Page Ten, P E R S P EC T IV E S .NCE IN C49,74egTIMES Continued from Page Five fished in his pocket, laying his cards down, and pulled out a grimy bill. Red stared at him. So did John. Of all the dumb tricks. For an instant Red was scared he might have them, but he had seen John glance over the kid's shoulder as he came back in, ad John was too surprised at the move. "Red?" Charley asked, and handed the bill across the table. "Sure," Red said and passed him a small stack of chips. "Your five, and five better," Charley said in a strained easy tone. But his face showed too much to let him get away with it. There was more money on the table than he earned in three weeks washing dishes and mopping up and peeling spuds from four in the morning until eleven at night. "Call," said Brit. "Too much for me," Red said calm- ly, and put his cards down. What the hell did he care what they thought? He watched Rag. Jesus, he wasn't go- ing to - oh, that was better. But he almost hadn't. You just couldn't tell what a dumb one was liable to do. Too bad about Charley too, but he was paying for his education, that was the way to figure it. "I call too," Rag said after opening up his cards, looking at the three queens, closing the cards, then opening them again to make sure.- "Two pair," Charley said, showing fives and nines. "Jesus Christ," Brit said. "And you raised on them. Three tens." He showed them, and reached toward the pot. "Ha, boy! Wait a minute, Brit. Three queens!" Rag's voice was happy, loud with relief. One by one he slapped the queens on the table, and then grinning like a kid he raked the pot in front of him. "By God, best pot I've won today. Watch out, boys, I'll have all your money pretty soon." Charley stood up, holding back tears because he was a man among men now. He swallowed the lump again and said, "Well that cleans me, boys. Guess I'll go help with supper." His voice was cheerless, his attempt at a good los- ing smile even more so. "O. K., boy," they said, and without a word of sympathy they went on with the game. He stood looking as they passed their cards to Rag, then as Rag started his awkward shuffling Charley turned and went out on deck. There was a fog coming up fast now, and the cold damp made him shiver, but he stood at the rail looking out over the water, not crying, no more than tears standing in his eyes, his nose running a little. All that money. None to send home again. Home. They'd just be set- ting down to supper now, and the dark would be coming down. And, oh gee. No friends, none of them gave a whoop here. If he was home, gee. Swallowing hard, he turned. away from the rail and walked around to the galley. "Poor kid," Brit said as he gathered his cards. "The hell," John said toughly. "If he don't know no better he's got it coming to him." He waited for his last card before picking up his hand. RED DIDN'T SAY anything. He was for blood this hand. Over him there had settled that cold, killer feeling. He was keyed up but calm. A sharp, impersonal hate for every man at the table was in him, and his nerves, his mind, his eyes, his ears, all tingled with concentration. Every one of them had something right now, he knew. There was silence. A feeling. of hidden battle in the air. But Red knew he would win this hand. He wasn't kidding himself, but he knew his luck was with him, he had felt this way before, and never got fooled. It would be the last game, because when he got through they'd all be cleaned. He spread the cards, one by one, and almost yelled, or made some break. He looked again hard at each card to make sure one of them wasn't a diamond. No, by Christ he had a royal flush in hearts, dealt cold without a draw! The first time in twenty years of poker. He had to fight the impulse to lay them down without going on with the hand. God damn! Brit had three sevens and a couple of fives, and for the first time in the game he was interested and wanting to win. While he had been sitting there he had got to thinking about that little brunette up at the union office in Toledo. One good pot and he'd have enough to show her a good time. "Say five, boys," he said. "And five," Red added, putting ten chips out. Brit thought fast. Maybe Red had a full house too. Only thing to do was shoot the works, take a chance on getting four sevens. Well, what woul John say? John wanted to laugh at them. He knew they were beat. Here were three aces, club, spade, diamond. Nobody else had the fourth. He would draw for it, but even if he didn't get it, three aces would beat in this game. Odds were too big against four of a kind in straight five-card draw. The dumb turds, they'd see. He'd have their money pretty soon. "I say five more," John said, look- ing around calmly, holding back the edge of triumph in his voice. "Jesus Christ," Rag said. His hand didn't look too good, but it could be. A possible straight, or even a straight flush if he was plenty lucky. "Well, I got plenty of dough, I'll stick," he added after thinking a minute. He could save the eight, nine, and ten of diamonds, and maybe - well, he'd take a chance. But if he didn't get them, or if somebody bumped again before the draw, he was out. "I'll stay," Brit said, and slowly pulled the two fives out of his hand. Should he, or shouldn't he? Ah, take a chance. Go for the other seven. "o. K.," Red said, and tossed five chips in. Don't scare them out. Suck them in easy, easy. "Two?" Rag asked Brit, looking at the backs of the two cards raised above the other three. "Yeah, I guess so," and Brit tossed the pair down, still undecided. He look- ed at the top card Rag dealt him. Son of a bitch, a king of clubs. No chance now. He looked at the other card. A seven. Man alive, that brunette was his right now. Four of a kind. They couldn't beat it. "How many, Red?" Rag asked. "I'll keep these," Red said easily. "Who the hell you trying to bluff, Carnahan?" John couldn't help saying it, even if he scared Red out of the game and lost money. The Irish bas- tard thought he was so smart. "Oh, let's wait and see, eh, John?" Red said, his eyes looking into John's until the wop looked back at his cards again. I'll take two," he growled without look- ing up. God damn that Red, he asked for it. Some night maybe a knife, maybe a push over when he got too close to the rail and nobody was around. No, not the other ace, but two nines. Hell, a full house, three aces. Plenty. "I'm taking two myself, boys," Rag said, and carefully tossed two cards into the discard heap where Charley had sat, and counted out two cards for himself. The only reason his face didn't give him away was that he was so stunned no part of him could move. A straight flush in diamonds, queen high. He was a rich man. The kid could have skates and a bike 'too. She could have three new dresses, and she would put her arms around his neck, and oh boy he was lucky. If he hadn't won that last stand he'd never have dealt himself this one. They sat there quietly for a minute, every man sure he had the pot. Then the betting began, not big bets, but every man bumping until all the chips were out, and bills started to appear on the table. Red was surprised. He had known they had good hands, but not this good. Es- pecially he was surprised at Rag. Rag must have a hell of a good hand, be- cause ordinarily he lacked the guts to keep on like this for very long. Red was glad he knew what he knew, and glad they had cards too so that the pot would be fatter than it would have been if one of them had dropped out, He noticed that John was weakening. It was Rag sticking that was doing that. John glowered at his three aces. Could that son of a bitch Rag beat them? Could he beat a full-house? God damn dumb Rag, he wouldn't stay in like this unless he had a mitt full.' But Christ, he was in too heavy himself now to drop. Oh, why the hell did he ever play with a dumb guy like that? You couldn't tell anything about a guy who didn't know the first thing about the game. He might be crazy enough to bluff, or he might not realize that his cards weren't good, or - Jesus Christ! Now it wasn't Carnahan he wanted to knife, it was this dumb Rag who stuck right in, and raised him every time he raised Carnahan. Or raised him even if he didn't raise Carn- ahan. Well, God damn it, he was through. Most of his pay gone right now, but he'd save what was left. And Rag better have 'em. Red looked at him, smiling. "Staying, John?" he mocked, his tone reminding John about what he had said before. "No, you son of a bitch, I'm out," he snarled, and- threw his cards down. Now again he hated Carnahan, and would have killed him there at the table, only Canahan was bigger, could lick him in a fight. But later. Maybe out .on the lake tonight. He lit a ciga- rette and let his chin sink to his chest, seeing on the edge of the table the red hair floating in the black water, the last struggles for life. He smiled a lit- tle. Then again he didn't smile. Brit knew that he had only a buck left. If Red raised him, or if Red didn't but Rag did, he was through. It hurt him plenty. He was damn sure he could take this hand, but it was his own fault for never bringing more than half his pay to a game. But God this hand had run up so far above what any other he had seen on board here had that he couldn't blame himself. But he couldn't win either now, for Red had just raised him. Rag raised Red, and Brit dropped out. "God damn it," he breathed reluctantly, and thought one last time about the little brunette. Well, maybe she'd come across for the sake of the party line. Yeah, and maybe not. S IT WAS RIM and Rag now, Red thought. Him, Tom Carna- han, with a royal flush, Rag couldn't beat it no matter what they laid their cards down. But Rag have a real hand because a coward in poker only bets like this when he has them. Scared money never wins. No rent, no wife, no kid for Tom. If he lost he took it. If he won he deserved it. This was his royal flush, this was his time to know he couldn't lose. Rag raised him and he raised Rag. He could feel sorry for him, but he could feel in the sound of Rag's voice that Rag felt sorry for him. That voice was going to sound different when they laid down their cards. But Rag was excited. He looked down at his own hands. The palms were damp, only he could see it, but he was ashamed. He didn't get excited, that was for dubs, "Your five and five better." But all this money, it wasn't from Rag. It was a kid's, it was a homely little wife's. No put that away. Poker is poker. There aren't wives and kids behind the chairs. Battle, and the hell with it. Rag was like a kid, too greedy, grabbing at something with big eyes, and clawing, stretched fingers. And Red held it beyond his reach. Better to have been John or Brit. The kid would eat light this month. The wife and Ragsdale would go down to the bank maybe. If they could. No fun to take it this way. Bad business to know the guys you played with. Get it over with fast. "Well, I'll call you, Rag." At least never again with some guy he felt sorry for. Being mushy cost money, and it made you feel funny about so many things. Ragsdale's face became one wide, big boy grin. "Guess you better, Red," he chortled. "By Jesus, I been busting to show this hand. All I could do to keep from laying it down the minute I got it." He spread his straight flush out on the table. "There you are, Red. Bet you can't beat that." The strain gone, he beganto laugh very loudly, the con- trast between his laugh and the gloomy silence of the other three a bizarre one, almost weird. Red didn't lay down his hand until Rag stopped laughing. He fought the idea that came to him, fought so hard that sweat showed at the corners of his forehead. It would be so easy to just give the thing to the-dumb son of a bitch, just lay the cards face down, and not take the guy's money away from the ones who ought to have it. And he would feel good if he did.He would feel holy and clean, like way back when some other kid did a bad thing, and he knew he was better than that kid. Rag's laugh got nervous and stopped. Red laid his hand on the table, and spread the cards out, the ace on top. Red didn't say a word. He didn't smile. And Rag sucked in his breath so hard that you could hear it easy. He stared at the royal flush, he moved his arm as if to pick up the cards and feel them, There was no thought in Rag's head. Only "no, no, no," running in rhythm with the suddenly hard pulsing throb of his blood. Her, kid, didn't even exist. It was to win he had wanted, not for anything, just to win, not lose. He reached to gather up his cards and let his arm lie on the table. It felt heavy, he couldn't make the fingers close over his straight flush there. The dry lips he wet to say something, but he couldn't wet the tight, dry throat. He had made a shoving motion with the back of the hand that lay there on the table. It was all Red's he wanted to say. But even in shoving air with his hand he couldn't help clutching air with it as if to grab that pile of chips and bills. Just to get out of here was all he wanted. Any place but here. He could scarcely breathe, and he could- n't make himself talk. He stood like an old man, shoving hard on the arm of his chair, dragging his own arm across the table until it flapped loosely down against his side as he stood. A last time he looketd at the cards Red had laid down before him. He nodded his head vaguely and went out of the room. "Christ," Brit whispered as the door banged after the beaten. Red made no move to pull in the pot. He hadn't watched Rag leave, but he watched that right hand as long as it lay on the table. He stared at the place where it had lain, and there was still a small moist smudge there. As he watched, the -smudge be gan to contract, slowly 'at first, then Continued on PageTwelve