WHEN MY SHIP COMES IN About the middle of the month my family went to spend a week or two in a cottage at a neighboring beach. I enjoyed being at the sea-side, but I was hard up for playmates. For a few days there was a boy in the cottage next ours, and he spent most of his time riding around the veranda on a velocipede. This made me feel that I needed a velocipede, too, and I suggested to my father that he supply my lack. "You shall have one," he said,—"when my ship comes in." I had never heard of the ship before—had never known that my father owned so much as a rowboat. But he had said This left me rather dissatisfied, but I reflected, as I strolled around the veranda, that it was a good thing I had heard about this ship while we were living at the seashore. At home there was less opportunity to watch for ships. Here I saw dozens of them every day. Sometimes there would not be one in sight when I went to bed, but in the morning seven or eight would ride at anchor a mile or more from the beach. Great steamers passed along, leaving a trail of smoke behind, and once or twice I had seen dainty yachts, glittering with I decided that I would rather have my father's ship turn out to be a schooner like that white one. By the time I had reached this decision I had come to the water's edge. It was a warm morning, and the sun, three or four hours high, sparkled on the ocean. Farther up the beach, out of danger from the waves, I came upon a large sand-flea hopping along energetically. I sat down to head him off, and find what he was about. With his hard-shelled and rounded back he looked like a small model of some prehistoric and armored monster—only he had two very mild blue eyes. As soon as I tried to intercept him with a piece of dried marsh-grass he put his head down and dug so vigorously that he was soon covered with sand. His disappearance left me alone. It was a lonely place, that beach, for the peanut-man and the merry-go-round had not discovered it, and its only inhabitants But I did not miss the crowd. A few minutes' walk farther down the beach brought me to a point of sand that ran out into the ocean for fifty or sixty yards at low tide. At the end it curved around and enclosed a small salt-water pond. This was an enchanted spot. In the first place, it was the very kind of a pond for "going in wading." That mysterious and dangerous thing called the undertow, which lived among the breakers, had no influence in these quiet waters. Then, along the edges could be found, more than anywhere else, all kinds of interesting shells and sea creatures. There were large white shells, well adapted for scooping holes in the sand, and smaller, roundish cockle-shells whose inmates were usually at home. When you picked up one of them the cockle retired There were starfish with waving tentacles, sand-dollars, and the empty shells of sea-urchins and razor-clams. The black and ominous-looking objects which I implicitly believed to be sharks' eggs were often found near the borders of that ocean pond, and horseshoe crabs crawled darkly beneath its surface or lay dry and deceased on the sand. Some rocks, covered with seaweed, sheltered a colony of ordinary crabs—little ones, who scuttled away as you approached, and big, dignified, ferocious veterans, who looked up at you defiantly and blew a multitude of bubbles, though whether they did this through wrath and indignation, or merely with the conscious joy of the artist, I could never discover. These rocks were also the haunt of sea-gulls, who took flight before you The waves brought up many charming varieties of seaweed, red, green, and brown. Beautiful enough it looked in the water; the disappointment came when you took it out. Besides all these living or growing things, each high tide cast up on the sands an assortment of fascinating objects—pebbles of odd shapes and colors, smooth bits of wood rounded by the waves, spindles and spools that had come down the river from the mills of far-away towns, and bottles which always looked as if they were going to contain a message from some ship-wrecked mariner—but never did. And now the greatest delight of all had been added, for I could watch for my Then I could spend the day riding it around the veranda of our cottage. Or perhaps the ship would not be able to come so close to the shore. It would anchor a mile or two out, and send a boat. The velocipede might get wet coming in an open boat that way, and, if it were made of iron, the water would rust it. I hoped they would know enough to cover it up before they started to row in to the beach. There were certainly no ships in sight that I could believe were my father's. Two fishing schooners were riding at Where were they coming from? That was an interesting question. I could see no land out there, but I had been told that if a ship sailed straight ahead in that direction the first land reached would be Portugal. "I wonder what kind of velocipedes they have in Portugal?" I uttered this aloud, and I jumped when I heard a voice say:— "What's that you are wondering?" A man had walked up behind me. He was a stranger—a tall man, carrying his hat in his hand. He repeated his question, and I told him that I was wondering about the velocipedes in Portugal. "Portugal—Portugal," he ruminated. "I've never been in Portugal. I've been near it, though. I've been in Spain. In fact, I own some property in Spain." "Do you?" I queried in astonishment. "But you look like an American. And Portugal's right straight out there. Why didn't you go there first?" "Well, I went another way, you see. And then the Spaniards are easier to get along with—they're better landlords." "Can you talk Spanish?" I demanded. "A little," he replied modestly; "enough to answer. Tell me about this velocipede of yours. How did it get to Portugal?" "It didn't get there," I told him; "it's "Oh, your father has a ship, has he?" "Yes. He told me this morning that I could have a velocipede when his ship came in." He looked down at me seriously enough. "I see. And so now you're waiting for his ship to come in." "Yes." There was a pause. Then he seemed struck by the appearance of my bare legs. "What is the matter with your shins?" he asked. "Mosquito bites," I replied briefly. After another pause he said, gravely: "Camphor is good for mosquito bites." "Yes, I know. My mother puts it on every night." I thought a moment, and then asked, "Do they have mosquitoes in Spain?" "Not on my estates," he assured me; "nothing unpleasant on them at all. But it's funny you should be here waiting for a ship to come in. For that's just what I am doing." "Have you a ship?" "One exactly like your father's." "Do you know my father?" "No, but I know his ship." "Is it a three-masted schooner, painted white?" "Why, it's white. I am not sure about the three masts. But it's white sure enough, all bright and shiny. So is mine. Most of 'em are." "Do many people have ships?" "Oh, yes, lots and lots. Some of them have velocipedes on board, and some have—oh, all kinds of things." "What have you on yours?" He eyed me again. "You would laugh if I told you." "No, I wouldn't either." "Yes, you would." "No, I wouldn't either," I insisted. "Tell me what you've got on your ship." "Promise you won't tell?" he asked. "Yes, of course." "Cross your throat?" "Yes." And I did so. He bent down. "Well, then, it's a—" He broke off and looked along the beach. I looked too, but saw nothing remarkable; only Miss Norton, who lived in the cottage next but one to ours. She had Boojum, the Nortons' bull terrier, on a leash. Boojum was pulling at the leash and dragging her along as usual, and she seemed to be quite out of breath when she reached the little sandy point. My friend, the man, told me to come on, and hurried off to meet Miss Norton. "Come on! Don't you want to go for a walk? We'll watch for your ship as we go." But I shook my head. I did not intend to be drawn from my vigil as easy as that. Miss Norton did not interest me particularly—I could see her any day. The man was apparently glad to see her; they slipped Boojum's leash, let him rush off by himself, and then started together along the sand. He could not have had anything valuable on his ship, for he never glanced at the ocean at all. I turned again to inspect the horizon, reflecting that it was quite different when you expected your ship to bring you a velocipede. |