Swallowdale. Arthur Ransome
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“John.”
“What is it?”
“What do you think yourself Nancy meant by native trouble?”
“Oh, I don’t know. Go to sleep, or they’ll come and find us not up in the morning.”
CHAPTER III
HORSESHOE COVE AND THE AMAZON PIRATES
TIRED AS THEY had been the night before, the explorers woke early. As the sun rose above the wooded hills on the eastern side of the lake it poured down through the trees on the island and splashed the little white tents with light so strong that nobody could sleep, and it was easier to look at the green outside than at the dancing, dazzling patches on the tent walls.
Roger woke and listened. There was a rustle of leaves in the trees and the noise of little waves splashing on the rocks. It was lonely, waking up for the first time in a tent with no one else in it, and Roger crawled out at once and made sure that the other tents were there, and then looked in through their open doorways to see that the rest of the crew were inside them. John and Susan might still have been asleep, but Titty was propped up on one elbow and looking out.
“Hullo, Roger!” she said, when the ship’s boy blocked the doorway and looked in.
“Hullo, Titty!” said he.
“We’re really here,” said Titty.
“I know we are,” said Roger.
“I never thought we would be again. Let’s go and bathe.”
“John and Susan are asleep.”
“Hullo!” said John. “Have the Amazons come in the night?”
“It’s only Roger and me.”
“Go to sleep,” said Susan.
“We’re going to bathe,” said Roger.
“What’s the time, John?”
“Half-past six.”
“They can’t go for the milk for an hour yet.”
“May I open up the fire and put some wood on to make a smoke?” said Titty.
“Bother you fo’c’sle hands,” said the mate.
“It’s no good trying to sleep now,” said the captain. “Let’s all bathe.”
A few minutes later the cheerful screaming of a parrot brought out into the sunshine and four big splashes in the shallows by the landing-place showed that all five of the ship’s company had agreed that the day had properly begun.
“Put your head right under, Roger,” said the mate. “Put it under right away. You can do what you like afterwards.”
“Pouf!” said Roger, blowing and puffing and spluttering as he came up again. “I went right down to the bottom. This is better than swimming-baths. Come on, Titty. Let’s see who can pick up most pearls in one dive.”
After the bathing there was the fire to make up and the kettle to boil. There was not much hurry about the kettle, so as soon as the fire had burnt up well the boy and the able-seaman brought handfuls of damp leaves from the water’s edge and threw them on the flames so that a great column of smoke poured up through the trees and drifted away to the north.
“They ought to see that if they’re looking,” said Titty.
“They’re probably asleep in bed,” said Susan.
“I’m jolly glad we’re not,” said Roger. “Isn’t it time now to go for the milk?”
“We’ll all go,” said Susan.
“What about the mail for mother?” said John.
Titty dived into her tent for the box with the writing things. The box made a good desk to write on. Titty did the writing but everybody suggested things to say. This was the letter:
My (crossed out) Our Dearest Mother,
Good morning. Everybody slept very well. Everybody is very well. We hope you are very well. Love to the ship’s Baby, and Nurse and Mrs. Jackson. We’ve just bathed. No Amazons yet. Wind south. Light. Sky clear. Now we are going to get the milk.
Much love from
John, Susan, Titty, Roger.
P.S. – Love from Polly.
She addressed the envelope to Mrs. Walker, Holly Howe, and wrote “Native Post” in very small letters in the top left-hand corner.
While the others were putting their names to the letter and Titty was doing the envelope, John went off to the harbour to fetch Swallow. He paddled her out through the rocks and round to the landing-place where the others came aboard. It was not really far to row, but with such a friendly wind blowing, making it an easy reach both ways, it seemed silly not to sail, even across Shark Bay to the landing-place for Dixon’s farm.
“They were geese,” said Roger, as soon as they had climbed up the steep field and come through the damson trees to the farm. “I knew they were.”
“Aye,” said Mrs. Dixon, coming to the door. “Geese they are, but don’t you be afraid of them.”
“We’re not,” said Roger. “At least (as the old gander stretched its neck towards him and hissed) not really.”
“Shoo,” said Mrs. Dixon. “Shoo,” and the geese went off to the other end of the yard. “Just you say ‘Shoo’ to them and make as if you’d give them what for if they didn’t shift, and they’ll not trouble you. Well, and I’m rare and pleased to be seeing you all again. Many’s the laugh I’ve had, thinking how I had to come down to you with a bucket of porridge after the storm, and you taking your breakfast out of the bucket. You won’t be seeing so much of Miss Ruth and Miss Peggy just now. Nor their Uncle Jim neither.”
(Ruth was Nancy’s real name, but she liked being Nancy better.)
“They’re coming,” said Titty.
“I was thinking that with old Miss Turner staying at Beckfoot they’ll maybe