The Motor Girls on Waters Blue - Or the Strange Cruise of the Tartar by Margaret Penrose
page 103 of 240 (42%)
page 103 of 240 (42%)
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sighted, or spoken to, since leaving San Juan.
"Oh, if anything has happened to her!" sighed Cora. "There's just as much chance that nothing has happened, as that there has," declared Jack. "She might have gone into any one of a dozen harbors." "I suppose so, but, somehow, I can't help worrying, Jack." "I know, little girl," he said, sympathetically. "But I oughtn't to trouble you," Cora went on. "Are you really feeling any better, Jack?" "Heaps; yes. Water and I are going out to have a look at the water to-day. We're tired of being cooped up here." "Oh, I wish I could go!" "Why not? Come along. It will do you girls good." So it was arranged. The girls, including Inez, donned rubber coats, and, well wrapped up for it was chilling with the advent of rain, they set forth from the hotel. They made a struggling way to the sea wall, and there looked out over a foaming waste of waters. In one place where a sunken reef of coral came close to the surface the waves beat and tore at it as though to |
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