The Hilltop Boys on the River by Cyril Burleigh
page 92 of 161 (57%)
page 92 of 161 (57%)
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"To be sure, and I only meant that Jack should keep it in case he
could find no owner for it:" It was now time for the boys to return to the camp, and they took their leave, Jack promising to examine the watch when he got back, and to report if it was as the lady had said. After supper Jack and Percival went to the doctor's, and Jack told what the lady had said, and asked to see the watch. The top of the upper part of the case could be removed, just as she had said, and Jack found the photograph and the little coin under it. "Well, that is all right," he said to Dick. "I am satisfied that the owner has now been found, for that thing has bothered me a good deal. I wonder what Higgins has been doing all this time, however, not to report his failure to get the watch?" "A sudden rush of sense to the head may have affected him," laughed Dick, "and he was ashamed to say anything about it. If he had told that he had discovered the watch, and that you had it he would have been obliged to tell why it had not been given to him, and that would have been altogether too much for his vanity." "I suppose so," said Jack with a smile. |
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