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    Cry Wolf

    Page 3
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      usually a decent game down at the club."

      "We can't go in there. We aren't members."

      "I have reciprocity with my London club, old boy.

      Sign you in, what?" They had played for an hour and a half. Jake was

      enjoying the game. He liked the style of the establishment, for he

      usually played in less salubrious surroundings the back room behind the

      bar, an upturned fruit-crate behind the main boiler in an engine room,

      or a scratch game in a dockside warehouse.

      This was a hushed room with draped velvet curtains, expanses of dark

      wood panelling, dark-toned oil paintings and hunting trophies

      shaggy-maned lions, buffalo with huge bossed horns drooping

      mournfully,

      all of them staring down with glassy eyes from the walls.

      From the three billiard tables came the discreet click of the ivory

      balls, as half a dozen players in dress shirts and braces, black ties

      and black trousers, evening jackets discarded for the game, leaned

      across the heavy green-topped tables to play their shots.

      There were three tables of contract bridge from which came the murmur

      of bid and counter bid in the cultivated tones of the British upper

      class, all the players in the dress that Jake thought of as penguin

      suits black and white, with black bows.

      Between the tables, the waiters moved on silent bare feet, in

      ankle-length white robes and pillbox fez, like priests of some ancient

      religion bearing trays of sparkling crystal glass.

      There was only one table of draw poker, a huge teak structure with

      brass ashtrays set into the woodwork, and niches and trays to hold the

      whisky glasses and the coloured ivory chips. At the table sat five

      players, and only Jake was not in evening dress the other three were

      the type of poker players that Jake would dearly love to have kept

      locked up for his exclusive pleasure.

      There was a minor British peer, out in Africa to decimate the wildlife.

      He had recently returned from the interior, where a white hunter had

      stood respectfully at his elbow with a heavy-calibre rifle,

      while the peer mowed down vast numbers of buffalo, lion and

      rhinoceros.

      This gentleman had a nervous tic under his right eye which jumped

      whenever he held three of a kind or better in his hand.

      Despite this affliction, a phenomenal run of good cards had allowed him

      to be the only winner, other than Jake, at the table.

      There was a coffee planter with a deeply tanned and wrinkled face who

      made an involuntary little hissing sound whenever he improvised on the

      draw or squeezed out a pleasing combination.

      On Jake's right hand was an elderly civil servant with thinning hair

      and a fever-yellow complexion who broke out in a muck sweat whenever he

      judged himself on the point of winning a pot an expectation which was

      seldom realized.

      In an hour's careful play, Jake had built up his winnings to a little

      over a hundred pounds and he felt very warm and contented down there

      where his dinner was digesting. The only element in his life that

      afforded him any disquiet was his new friend and sponsor.

      Gareth Swales sat at his ease, conversing with the peer as an equal,

      condescending graciously to the planter and commiserating with the

      civil servant on his run of luck. He had neither won nor lost any

      significant amount, yet he handled the cards with a dexterity that was

      impressive. In those long tapering fingers with the carefully

      manicured nails, the pasteboards rustled and rippled, blurred and

      snapped, with a speed that defied the eye.

      Jake watched carefully, without appearing to do so, whenever the deal

      passed to Major Gareth Swales. There is no way that a dealer,

      even with the most magical touch, can stack a deck of cards without

      facing them during the shuffle and Gareth never faced the deck as he

      manipulated it. His eyes never even dropped to the cards, but played

      lightly over the faces of the others as he chatted. Jake began to

      relax a little.

      The planter dealt him four to an open-ended flush, and he filled it

      with the six of hearts. The civil servant, who had an insatiable

      curiosity, called his raise to twenty pounds and sighed and muttered

      mournfully as he paid the ivory chips into the pot and Jake swept them

      away and stacked them neatly in front of him.

      "Let's have a new pack-" smiled Gareth, lifting a finger for a servant,

      and hope that it breaks your run of luck." Gareth offered the seal on

      the new pack for inspection, then split it with his thumbnail and

      unwrapped the pristine cards with their bicycle-wheel designs,

      fanned them, lifted the jokers and began to shuffle, at the same time

      starting a very funny and obscene story about a bishop who entered the

      women's rest room at Choring Cross Station in error.

      The joke took a minute or two in the telling and in the roar of

      masculine laughter that followed, Gareth began to deal, skimming the

      cards across the green baize, so that they piled up neatly before each

      player. Only Jake had noticed that during the bishop's harrowing

      experiences in the ladies" room, Gareth had blocked the cards between

      shuffles, and that each time as he lifted the two blocks he had rolled

      his wrists so that for a fleeting instant they had fanned slightly and

      faced.

      Guffawing loudly, the baron gathered up his hand and looked at it.

      He choked in the middle of his next guffaw, and his eyelid started to

      jump and twitch, as though it was making love to his nose. From across

      the table came a loud hiss of indrawn breath as the planter closed his

      cards quickly and covered them with both hands. At Jake's right

      hand,

      the civil servant's face shone like polished yellow ivory and a little

      trickle of sweat broke from his thinning hairline, ran down his nose,

      and dripped unheeded on to the front of his dress shirt, as he stared

      at his cards.

      Jake opened his own cards, and glanced at the three queens it

      contained. He sighed and began his own story.

      "When I was first engineer on the old Harvest Maid tied up in

      Kowloon, the skipper brought a fancy little dude on board and we all

      got into a game. The stakes kept jumping up and up, and just after

      midnight this dude dealt one hell of a hand." Nobody appeared to be

      listening to Jake's story, they were all too absorbed with their own

      cards.

      "The skipper ended up with four kings, I got four jacks and the ship's

      doctor pulled a mere four tens." Jake rearranged the queens in his

      hand and broke off his story while Gareth Swales fulfilled the civil

      servant's request for two cards.

      "The dude himself took one card from the draw and the betting went mad.

      We were throwing everything we owned into the pot. Thanks,

      friend, I'll take two cards also." Gareth flicked two cards across the

      table, and Jake discarded from his hand before picking them up.

      "As I was saying, we were almost stripping off our underpants to throw

      it all in the middle. I was in for a little over a thousand bucks Jake

      squeezed open the new cards and could hardly suppress a g
    rin. All the

      ladies were there. Four pretty little queens peered out at him.

      "We signed IOUs, we pledged our wages, and the dude came right along on

      the ride, not pushing the betting but staying right there."

      Gareth gave the baron one card and drew one himself.

      They were listening now, eyes darting from Jake's lips to their own

      cards.

      "Well, when it came to the showdown, we were looking at each other

      across a pile of cash that came to the ceiling and the dude hit us with

      a straight flush. I remember it so clearly, in clubs three to the

      eight. It took the skipper and me twelve hours to recover from the

      shock and then we worked out the odds on that deal just happening

      naturally it was something like sixteen million to one. The odds were

      against the dude and we went looking for him. Found him down at the

      old Peninsula Hotel, spending our hard-won gold. We were preparing for

      sea at the time. Our boilers were cold. We sat the dude on top of

      them, and fired them.

      Had to tie him down, of course, and after a few hours his knockers,

      were roasting like chestnuts."

      "By God," exclaimed the peer.

      "How awful."

      "Quite right," Jake agreed. "Hell of a stink in my engine room." A

      heavy charged silence settled over the table all of them aware that

      something explosive was about to happen, that an accusation had been

      made, but most of them not certain what the accusation was,

      and at whom it had been levelled. They held up their cards like

      protective shields, and their eyes darted suspiciously from face to

      face. The atmosphere was so tense that it pervaded the gracious

      room,

      and the players at the other tables paused and looked up.

      I think," Gareth Swales drawled in crisp tones that carried to every

      corner of the listening room, "that what Mr. Barton is trying to say

      is that somebody is cheating." That word, spoken in these

      surroundings, was so shocking, so charged with dire consequence, that

      strong men gasped and blanched. Cheating in the club, by God, better a

      man be accused of adultery or ordinary murder.

      "I must say that I have to agree with Mr. Barton." The icy blue eyes

      snapped with angry lights, and he turned deliberately to the bewildered

      member of the House of lords beside him.

      "I wonder if you would be good enough, sir, to inform us as to the

      exact amount of our money that you have won." The voice cracked like a

      whiplash, and the peer stared at him with complete incomprehension for

      a moment and then his face mottled purple and crimson, and he gobbled

      angrily.

      "Sir! How dare you. Good God, sir!-" and he rose in his seat,

      breathless, choking with outrage.

      "Have at him!" cried Gareth, and overturned the heavy teak table with

      a single upward thrust of both hands. It crashed over, pinning the

      planter and the civil servant under it, and scattering ivory chips and

      playing cards in such profusion that nobody would ever know what cards

      Gareth Swales had dealt to himself in that last remarkable deal.

      Gareth leaned across the struggling mass of downed players and clipped

      the peer smartly under the left ear.

      "Cheating! Ha! Caught you cheating!" The peer roared like a bull and

      swung a full-armed punch under which Gareth ducked lightly, but which

      went on to catch the club secretary between the eyes, as he hurried up

      to intervene.

      The room erupted into violence, as the other members rushed in to

      assist the secretary.

      Jake tried to reach Gareth, through the sudden seething storm of

      bodies.

      "Not him, you!" he shouted angrily, flexing his arms and knotting his

      fists.

      There were forty club members in the room. Only one person was not

      dressed in the uniform that showed they belonged Jake in his baggy

      moleskins and the pack turned on him.

      "Watch out behind you, old boy," Gareth warned Jake in a friendly

      fashion, as he reached out to take the lapels of Gareth's suit in his

      hands.

      Jake whirled to meet the rush of angry members, and the fists that were

      bunched for Major Swales thudded into the charging group. Two of them

      dropped but the rest swarmed on.

      "Lay on!" Gareth encouraged him merrily. "And damned be he who cries

      "Enough"." Miraculously he had armed himself with a billiard cue.

      By now, Jake was almost totally submerged under a heaving mound of

      black evening dress. There were three of them riding on his back, two

      hanging around his legs, and one tucked under each of his arms.

      "Not me, you fools. Not me him!" He tried to point to Gareth,

      but both his arms were occupied.

      "Quite right," Gareth agreed. "Dirty cheating dog!" and he wielded

      the billiard cue with uncanny skill, holding it inverted and tapping

      the thick end smartly against the skulls of the well-dressed gentlemen

      riding on Jake's back. They dropped away, and freed of their weight

      Jake turned to Gareth once more.

      "Listen-!" he bellowed, advancing despite the bodies that clung to his

      legs.

      "Listen, indeed." Gareth cocked his head, and the sound of a police

      whistle shrilled, and there was the glimpse of uniforms beyond double

      doors. "Peelers, by Jove, Gareth announced. "Perhaps we should move

      on. Follow me, old son." With a few expert swings of the billiard

      cue, he knocked the glass from the window beside him, and stepped

      lightly and unruffled into the darkened garden.

      Jake strode along the unlit footpath under the dark jacaranda trees. He

      followed the main road out towards his camp beside the stream. The

      outraged cries and the sound of police whistles had long since died

      away in the night behind.

      Jake's anger had also died away, and he chuckled once as he thought of

      the peer's purple face and his bulging affronted eyes. Then behind

      him, following along the dark street, he heard the rhythmic squeak of

      the springs of a ricksha, and the pad of bare feet.

      Even before he looked back, he knew who was following.

      "Thought I'd lost you," Gareth Swales remarked lightly, his handsome

      noble features lit by the glow of the cheroot between his teeth as he

      lolled against the cushions of the ricksha. "You took off like a long

      dog after a bitch. fantastic turn of speed. I was very impressed."

      Jake said nothing, but strode on towards his camp.

      "You can't possibly be bound for bed." The ricksha kept station beside

      Jake. "The night is still a pup and who can say what beautiful

      thoughts and stirring deeds Care still to be thought and performed."

      Jake tried not to grin, and kept going.

      "Madame Cecile's?"Gareth wheedled.

      "You really do want those cars don't you?"

      "I am hurt,"

      announced Gareth, "that you should imply gross materialism to my

      friendly overtures."

      "Who is paying? "demanded Jake.

      "You are my guest."

      "Well, I've drunk your beer, eaten your food why should I stop now?" He

      stopped and walked to the ricksha. "Move over, then, he said.

      The ricksha driver wheeled in a tight turn and trotted back into
    the

      town, while Gareth pressed a cheroot between Jake's lips.

      "What did you deal yourself?" Jake asked, between puffs of the

      fragrant smoke. "Four aces? Straight flush?"

      "I am appalled at the implied slur on my character, sir. I shall

      ignore the question." They jogged a little farther in silence until it

      was Gareth's turn to ask the next question.

      "You didn't really roast that poor fellow's chestnuts, did you?"

      No, "Jake admitted. "But it made a better story." They reached the

      door of Madame Cecile's, discreetly set back in a walled garden, with a

      lamp burning over the lintel.

      Gareth paused with his hand on the brass knocker.

      "You know damned if I don't owe you an apology. I've misjudged you all

      along the line."

      "It's been a lot of laughs."

      "I think I'm going to have to be honest with you."

      "I don't know if I can stand the shock." They grinned at each other

      and Gareth punched his shoulder lightly.

      "It's still my treat, what?" Madame Cecile was so tall and thin and

      bosorriless that she seemed in danger of snapping off like a brittle

      stick. She wore a severely cut dress of dark and indeterminate colour

      which swept the ground and buttoned up under her chin and at the

      wrists. Her hair was drawn back tightly into a large bun at the back

      of her neck and her expression was prim and disapproving, but it

      softened a little when she let them into the front room.

      "Major Swales, it is always a pleasure. Mr. Barton, we haven't seen

      you in a long while. I was afraid you'd left town."

      "Let us have a bottle of Charlie Champers, my dear." Gareth handed his

      silk scarf to the maid. "Have you run out of the Pal Roger 1923?"

      "Indeed not,

      Major."

      "And we'd like to talk alone for a while before meeting any of the

      young tallies. Is your private lounge vacant?" Gareth was settled

      comfortably in one of the big leather armchairs with a glass of

      champagne in one hand and a cheroot in the other.

      Duce is about to put himself in to bat. Though God alone knows what he

      hopes to gain by it. From all accounts, it's the most desolate stretch

      of desert and mountain one could imagine. However,

      Mussolini wants it perhaps he has visions of empire and glory. The old

      Napoleonic itch, you know."

      "How do you know this?" Jake was sprawled on the buttoned couch across

      the room. He wasn't drinking the champagne. He didn't like the

     


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