[The Adventures of a Special Correspondent by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookThe Adventures of a Special Correspondent CHAPTER III 1/13
The boat did not start until three o'clock in the afternoon.
Those of my companions who intended to cross the Caspian hurried off to the harbor; it being necessary to engage a cabin, or to mark one's place in the steamer's saloon. Ephrinell precipitately left me with these words: "I have not an instant to lose.
I must see about the transport of my baggage." "Have you much ?" "Forty-two cases." "Forty-two cases!" I exclaimed. "And I am sorry I have not double as many.
Allow me--" If he had had a voyage of eight days, instead of one of twenty-four hours, and had to cross the Atlantic instead of the Caspian, he could not have been in a greater hurry. As you may imagine, the Yankee did not for a moment think of offering his hand to assist our companion in descending from the carriage.
I took his place.
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