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They were a little surprised, however, to find Blackie Daw at breakfast with Wallingford, but they greeted that old comrade with great cordiality, coupled with an inward fear that he might interfere with their designs upon Wallingford.
"You haven't been making a book against J. Rufus on the day's races, have you?" inquired Phelps.
"Not yet," said Blackie, laughing, "but I'm willing. What's he on?"
"Whipsaw," interposed Wallingford.
Blackie laughed softly.
"I don't know the horse," he said, "but I just seem to remember that he's the joke of the track."
"No," explained Larry; "he's too painful to be a joke."
"What odds do you expect to get, Wallingford?" asked Blackie, reaching for his wallet.
"Hold on a minute," said Phelps hastily. "You don't want to b.u.t.t in on this, Daw. We've been making book for J. Rufus all week, and it's our money. You hold stakes."
"Don't you worry," snapped Wallingford, suddenly displaying temper; "there will be enough to go around. I'll cover every cent you four have or can get," and he pushed his chair back from the table. "This is my last day in the racing game, and I'm going to plunge on Whipsaw.
I've turned into cash every resource I had in the world. I've even soaked my diamonds and watch to get more. Now come on and cover my coin." From his pocket he produced a thick bundle of bills of large denomination. "What odds do I get? The last time Whipsaw was in a race he opened at twelve to one and I ought to get fifteen at least to-day. Here's a thousand at that odds."
"Not on your life!" said Short-Card Larry. "I wouldn't put up fifteen thousand to win one on any game."
"What'll you give me, then? Come on for this easy money. Give me ten?"
No, they would not give him ten.
"Give me eight?"
They hesitated. He immediately slid the money in his pocket.
"You fellows are kidding. You don't want to make book for me. I'll take this coin out to the track and get it down at the long odds."
His display of contemptuous anger decided them.
"I'll take my share," a.s.serted Short-Card Larry, he of the quick temper, and among them the four made up the money to cover Wallingford's bet.
"Here's the stakes, Blackie," said Wallingford, pa.s.sing over the money toward him. "You're all willing he should hold the money?"
They were. They knew Blackie.
"Moreover," observed Yap Pickins meaningly, "we'll keep close to him."
"Here's another thousand that you can cover at five to one," offered Wallingford, counting out the money.
Now they were as eager as he.
"We'll take you," said Teller, "but I'll have to go out and get more mezuma."
"All right. Bring all you can sc.r.a.pe together and I'll cover the balance of it at two to one."
For just one moment they were suspicious.
"Look here," said Billy Banting, "do you know something about this horse?"
"If I did I wouldn't tell. Don't you know that I can get from fifteen to twenty at the track? Why do you suppose I want to make such a sucker bet as this? It's because I'd rather have your money than anybody else's; because I want to _break_ you!"
He was fairly trembling with simulated anger now.
"If that's the case you'll be accommodated," said Teller with an oath.
"Come on, boys; we'll bring up a chunk of money that'll stop all this four-flush conversation."
Mr. Phelps, having already "produced to his limit," stayed with Wallingford while the others went out. First of all, they dropped in at a quiet pool-room where they were known, and made inquiries about Whipsaw. They were answered by a laugh, and an offer to "take them on for all they wanted at their own odds," and, rea.s.sured, they scattered, to raise all the money they could. They returned in the course of an hour and counted down a sum larger than Wallingford had thought the four of them could control. He was to find out later that they had not only converted their bank accounts and all their other holdings into currency, but had borrowed all their credit would stand wherever they were known. Wallingford, covering their first five thousand with one, calmly counted out an amount equal to one-half of all the rest they had put down, pa.s.sed it over to Blackie to hold, then flaunted more money in their faces.
"This is at evens if you can sc.r.a.pe up any more," he offered sneeringly. "Go soak your jewelry."
Before making that suggestion he had noted the absence of Larry's ring and of Billy's studded watch-charm. Phelps was the only one who still wore anything convertible, a loud cravat-pin, an emerald, set with diamonds.
"Give you two hundred against your pin," said he to Phelps, and the latter promptly took the bet.
"Are you all in?" asked Wallingford.
They promptly acknowledged that they were "all in."
"All right, then; we'll have a drink and go out to the track. You'll want to see this race, _because I win_!"
They were naturally contemptuous of this view, even hilariously contemptuous, and they offered to lend Wallingford money enough, after the race, "to sneak out of town and hide."
While they were taking the parting drink Blackie Daw slipped into Wallingford's bedroom for just one moment "to get a handkerchief."
There he found, mopping his brow, a short, thick-set chap known as Shorty Hampton, a perfectly reliable and discreet betting commissioner.
"I was just goin' to duck," growled Shorty in a gruff whisper. "I've got two or three other parties to see. I've been suffocating in this d.a.m.ned little room for the last hour, waitin'."
"All right. Here's the money," said Blackie, and handed him _half the stakes which had just been intrusted to his care_. "Spread this in as many pool-rooms as you can; get it all down on Whipsaw."
"Three ways?" asked Shorty.
"Straight, every cent of it," insisted Daw. "No place or show-money for us to-day."
At the track they saw Beauty Phillips alone in the grand-stand, and joined her. Wallingford introduced Blackie, and they chatted with her a few moments, then Wallingford took him away. He did not care to have Jake Block see them with her until after the fourth race. As they moved off she gave Wallingford a quick, meaning little nod.
True to Pickins' threat the quartet kept very close indeed to Daw, but, during the finish of the rather exciting third race, Blackie, manoeuvering so that Wallingford was just behind him, slipped from his pocket the remaining half of the stake-money.
"Well, boys," said Wallingford blandly, the money safely tucked away in his own pocket. "I still have a little coin to wager on Whipsaw. Do you want it?"
"No; we're satisfied," returned Larry dryly.
"All right, then," said Wallingford. "I'm going down and get it on the books."
Harry Phelps sighed.