Hocussed.
In a small inner room in The Lucky Digger sat Benjamin
Tresco and the
Prospector.
The goldsmith was happy. His
glass was before him, between his teeth was the stem
of his pipe, and in consequence his face beamed with
contentment, pleasure, good humour, and indolence.
The digger, on the other hand, looked
serious, not to say anxious, and his manner was full
of uneasiness. His glass stood untouched, his
half-finished pipe had gone out, and he could not sit
still, but began to pace backwards and forwards restlessly.
“I’ve put my foot in it,”
he said, pulling nervously at his bushy beard.
“I’ve quarrelled with the toffs of the
town, and the best thing I can do is to make a git.
I’ll start for the bush to-morrer.”
“Now you’re talking bunkum,”
said Tresco, as the smoke from his pipe wreathed above
his head. “I know those men two
bigger rogues never breathed. They simply wanted
to fleece you, and instead of that you gave ’em
one in the eye. More power to you: it was
immense! As for old Mr. Crewe and his crowd,
they were on the make too; but they are out of court there’s
no chance of them trying to renew your acquaintance.
Now, what you must do is to enjoy yourself quietly,
and by-and-by get back to your claim. But, for
to-night, we’ll have a good time a
little liquor, a quiet game of cards, a bit of a talk,
and perhaps a better understanding.”
“To speak the blanky truth,”
said the digger, “you’re the whitest man
I’ve met. True, I’ve give myself away
a bit, but you’re the only man ain’t tried
to do the pump-handle business with me.”
“I’ll buy all the gold you like to bring
to town.”
“Right! Here’s my fist: you
shall ’ave all I git.”
The two men solemnly shook hands.
“Drink your liquor,” said Tresco.
“It’ll do you good.”
The digger drank, and re-lit his pipe.
“Now, what I says is that there’s
men I like to put in the way of a good thing.”
“Same here,” said Benjamin.
“An’ I say you’ve
dealt honest by me, and I’ll deal fair and open
with you.”
“What I should expect,” said Benjamin.
“I’ve found a good thing more
than I could ever want myself, if I lived a hundred
years. I intend to do the handsome to a few o’
my pals.”
“I’m one.”
“You’re one. First,
I shall go back and do a bit more prospecting, and
see if I can better my claim. Then I shall come
to town, and let my mates into the know.”
“Just so.”
“By-and-by we’ll slip
out o’ town, an’ no man any the wiser.
You can’t track me I’m
too smart, by long chalks.”
Tresco’s glass stood empty.
“We’ll drink to it,”
he said, and rang the little hand-bell that stood
on the table.
Gentle Annie entered, with that regal
air common to bar-maids who rule their soggy realms
absolutely.
“Well, old gentleman, same old
tipple, I suppose,” said she to Tresco.
“My dear, the usual; and see
that it’s out of the wood, the real Mackay.
And bring in some dice.”
The two men sat quietly till the bar-maid returned.
Tresco rattled the dice, and threw
a pair of fours. “No deception,” he
said. “Are these the house’s dice,
my dear?”
“They’re out of the bar,” replied
Gentle Annie.
“Are they in common use for throwing for drinks?”
“What d’you take me for? D’you
think I know how to load dice?”
“My dear, this gentleman must
know everything’s square when he plays with
me. When we ring again, just bring in the usual.
Adieu. Au revoir. Haere ra, which is
Maori. Parting is such sweet sorrow.”
As the bar-maid disappeared the digger
placed a pile of bank-notes on the table, and Tresco
looked at them with feigned astonishment. “If
you think, mister, that I can set even money again
that, you over-estimate my influence with my banker.
A modest tenner or two is about my height. But
who knows? before the evening is far spent
perhaps my capital may have increased. Besides,
there are always plenty of matches for counters a
match for a pound.”
“What shall it be?” asked the digger.
“‘Kitty,’” answered Tresco.
“A pound a throw, best of three.”
“I’m agreeable,” said the digger.
“Throw for first ‘go,’” said
Tresco.
The digger nodded, took the dice, and threw “eight.”
The goldsmith followed with six, and said, “You
go first.”
The Prospector put three pounds in
the centre of the table beside Tresco’s stake,
and began to play. His highest throw was ten.
Tresco’s was nine, and the digger took the pool.
“Well, you got me there,” said the goldsmith.
“We’ll have another ‘go.’”
Again the pool was made up, and this
time Tresco threw first. His highest throw was
“eleven,” which the digger failed to beat.
“She’s mine: come
to me, my dear.” Taking the pool, the goldsmith
added, “We’re quits, but should this sort
of thing continue, I have a remedy double
every alternate ‘Kitty.’”
The game continued, with fluctuations
of luck which were usually in the digger’s favour.
But the rattling of the dice had attracted
attention in the bar, and, lured by that illusive
music, four men approached the room where the gamblers
sat.
“No intrusion, I hope,”
said the leader of the gang, pushing open the door.
“Come in, come in,” cried
Tresco, barely glancing at the newcomers, so intent
was he on the game.
They entered, and stood round the
table: an ugly quartette. The man who had
spoken was short, thick-set, with a bullet head which
was bald on the top, mutton-chop whiskers, and a big
lump under his left ear. The second was a neat,
handsome man, with black, glittering eyes, over which
the lids drooped shrewdly. The third was a young
fellow with a weak face, a long, thin neck and sloping
shoulders; and the fourth, a clean-shaven man of heavy
build, possessed a face that would have looked at
home on the shoulders of a convict. He answered
to the name of Garstang.
“Dolphin,” said he to the man with the
lump, “cut in.”
“No, no; let it be Carnac,”
said Dolphin, looking at the keen-eyed man, who replied,
“I pass it on to young William.”
“Gor’ bli’ me, why
to me?” exclaimed the stripling. “I
never strike any luck. I hand the chanst back
to you, Carny.”
The man with the shrewd eyes sat down
at the table, on which he first placed some money.
Then he said in a clear, pleasant voice:
“You’ve no objection,
I suppose, to a stranger joining you?”
“Not at all, not at all,” said the genial
Benjamin.
“If you’re meanin’
me” the digger glanced at the company
generally “all I’ve got to say
is: the man as increases the stakes is welcome.”
They threw, and the digger won.
“That’s the style,”
said he, as he took the pool. “That’s
just as it oughter be. I shout for the crowd.
Name your poisons, gentlemen.” He rang
the bell, and Gentle Annie appeared, radiant, and supreme.
She held a small tray in one hand, whilst the other,
white and shapely, hung at her side. As the men
named their liquors, she carefully repeated what they
had ordered. When Carnac’s turn came, and
she said, “And yours?” the handsome gambler
stretched out his arm, and, drawing her in a familiar
manner towards him, said, “You see, boys, I know
what’s better than any liquor.”
In a moment Gentle Annie had pulled
herself free, and was standing off from the sinister-faced
man.
“Phaugh!” she said with
disgust, “I draw the line at spielers.”
“You draw the line at nothing
that’s got money,” retorted the owner of
the glittering eyes, brutally.
“Gentlemen,” said Gentle
Annie, with a touch of real dignity in her manner,
“I have your orders.” And she withdrew
modestly, without so much as another glance at Carnac.
The play continued till her return.
She handed round glasses to all but the handsome gambler.
“And where’s mine?” asked he.
“You forgot to order it,”
said she. “I’ll send the pot-boy to
wait on you.” In a perfectly affable
manner she took the money from the uncouth digger,
and then, throwing a disdainful glance at Carnac, she
tossed her head defiantly, and went out.
The game continued. Now Tresco’s
pile of money was increased, now it had dwindled to
a few paltry pounds. The digger looked hot and
excited as he, too, lost. Carnac, wearing a fixed,
inscrutable smile, won almost every throw.
The gambler’s feverish madness
was beginning to seize Tresco as it had already seized
his friend, but at last he was stopped by lack of funds.
“How much have you on you, Bill?”
he asked of the Prospector.
“How much have I got, eh?”
said Bill, emptying his pockets of a large quantity
of gold and bank-notes. “I reckon I’ve
enough to see this little game through and lend a
mate a few pounds as well.”
“I’ll trouble you for
fifty,” said Tresco, who scribbled an IOU for
the amount mentioned on the back of an envelope, and
handed it to the digger.
The man with the lump on his neck
had seated himself at the table.
“I think, gents, I’ll
stand in,” said he. “You two are pals,
and me and Carnac’s pals. Makes things
equal.” He placed three pounds in the pool.
“Hold on,” Carnac interrupted.
“I propose a rise. Make it L5 a corner that’ll
form a Kitty worth winning the game to be
the total of three throws.”
“Consecutive?” Tresco asked.
“Consecutive,” said the
digger. “It avoids a shindy, and is more
straightfor’ard.”
A pool of L20 was thus made up, and the play continued.
The innocent youth who answered to
the name of William stood behind Tresco’s chair
and winked at Garstang, whose loosely-made mouth twitched
with merriment.
“Don’t be rash, Dolly,”
remarked Young William to the man with the hideous
neck, who held the dice box. “Think of your
wife an’ kids in Sydney before you make yer
throw. You’re spoilin’ my morals.”
“Go outside, and grow virtuous
in the passage.” Dolphin made his throws,
which totalled twenty-six.
Tresco followed with eighteen.
The digger’s and Carnac’s chances still
remained.
So lucky on the diggings, so unlucky
in town, Bill the Prospector took the box with a slightly
trembling hand and rattled the dice. His first
throw was twelve, his second eleven. “Even
money I beat you,” he said to Dolphin.
“Garn,” replied that polite
worthy. “What yer givin’ us?
D’you take me for a flat?”
The digger threw, and his score totalled thirty.
“P’r’aps, mister,”
he said, turning to Carnac, “you’d like
to take me up. Quid to quid you don’t beat
me.”
The glittering eyes fixed themselves
on the digger. “You’re too generous,
sir,” said the gentlemanly Carnac. “Your
score is hard to beat. Of course, I mean to try,
but the odds are in your favour.”
“I’ll make it two to one,” said
the digger.
“Well, if you insist,”
replied Carnac, “I’ll accommodate you.”
He placed his pound upon the table, and made his first
throw ten.
“Shake ’er up, Carny,”
cried Young William. “I back you. No
deception, gentlemen; a game which is nothing but
luck.”
The suave gambler’s next throw was eleven.
“An even pound you lose, mister,” said
William to the digger.
“Done,” cried the Prospector. “Put
out the money.”
Carnac threw twelve, said, “The little lady’s
mine,” and took the pool.
The digger handed two pounds to the
winner and a pound note to Young William who, crumpling
his money in his palm, said, “Oysters for supper
and a bottle of fizz there’ll be no
end of a spree.”
The monotonous round of the game continued,
till Tresco’s borrowed money had dwindled to
but five pounds, which was enough for but one more
chance with the dice.
The Prospector had fared but little
better. What with the money he had staked, and
side bets on individual throws, his pile of money had
been reduced to half.
“There ain’t nothin’
mean about me,” he said, “but I’d
be obliged if some gen’leman would shout.”
Dolphin touched the bell, and said,
“I was beginning to feel that way myself.”
A very undersized young man, who had
plastered his black hair carefully and limped with
one leg, appeared, and said in a very shrill voice,
“Yes, gentlemen.”
“Who are you?” asked Dolphin.
“I’m the actin’-barman,”
replied the young man, twirling the japanned tray
in his hands, and drawing himself up to his full height.
“I should call you the blanky
rouseabout,” said Dolphin. “We want
the bar-maid.”
“Miss Quintal says she ain’t
comin’,” said the important youth.
“To tell the truth, she’s a bit huffed
with the ’olé lot of yer. What’s
your orders, gents?”
He had hardly got the words out of
his mouth, when Young William rushed him from the
room and along the passage.
Dolphin rang the bell, but no one
came to the door till Young William himself reappeared.
“I guess we won’t have
no more trouble with that lot,” said he.
“I jammed ‘im inter a cupboard under the
stairs, along with the brooms an’ dustpans.
’Ere’s the key. I’ll take your
orders meself, gentlemen.”
“Where’s the lovely bar-maid?” asked
Dolphin.
“She’s that took up with
a gent that’s got a cast in his eye and a red
mustache,” replied William, “that she’s
got no time fer this crowd. What’s
yours, Garstang? Look slippy. Don’t
keep me all night.”
The men named their liquors, and Young
William, taking three shillings from Dolphin, returned
to the bar.
He was rather a long time away, and
when he reappeared Carnac remarked, “You’ve
been deuced slow over it you’ll have
to be sharper than that, if you want to be waiter
in a hotel, my Sweet William.”
“You’re all very small
potatoes in this room, you’re no class you’re
not in it with wall-eyed blokes. Here’s
yer drinks.”
He went round the table, and carefully
placed each individual’s glass at his elbow;
and the game continued.
The pool fell to Carnac, and all Tresco’s money
was gone.
“Here’s luck,” said
the Prospector, lifting his glass to Dolphin; and
when he had drunk he put his stake in the middle of
the table.
Carnac rattled the dice-box.
“Hello!” he said. “Kitty is
short by five pounds. Who’s the defaulter?”
“Me, I’m afraid, gentlemen,”
said Tresco. “I’m cleaned out.
’Case of stone-broke.”
“What’s this?” exclaimed
the digger. “You ain’t got a stiver
left? Well, there ain’t nothing mean about
me here y’are.” He roughly
divided his money, and pushed one-half across the
table to Tresco.
“Hear, hear!” cried Carnac, clapping his
hands.
“’Ere, ’ere!” echoed Sweet
William. “Very ’an’some, most
magnanimous.”
Benjamin reached out his hand for
the money, and in so doing overturned his glass, which
broke into shivers on the floor.
“Good liquor spilt,” he
remarked as he counted the money and drew another
IOU for the amount loaned, which was sixty-seven pounds.
The play proceeded. “Here’s
to you,” said Dolphin, as he drank to Tresco.
“Better luck you deserve it.”
The digger was filled with the gambler’s
fever. His eyes were wild, his face was hot;
he drained his glass at a draught, and drummed the
table with his fingers.
“Neck or nothin’, Tresco,”
he said. “Make it ten pound a corner, and
let’s blanky well bust or win. Win, I say double
the stakes, and see if that’ll change our luck.”
“Anything to oblige you, gentlemen,”
said Carnac. “Let it be ten pounds, and
you can withdraw as soon as you win your money back.
It’s a free country: you can have one throw,
two, or any number you please. But don’t
say you were coerced, if you lose.”
Tresco answered by putting his ten pounds in the pool.
The situation seemed to amuse Young
William. He stood behind the goldsmith’s
chair, holding his sides to suppress his laughter,
and making pantomimic signs to Garstang, who looked
on with stolid composure and an evil smile.
The players made their throws, and Carnac won the
pool.
“Never mind,” cried the
Prospector, with strong expletives. “There’s
my stake let me have another shy.
Game to the finish.” He rose to his feet,
threw his money down on the table with a bang, reeled
as he stood, and sat down heavily.
And so the game went on. No luck
came to Tresco, and but a few pounds remained in front
of him. “One more Kitty, and that finishes
me,” he said, as he placed his stake in the
pool.
As usual, he lost.
“Here’s seven pounds left,”
he cried. “Even money all round, and sudden
death on a single throw.”
The final pool was made up. The
digger threw first a paltry seven.
Dolphin followed with five. It was Tresco’s
turn to play next, and he threw eleven.
Carnac dallied long with the dice.
He was about to throw, when the Prospector rose from
his seat and, swaying, caught at the suave gambler’s
arm for support. With a rattle the dice-box fell.
Carnac uttered an oath. Before the players three
dice lay upon the table.
Tresco swore deep and loud, and in
a moment had fastened both his hands upon the cheat’s
throat. Carnac struggled, the table with all its
money fell with a crash, but the sinister Garstang
made a swift movement, and before Tresco’s face
there glittered the barrel of a revolver.
“Drop him,” said Garstang
hoarsely. “Loose hold, or you’re dead.”
The goldsmith dropped his man, but
Garstang still covered him with his weapon.
“Stow the loot, William,”
said Dolphin, suiting the action to the word; and
while the two trusty comrades filled their pockets
with gold and bank-notes, Carnac slunk from the room.
With a heavy lurch the digger tumbled up against the
wall, and then fell heavily to the floor.
“Don’t give so much as
a squeak,” said Garstang to the goldsmith, “or
you’ll lie beside your mate, only much sounder.”
Dolphin and Young William, laden with
booty, now retired with all speed, and Garstang, still
covering his man, walked slowly backward to the door.
He made a sudden step and was gone; the door shut with
a bang; the key turned in the lock, and Benjamin Tresco
was left alone with the insensible form of Bill the
Prospector.
“Hocussed, by Heaven!”
cried the goldsmith. “Fleeced and drugged
in one evening.”