قراءة كتاب The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms Or Lost in the Wilds of Florida
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The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms Or Lost in the Wilds of Florida
cases. So, sister mine, go to sleep in peace, and in the morning you'll have forgotten all about it. Only don't let's tell any one, for some of the company, like Mr. Sneed, might make trouble for Mr. Pertell, saying alligators were there."
"Well, there are."
"Perhaps. But who cares? I'd like to get one ordinary-sized 'gator."
"Why, Alice! What for?"
"I've always wanted an alligator bag, and I never could afford it. Now's my chance. But we may never get far enough into the interior for that. By the way, where did it say those girls started from? I didn't half read it."
"From Sycamore, near Lake Kissimmee."
"Well, Mr. Pertell did mention that we might get to the lake, but he didn't specify Sycamore."
"No, and now I'm going to try and do as you said, and forget all about it," and Ruth laid aside the paper and resumed putting up her hair for the night.
"I wonder what will happen to-morrow?" mused Alice, as she slipped into her robe, and thrust her feet into bath slippers.
"What do you mean?" Ruth's voice was rather muffled, for her hair was over her face now.
"I mean Mr. Towne fell in to-day, and—"
"Gracious, I hope you don't infer that it's someone else's turn to-morrow!"
"Hardly!" laughed Alice. "Hand me that cold cream, please, the salt air has chapped my face. Oh, say, did you notice how much color Laura had on to-day? If ever there was a 'hand-made' complexion hers was!"
"You shouldn't say such things!"
"Why not? When they're true! And such eyes as she made at poor Mr. Towne!"
Ruth slipped a rosy palm over her sister's lips, but Alice pulled it away, and laughingly added:
"She found that her glances failed to reach Paul, and so she's trying her 'wireless' on—"
"Alice, you must stop. Someone may hear you!"
"Can't! Daddy has the stateroom on one side, and Mr. Pertell the other, and they're both sound sleepers. But I've finished anyhow. You put out the light," and with a bound, having completed her toilette, Alice was in her berth.
Ruth sighed, and then sat again staring off into space. It must have been some little time, too, for when she turned to look at her sister, Alice was breathing deeply in sleep.
"Dear Alice!" murmured Ruth, and she bent over her for a moment, and kissed her lightly on the cheek—as gently as the fall of a rose petal. Soon the older sister, too, was asleep.
In order that there might be no trouble among the members of the moving picture company over the statement made in the newspaper that perhaps the two girls had fallen victims to alligators, Ruth, next morning, carefully cut out the item, and put it away among her things.
"It may be silly," she said to Alice, "but—"
"It is silly to imagine anything like that," was the quick retort.
"But it's best to be on the safe side," finished Ruth, gently. "Mr. Sneed is so peculiar."
"I agree with you there, sister mine. Well, you've taken the precautions, anyhow. My, I'm hungry! I hope breakfast is ready."
"You are not troubled with mal-de-mer, then?"
"Not a bit of it, and I never was out on the ocean before. It isn't a bit rough; is it?"
"Well, we did roll some during the night, but then the sea is calm. Wait until we get a storm."
"I do hope one comes!"
"Alice DeVere!"
"Well, I mean just a little one, with waves like little hills, instead mountains."
The only members of the film company who did not present themselves at the breakfast table were Miss Pennington and Miss Dixon.
They breakfasted in their staterooms, but it was noticed that the trays came out about as well filled as they went in, from which it might be gathered that they were not altogether free from the toll the sea exacts from most travelers.
"My, how charming you look!" observed Paul to Alice as he joined her on deck, and arranged her steamer chair out of the wind. She had on a new jacket, and a little toque, the brown fur of which matched her eyes, and brought out, in contrast, the damask of her cheeks.
"Thank you," she laughed in retort. "I might say the same of you. That's a good-looking coat."
"A little different from the usual, yes. The man said it was imported—"
"Just as if that made it any better."
"It doesn't—only different. Where did you get that rug? It's an odd pattern."
"My! But the compliments are flying this morning. It's one daddy picked up somewhere. Isn't the weather glorious?"
"Now we're on a safe topic," laughed Paul. "Here come Russ and Ruth. My, but she's stunning!"
"I'm glad you appreciate her," Alice said. Really, Ruth made a picture, for she had on a long white cloak, and with a turban trimmed with ermine, and her fair hair and blue eyes, she looked like some Siberian princess, if they have princesses there, and I suppose they must.
The four young people chatted and laughed together, while the Tarsus plowed on her way. It was a day of idleness, save that Russ took a few pictures of scenes on shipboard for future use.
In the afternoon, while Ruth and Alice were reclining luxuriously in their steamer chairs, they observed one of the officers come up from below, and run toward the bridge. There was something in his manner that startled Alice, and she sat up suddenly, exclaiming:
"I hope nothing has happened!"
"Happened? Why should it? What do you mean?" asked Ruth. But immediately a look of fear came into her own eyes—a look born of suggestion merely.
"Oh, I don't know," and Alice tried to laugh, but it did not ring true. "It was just a notion—"
She did not finish, for another officer came on the run from forward, and he, too, sought the bridge. Then the two girls saw curling up from one of the hatchways on the lower forward deck, a little wisp of smoke, and immediately afterward there sounded through the ship the clanging of bells.
"What's that?" cried Ruth, casting aside her rug, and struggling to her feet, no easy matter from a steamer chair. "What's that?"
"Some alarm," said Alice, faintly.
Paul came running toward them.
"Oh, what is it?" gasped Ruth, impulsively clasping him by the arm.
"Don't be frightened," said Paul, but Alice noticed that his lips trembled a little. "It's only a—fire drill."
As he spoke there was an outpouring of sailors from many places, and lines of hose were reeled out.
The wisp of smoke from the forward hatchway had increased now, though the hatch cover was on.
Up on the bridge the girls could see the captain leaving his post in charge of one of the officers. The ship, too, seemed to be turning about.
"Are you sure it is only fire—drill?" asked Alice.
"Why, that's what a sailor told me," answered Paul, slowly.
"Look," said Alice, and she pointed to the curling smoke.
More clanging bells resounded, and more lines of hose were run out. There was no doubt, now, that the Tarsus was making a complete turn.
Then, as the captain and one officer left the bridge there rang out the cry:
"Fire! Fire! The ship's on fire! Lower the boats!"
CHAPTER V
DISABLED
Panics start so easily, especially at the mere mention of the word "fire," that it is no wonder there was at once an incipient one aboard the Tarsus. But the captain, who was a veteran, acted promptly and efficiently.
Some of the sailors had made a rush for the boats, but the captain, coming down from the bridge on the run, flung himself in front of the excited men. He pushed one or two of them aside so violently that they fell to the deck. Then the commander, in a voice that rang out above the startled calls, cried out:
"Get back, you cowards! If we do take to the boats it will be women and children first! But we're not going to! Stop that noise!"
His hand went, with an unmistakable gesture, to his pocket. Perhaps

