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The second gambler pursed up his lips and shrugged his shoulders. "Suits me, too," he remarked good-naturedly, "I'll up you a thousand."
He contributed two brown chips with great deliberation. Steadman was giggling foolishly.
"Where would I have been?" he gibbered. "The tall gra.s.s wouldn't have hidden me."
The third gambler now came into the game. It appeared that he, also, thought highly of his hand, for he raised both his comrades by a brown chip.
"One, two--and back again!" he murmured. "I've got you pinched. Only six thousand in the pot--and four aces will take it all! Come right in, Mr.
Sackett, the water's warm." They watched him covetously.
"Oh, I don't know," answered Ralston with deliberation. "I have one or two cards myself. They look pretty good to _me_! But then I'm not used to the game. I wonder if you'd stand a raise." He picked up four brown chips and counted them slowly. They eyed him, hardly breathing. Then Ralston laid the chips back on the table.
"No," said he regretfully. "It's too high for me. Here are my openers,"
and he threw down his hand face upward on the table.
"Four j-jacks!" stammered Steadman, rubbing his eyes. "Four j-jacks!"
The others, with the exception of Farrer, had arisen and stood glowering at Ralston.
"What's this?" exclaimed Farrer harshly.
"What's your game?" cried another.
"Nothing, gentlemen. I lie down. That's all. It's my privilege."
The gambler ground his teeth and placed his cards on the table.
"Aren't you going to finish the game?" asked Ralston with elaborate sarcasm.
"Of course we are," shot back Farrer. "Only to see a man do a d.a.m.n fool thing like that is enough to bust up any game." He looked at his cards.
"I'm out," he added shortly.
The first gambler did not seem to regard his hand any longer with favor, for he "dropped" immediately. So also did the second, and the third drew the chips toward him, no cards having been disclosed.
Steadman was still giggling feebly.
"I say," he mumbled again, "you _are_ easy! Four jacks! O my! O----"
"Do you think so?" inquired Ralston politely, as he reached quickly across the table and, picking up the first gambler's hand, turned it over. The man grabbed for the cards, but he was an instant too late.
Four aces lay under the gaslight.
"Not so easy, eh?" continued Ralston. "Pretty good judgment, it seems to me. I'll have my ante back, if you please," and he replaced one of the blue chips on his own pile. "It requires more nerve to lay down four aces than four jacks."
The men stared at him without speaking, and Farrer arose abruptly.
"I supposed I was in a respectable game," he announced with severity.
"If you gentlemen," turning to Ralston and Steadman, "will step downstairs I will adjust matters with you. As for you," addressing the other three, "make yourselves scarce and never come into my house again." They moved slowly toward the door.
"Don't worry on our account, Mr. Farrer," remarked Ralston suavely. "I'm sure the matter was merely a coincidence. Seeing a man lie down on four jacks is enough to account for any apparent little irregularity." But, before he had finished, the three, closely followed by Farrer, had departed. Then Ralston looked over to where Steadman was sitting with a smile of utter la.s.situde.
"We were well out of that, I fancy," said he.
"I wonder what _I_ had?" answered Steadman dreamily. He fumbled unsteadily for his hand and turned it over card by card.
The first was a deuce of spades.
"Oh!" he remarked, "a pair of 'em, anyhow."
The next was a deuce of diamonds, and the last a deuce of clubs.
Steadman looked stupidly around the table.
"Four little twos!" he muttered. "And _you_ had four knaves and he had four aces. I guess there's a special Providence looking out for _me_.
Say, what won that pot, anyway?"
Farrer suddenly reappeared at the door.
"Here's your money, gentlemen," he remarked, counting the chips in front of each of them and throwing down the appropriate number of bills.
"Sorry to have the game broken up in such a way, but these sharps get in everywhere. I hope you won't mention the incident. I have a very fine line of patrons and nothing of the kind has ever occurred before."
As he turned away Steadman raised his eyes and looked the gambler full in the face.
"Farrer," said he, "you've robbed me--you and your gang. Some time I'll make you pay for it, you--thief!" Then the fire died as suddenly as it had come, his head dropped forward listlessly, his eyes rolled ceiling-ward, and he fell to mumbling and muttering to himself. Ralston sprang to his side, as Farrer slid through the door.
"I'm d.i.c.k Ralston," he said. "Don't you recognize me?"
Steadman gazed at him stolidly.
"Rals'on?" he muttered. "Rals'on? So you are! I guess you are. Why not?
What of it?"
He put his head on his arms and leaned them against the table top.
Ralston grasped him by the shoulder and shook him roughly.
"Pull yourself together!" he cried. "You must get out of here quickly."
He shook Steadman again.
"Don't you understand?" he said sharply. "Your regiment leaves in an hour. _Your regiment!_ Your company!"
Steadman looked at him dully. A burned-out cigarette hung from his under lip by its own cohesive ability.
"Rats!" he muttered. "I've chucked all that. Regiment can go for all of me unless it wants to wait."
"You fool!" shouted Ralston. "Don't you see it's the end of you if you don't go!"
"The end's come already! I'm a dead one now!"