can't hope to make for England in a tab like this, we will just lay her head for Sarawak."
This was accordingly done, their new course being nor'-east and by east.
It would extend our tale to undue proportions were we to give in detail all the adventures they experienced, dangers they encountered, and hair-breadth escapes they made, between that point on the wide southern ocean and the Malay Archipelago. The reader must be content to skip over the voyage, and to know that they ultimately arrived at the port of Sarawak, where they were kindly treated by a deputy, the Rajah himself being absent at the time.
During the voyage, the subject of finding Letta's parents became one of engrossing and increasing interest,—so much so, indeed, that even electricity and telegraph-cables sank into secondary importance. They planned, over and over again, the way in which they would set about making inquiries, and the various methods which they would adopt in pursuit of their end. They even took to guessing who Letta's parents would turn out to be, and Sam went so far as to invent and relate romantic stories, in which the father and mother of Letta played a conspicuous part. He called them Colonel and Mrs. Montmorenci for convenience, which Slagg reduced to Col. and Mrs. Monty "for short."