[Cap’n Warren’s Wards by Joseph C. Lincoln]@TWC D-Link book
Cap’n Warren’s Wards

CHAPTER X
15/47

I told Malcolm I should bring her." "Sure! Sartin! Caroline can go, of course." But Caroline also declined.

Having misjudged her guardian in the matter of the Moriarty family, she was in a repentant mood, and had marked that day on her calendar as one of self-sacrifice.
"No, Captain Warren," she said, "I shall not go unless you do." "Then the captain will come, of course," declared Mrs.Dunn, with decision.

"I'm sure he will not be so selfish as to deprive me--and Malcolm--of your company." So, because he did not wish to appear selfish, Captain Elisha admitted that his letter might be written later in the afternoon, accepted the invitation, and braced his spirit for further martyrdom.
It was not as bad as he expected.

The Dunns occupied a small, brown-stone house on Fifth Avenue, somewhat old-fashioned, but eminently respectable.

The paintings and bronzes were as numerous as those in the Warren apartment, and if the taste shown in their selection was not that of Rodgers Warren, the connoisseur, they made quite as much show, and the effect upon Captain Elisha was the same.


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