Harold SITS in A game.
When Elizabeth Compton broached to
her father the subject of a much-needed rest and a
trip to the Orient, he laughed at her. Why, girl,”
he cried, “I was never better in my life!
Where in the world did you get this silly idea?”
“Harold noticed it first,”
she replied, “and called my attention to it;
and now I can see that you really have been failing.”
“Failing!” ejaculated
Compton, with a scoff. “Failing nothing!
You’re a pair of young idiots. I’m
good for twenty years more of hard work, but, as I
told Harold, I would like to quit and travel, and I
shall do so just as soon as I am convinced that he
can take my place.”
“Couldn’t he do it now?” asked the
girl.
“No, I am afraid not,”
replied Compton. “It is too much to expect
of him, but I believe that in another year he will
be able to.”
And so Compton put an end to the suggestion
that he travel for his health, and that night when
Bince called she told him that she had been unable
to persuade her father that he needed a rest.
“I am afraid,” he said
“that you don’t take it seriously enough
yourself, and that you failed to impress upon him the
real gravity of his condition. It is really necessary
that he go—he must go.”
The girl looked up quickly at the
speaker, whose tones seemed unnecessarily vehement.
“I don’t quite understand,”
she said, “why you should take the matter so
to heart. Father is the best judge of his own
condition, and, while he may need a rest, I cannot
see that he is in any immediate danger.”
“Oh, well,” replied Bince irritably, “I
just wanted him to get away for his own sake.
Of course, it don’t mean anything to me.”
“What’s the matter with
you tonight, anyway, Harold?” she asked a half
an hour later. “You’re as cross and
disagreeable as you can be.”
“No, I’m not,” he
said. “There is nothing the matter with
me at all.”
But his denial failed to convince
her, and as, unusually early, a few minutes later
he left, she realized that she had spent a most unpleasant
evening.
Bince went directly to his club, where
he found four other men who were evidently awaiting
him.
“Want to sit in a little game
to-night, Harold?” asked one of them.
“Oh, hell,” replied Bince,
“you fellows have been sitting here all evening
waiting for me. You know I want to. My luck’s
got to change some time.”
“Sure thing it has,” agreed
another of the men. “You certainly have
been playing in rotten luck, but when it does change—oh,
baby!”
As the five men entered one of the
cardrooms several of the inevitable spectators drew
away from the other games and approached their table,
for it was a matter of club gossip that these five
played for the largest stakes of any coterie among
the habitues of the card-room.
It was two o’clock in the morning
before Bince disgustedly threw his cards upon the
table and rose. There was a nasty expression on
his face and in his mind a thing which he did not
dare voice—the final crystallization of
a suspicion that he had long harbored, that his companions
had been for months deliberately fleecing him.
Tonight he had lost five thousand dollars, nor was
there a man at the table who did not hold his I. 0.
U’s. for similar amounts.
“I’m through, absolutely
through,” he said. “I’ll be
damned if I ever touch another card.”
His companions only smiled wearily,
for they knew that to-morrow night he would be back
at the table.
“How much of old man Compton’s
money did you get tonight?” asked one of the
four after Bince had left the room.
“About two thousand dollars,”
was the reply, “which added to what I already
hold, puts Mr. Compton in my debt some seven or eight
thousand dollars.”
Whereupon they all laughed.
“I suppose,” remarked
anther, “that it’s a damn shame, but if
we don’t get it some one else will.”
“Is he paying anything at all?” asked
another.
“Oh, yes; he comes across with
something now and then, but we’ll probably have
to carry the bulk of it until after the wedding.”
“Well, I can’t carry it
forever,” said the first speaker. “I’m
not playing here for my health,” and, rising,
he too left the room. Going directly to the buffet,
he found Bince, as he was quite sure that he would.
“Look here, old man,”
he said, “I hate to seem insistent, but, on the
level, I’ve got to have some money.”
“I’ve told you two or
three times,”’ replied Bince, “that I’d
let you have it as soon as I could get it. I
can’t get you any now.”
“If you haven’t got it,
Mason Compton has,” retorted the creditor, “and
if you don’t come across I’ll go to him
and get it.”
Bince paled.
“You wouldn’t do that,
Harry?” he almost whimpered. “For
God’s sake, don’t do that, and I’ll
try and see what I can do for you.”
“Well,” replied the other,
“I don’t want to be nasty, but I need some
money badly.”
“Give me a little longer,”
begged Bince, “and I’ll see what I can
do.”
Jimmy Torrance sat a long time in
thought after the Lizard left. “God!”
he muttered. “I wonder what dad would say
if he knew that I had come to a point where I had
even momentarily considered going into partnership
with a safe-blower, and that for the next two weeks
I shall be compelled to subsist upon the charity of
a criminal?
“I’m sure glad that I
have a college education. It has helped me materially
to win to my present exalted standing in society.
Oh, well I might be worse off, I suppose. At
least I don’t have to worry about the income
tax.
“It is now October, and since
the first of the year I have earned forty dollars
exactly. I have also received a bequest of twenty
dollars, which of course is exempt. I venture
to say that there is not another able-bodied adult
male in the United States the making of whose income-tax
schedule would be simpler than mine.”
With which philosophic trend of thought,
and the knowledge that he could eat for at least two
weeks longer, the erstwhile star amateur first baseman
sought the doubtful comfort of his narrow, lumpy bed.
It was in the neighborhood of two
o’clock the next morning that he was awakened
by a gentle tapping upon the panels of his door.
“Who is it?” he asked. “What
do you want?”
“It’s me bo,” came
the whispered reply in the unmistakable tones of the
Lizard.
Jimmy arose, lighted the gas, and opened the door.
“What’s the matter?” he whispered.
“Are the police on your trail?”
“No,” replied the Lizard, grinning.
“I just dropped in to tell you that I grabbed
a job for you.”
“Fine!” exclaimed Jimmy. “You’re
a regular fellow all right.”
“But you might not like the job,” suggested
the Lizard.
“As long as I can earn an honest
dollar,” cried Jimmy, striking a dramatic pose,
“I care not what it may be.”
The Lizard’s grin broadened.
“I ain’t so sure about
that,” he said. “I know your kind.
You’re a regular gent. There is some honest
jobs that you would just as soon have as the smallpox,
and maybe this is one of them.”
“What is it?” asked Jimmy. “Don’t
keep me guessing any longer.”
“You know Feinheimer’s Cabaret.”
“The basement joint on Wells Street?”
asked Jimmy. “Sure I know it.”
“Well that’s where I got you a job,”
said the Lizard.
“What doing?” asked Jimmy.
“Waiter,” was the reply.
“It isn’t any worse than
standing behind a counter, selling stockings to women,”
said Jimmy.
“It ain’t such a bad job,”
admitted the Lizard “if a guy ain’t too
swelled up. Some of ’em make a pretty good
thing out of it, what with their tips and short changing—Oh,
there are lots of little ways to get yours at Feinheimer’s.”
“I see, “said Jimmy; “but don’t
he pay any wages?”
“Oh, sure,” replied the Lizard; “you
get the union scale.”
“When do I go to work?”
“Go around and see him to-morrow
morning. He will put you right to work.”
And so the following evening the patrons
of Feinheimer’s Cabaret saw a new face among
the untidy servitors of the establishment—a
new face and a new figure, both of which looked out
of place in the atmosphere of the basement resort.
Feinheimer’s Cabaret held a
unique place among the restaurants of the city.
Its patrons were from all classes of society.
At noon its many tables were largely filled by staid
and respectable business men, but at night a certain
element of the underworld claimed it as their own,
and there was always a sprinkling of people of the
stage, artists, literary men and politicians.
It was, as a certain wit described it, a social goulash,
for in addition to its regular habitues there were
those few who came occasionally from the upper stratum
of society in the belief that they were doing something
devilish. As a matter of fact, slumming parties
which began and ended at Feinheimer’s were of
no uncommon occurrence, and as the place was more
than usually orderly it was with the greatest safety
that society made excursions into the underworld of
crime and vice through its medium.