Although Mr. and Mrs. Elmer regretted
the delay in Key West, being anxious to get settled
in their new home as soon as possible, the children
did not mind it a bit; indeed, they were rather glad
of it. In the novelty of everything they saw
in this queerest of American cities, they found plenty
to occupy and amuse them.
The captain and their father were
busy in the court-room nearly every day, and Mrs.
Elmer did not care to go ashore except for a walk in
the afternoon with her husband. So the children
went off on long exploring expeditions by themselves,
and the following letter, written during this time
by Ruth to her dearest friend, Edna May, will give
an idea of some of the things they saw:
“Key west, fla., December 15,
188-.
“My dearest Edna, It
seems almost a year since I left you in dear old Norton,
so much has happened since then. This is the very
first chance I have had since I left to send you a
letter, so I will make it a real long one, and try
to tell you everything.
“I was not sea-sick a bit, but Mark was.
“In the Penobscot River we rescued
a man from a floating cake of ice, and brought him
with us. His name is Jan Jansen, but Mark calls
him Jack Jackson. A few days before we got here
we found a wreck, and helped get it off, and brought
it here to Key West. Now we are waiting for a
court to say how much it was worth to do it. I
shouldn’t wonder if they allowed as much as
a thousand dollars, for the wreck was a big ship,
and it was real hard work.
“This is an awfully funny place,
and I just wish you were here to walk round with Mark
and me and see it. It is on an island, and that
is the reason it is named ‘Key,’ because
all the islands down here are called keys. The
Spaniards call it ‘Cayo Hueso,’ which means
bone key, or bone island; but I’m sure I don’t
know why, for I haven’t seen any bones here.
The island is all made of coral, and the streets are
just hard white coral worn down. The island is
almost flat, and ’Captain Li’ he’s
our captain says that the highest part is
only sixteen feet above the ocean.
“Oh, Edna! you ought to see
the palm-trees. They grow everywhere, great cocoa-nut
and date palms, and we drink the milk out of the cocoa-nuts
when we go on picnics and get thirsty. And the
roses are perfectly lovely, and they have great oleanders
and cactuses, and hundreds of flowers that I don’t
know the names of, and they are all in full bloom
now, though it is nearly Christmas. I don’t
suppose I shall hang up my stocking this Christmas;
they don’t seem to do it down here.
“The other day we went out to
the soldiers’ barracks, and saw a banyan-tree
that ‘Captain Li’ says is the only one
in the United States, but we didn’t see any
monkeys or elephants. Mark says he don’t
think this is very tropical, because we haven’t
seen any bread-fruit-trees nor a single pirate; but
they used to have them here I mean pirates.
Anyhow, we have custard apples, and they sound tropical,
don’t they? And we have sapadilloes that
look like potatoes, and taste like well,
I think they taste horrid, but most people seem to
like them.
“It is real hot here, and I
am wearing my last summer’s best straw hat and
my thinnest linen dresses you know, those
I had last vacation. The thermometer got up to
85 degrees yesterday.
“Do write, and tell me all about
yourself and the girls. Has Susie Rand got well
enough to go to school yet? and who’s head in
the algebra class? Mark wants to know how’s
the skating, and if the boys have built a snow fort
yet? Most all the people here are black, and everybody
talks Spanish: it is so funny to hear them.
“Now I must say good-bye, because
Mark is calling me to go to the fruit auction.
I will tell you about it some other time.
“With love to everybody, I am your own lovingest
friend,
“Ruth Elmer.
“P.S. Don’t
forget that you are coming down here to see me next
winter.”
Before Ruth finished this letter Mark
began calling to her to hurry up, for the bell had
stopped ringing, and the auction would be all over
before they got there. She hurriedly directed
it, and put it in her pocket to mail on the way to
the auction, just as her brother called out that he
“did think girls were the very slowest.”
They had got nearly to the end of
the wharf at which the schooner lay, when Ruth asked
Mark if he had any money.
“No,” said he, “not
a cent. I forgot all about it. Just wait
here a minute while I run back and get some from mother.”
“Well,” said Ruth, “if
boys ain’t the very carelessest!” But Mark
was out of hearing before she finished.
While she waited for him, Ruth looked
in at the open door of a very little house, where
several colored women were making beautiful flowers
out of tiny shells and glistening fish-scales.
She became so much interested in their work that she
was almost sorry when Mark came running back, quite
out of breath, and gasped, “I’ve got it!
Now let’s hurry up!”
Turning to the left from the head
of the wharf, they walked quickly through the narrow
streets until they came to a square, on one corner
of which quite a crowd of people were collected.
They were all listening attentively to a little man
with a big voice, who stood on a box in front of them
and who was saying as fast as he could,
“Forty, forty, forty. Shall
I have the five? Yes, sir; thank you. Forty-five,
five, five who says fifty? Fifty, fifty,
forty-five going, going, gone! and sold
at forty-five to Mr. Beg pardon; the name,
sir? Of course, certainly! And now comes
the finest lot of oranges ever offered for sale in
Key West. What am I bid per hundred for them?
Who makes me an offer? I am a perfect Job for
patience, gentlemen, and willing to wait all day, if
necessary, to hear what you have to say.”
Of course he was an auctioneer, and
this was the regular fruit auction that is held on
this same corner every morning of the year. Many
other things besides fruit are sold at these auctions;
in fact, almost everything in Key West is bought or
sold at auction; certainly all fruit is. For
an hour before the time set for the auction a man goes
through the streets ringing a bell and announcing what
is to be sold. This morning he had announced
a fine lot of oranges, among other things, and as
Mrs. Elmer was anxious to get some, she had sent Mark
and Ruth to attend the auction, with a commission to
buy a hundred if the bids did not run too high.
The children had already attended
several auctions as spectators, and Mark knew enough
not to bid on the first lot offered. He waited
until somebody who knew more about the value of oranges
than he should fix the price. He and Ruth pushed
their way as close as possible to the auctioneer,
and watched him attentively.
“Come, gentlemen,” said
the little man, “give me a starter. What
am I to have for the first lot of these prime oranges?”
“Two dollars!” called a voice from the
crowd.
“Two,” cried the auctioneer.
“Two, two, two and a half. Who says three?
Shall I hear it? And three. Who bids three?
That’s right. Do I hear the quarter?
They are well worth it, gentlemen. Will no one
give me the quarter? Well, time is money, and
tempus fugit. Going at three at
three; going, going, and sold at three dollars.”
Several more lots sold so rapidly
at three dollars that Mark had no opportunity of making
himself heard or of catching the auctioneer’s
eye, until, finally, in a sort of despair he called
out “Quarter,” just as another lot was
about to be knocked down to a dealer at three dollars.
“Ah!” said the auctioneer,
“that is something like. It takes a gentleman
from the North to appreciate oranges at their true
value. A quarter is bid. Shall I have a
half? Do I hear it? Half, half, half; and
sold at three dollars and a quarter to Mr. –what
name, please? Elder. Oh yes; good old name,
and one you can live up to more and more every day
of your life. John, pick out a hundred of the
best for Mr. Elder.”
The oranges selected by John were
such beauties that neither Mark nor his mother regretted
the extra quarter paid for them. After that,
during the rest of their stay in Key West, whenever
Mark went near a fruit auction he was addressed politely
by the auctioneer as “Mr. Elder,” and
invited to examine the goods offered for sale that
day.
One day Mark and Ruth rowed out among
the vessels of the sponging fleet that had just come
in from up the coast. Here they scraped acquaintance
with a weather-beaten old sponger, who sat in the stern
of one of the smallest of the boats, smoking a short
pipe and overhauling some rigging; and from him they
gained much new information concerning sponges.
“We gets them all along the
reef as far as Key Biscayne,” said the old sponger;
“but the best comes from Rock Island, up the
coast nigh to St. Mark’s.”
“Why, that’s where we’re going!”
interrupted Ruth.
“Be you, sissy? Wal, you’ll
see a plenty raked up there, I reckon. Did you
ever hear tell of a water-glass?”
“No,” said Ruth, “I never did.”
“Wal,” said the old man,
“here’s one; maybe you’d like to
look through it.” And he showed them what
looked like a wooden bucket with a glass bottom.
“Jest take an’ hold it a leetle ways down
into the water and see what you can see.”
Taking the bucket which was held out
to her, Ruth did as the old man directed, and uttered
an exclamation of delight. “Why, I can see
the bottom just as plain as looking through a window.”
“To be sure,” said the
old sponger; “an’ that’s the way
we sees the sponges lying on the bottom. An’
when we sees ’em we takes those long-handled
rakes there an’ hauls ’em up to the top.
When they fust comes up they’s plumb black,
and about the nastiest things you ever did see, I
reckon. We throws ’em into crawls built
in shallow water, an’ lets ’em rot till
all the animal matter is dead, an’ we stirs ’em
up an beats ’em with sticks to get it out.
Then they has to be washed an’ dried an’
trimmed, an’ handled consider’ble, afore
they’s ready for market. Then they’s
sold at auction.”
The sponge crawls of which the old
man spoke are square pens make of stakes driven into
the sand side by side, and as close as possible together.
In some of them at Key West Mark and Ruth saw little
negro boys diving to bring up stray sponges that the
rakes had missed. They did not seem to enjoy
this half as much as Mark and his boy friends used
to enjoy diving in the river at Norton, and they shivered
as though they were cold, in spite of the heat of
the day.
When the children told Mr. Elmer about
these little, unhappy-looking divers that night, he
said,
“That shows how what some persons
regard as play, may become hard and unpleasant work
to those who are compelled to do it.”
Several days after this Mr. Elmer
engaged a carriage, and took his wife and the children
on a long drive over the island. During this drive
the most interesting things they saw were old Fort
Taylor, which stands just outside the city, and commands
the harbor, the abandoned salt-works, about five miles
from the city, and the Martello towers, built along
the southern coast of the island. These are small
but very strong forts, built by the government, but
as yet never occupied by soldiers.
In one of them the Elmers were shown
a large, jagged hole, broken through the brick floor
of one of the upper stories. This, the sergeant
in charge told them, had been made by a party of sailors
who deserted from a man-of-war lying in the harbor,
and hid themselves in this Martello tower. They
made it so that through it they could point their
muskets and shoot anybody sent to capture them as soon
as he entered the lower rooms. They did not have
a chance to use it for this purpose, however, for
the officer sent after them just camped outside the
tower and waited patiently until hunger compelled
the runaways to surrender, when he quietly marched
them back to the ship.
In all of the forts, as well as in
all the houses of Key West, are great cisterns for
storing rain-water, for there are no wells on the
island, and the only fresh-water to be had is what
can be caught and stored during the rainy season.
It was a week after the orange auction
that Mr. Elmer came into the cabin of the schooner
one afternoon and announced that the court had given
its decision, and that they would sail the next day.
This decision of the court gave to
the schooner Nancy Bell five thousand dollars, and
this, “Captain Li” said, must, according
to wrecker’s law, be divided among all who were
on board the schooner at the time of the wreck.
Accordingly, he insisted upon giving Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer each two hundred dollars, and Mark, Ruth, and
Jan each one hundred dollars. As neither of the
children had ever before owned more than five dollars
at one time, they now felt wealthy enough to buy the
State of Florida, and regarded each other with vastly
increased respect. While their father took charge
of this money for them, he told them they might invest
it as they saw fit, provided he and their mother thought
the investment a good one.
At daylight next morning the Nancy
Bell again spread her sails, and soon Key West was
but a low-lying cloud left far behind. For three
days they sailed northward, with light winds, over
the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. On the
evening of the third day a bright light flashed across
the waters ahead of them, and “Captain Li”
said it was at the mouth of the St. Mark’s River.
As the tide was low, and no pilot was to be had that
night, they had to stand off and on, and wait for daylight
before crossing the bar and sailing up the river beyond
it.