Part 1 (2/2)
”I play for sport, not for dollars. I don't want your money, and now you're getting something back, we'll put up the bets again.”
”Then, since your wad is nearly gone, somebody must keep the score,”
said Jackson, and Stannard pulled out his note-book.
Jimmy took another drink and tried to brace up. His luck, like his roll of bills, was obviously gone, but when he was winning the others had not stopped, and he did not want them, so to speak, to let him off. When he lost he could pay. But this was not important, and he must concentrate on his cards. The cards got worse and as a rule the ace he thought one antagonist had was played by another. At length Stannard pushed back his chair from the table.
”Three o'clock and I have had enough,” he said, and turned to Jimmy. ”Do you know how much you are down?”
Jimmy did not know, but he imagined the sum was large, and when Stannard began to reckon he went to the window. Day was breaking and mist rolled about the pines. The snow was gray and the high rocks were blurred and dark. Jimmy heard the river and the wind in the trees. The cold braced him and he vaguely felt the landscape's austerity. His head was getting steadier, and perhaps it was the contrast, but when he turned and looked about the room he was conscious of something like disgust. Stannard, occupied with his pencil, knitted his brows, and now his graceful carelessness was not marked; Jimmy thought his look hard and calculating. Yet Stannard was his friend and model. He admitted he was highly strung and perhaps his imagination cheated him.
He was not cheated about the others. Now a reaction from the excitement had begun, he saw Deering and Jackson as he had not seen them before.
Deering's grin was sottish, the fellow was grossly fat, and he fixed his greedy glance on Stannard's note-book. Jackson, standing behind Stannard, studied the calculations, as if he meant to satisfy himself the sum was correct. Jimmy thought them impatient to know their share and their keenness annoyed him. Then Stannard put up his book.
”It looks as if your resolve to play up was rash,” he remarked and stated the sum Jimmy owed. ”Can you meet the reckoning?”
”You know I'm broke. You're my banker and must fix it for me.”
Stannard nodded. ”Very well! What about your bet in the billiard-room?”
”Nothing about it. I made the stroke.”
Deering grinned indulgently, and when Jackson shrugged, Jimmy's face got red.
”If they're not satisfied, give them the lot; I don't dispute about things like that,” he said haughtily. ”Write an acknowledgment for all I owe and I'll sign the note.”
Stannard wrote and tore the leaf from his note-book, but he now used a fountain pen. Jimmy took the pen, signed the acknowledgment and went off. When he had gone Deering looked at Stannard and laughed.
”Your touch is light, but if the boy begins to feel your hand he'll kick. Anyhow, I'll take my wad.”
Stannard gave him a roll of paper money and turned to Jackson.
”I'll take mine,” said Jackson. ”In the morning I pull out.”
”You stated you meant to stop for a time.”
”There's nothing in the game for me, and I don't see what Deering expects to get,” said Jackson in a languid voice. ”I doubt if you'll keep him long; the boys in his home section, on the coast, reckon he puts up a square deal. Anyhow, you can't have my help.”
Stannard gave him a searching glance and Deering straightened his big body. Jackson's glance was quietly scornful.
”A hundred dollars is a useful sum, but my mark's higher, and I play with men. Maybe I'll meet up with some rich tourists at the Banff hotels,” he resumed, and giving the others a careless nod, went off.
”A queer fellow, but sometimes his mood is nasty,” said Deering. ”I felt I'd like to throw him over the rails.”
”As a rule, his sort carry a gun,” Stannard remarked.
Deering wiped some liquor from the table, picked up Jimmy's gla.s.s, which was on the floor, and put away the cards.
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