<h2 id="c5"><span class="small">CHAPTER V.</span> <br/>A TURN OF LUCK.</h2>
<p>The effect of Moses Flood’s entrance into his gambling
place was magical. It was as if a king had come into
the presence of half-a-dozen squabbling courtiers.</p>
<p>Godard shrank back in his lookout chair and relapsed
into silence. The several players who had risen in the
brief excitement resumed their seats with an air of unconcern,
and the dealer continued his shuffling of the
cards.</p>
<p>“What’s the trouble?” Flood quietly demanded.</p>
<p>He halted for a moment, erect and motionless, with
his piercing eyes bent darkly on the scene.</p>
<p>“Nothing much, sir,” rejoined the humpback, as he
dropped the bar across the closed door. “A bit of
backcap, that’s all. It’s over now.”</p>
<p>“It had better be,” was the significant response.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
<p>Flood’s keen eyes had taken in the situation, yet his
coldly dispassionate countenance masked his feelings as
with a veil of ice. He passed back of the table, gravely
greeting the several players, then paused to gaze down
at the sleeping youth on the couch.</p>
<p>“Did he come in with you?” he asked, turning soberly
to Cecil Kendall.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the latter, with a faint smile crossing
his pale face. “We have been over to Boston. Only
returned this noon.”</p>
<p>“He has been drinking heavily, hasn’t he?”</p>
<p>“Rather.”</p>
<p>“Wayward fool!”</p>
<p>“I tried to dissuade him,” muttered Kendall. “He’s in
no shape to go home, so we dropped in here.”</p>
<p>Flood’s face was clouded with a censorious frown as
he turned away to place his hat on a rack near-by.</p>
<p>Godard had made no further remarks, but sat staring
oddly at Kendall, who now appeared to ignore him.</p>
<p>The humpback had resumed his position at the end of
the table, with his legs curled under him in his chair,
with his ungainly head drawn down between his
shoulders, and his attention directed upon the movements
of the dealer, who had thrust the cards into the
box and was about to start a new deal.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
<p>Just then, however, Moses Flood approached him from
behind and detained him with a significant touch on the
shoulder.</p>
<p>Bruce did not commence to deal.</p>
<p>“How are they coming, Kendall?” Flood quietly asked,
with a glance at the former’s chips.</p>
<p>“Rocky,” said Kendall, with a sickly smile.</p>
<p>“That so?”</p>
<p>“Win these, Mose, and you have my pile. I shall be
down and out, in more senses than one.”</p>
<p>Flood knew too well what he meant, yet his countenance
did not change by so much as a shadow. He addressed
the dealer, saying gravely:</p>
<p>“Go and get your supper, Tom, and I will deal while
you are out,” said he. “I shall wish to be away for an
hour or two after you return.”</p>
<p>“All right, sir.”</p>
<p>“You, Godard, may rearrange that sideboard, if you
will. It looks as if it had been struck by lightning. The
cues can declare it if I overpay.”</p>
<p>“Not much danger of that, Mr. Flood,” smiled Godard,
as the two men at once complied.</p>
<p>Flood made no reply. He wheeled the lookout’s chair
a little to one side, as if it was in his way. In fact, however,
he wanted no one in it during the next half-hour.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
<p>Then he took the dealer’s seat at the table, that which
Tom Bruce had vacated.</p>
<p>“You may draw the curtains back of me, John, and
close the window. I feel a draft,” said he, addressing
the cuekeeper.</p>
<p>He never called him by his nickname. In his sight the
deformed man’s affliction was great enough as it was.
This showed of what the nature of Moses Flood was
capable.</p>
<p>He had removed his coat and opened his vest. He was
rather slow in his movements, and not without an object.
He had been on fire within. He now was cooling down.
He was setting his nerves to the extraordinary task he
saw before him.</p>
<p>As the humpback left the window, Flood turned as if
to see that it was closed. For the moment his face was
averted from the several players. Only Humpty Green
could see it, and he caught from Flood’s eyes a flash that
thrilled him through and through. It was a magnetic
telegram, an unuttered command. It was understood,
and the cuekeeper was startled; but even the cuekeeper
in a faro-bank commands his emotions. Without a
change of countenance he resumed his seat.</p>
<p>Meantime, Nick Carter and Chick had sauntered over
to the sideboard, then dropped into two chairs near the
<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
wall, where they sat, quietly talking and pretending to
be sizing up the game.</p>
<p>“There’s your man, all right,” murmured Chick, when
Kendall’s name was mentioned.</p>
<p>“Yes,” nodded Nick. “That is about what I expected.”</p>
<p>“Are you going to arrest him?”</p>
<p>“Not at present. I’m not sure that he is guilty of
embezzlement, and Gilsey wished to give him till to-morrow
to report at the bank.”</p>
<p>“You’ll keep an eye on him, eh?”</p>
<p>“Rather.”</p>
<p>“Yet——”</p>
<p>“Wait a bit,” muttered Nick. “By Jove! there’s something
out of the ordinary going to come off here.”</p>
<p>“Think so?”</p>
<p>“Look at Flood’s face. It’s as colorless as marble.”</p>
<p>“So ’tis, Nick.”</p>
<p>“There is something in the wind. He has got rid of
his dealer and sent his lookout from the chair. By all
that’s good and great, Chick, I believe he’s up to some
extraordinary move.”</p>
<p>“You’ll wait to see?”</p>
<p>“I should say so.”</p>
<p>None of this was overheard by others, and the two
<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
detectives gave no sign of observing anything unusual.
It took Nick’s keen eyes and broad experience, moreover,
to detect in Moses Flood the slightest indication of what
he had in mind.</p>
<p>Flood had reverted to the table, and the light again
fell full on his face. It was pale, yet composed; stern,
yet not evil; expressive, yet changeless.</p>
<p>He was thinking of the girl to whose hand he had
aspired, of the rector whose censorious words still were
ringing in his ears; and he was thinking, too, of the
wretched man seated opposite, a man who had fallen
lower and sinned deeper than he had ever done.</p>
<p>He was about to do what only one man in millions
would have done. He believed what the rector had told
him, that Dora Royal loved this man, who, were his sin
to be brought home to him, would become a criminal at
law and an outcast of society.</p>
<p>For the sake of the girl, and to preserve her happiness,
Moses Flood, looking for no return, not so much even as
a smile of gratitude, was about to secretly sacrifice a
goodly part of his fortune upon the altar of his own hopeless
affection.</p>
<p>He had spoken the truth, this man, when he said, “Even
a gamester may love nobly, and be capable of great self-sacrifice.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
<p>Yet his face was a mask, hiding the emotions within.</p>
<p>One man only among all his observers could read it
aright—Nick Carter.</p>
<p>Flood laid aside the deal box lately used, and took
another from a lower drawer of the table, of which he
alone had the key.</p>
<p>The box appeared to be precisely like the other—but
it was not. With slight manipulation, the dealer could
lower an invisible plate within, thus widening the slot
through which the cards were dealt, allowing the passage
of two cards instead of one. The mechanism could not be
discovered, except with close examination, and even then
a novice would not detect it.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter with the other box?” demanded
a player, at once betraying a gambler’s suspicions.</p>
<p>“Nothing that I know of,” said Flood coldly. “Why
do you ask?”</p>
<p>“Well, for no reason. I wondered why you shifted,
that’s all.”</p>
<p>“Because I wanted to,” said Flood. “I prefer to work
with my own tools. Are you suspicious? If so, you are
not invited to play.”</p>
<p>“That’s true enough.”</p>
<p>“If my word is of weight with you, however, you may
<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
be sure that a false card was never dealt in this place, to
my knowledge.”</p>
<p>And he spoke the truth.</p>
<p>“The game is strong enough without it,” smiled Kendall,
over whom, as over all, Moses Flood seemed to
exercise a strangely magnetic influence.</p>
<p>The latter made no reply, but took from the same
drawer a deck of cards bound with a rubber, which he
deliberately removed and threw to the floor. They were
well seasoned, and of a rare and expensive quality, and
unique design. They were of the kind known as “crazy
backs.”</p>
<p>Nick Carter recognized them the moment his gaze
lighted on them. He leaned nearer to Chick and whispered
quietly:</p>
<p>“I begin to suspect what’s coming off here, Chick.
That’s a brace box, for a hundred.”</p>
<p>“The dickens! Do you think so?”</p>
<p>“I do, indeed. And that deck of cards he has just
brought up, Chick, is a deck of strippers.”</p>
<p>“What are strippers, Nick?”</p>
<p>“Cards used for dealing one kind of a brace game,”
whispered Nick. “They are cut just the least bit wider
at one end than the other. The narrow ends of the
cards forming the middle of the layout are turned one
<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
way in shuffling, and those comprising the ends of the
layout are turned the other.”</p>
<p>“What’s the idea of that?”</p>
<p>“Simple as two and two,” replied Nick softly. “After
shuffling the deck, the dealer takes the wide end of the
cards between his thumbs and middle fingers, and with
a movement so rapid as to defy detection, he strips them
apart. Then he holds in one hand the cards corresponding
to the ends of the layout, and in the other those comprising
the middle. After putting them together, and
placing them in the box, he knows almost to a certainty
which cards are to win and which to lose throughout the
deal.”</p>
<p>“The devil you say!” muttered Chick. “Then there
must, indeed, be something coming off here.”</p>
<p>“Wait and see.”</p>
<p>Now, a word concerning the brace game Nick had
partly described. Suppose that a player bets heavily
upon an end card of the layout to win.</p>
<p>The dealer sees that the bet is placed correctly, and for
him to win the amount wagered it is necessary for him to
reverse the combination of the cards. What does he do?
He presses down on the secret plate in the box, and in
making the turn, instead of dealing two cards, a winner
and a loser, he deals three, and so adroitly that the
<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
deception is not observed. This reverses the combination,
and the player referred to must lose. It is called
“taking a card.”</p>
<p>But it is necessary, also, that the cues should show
correctly at the end of the deal. The cuekeeper watches
the dealer attentively. The latter, after taking a card,
signs by prearranged signals to the former, who raps
once with a chip against the side of the cue-rack, which
signifies that the card taken is recorded, and at the end of
the deal the cues are right.</p>
<p>Sometimes the cards are marked also, that the dealer
may know each turn before making it. This is called
“dealing at sight.”</p>
<p>What is all this that has been described? It is one way
by which men thrust their hands into their brother’s
pocket and rob him. It is more ignoble than stopping one
in the darkness, and commanding him, at the point of a
weapon, “Stand and deliver!” It is one of the methods
by which is dealt the perfidious “brace faro!”</p>
<p>Such was the box and such the cards which Moses
Flood had placed on the table before him.</p>
<p>The goggle eyes of Humpty Green began to open
wider, his ungainly face to grow pale and grave. He
had never known of such in the place, but the master
<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
had commanded and the menial would obey. He drew
his chair closer to the table.</p>
<p>Amid that momentous silence which invariably marks
the opening of a new deal, Moses Flood, his pale features
fixed like marble, his eyes steadfastly intense, his white
hands nerved to their performance, began to shuffle the
cards. His movements were rapid and graceful. In the
flash of an eye he had stripped the deck asunder, cut it,
and placed it in the box. A six showed at the top; the
ends of the layout were winners, the middle losers.</p>
<p>Flood sat back in his chair and waited the placing of
bets. With an experienced eye he sized Kendall’s remaining
chips; there were about six hundred dollars’
worth. The other players were wagering small amounts,
and he gave them no attention. His mind was upon the
man directly opposite.</p>
<p>Kendall’s hand trembled when it placed his first bet.
He went on to the six to lose. He believed that he alone
of all the world knew his dire need of winning.</p>
<p>This bet was wrongly placed, and Flood knew it, yet
made a turn. There was no decision, but a king had
showed winner, and Kendall coppered the next. In
a spirit of antagonism he was bucking the cards.</p>
<p>Moses Flood leaned forward and glanced down upon
the box. He could see the edges of the three top cards.
<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
They were marked by small, red dots, invisible to the
players. Suddenly he made the turn. It was done like
a flash. His forefinger touched for an instant the left
lower corner of the box, and the silence was broken by
the quick, responsive rap of the cuekeeper. He had
taken a five. The cue was marked up, and the combination
was reversed.</p>
<p>Cecil Kendall had won his first bet—and the face of
the humpback was a study; for, by taking the card, the
dealer, contrary to all precedent, had forced himself to
lose!</p>
<p>Humpty Green decided that Moses Flood had made a
mistake.</p>
<p>The good luck seemed to encourage Kendall. He
placed another bet—and won. He doubled the amount,
and won again. He moved bet and payment to the corner
of a card, and said in tones tremulous despite him:</p>
<p>“That goes both ways.”</p>
<p>He whispered the turn—it was followed by a rap from
the cuekeeper.</p>
<p>The latter’s face was now livid from uprising excitement,
and his eyes like glowing coals. There could be
but one meaning to what he saw—Moses Flood was indeed
dealing a “brace game,” but he was dealing it
against himself, and forcing Cecil Kendall to win! With
<span class="pb" id="Page_60">60</span>
form quivering in his chair, the menial looked at the master.
He might as well have looked at the ceiling.</p>
<p>To Kendall it seemed like the interposition of fate.
The spirit of fortune inspired him. He observed that his
last bet topped the limit, yet he had not been stopped.</p>
<p>“How high can I go?” he asked suddenly, looking up
at the dealer.</p>
<p>“Till I call you down,” answered Flood, with unmoved
countenance.</p>
<p>“Look out, or I’ll break you,” laughed Kendall nervously,
his face flushed, his eyes glowing.</p>
<p>“You cannot break me,” replied Flood, with calm
gravity.</p>
<p>“How much can I win?”</p>
<p>The question came with strangely abrupt eagerness.</p>
<p>“Ninety thousand dollars,” was the nonchalant rejoinder.</p>
<p>A momentary pallor swept over Kendall’s face at the
mention of the sum, and his glittering eyes flashed for an
instant on Flood; but the latter’s countenance, void of
insinuation, was as cold and calm as a sea of ice. The
player’s brow darkened slightly, and his lips became
drawn in the intensity of his mental action. Had he
known what the humpback, shaking in his chair, knew
<span class="pb" id="Page_61">61</span>
at that moment, he would have won the sum in half-a-dozen
turns.</p>
<p>“God!” he cried to himself. “What would that be to
me! it would place me on my feet again! It would
make me a man again—a man worthy of life and of her!
God above, is it possible to win it?”</p>
<p>He saw a possibility, one chance in a hundred, and
took it. He was well worthy his reputation of a high-roller.
Down he went upon the layout with his chips;
now betting one, now two, now three hundred dollars on
a card.</p>
<p>The chips before him gathered like Arctic snow. One,
two, three thousand dollars was passed—and yet he won.
His face burned as from fever. He was on fire within.
He could scarcely comprehend what was taking place, but
that it was was sufficient; and a fervent hope, banishing
sober contemplation, urged him on. He pressed his bets
from two to three, and from three to five hundred, yet
Moses Flood never spoke. He was glad to see him do
so, for the other players, astounded by the seeming run
of luck, were beginning to follow Kendall.</p>
<p>The silence, oppressive in its intensity, was broken only
by the occasional rap of the cuekeeper and the labored
breathing of the sleeping youth upon the sofa.</p>
<p>“Last turn,” said the humpback suddenly, his voice
<span class="pb" id="Page_62">62</span>
deep and husky in his throat. “An ace, five, and seven
in.”</p>
<p>Then, for the first time during the deal, did Moses
Flood glance at the cue-rack, and raising his eyes, like
stars in his stoical face, he gave its keeper a look of
such intensity that the fellow fairly shuddered in his
chair. It was a command of silence which he dared not
disobey.</p>
<p>Cecil Kendall placed his bets, and Flood made the
turn.</p>
<p>The cues were right, despite the fact that six cards
had been taken, and the humpback breathed a sigh of
relief.</p>
<p>Something like an exclamation of triumph, half suppressed,
broke from Kendall’s lips. He had called the
turn and emptied the check-rack.</p>
<p>The recreant cashier of the Milmore Trust Company
had won twenty thousand dollars on the deal.</p>
<p>He had experienced a wonderful turn of luck.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
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