How to Use Reading EPUB 1. Opening an EPUB File Click the " " Upload icon button to select an EPUB file from your device. 2. Navigation Go to Page: Enter a specific page number in the page navigation field 3. Additional Features Search: Find specific text within the book and navigate between them. The search can also be used to navigate between chapters, go to particular words; which can be very helpful to quickly navigate to current reading state as auto load only load that page but not the exact paragraph/sentences. 4. Saving Progress Reading EPUB automatically save your reading progress. 6. Auto Load Reading EPUB automatically load saved pages on page load. 7. Book Suggestions and download Don't know what to Read, Click to check out suggested books Don't know where to download...
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Wrecked Clos-Poulet, Bretagne May 1758 She thought him dead at first. A man, draped lifeless upon a wedge of broken hull, cheek pressed against the timber as tenderly as a lover’s as he rose gently up, gently down with the exhausted breath of the sea. The storm had raged all night, howling and hurling itself against the shore, rattling the windows so hard that it had taken all of Luce’s will not to fling them open and feel its cold breath on her face. Only the chintz drapes, her mother’s great pride, had stopped her. Papa had brought the fabric all the way from India, and there was no telling how Gratienne would have reacted had Luce allowed the weather to spoil them. And so, she had kept the window closed, watching the storm as it battered the gardens and orchard and pried at the roof of the dovecote as though it would rip it free and toss it, rolling and bouncing, down the sweep of rain-soaked fields and into the furious waves. It was the kind of weather that stilled the world and ...
SHE..EXTRACTED.
About an hour before sundown we at last, to my unbounded gratitude, emerged from the great belt of marsh on to land that swelled upwards in a succession of rolling waves. Just on the hither side of the crest of the first wave we halted for the night. My first act was to examine Leo’s condition. It was, if anything, worse than in the morning, and a new and very distressing feature, vomiting, set in, and continued till dawn. Not one wink of sleep did I get that night, for I passed it in assisting Ustane, who was one of the most gentle and indefatigable nurses I ever saw, to wait upon Leo and Job. However, the air here was warm and genial without being too hot, and there were no mosquitoes to speak of. Also we were above the level of the marsh mist, which lay stretched beneath us like the dim smoke-pall over a city, lit up here and there by the wandering globes of fen fire. Thus it will be seen that we were, speaking comparatively, in clover. By dawn on the following morning Leo was qui...
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