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He knew that he must have an instant to think or else go mad. With careless gesture he threw a couple of louis upon the table before him, not caring where they fell, and once again the wheel of chance revolved.
What did this mean? There was no answer to his agonised mental inquiry.
He saw Ethel and her mother bending over a card covered with figures--one of those system cards so frequently seen at the tables, so certain to end in disaster.
He saw also the pallor of their faces. He realised in a flash of intuition that they were losing heavily.
How to warn them, how to tell them that he and he only possessed the secret key to Fortune to-night he could not think, he could not divine.
Again he glanced at his card. Habit had become mechanical. His watch pointed to ten minutes past the hour. His directions stood clear and plain in the cypher before him.
He sorted out his notes and did what was directed.
Up there, on the top of the Hotel Malmaison, Emile Deschamps was even at that moment pressing a certain key. The result was as inevitable as sure as Fate.
And as Fate or, rather, the cunning of science, the immense trickery of the two young geniuses, spoke, Basil saw that Ethel McMahon and her mother were very hard hit.
He watched them slant-wise from the ends of his spectacles, realising, more definitely than ever, that they were playing upon some fallacious scheme, and being sure--with a jerk of memory--that old Mrs. McMahon had unearthed one of her late husband's systems, and was pursuing it to her own ruin.
Again he won, and by now he was a rich man. The excitement was tremendous, when suddenly the tall man in evening dress announced a suspension of play.
Basil Gregory had "broken the bank."
There is a prevalent idea, among those who do not know much about Monte Carlo, that breaking the bank means that the whole play of the Casino is stopped for the night on which it occurs.
This is quite wrong.
"Breaking the bank" simply means that the resources of a particular table, out of the dozen or so tables on which roulette is played, are exhausted for a moment. In five minutes new money is brought and play goes on.
It was so now. There was a hurried consultation, and in no time lackeys were bearing oak coffers bound with bra.s.s, filled with money, to Basil's table, accompanied by three or four frock-coated officials.
The money was spread out in rows before the princ.i.p.al paying croupier, and six minutes had hardly pa.s.sed when once more the calm, pa.s.sionless voice of the director was calling upon the players to "make their game."
But in the interim, as Basil Gregory leant back in his chair, he had heard, with ears quickened by anxiety and love, these words from Ethel to her mother--words spoken in English:
"But, mother, we _cannot_ go on."
Then the answer, in a sort of wail of despair: "We must go on, Ethel.
This next coup is certain to put us right. We must pay no attention to the extraordinary luck of that young Russian n.o.bleman opposite. We must adhere to your father's system. If this coup goes wrong, then we can only play twice again, and all our money will be exhausted. But I have every faith in your father's system."
Then Basil heard something about "courage," and, finally, a whispered lamentation that "our capital is so small."
Three numbers upon his cypher-card had pa.s.sed by during the rebringing of money to the table.
Glancing at his watch, he saw that the time was ripe for him to play upon 16.
He was gathering up the necessary money to put upon the board, when the sallow man from the Administration pushed through the people surrounding him and whispered in his ear.
If he liked, the official did not press it at all, monsieur should have the opportunity of playing three coups against the bank. That is to say, that the ordinary maximum should be entirely abrogated in favour of monsieur, and any sum he cared to wager upon an even chance, the Administration would be pleased to meet.
The colloquy was very rapid. Deschamps had told Basil that such a thing might happen--such an offer be made to him. When a player has temporarily suspended the game at a certain table--or, in common parlance, "broken the bank"--the authorities are nearly always ready for a final sensational coup.
Basil nodded. "Certainly," he said, pulling out bundle after bundle of notes. "I will play 200,000 francs on red."
The number 16 is a red number. Basil wagered almost his whole winnings of that night without a tremor.
There was now a dead silence round the table. People cl.u.s.tered about it ten deep in the vain effort to see what was going on. Yet, while the wheel was turned and the ball spun, the only unconcerned person about this gigantic stake was Basil Gregory himself.
No one else put a single coin upon the table, save only a trembling old lady who sat by a young and lovely girl--an obstinate old lady, clinging to a hope.
Basil was given notes to the value of 16,000.
The most notable thing about the Casino, with its enormous resources, is the absolute impa.s.sibility of its officials.
Again Basil wagered 8,000--this time upon black.
He won, and as his money was being paid to him a loud murmur rose from the crowd--a loud murmur, broken by a sharp and pulsing cry.
A tall and beautiful girl had risen from her feet and had fallen in a deep swoon into the arms of the bystanders behind her.
There was an immediate struggle. The electric tension of the moment was over. The well-dressed crowd surged and almost fought in a panic of snapped nerves and suddenly relaxed excitement.
People came surging from all sides. The other tables were deserted, and, far away through the great halls, those who were playing _trente-et-quarante_ rose from their cards with listening ears.
In that supreme moment Basil Gregory did not lose his head. He gathered up his enormous winnings. The pockets of his coat bulged with wealth.
And Ethel McMahon was being carried out into the Atrium, followed by her mother in a state of wild hysteria, before he rose from his seat.
He took six thousand-franc notes from one of his pockets. To each of the six croupiers he gave a note.
Then he sauntered quietly out into the huge hall.
Under the brilliant electric lights which gleamed upon the marble he saw little groups of people--each group seeming quite small in the immensity--talking earnestly together.
As he came out among them every head was turned, though of Ethel and her mother he saw not a trace.
But as he went to the cloak-room, and delivered his metal ticket, two or three commissionaires came up to him with awed and respectful faces.
"That young lady?" he said, "and the elder one with her?"
"It was nothing, monsieur," one of the men hastened to say. "They are two English ladies staying at the _pension_ in the Rue Grimaldi. Your success, monsieur, unnerved them. They have been sent home in a _voiture_."
Basil nodded as he was helped into his long, dark coat.
With a smile he distributed a few gold coins, and then, alone, unattended, he walked out into the warm, aromatic night, and strolled to his adjacent hotel among flower-bordered paths, under the twin lights of electricity and the great, red moon of the South.
At the Hotel de Paris, at the Metropole, at Ciro's, people were gathering for gay supper parties.
As he entered the huge, brilliantly decorated lounge of the Malmaison, groups of wealthy people were smoking a preliminary cigarette before supper. Some of them--many of them--recognised him, and nodded and whispered to each other, but he entered the lift and went straight to his own room.