he handed Dakota an orange bandana with white polka dots. âItâs your disguise.â
âA disguise on top of my cow disguise? This is silly.â Dakota took the bandana from Chuck. âThis looks familiar. Isnât this the bandana from the post outside the Leaky Tiki? Did you steal this?â he gasped.
âIt is from the Leaky Tiki, but I just borrowed it. Weâll bring it back,â Chuck said. âTie it around your head. All sailors wear bandanas on their heads. Unless youâre the captain. Then you wear a hat.â
âIs this your plan?â Dakota asked nervously. âWhat if we get caught?â Marcoâs first mate Ribeye looked awfully big and mean, and Dakota didnât like the idea of making that one-eyed bull any grumpier.
âWe wonât get caught,â Chuck said as he folded their copy of The Daily Moos into a very fine-looking paper hat. âMarco will be busy talking for hours. Besides, weâre not going to take anything. Weâre just looking . If anyone asks, just say youâre one of his sailors.â
âWhy do you get to wear a hat?â he asked Chuck.
âWe only have one bandana,â Chuck said, putting on the paper hat. âPlus, itâs my idea, so I get to wear the captainâs hat.â
They looked out at the wharf. Many cows were milling about, tending to the small boats on either side of the dock.
âThereâs no way this is going to work!â Dakota said in a hushed whisper.
âSure it will! Just talk like a sailor,â Chuck whispered back. âArrrr, matey!â he said in a loud pirate voice as he marched out on the pier. âIt sure be a good day for sailinâ, aye?â
âAye, aye, sir!â Dakota shouted back. âUmmmâ¦.Yo ho ho and a bottle of milk!â Dakotaâs face turned red under his cow mask. He felt incredibly foolish. Cows all over the harbor watched curiously as the two phony sailors marched by, but no one questioned them. Chuckâs plan was working! They continued their loud parade all the way to the end of the wharf.
The Swashclucker may have been the biggest ship in the harbor, but that was only because all the other boats were so small. Up close the ship was squat and dumpy. Its sides had been repaired so many times that the patchwork of planks nailed to its sides looked like big wooden bandages. At the top of the mast sat a rickety crowâs nest with a tiny orange flag waving from it. It really wasnât very fancy. But as far as Chuck was concerned, it was amazing.
âThis is such a bad idea,â Dakota said as they climbed on board the shipâs main deck. âI donât think weâre going to find anything here but trouble.â
âWerenât you listening to Marcoâs stories?â Chuck asked. âEven if heâs only done half the stuff he says, this boat should still have treasures all over it! Letâs look for that sea snakeâs head he was talking about! I bet itâs in his quarters.â
They made their way to Marcoâs cabin, which looked a lot like a chicken coop. Chuck swung open the door with excitement. He thought the room would be filled with ancient artifacts and mystical objects, glittering jewels and gold coinsâ¦maybe the sea snakeâs head would even be mounted on the wall!
But the cabin was not at all what Chuck expected.
There were no treasures. There were no jewels or prizes or coins. The only golden thing in sight was a warm light that came through the windows, highlighting a globe, a spyglass, and measuring tools on a table in the middle of the room. In the corner was a roosting perch where Marco would stand as he slept. The wall on the right displayed a collection of swords. The wall on the left was covered with maps and charts. It looked like a great place to plan an adventure. But it was no treasure trove.
âOkay,â said Dakota. âWhereâs all