登陆注册
37907400000018

第18章 CHAPTER IX. HAROLD SITS IN A GAME.(1)

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."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 人生NG重启后的日子

    人生NG重启后的日子

    没有高学历没有高收入,默默无闻的生活,过着平淡无奇的生活,对爱情对婚姻都是任劳任怨,以老公为中心的活着,她以为生活爱情也就是这样了!可万万没想到如此贤惠一心一意的自己,却遭到了背叛,生活陷入了绝望,就这样她结束了自己失败的人生,或许才是最好的!可老天却不让,或许是打开方式不对,她的人生得到了重启,带着前世的记忆重新活了过来,可生活又曾放过了谁,火灾,失去双亲,抢夺财产,在欺压中她明白过来,既然让她重新来过,那她就要活成自己想要的样子,要为自己而活,至于感情她再也不会相信了……
  • 傲世凌天:重生嫡女狠嚣张

    傲世凌天:重生嫡女狠嚣张

    她苦心孤诣辅助自己的夫君登上王位,却在登基之日换来一纸诏书,被冠上偷情之罪,压入地牢,择日行刑。七年的感情,原来却只是他下的一盘棋,自己只是其中一颗小小的棋子。心有不甘,拿血为引,以己之魂,封己之魄,换己重生。这一世,她如同厉鬼般归来,不再受人摆布,欺她辱她者,必杀之。然而,当她遇上对她百般苛护,温柔至极的他,不知她那颗被仇恨所蒙蔽的心是否会被洗涤,开出一朵爱情的花?
  • 墨家天下策

    墨家天下策

    这是一部以墨家精神为指引的铁血小说。乱世争霸,何为霸术。墨家为何在春秋战国兴盛一时,又迅速走向没落。我们每个人都可能是一个墨者,在每一个地方,践行自己的信仰!天下初新,从墨者始!
  • 诡案寻凶

    诡案寻凶

    是精神病人,还是天生警察?是绝世天才,还是犯罪大师?他们是最不像警察的警察,他们是最不像罪犯的罪犯。这里没有绝对的善良,这里没有绝对的邪恶。只有赤裸裸的事实。
  • 嫡女重生之繁花似锦

    嫡女重生之繁花似锦

    前世慕容晓晓被渣男欺骗,利用,最后还落得个死无全尸,最好闺蜜竟然害死自己的亲娘,哥哥,最后还如愿嫁给自己的夫君做妾,直到顶替自己成为世子妃,而自己则被他们这对狗男女囚禁,毁容,肆意折磨,百般凌辱直到再没有任何利用价值才得以解脱……晓晓以灵魂起誓:若有来生定让她们血债血偿……老天有眼睁眼让她回到了10岁那年岁……
  • 轻盏

    轻盏

    苏轻盏做了一个梦,梦到了前世陆湛因为她死于非命。于是梦醒之后陆湛莫名多了一个小跟班,还整天缠着他软着嗓子,“湛哥哥湛哥哥。”陆湛揉眉,罢了,看在她生的实在可爱,就由她缠着吧。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 帅哥,别惹女篮社!

    帅哥,别惹女篮社!

    皇啻王朝系列一:《撩妹A计划》哈利路亚!龙傲雨的工作之外,除了生活。生活之外,只有工作。还能改变吗?有,工作时,狂撩小秘书陈白凤,兼具工作乐趣,外带减压。
  • 寻灵仙途

    寻灵仙途

    道法残缺,玉石补之;道法齐全,玉石美之。且看一名根骨普通的少年如何凭借一块神奇的玉石风云九州,扬名仙界。
  • 君下无双,陪你

    君下无双,陪你

    我堂堂z国第一首席特工竟然也会犯这种低级的错误,,被人暗算致死,,,,,,(1)'啊!头好痛。”君冰突然疑惑的睁开眼,突然看到一张如神邸一般菱角分明,俊美异常,浑身散发冷气的男人。。。。。(2)“冰,你在这先等着我,等为夫给你报仇。”说罢便轻轻放下君冰,朝着前方走了好远。。。。。。(3)还没等君冰反应过来便猛地亲向她,,,,,,,本文男女主皆身心干净,女主逗比风格,该冷是就冷外加大腹黑,男主腹黑强大腻宠女主一个人,,,喜欢的欢迎跳坑,岚岚会很努力的更的!