” said Toby, “who had a sloop he called the A. L. We used to say it stood for always last, but it was really just his initials. You might call yours the A. D.” Arnold considered. “A. D.,” he murmured. “Say, that isn’t so bad, is it? It—it’s sort of short and—and neat, eh?” “Yes, and you could call it Anno Domini for long,” laughed Toby. Arnold’s face clouded. “Yes, I suppose fellows would get up all sorts of silly meanings for it. If it wasn’t for that——” Phebe clapped her hands. “I’ve got it!” she cried. “Call it the Aydee!” “That’s what we said,” began Toby. “No, not the letters, Toby,” explained Phebe. “‘A-y-d-e-e,’ Aydee! I think that would be lovely!” “That’s not so worse,” commented Arnold, reaching for a chip and his pencil. “Let’s see what it would look like.” He printed it in capital letters, viewed it, and passed it around. “I think it’s clever, Toby. Folks wouldn’t know it stood for anything, would they? It sounds like—like a name out of the ‘Arabian Nights,’ or—or something.” “Aydee it is, then,” declared Toby. “Funny, but I was just going to suggest that myself!” “Yes, you were!” Arnold jeered. “Like fun! That’s Phebe’s name, and Phebe will have to christen her! We’ll have a regular christening ceremony, folks, and break a bottle of—of——” “Root beer,” suggested Toby. “Well, something over her bow as she glides—glides——” “And I’ll recite ‘The Launching of the Ship,’” said Toby, “and you’ll wave a couple of flags and——” “And Mr. Murphy will scream ‘All hands!’” laughed Phebe. “It will be a perfectly wonderful affair, Arnold!” “Well, it will. You wait and see.” Arnold jumped up. “Come on and we’ll go and tell Long Tim what her name is. Would you have it painted on in gold, Toby, or would you put brass letters on?” “Brass letters. Gold-leaf comes off too easily. You two go ahead. I’m going back to the landing. It’s almost four.” After the Urnove had returned from her last trip and was tied to the boat-yard pier again, and Arnold had slipped out of sight in the Frolic, Toby and Phebe walked across the yard and the “I’m awfully sorry,” murmured Phebe. “But you won’t give up after just one day, will you?” “N-no, I guess I’ll finish out the week. There’s just tomorrow and Saturday. If something doesn’t happen by then I’ll call it off. It’s funny, too, sis, for I’ll just bet you anything lots of folks went over to Johnstown today by road. Why couldn’t they let me take ’em over? It wouldn’t have cost any more. Not so much!” “Maybe they don’t know about it yet,” said Phebe encouragingly. “It takes time to—to get things started, you know.” “Some one ought to know about it by this time,” replied the boy disconsolately. “If we’d only had one passenger it wouldn’t have been so bad, but not to have had any——” “Toby, I’m just as sure as anything that you’ll do better tomorrow!” “Well, I couldn’t do much worse,” Toby answered ruefully. “Let’s go in.” |