by Zane Grey
‘Hello, old sport,’ he said affably. ‘Some night, ain’t it?’
To know why a man of the type of James Edward Longstreet should be flattered at being called ‘old sport’ by one of the type of Yellow Barbee is to understand human nature; Longstreet was utterly human. The bonds of environment are bands of steel; the little boy that close to threescore years ago was Johnny Longstreet had been restricted by them, his growth had been that of a gourd with a strap about its middle; he had perforce grown in conformity with the commands of the outside pressure. Had he been born in Poco Poco and reared on a ranch, it is at least likely that he would not have been a professor in an Eastern university. Now that the steel girdles of environment were stricken off it appeared that the youthful heart of him stimulated new growth. As for heredity, environment’s collaborator, both he and Barbee were lineal descendants of father Adam and mother Eve. But, be the explanation where it may, ‘the everlasting miracle’ was the same, and the ‘old sport’ beamed as he would not have done had the University of Edinburgh bestowed upon him a new degree.
‘Let’s frolic a few,’ suggested Barbee, with a sidelong glance.
‘I have some business to attend to,’ said Longstreet eagerly. ‘I’ll hurry through with it. Then—then I assure you that I shall be glad to witness with you the—the gaiety of the—of the places of amusement here.’
He explained what his business was.
‘You stop at the store, then,’ said Barbee. ‘Tell Mexico Pete to have your grub and truck ready; I’ll mosey on up to the saloon and scare up Tod and tell him about the team. I’ll wait for you up there. And, since we ain’t got all night, suppose you shake a foot, pardner.’
When a few minutes later Longstreet reached the adobe saloon of ‘Tonio Moraga, he found Yellow Barbee smoking a cigarette outside the deep-set door.
‘Kind of quiet,’ apologized the young fellow. ‘But we’ll look ’em over.’
He struck the door open with his shoulder and Longstreet followed him into a big room sufficiently well lighted by a couple of hanging kerosene lamps. At one side was an ancient, battered bar; behind the bar a lazy Mexican in shirt sleeves; at one end Tod Barstow pouring the cool contents of a pint bottle of some pinkish beverage directly from the throat of the bottle into his own throat; lounging idly in chairs of various interesting stages of dilapidation half a dozen men, all dark-skinned, black of moustache and hair. Barstow’s position necessitated the fixing of his eyes upon the ceiling; all other glances, ignoring Barbee, centred upon Longstreet. He was smiling and eager.
‘Come alive, gents!’ called Barbee genially. ‘Stack up alongside the bar and I’ll buy! Moraga,’ to the bartender, ‘you know me. I got a real bad case of alkali throat. Roll up, boys!—Say, wait a minute. Moraga, meet my friend Longstreet.’ Moraga showed many large white teeth in a friendly smile and gave into Longstreet’s keeping a small, moist and very flabby hand. The other men, silently accepting the invitation, came forward; Barbee introduced them all. Longstreet’s was the emotion of one being initiated into a new fraternity.
They named their poison, in the parlance of the neighbourhood, and stood to their glasses like so many valiant gunners. Longstreet, big enough in his views of humanity, to look upon them as so many boyish souls, beamed. Then he noted that they seemed to be waiting for something, wondered what it might be, glanced over his shoulder, looked back at them and understood. They were waiting for him. So he said hastily, and in their own phrase:
‘Same thing.’
Which, of course, brought down to his place on the bar a small glass and a large bottle. He had never done a thing like this in all the calm days of his existence, but now the deed came naturally enough. He poured his glass and even echoed the other remarks of ‘Here’s how.’ When the fiery liquor arrived in his stomachical regions he realized with perfect clarity that it was without doubt some newly invented substitute for whisky; perhaps that jackass-brandy which he had heard of. His emotion was twofold: he was glad that Helen was at the hotel and he was determined not to repeat the dose.
‘That’s the goods,’ said Longstreet jocularly, trying to smack his lips.
Barbee led the way to the nearest table and out of the nowhere brought into the here a deck of cards. Longstreet was on the verge of applauding when he noted that every one else accepted the act as a matter of fact, and subsided into himself and into a chair at the same moment.
‘Who’ll make it four-cornered?’ demanded Barbee. ‘Short, but lively while she lasts. Little old game, name of stud horse?’
Two of the Mexicans, having hesitated and then looked to Barbee, came forward and deposited themselves carelessly in the two chairs. Barbee shuffled, cut, shuffled again and put the cards down.
‘Cut for deal,’ he ordered.
When each of the other men had leaned forward and lifted a sheaf of cards, Longstreet divided the remainder. The deal went to Barbee. And what is more, Longstreet understood why; Barbee showed the highest card, a king. Longstreet straightened in his chair and his interest grew; he went over in mind what he had learned at the ranch. A pair beats a stiff, two pair beat a pair, threes beat two pair and so on. It was simplicity itself and here was he, Professor Edward Longstreet, measuring his judgment against that of Mexican Mendoza, Mexican Chavez and Yellow Barbee, cowpuncher. Ready from the flip of the first card to concede that these gentlemen had had a rather wider experience with card-playing, none the less he realized the superiority of his mentality, his greater intellectual training, and fully expected something more than just an ‘even break.’ He concealed the faces of his cards cannily and gave his scholarly brain entirely to a pleasant task in mathematics.
Through many years of training he was familiar with abstruse problems; hence it may be forgiven him, if, at first blush, this form of poker appeared simplicity itself. He reasoned thus: There were fifty-two cards in the full deck; there were exactly four, neither more nor less, of each ace, deuce, trey and so forth until one got to the king; there were, also, just four men drawing cards; each man, if he played his hand out, could draw five cards. All of this was data; it seemed as though he had x and y given and was merely to find z. His eye, as the game began, registered zest.
He remembered former instructions: Each man’s first card, dealt face down, was to remain face down until the hand was played out; the owner of that first card, and no other man, had the right to turn up the corner and discover what it was. So when Barbee tossed his card to him, Longstreet wasted no time in peeking at it. It was the ace of clubs; not a better card in the deck! He lifted his face and beamed; it was a good start. And this time the emotion registered in his frank eye was that of a guileless old gentleman who has an ace in the hole. There was no misreading that triumphant gleam.
Again the cards fell gently from Barbee’s practised hand, each of the four faces up this time. Longstreet’s was a king; he nodded his acceptance and approval. All of the time his brain was busied with his developing theory of chances: there were four aces, four kings in the deck, and he already had one of each. There were four players in all; there were fifty-two cards; it was unlikely that in this hand another king should turn up. And no other king did; he had the high card. He smiled warmly.
‘The high card bets,’ drawled Barbee.
‘Oh!’ exclaimed Longstreet. ‘Yes, to be sure. Let me see.’
His sparkling eye roved about the table. Barbee’s exposed card was a jack, one of the Mexicans had a ten and the other a four. Longstreet felt both warmed with triumph and yet a little sorry for them. So he did the kind thing by them and bet only a dollar. The two Mexicans lifted their brows at him, looked to Barbee, and then with a splendid show of nonchalance both came in. Barbee chinked his silver dollar down upon the others and dealt the third card. Longstreet waited breathlessly.
This time there came to him another king, the king of spades, and his litt
le exclamation of genuine delight was a pretty thing to hear. But the next second a look of frowning incredulity overspread his features; the king of hearts fell to Chavez and the king of diamonds to Mendoza. Barbee gave himself an ace. But it was not the ace that interested Longstreet; his newly-born theory of chances was a trifle upset. That three kings, when there were only three left in the deck, should come one on the heels of another was a matter for reflection. But evidently there was no time granted for readjustment of preconceived ideas.
‘Longstreet’s the only man with a pair in sight,’ said Barbee. ‘It’s your bet again, Longstreet.’
Longstreet hurriedly bet a dollar. Chavez, with a king and ten in view, raised the bet four dollars. Mendoza withdrew his hand and his attention and began rolling a cigarette, never once taking his eyes from Longstreet’s eager face. Barbee tossed in his five dollars, and Longstreet was brought to realize that if he wished to remain in the game it was in order for him to add another four dollars to his bet. He did so without a moment’s hesitation. And again he began his search of the deathless underlying mathematical law of the game of stud poker.
Meanwhile Barbee dealt the fourth card. When the fates had it that a second ace fell to Longstreet’s lot they should have been amply repaid by the glowing smile that widened his good-humoured mouth. He now had, and he realized to the full his strategic position in that no one else could have his secret knowledge, a pair of kings and a pair of aces. The two biggest pairs in the deck! He looked with renewed interest at the other cards. Chavez now had two tens exposed; before Barbee lay no pair at all, just a jack, an ace and a five. There was but one more card to be dealt. He could therefore count Barbee out of the running. It remained to him and Chavez, and Chavez had only a pair of tens in sight.
‘Your bet again, Longstreet,’ Barbee reminded him. He started and bet his dollar. Chavez repeated his earlier performance and raised the bet four dollars. Barbee tossed away his cards; Longstreet noted the act triumphantly, and nodded in the manner of a father approving the wise act of a young untried son.
‘What you do, señor?’ asked the Mexican. Longstreet withdrew his eyes from Barbee and gave his attention to his antagonist, a half-bred Mexican of low-grade mentality who was offering a duel of wits! He bet the requisite four dollars.
And now from Barbee’s fingers came the last cards, one for Longstreet and one for Chavez. Longstreet drew a queen and went into the silence of deep meditation; to Chavez came a lowly seven. Longstreet needed no prompting that it was time to bet; further he understood that this was the last round, the final opportunity. He did not wait for the customary raise of Chavez, but slipped five dollars into the pot and sat back, beaming.
Nor did the Mexican hesitate. He pushed out to the centre of the table with slow brown fingers two twenty-dollar gold pieces.
‘You—you raise me?’ asked Longstreet.
‘Si, señor. Tirty-fife pesos mas.’
Longstreet curbed a desire to warn the man, to insist that he reconsider. But in the end he kept his own counsel and made his complementary bet of thirty-five dollars.
‘Call you,’ he said quite in his best form.
The Mexican extracted from the bottom of his cards the first one dealt him face down and flipped it over carelessly. It was a ten; he had three tens, and the professor’s extremely handsome pairs of aces and kings were as nothing. The Mexican’s brown fingers drew the winnings in toward him, Longstreet’s fifty-one dollars among them. Longstreet stared at him and at Barbee and at the treacherous cards themselves in sheer bewilderment.
It was not that he was shocked at the loss of a rather large sum of money in his present circumstances; his brain did not focus on the point. He was trying to see in what his advance theories had miscarried. For certainly it had seemed extremely unlikely that Chavez would have had three tens. Why, there were only four tens in the deck of fifty-two, there were four men playing, there remained in the deck, untouched, thirty-two cards——
‘Deal ’em up,’ said Barbee. ‘Your deal, old boy.’
‘It lies entirely within the scope of conservative probability,’ said Longstreet blandly, his eyes carrying the look of a man who in spirit is far away from his physical environment, ‘that, after all, my data were not sufficient.’
‘Talking to me?’ said Barbee. He made a playful show of looking over his shoulder to the invisible recipient of Longstreet’s confidences; at the moment a door behind him opened and a new face did actually appear. Barbee’s glance grew into a stare of surprise. Then he turned square about in his chair again and snapped out: ‘Deal, can’t you?’ Longstreet saw that the boy’s face was red; that his eyes burned malignantly.
‘Hello, Barbee,’ said the man in the newly opened door. He came fully into the room and closed the door after him.
‘Hello, Courtot,’ answered Barbee colourlessly.
With an effort Longstreet had withdrawn his analytic faculties from the consideration of the recent problem that had been solved for him by the cards themselves; now he was busied with collecting them, arranging them and getting ready to shuffle. Among the amused eyes watching him he was conscious of a pair of eyes that were not simply amused, the eyes of Jim Courtot. He looked up and took stock of the new-comer, impelled to something more exhaustive than a superficial interest by that intangible but potent thing termed personality. This man who had entered the room in familiar fashion through a back door and a rear room, was of the magnetic order; were he silent in a gathering of talking men he must have been none the less a conspicuous figure. And not because of any unusual saliency of physical attributes; rather for that emanation of personality which is like electricity—which, perhaps, is electricity.
He was tall, thin, very dark; his eyes were of beady blackness; he affected the sombre in garb from black hat and dark shirt to darker trousers and black boots. His face was clean-shaven; maybe he had just now been shaving in the rear room. His age might have lain anywhere between thirty-five and fifty. There are men like Jim Courtot, of dark visages and impenetrable eyes, thin and sallow men, upon whom the passing years appear to work all of their havoc early and then be like vicious stinging things deprived of their stings.
‘For God’s sake!’ spoke up Barbee, querulously and nervously. ‘Are you going to shuffle all the spots off? Come alive, Longstreet.’
Longstreet allowed Barbee to cut and began dealing. Jim Courtot, his step quick but strangely noiseless, came to the table. His eyes were for Barbee as he said quietly:
‘Just a little game for fun? Any objection if I kick in?’
Barbee frowned. Further, he hesitated—and hesitation played but a small part in El Joven’s make-up. Finally he evaded.
‘Where’ve you been all this long time, Courtot?’ he asked sullenly. ‘The biggest game of six years was pulled off down in Poco Poco last week and you wasn’t there. I heard a man say you must be dead.’
Courtot considered him gravely. Longstreet regarded the man, fascinated. He did not believe that the man knew how to smile. To imagine Jim Courtot laughing was to fancy a statue laughing.
‘When there’s a big game pulled off and I’m not there, kid,’ he answered when he was good and ready to answer, ‘it’s because there’s a bigger game somewhere else. And I’m heeled to play in your little game if you think you’re man enough to take me on.’
Barbee snarled at him.
‘Damn you,’ he said savagely.
Jim Courtot drew up his chair and sat down. There was a strange sort of swiftness and precision in the man’s smallest acts. Now he brought from his hip pocket a handful of loose coins and set the heap on the table before him. For the most part the coins were gold; he stood ready to put into play several hundred dollars.
‘Heeled, kid,’ he repeated. The voice was as nearly dead and expressionless as a human voice can be; only the words themselves carr
ied his insolence. ‘Please, can I play in your game?’
To Barbee’s youth it was plain challenge and, though he hated the man with his whole soul, Barbee’s youth answered hotly:
‘I’ll take you on, Jim Courtot, any day.’
Thereafter Courtot ignored Barbee. He turned to Longstreet and watched him deal five cards face down. Then he appeared to lose interest in everything saving his own hand. Longstreet dealt the second five cards, faces up. They fell in the order of nine, four, jack, ace and, to himself, a seven. He did not believe that the new player had seen any but his own card. Barbee, to whose lot the ace had fallen, placed his bet. There was bright bitter challenge in his eyes as he stared across the table at Courtot.
‘Ten bucks to start her off,’ he said shortly.
Longstreet had supposed it customary to begin with a dollar; in his mind, however, there was little difference between one and ten. Therefore he made no remark and placed his own money in the pot. The two Mexicans tossed their cards away. Courtot, looking at no one, and without speaking, came in. Longstreet dealt a second round. Now Courtot had two fours in sight; Barbee had two aces; Longstreet a king and a seven exposed, but also a king hidden. When Barbee said, ‘Twenty bucks to play,’ and said it viciously with a jeering stare at Courtot, Longstreet began counting out his money. But before he had completed the slow process the street door opened.
It was Alan Howard. He stood a moment on the threshold, his look one of sheer amazement. He had come looking for Professor James Edward Longstreet, eminent authority upon certain geological subjects. Had anyone told him that he would find his man playing stud poker with Barbee and two Mexicans and Jim Courtot——