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CHAPTER IV
The unpleasant sensation of moving in the dark remained with Milbanke while a.s.shlin, still noisily excited, arranged the stakes, cut for the deal, and, having won the cut, distributed the cards. By nature he was lethargic and placid; by habit he was precise, methodical, and commonplace. The advent into this new atmosphere, with its inexplicable suggestions and volcanic outbursts, left him distressed and ill at ease. He was the type of man who, in every relation of life, likes to know exactly where he stands. Having once satisfied himself upon that point, he was usually content to follow the routine of existence without trouble to those around him; but until it was fully defined, he was a prey to a vague uneasiness.
So absorbed was he by the trend of his own speculations, that for the first five games he gave but small consideration to the play. Then, however, his host jogged his attention with no uncertain hand.
Pausing in the shuffling of the cards, he glanced across the table.
"You're playing like an old woman, James. Are your wits wool-gathering, that you've let me win every blessed game?"
Milbanke looked up. "Forgive me," he said hastily--"forgive me. I was thinking----"
"--Thinking that a broken-down devil of an Irishman isn't high enough game to fly at?" a.s.shlin laughed. "Well, I'll put some life into you.
I'll double the stakes. What do you say to that?"
He leant back in his chair, balancing the pack of cards in his hands.
Milbanke, with suddenly awakened observation, saw that his eyes glittered with excitement and that his lips were set.
"Double the stakes?" he echoed doubtfully. "Oh, certainly if you think it will improve the game. For myself I rarely play for money! I always think that the cards----"
"--Are sufficient in themselves, I suppose?" a.s.shlin laughed. "Don't you believe it, James? Or if you do, I'll teach you better. Come along!
In for a penny, in for a pound! Are you agreeable?"
For a moment Milbanke was thoughtful; then he became conscious of the other's impatient glance.
"Why--why certainly," he said. "Anything you like!"
"Spoken like a man!" a.s.shlin impulsively threw down the cards, and then gathered them up again. "I see the embalming process isn't completed yet. The antiquarians have left a shred or two of frail humanity in you. Well, we'll have it out. We'll put an edge on it. Come along!" He leant forward, the reckless brightness deepening in his eyes.
But Milbanke hesitated.
"Hadn't we better settle up the first score and start afresh?" he said.
"How do we stand?"
He put his hand into his pocket. But the other waived the point.
"Is it paying at this hour of the night?" he cried. "Give me a pencil, and I'll jot down our difference, if you're conscientious. But the balance will be on the other side before the candles are burned out.
The devil forgot to bring luck to the a.s.shlins since poor Anthony went below. But come along, man!--come along! Here's to the youth of us!"
He drained his gla.s.s; and turned again to the business of the cards.
During the next half-dozen games neither spoke. With deep absorption, a.s.shlin followed the run of the cards. Once or twice an exclamation escaped him; once or twice he paused to replenish Milbanke's gla.s.s or his own; but in every other respect he had eyes and thoughts for nothing but the business in hand. Milbanke, on the contrary--gambler neither by instinct nor training--was infinitely more interested in his opponent than in the play.
As he watched a.s.shlin, a score of recollections rose to his mind--recollections that time and advancing age had all but effaced. He recalled the numberless occasions upon which the Irishman, in the exuberance of youth, had sat over a gaming-table until the daylight had streamed in across the scattered cards, the heaped-up cigar-ashes and the emptied gla.s.ses; he reviewed the rare occasions on which his cajoleries had drawn him from his own mild pursuits to be a sharer in these prolonged revels; and with the memory came the thought of the headache, the sick sense of weariness that had invariably lain in wait for him the following morning. A wondering admiration for a.s.shlin had always held a place in these jaded after-sensations--a species of hero-worship for one who could turn into bed at four in the morning and emerge at nine with all the vigour and vitality of the most virtuous sleeper. He had never fully realised that to men of a.s.shlin's stamp dissipation, excitement, and action are potent stimulants, calling forth all the superfluous nervous energy that by nature they possess.
While the tide of life runs high about such men, they are borne forward, buoyed up by their own capacity for living and enjoying. To them, existence at high pressure is a glorious, exalted state, exempt from satiety or fatigue; it is the quieter phases of existence--the phases that to ordinary men mean rest, peace, domestic tranquillity and domestic interests--that these exuberant, ardent human beings have cause to dread.
An hour went by, and still the idea of a past, curiously reflected and curiously contradicted, absorbed Milbanke's perceptions. Then gradually but decisively it was borne in upon his mind that his absorption was blunting his common sense. He was playing execrably.
It has been said that he was no gambler; but neither was he a fool.
With something of a shock he realised that he stood a loser to the extent of seven or eight pounds. With the realisation he sat straighter in his chair. It was not that he grudged the money. He was generous--and could afford generosity. It was rather that that admirable quality which urges the Englishman to play a losing game was stirred within him.
"By Jove, Denis!" he said. "I must look to my laurels! I used to play a better game than this."
a.s.shlin's only answer was a laugh--a laugh from which all the bitterness had dropped away, leaving a buoyant ring of absorption and delight. Under the stimulus of excitement, he had altered. He was exalted, lifted above the petty discontent, the pessimism, the despondency that tainted his empty days.
And so for nearly two hours they played steadily; then Milbanke paused and drew out his watch.
"I don't know what sort of hours you keep in Ireland," he hazarded; "but it's nearly twelve o'clock."
a.s.shlin had paused to snuff one of the candles that had begun to gutter. At the other's words, he glanced up in undisguised surprise.
"Hours?" he repeated. "Why, any--or none at all. You don't know the glory of having something to sit up for." He paused for a second in a sort of ecstasy. "You don't know it; you can't know it! You have never felt the abomination of desolation."
He laughed feverishly and gathered up the cards afresh.
"Come, James! Your deal!"
And in this manner the night wore on. In the early stages of their play a.s.shlin's luck stuck to him determinately; but by degrees his opponent's more cautious and level play began to tell, and their positions were gradually reversed. By one o'clock Milbanke had made good his losses and even stood with some trifling amount to his advantage. Here again he had mildly suggested a cessation; but a.s.shlin, more intoxicated by bad than he had been by good fortune, had demanded his revenge, and called loudly through the quiet house for more candles and more wine.
But with the fresh round of play, the luck remained unaltered. Milbanke continued to win.
With a sleepy face, but no expression of surprise, Burke responded to his master's call, replenishing the light and setting the port upon the table. But the players scarcely noticed his entrance or departure.
a.s.shlin was playing with desperate recklessness; and Milbanke, without intent or consciousness, was slowly falling under the influence of his companion's excitement. As minute succeeded minute and a.s.shlin sat rigid in his seat--cutting, dealing, marking the result of each game upon a strip of paper--the elder man became more and more the satellite of thirty years ago, less and less the placid archaeologist for whom the follies of the present lie overshadowed by the past.
He forgot the long journey of the afternoon, the peculiar incidents of his arrival. A slight flush rose to his usually bloodless cheeks; he found himself watching the run of the cards with a species of reflected eagerness, roused to an unaccustomed elation when the advantage fell to him.
At three o'clock they played the last round. And it was only then--when the last card had been thrown on the table, and he had risen stiff from long sitting, the winner of something like twenty pounds--that he realised how completely he had been dominated by this resurrected influence; dominated to the exclusion of personal prejudice and even personal comfort. So strong was this impression of past influences that he was roused to no surprise when, glancing at his companion, he saw him temporarily rejuvenated--his expression alert, his whole face vivified by the night's excitement.
Again a touch of the old sympathy arose within him. The reckless, cynical man before him was momentarily effaced; the bright personality of long ago seemed to fill the room.
"Good-night, Denis!" he said gently, holding out his hand.
a.s.shlin caught it enthusiastically.
"Good-night, James!--good-night! And once more a thousand welcomes and a thousand thanks. You have been a drop of water in the desert to a parching man. Good-night, and pleasant dreams to you! I'll reckon up my losses in the morning and write you a cheque. Good-night!"
Milbanke responded to the pressure of his fingers.
"Don't trouble about the money," he said. "Any time will do--any time.
But you're turning in yourself? We'll be upstairs together?"
But a.s.shlin shook his head.
"Not yet," he said. "Not after this. I'll take a turn across the fields and have a look at the night on the water. I feel too much awake to be smothered by sheets and blankets. It isn't often we feel life here--and the sensation is glorious."
He drew up his tall, powerful figure and stretched out his arms. Then almost at once he let them fall to his sides.
"But what moonshine this is to you, you prosaic Saxon!" he exclaimed.