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มา ส คา ร่า ลัง โคม "I don't think we are getting ahead at all, Mr. Salisbury," said the captain, while the cousins were looking for their reports. CHAPTER XXXI A WOUNDED COMMANDER "That is true; and now I am going to appoint you acting third lieutenant. You will call the watch aft." "I don't know that anything has broken," replied Mrs. Passford, with a smile, after she had said good-morning to her son. The young officer was more excited than he had 34 ever been in the face of the enemy, for the present looked like a case in which his honor was at stake. He felt that it would be his ruin if the Vernon sailed without him. There had been some mistake in his orders, or in those of the commander of the store ship, and he was likely to be the sufferer for it. He rushed to the stern end of the ferry-boat in order to obtain a better view of the steamer; and at this moment he discovered a boat, pulled by one man, headed towards the navy-yard. He appeared to have been unwilling to trust Byron, as the seaman preferred to be called, and had attended to the business in person with the assistance of his confederate. The report was lying on the table in his chamber, and Byron could have borrowed it for any length of time to enable Corny to make a copy. Whoever had visited his chamber in the night, whether Corny or the man-servant, he must have taken the official envelope to the library, or some other part of the house, for it had been carefully opened, and restored to its 100 former condition after the genuine documents in it had been replaced by the blank paper.