[The Fighting Chance by Robert W. Chambers]@TWC D-Link bookThe Fighting Chance CHAPTER VIII CONFIDENCES 36/64
We've got some, too, in several rooms, and I never go into 'em.
They're like a scene in a bum play, or like one of those Washington Square rat-holes, where artists eat Welsh-rabbits with dirty fingers.
Ugh!" "I like it," said Plank, under his breath. Fleetwood stared, then shrugged, and returned to the window to watch a brand-new French motor-car drawn up before a modern mansion across the avenue. The butler returned presently, saying that Mr.Siward was at home and would receive them in the library above, as he was not yet able to pass up and down stairs. "I didn't know he was as ill as that," muttered Fleetwood, as he and Plank followed the old man up the creaking stairway.
But Gumble, the butler, said nothing in reply. Siward was sitting in an arm-chair by the window, one leg extended, his left foot, stiffly cased in bandages, resting on a footstool. "Why, Stephen!" exclaimed Fleetwood, hastening forward, "I didn't know you were laid up like this!" Siward offered his hand inquiringly; then his eyes turned toward Plank, who stood behind Fleetwood; and, slowly disengaging his hand from Fleetwood's sympathetic grip, he offered it to Plank. "It is very kind of you," he said.
"Gumble, Mr.Fleetwood prefers rye, for some inscrutable reason.
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