ดาวน์โหลด โจ๊ก เกอร์ 69
ดาวน์โหลด โจ๊ก เกอร์ 69
สล็อต xe88 CHAPTER IV THE SICK OFFICER IN THE STATEROOM On the lower floor nothing appeared to have been disturbed. In the parlor a gold watch, adorned with diamonds, had been left on the table by Florry, who had forgotten it; but it had not been taken. The burglar could not have helped 24 seeing it if he had explored the house as such gentry do on such occasions. In the dining-room no attempt to open the steel safe set in the wall, which contained a vast amount of silver, jewelry, money, and other valuables, had been made. In a word, wherever they examined the rooms, no sign of any depredations could be discovered. The burglar did not appear to have lunched in the pantry where some choice viands had been placed. The robber had certainly been very considerate, and had done no mischief either for plunder or diversion. He had evidently, in the opinion of Mrs. Passford and her son, undertaken a profitless enterprise. "How are you going to get to the entrance of the bay in a fog?" inquired Corny. "But we have plenty of good men, and some of them will make good officers," suggested the first lieutenant. "What do you mean by that?"