LIST OF CHAPTERS

CHAPTER
1 [TROT AND CAP'N BILL]
2 [THE MERMAIDS]
3 [THE DEPTHS OF THE DEEP BLUE SEA]
4 [THE PALACE OF QUEEN AQUAREINE]
5 [THE SEA-SERPENT]
6 [EXPLORING THE OCEAN]
7 [THE ARISTOCRATIC CODFISH]
8 [A BANQUET UNDER WATER]
9 [THE BASHFUL OCTOPUS]
10 [THE UNDISCOVERED ISLAND]
11 [ZOG THE TERRIBLE AND HIS SEA DEVILS]
12 [THE ENCHANTED ISLAND]
13 [PRISONERS OF THE SEA MONSTER]
14 [CAP'N JOE AND CAP'N BILL]
15 [THE MAGIC OF THE MERMAIDS]
16 [THE TOP OF THE GREAT DOME]
17 [THE QUEEN'S GOLDEN SWORD]
18 [A DASH FOR LIBERTY]
19 [KING ANKO TO THE RESCUE]
20 [THE HOME OF THE OCEAN MONARCH]
21 [KING JOE]
22 [TROT LIVES TO TELL THE TALE]

CHAPTER 1

TROT AND CAP'N BILL

"Nobody," said Cap'n Bill solemnly, "ever sawr a mermaid an' lived to tell the tale."

"Why not?" asked Trot, looking earnestly up into the old sailor's face.

They were seated on a bench built around a giant acacia tree that grew just at the edge of the bluff. Below them rolled the blue waves of the great Pacific. A little way behind them was the house, a neat frame cottage painted white and surrounded by huge eucalyptus and pepper trees. Still farther behind that—a quarter of a mile distant but built upon a bend of the coast—was the village, overlooking a pretty bay.

Cap'n Bill and Trot came often to this tree to sit and watch the ocean below them. The sailor man had one "meat leg" and one "hickory leg," and he often said the wooden one was the best of the two. Once Cap'n Bill had commanded and owned the "Anemone," a trading schooner that plied along the coast; and in those days Charlie Griffiths, who was Trot's father, had been the Captain's mate. But ever since Cap'n Bill's accident, when he lost his leg, Charlie Griffiths had been the captain of the little schooner while his old master lived peacefully ashore with the Griffiths family.

This was about the time Trot was born, and the old sailor became very fond of the baby girl. Her real name was Mayre, but when she grew big enough to walk, she took so many busy little steps every day that both her mother and Cap'n Bill nicknamed her "Trot," and so she was thereafter mostly called.