summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--75271-0.txt1762
-rw-r--r--75271-h/75271-h.htm2508
-rw-r--r--75271-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 646571 bytes
-rw-r--r--75271-h/images/coversmall.jpgbin0 -> 258716 bytes
-rw-r--r--75271-h/images/i_title.jpgbin0 -> 53188 bytes
-rw-r--r--75271-h/images/i_titledeco.jpgbin0 -> 18439 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
9 files changed, 4287 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/75271-0.txt b/75271-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b86b4e9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75271-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,1762 @@
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75271 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ TALES
+ OF THE
+ TURF
+
+ _By_
+ HUGH S. FULLERTON
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ A. R. DE BEER
+ PUBLISHER
+ New York City
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1922
+ by
+ A. R. DE BEER
+
+ _All Rights Reserved_
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+
+The publisher feels highly honored at being able, at this time, to
+present to the American public, from the pen of America’s foremost
+sports-writer and recognized authority, Hugh S. Fullerton, these
+stories of the American Turf, feeling sanguine that these tales,
+saturated with human interest, will be digested with as much pleasure
+and delight as the author took in writing and the publisher in
+publishing them.
+
+
+
+
+AUTHOR’S PREFACE
+
+
+All men love a horse who know a horse. The love of contest and struggle
+forms a kinship between man and horse that exists between no others. It
+is the gameness, the courage, the fighting spirit of the thoroughbred
+which arouses in man the finest instincts, and it is these qualities
+that cause the love of man for the thoroughbred. It is noticeable too,
+that the thoroughbred horse loves only those human beings who possess
+those same qualities.
+
+On the race-track we find the only pure democracy of the world, a
+democracy which includes all classes, all strata of society. It is more
+liberal, more forgiving of human frailties and human weakness, than any
+other place, because men who know racing understand how hearts break
+when the weight cloths are too heavy and the distance too great.
+
+These little tales of the turf are based upon real incidents and real
+characters. Perhaps those lovers of racing who have lived the life will
+recognize the characters, and to those I would plead that they extend
+to them the same broad understanding and forgiveness that they give to
+the tout, the cadger, and the down and outer in real life.
+
+ THE AUTHOR
+
+
+
+
+To Morvich
+
+_SON OF RUNNYMEAD AND HYMIR_
+
+_who has demonstrated to the world that handicaps of birth and breeding
+are not insurmountable--that the offspring of a sprinter can carry
+weight over a distance if he has the heart, that neither straight
+stifles, weight cloths nor distance counts against gameness and
+courage--this little volume is dedicated._
+ _THE AUTHOR._
+
+
+
+
+“HARDSHELL” GAINES
+
+
+“Hardshell” Gaines was the only name we knew him by, although had
+anyone been sufficiently interested to look through the list of
+registered owners of race-horses, he would have learned that Hardshell
+had been christened James Buchanan Gaines. The name might also have
+furnished a clue as to his age.
+
+Tradition was that he came from somewhere in Pennsylvania, as he spoke
+sometimes of the horses “up the valley”; but beyond the fact that
+he had a farm in Tennessee, where he bred and trained the horses he
+raced, nothing was set down in the “Who’s Who” of the turf. He was
+called Hardshell because he had once explained the difference between
+the Hardshell Baptists, to which denomination he belonged, and the
+Washfoots.
+
+He was an old man, thin and poorly dressed in baggy garments which
+carried the odor of horses and were covered with horse hairs. He loved
+horses, lived with them and for them and by them. In those days he
+emerged from his hibernation on the Tennessee farm when racing started
+at New Orleans and moved northward to Memphis, Louisville, Cincinnati,
+St. Louis, and Chicago, and in the fall he retraced the route and
+disappeared. He usually could be found working with some horse and
+humming an old hymn, and occasionally, when forgetful, he sang hymns
+aloud while brushing the horses.
+
+He was honest, which fact set him apart from the majority of the
+persons who follow horse-racing. According to the unwritten law of the
+turf, it was all right for a millionaire to race horses for sport and
+the purses, but a poor man was expected to do the best he could, dodge
+the feed man’s bill when possible, get a shade the best of the odds,
+keep under cover the fact that one of his horses was fit for a race
+until the odds were right, and, if possible, sell one or two colts to
+the wealthy owners at a fancy price to even the losses on the season.
+
+Hardshell Gaines violated all these rules. He was poor. He bred and
+raced horses because he loved them and loved the sport. He wagered two
+dollars on each horse he entered in a race, never more or less. He
+depended upon winning purses to meet expenses, and he refused to sell
+his best colts at any price. Each year he emerged from Tennessee with
+three or four fair selling-platers, a string of two-year-olds from
+which he hoped to develop a champion, and Sword of Gideon, better known
+as Swored at Gideon, his alleged stake horse and the pride of the Big
+Bend stables.
+
+Some of the race followers believed Hardshell to be rich. The
+suspicious ones (and suspicion has its breeding place on race-tracks)
+thought the old man laid big bets through secret agents whenever he was
+ready to win a race. When, at not too frequent intervals, one of his
+horses won, the wise ones nodded and whispered that old Hardshell had
+made another killing. Others of us who knew how many of the purses
+offered in selling races must be won to feed, care for, and transport
+eighteen or twenty horses, estimated his financial rating more closely.
+I knew there were times when second or third money in cheap races was
+welcome to help pay feed bills and jockey fees, and that in several
+lean times colts had disappeared from the Big Bend stables, having been
+sold secretly at low prices.
+
+No one ever heard Hardshell complain. His health was always “tol’able,”
+his horses were always “tol’able fast,” his luck was “tol’able,” and
+after replying thus to inquiries he hummed a hymn and went away. He
+never was with the crowd of owners and bookmakers around hotels or
+restaurants, but lived in the stables; and when little Pete, the
+diminutive negro jockey, rode out of the paddock, Hardshell, a timothy
+straw in his mouth and trousers laced into the tops of disreputable
+boots, sauntered into the betting ring, went to the stand of a
+bookmaker who had been his friend for years, wagered two dollars that
+his horse would win, and, without looking to see what the odds were,
+went down to the rail to root for his horse.
+
+Few knew that Hardshell cherished either an ambition or an enmity--but
+he did. His ambition was to breed and train a champion colt, and the
+object of his hatred was Big Jim Long, gambler, bookmaker, sure thing
+man, and the head of the Long Investment Company--and the ambition and
+the hatred were associated.
+
+Long was the Long Investment Company so far as advertising and general
+knowledge went, but the real head sat at a desk in a suite of offices
+in the lower Broadway district in New York, and, so far as anyone
+knew, never had been near a race-track. Not even his name was to be
+found in connection with the Long Investment Company. All letters,
+remittances, and transfers from branch offices were addressed to James
+Long, but the man who opened them was Thomas J. Kirtin, whose business,
+according to the modest lettering on the door of the back room, which
+opened upon an entirely different corridor from that upon which the
+Long Investment Company fronted, was “Investments.”
+
+Kirtin’s brain had evolved the idea of applying the all Tontine game
+to betting upon horse-races, and he had organized the Long Investment
+Company. In addition to the promise of certain dividends, the company
+added the appeal to the gambling instinct in human beings. It claimed
+that the reason persons who bet upon horse-races fail to beat the
+bookmakers is that the bookmakers have the preponderance of capital.
+The small bettor could not withstand a run of losses and the gamblers
+could. It proposed to turn the tables: all bettors were to pool their
+capital with the Long Investment Company, which, with its elaborate
+system of doping horse-races, its exclusive sources of information
+from owners and jockeys who were “interested,” and its perfect system
+of laying bets which would assure investors of the best odds on each
+race, would beat the game. Further, it was not as if a bettor wagered
+all on one race; the company would bet on three, four, possibly six,
+races a day on different tracks, betting only on inside information,
+and the winnings would be pooled and divided. One hundred per cent was
+guaranteed, and more if the winnings were larger.
+
+The public had shied at the proposition at first. Then those who had
+been lured by golden promises commenced to draw ten, fifteen, even
+twenty-five, per cent a month on their investments. On one occasion a
+“dividend” of seventy per cent was declared. The first investors had
+their money back and still were credited with the original investment.
+The news was received with incredulity, but as more and greater
+dividends were declared hundreds and then thousands had flocked to
+invest. Branch offices of the company, lavishly furnished and equipped
+with telegraph and telephone communications with all tracks, were
+established in a score of cities. Money poured into the Long Investment
+Company by tens of thousands, then almost by millions. Each month
+the “investors” received astonishing dividends. Some perhaps knew or
+suspected that the dividends were being paid out of the fresh capital,
+but, being gamblers, they threw their money into the gamble, betting
+that they would draw out their principal and more before the bubble
+burst.
+
+In New York, Kirtin waited, watching the expansion of the bubble and
+timing almost to the hour when the crash must come. In his safe nearly
+fifty per cent of the money received, changed into bills of large
+denominations, was packed in cases, and in his desk were reservations
+of staterooms on every vessel departing for Europe in the next
+fortnight. The bubble had endured longer than he expected. There was
+more than a million dollars packed in the cases, and more than that
+amount already had been transferred and deposited in various European
+banks. He hesitated, undecided as to whether to risk another week of
+delay--and decided that the time had come to reap the last harvest and
+permit the gleanings to remain.
+
+On the race-tracks Big Jim Long swaggered and continued his rôle
+as head of the company spending thousands and talking millions. He
+was a huge man, with a huge laugh, a round, ruddy face pink from
+much massage. He wore clothing of striking cut and colors, and his
+diamonds dazzled the eyes of jockeys and touts. He maintained an air
+of condescending familiarity with some and patronizing good fellowship
+with others, and he treated money as dross. Judges, stewards, and club
+officials watched Long closely and with some disappointment. Rumors
+that he had bribed jockeys, had influenced owners, that he had fixed
+races and engineered great killings, were whispered around the tracks,
+yet the officials could not discover any evidences of his guilt. Big
+Jim made no denials of the whispered accusations, but blatantly defied
+the officials to “get anything on him.” Moreover, the bookmakers, who
+watched his movements even more closely than the racing officials did,
+knew that he never had bet any large sums at the track, and Big Jim
+had sarcastically inquired if they thought him a fool to make bets for
+the company at the tracks, where the odds were made, when the company
+system was to scatter the bets over a score of cities and get better
+odds. Such bets as he made at the tracks were for his own account, and
+generally he lost, so that the small bettors who spied upon him, hoping
+to learn which horses the company were backing, suspected that he bet
+to blind them to the real identity of the horses the “killings” were
+made on. They believed that the Long Investment Company was winning
+vast sums. As a matter of fact, the Long Investment Company did not bet
+at all. Kirtin did not believe in gambling. Yet, oddly enough, Big Jim
+Long believed firmly and unshakably that, if he had complete control of
+the finances of the company, he could beat the races. He was convinced
+that with the capital of the Long Investment Company he could corrupt
+enough jockeys and owners to pay dividends legitimately and make a
+fortune for himself. Long would have been an easy victim of the game
+which he was helping perpetrate upon the public. Kirtin had no such
+illusions. Long had once argued the point with Kirtin in the privacy
+of the back room in New York, and Kirtin had called him a fool, with
+variations, prefix and addenda. And, as Kirtin sent him five thousand
+dollars a week with which to keep up the front of the Long Investment
+Company, Long had not pressed the point. Neither had he been convinced.
+
+It was against Big Jim Long that Hardshell Gaines cherished the one
+hatred of his life. It had started when Long sought to amuse himself
+and his friends by ridiculing Gaines and his stable. He had joked at
+the old man’s clothes, at his stable, his colors, and his jockey--and
+then had made the fatal blunder of ridiculing Sword of Gideon, calling
+him a “hound.”
+
+Perhaps nothing else would have aroused vengeful hate in the bosom
+of Hardshell, but to speak scornfully of Sword of Gideon was the
+unbearable insult. The Sword was Hardshell’s weakness, the consummation
+of his life’s ambition gone wrong. It was as if he had reared a
+strong, handsome son and seen him crippled and then laughed at.
+
+Hardshell had bred and reared the colt and named him, as he did all his
+other colts, from the Bible. As a two-year-old, racing against the best
+of the baby thoroughbreds of the West, the Sword had shown stamina,
+gameness, a racing instinct, and a dazzling burst of speed. He was
+royally sired, and even the millionaire owners agreed that Hardshell
+had at last produced a great colt. In mid-season he was rated as one of
+the two best two-year-olds of the year, and offers of large sums were
+made for him. He was eligible to race in all the big three-year-old
+stake races the next season, and Hardshell had refused to listen to any
+offer or set any price. He had set out to develop a champion racer down
+there on the little farm in the Big Bend of the Tennessee, a champion
+which would outrun and outgame the best of the country and win the
+American derby--then the greatest of all turf prizes.
+
+Late in August the thing happened. The colt was at the starting post in
+a six-furlong dash on the Hawthorne track when the barrier, a band of
+elastic, was broken by the lunging of another colt. The elastic band
+struck Sword of Gideon in the eye and maddened him with fright and
+pain. The accident seemed trivial, but the effect was the destruction
+of Hardshell’s life dream. Never thereafter would Sword of Gideon
+face the barrier without a fight. The memory of the stinging agony of
+that flying elastic was not to be effaced. A dozen times exasperated
+starters ordered him out of races and sent him back for further
+schooling at the barrier. Schooling was useless. He refused to face the
+thing which had hurt him. The only way in which he could be handled at
+the start of a race was for the jockey to turn his head away from the
+barrier, wait until the other horses started, then throw him around
+and send him after the flying field. Occasionally when the jockey
+swung him at the right second he had a chance to win. The majority of
+times he was handicapped five or six lengths on every start, and not
+infrequently when he heard the swish of the barrier he bolted the wrong
+way of the track. Look in the guide and after his name in many races
+you will find the brief record of a tragedy in the words, “Left at
+post.”
+
+The champion was ruined. But in the heart of Hardshell Gaines Sword
+of Gideon still was the champion. He worked over him as tenderly as a
+mother over a crippled child, and for him he sang his favorite hymns,
+as if striving to comfort the horse when he had behaved badly at the
+post. The newspapers, on account of his bad acting at the start, wrote
+of him as “Swored at Gideon.”
+
+Big Jim Long had called the Sword a “hound,” and thereafter Hardshell
+never spoke to him but passed him unseeing. At the bar one day Big
+Jim had noisily invited everyone to drink with him, and Hardshell had
+thrown away his beer and spat before walking away--and the open insult
+stung even Big Jim Long.
+
+All this was three years prior to the day when the affairs of the Long
+Investment Company reached their climax. In his New York offices,
+Kirtin realized that the finish was at hand. The bags filled with
+money had been removed from the safe in the luxurious offices of the
+Long Investment Company, carried through the door connecting them with
+the little office of Thos. J. Kirtin, Investments, and the door locked
+on both sides. Then Kirtin did the one decent thing of his career. He
+sent a code telegram to Long and to every agent of the company over the
+ganglia of leased wires, warning them that the jig was up and it was
+time to disappear.
+
+Probably it was not until he read that message that Big Jim Long
+understood the full significance of the situation. He never had stopped
+to ask himself why Kirtin had bestowed rank and titles upon him, why
+he had elected him president, and why all the ornate stationery and
+the many messages bore his name, or even why he had been paid five
+thousand dollars a week. Perhaps he thought he earned it by virtue
+of his influence among racing people. He understood now that he, Jim
+Long, would be held accountable to the law, that he would be fugitive
+or prisoner while Kirtin, with the millions of dollars looted from the
+public, could not be connected with the swindle and would be safe in
+Europe.
+
+He cursed Kirtin, and, strangely, not because Kirtin was a thief and
+worse. He cursed him because he considered Kirtin a fool. Had Kirtin
+followed his plan and advice, the scheme would have worked. With that
+almost unlimited capital behind him he could have fixed enough races
+and won enough money to pay the dividends.
+
+Long knew that within a day or two, three at the longest, the
+authorities would descend upon the company offices. With a sudden
+determination, Long sent a code order to every agent of the company to
+ignore Kirtin’s message and prepare for a killing.
+
+Let Kirtin go his cowardly way. He, Big Jim Long, would face the
+situation, pay the dividends, and handle the big money himself. He
+knew that at least a half million dollars remained in the hands of
+the agents of the company in different cities--the gleanings which
+Kirtin had not considered worth the risk to remain and collect. Long
+telegraphed, ordering the agents to hold all funds subject to his order
+instead of forwarding them to New York.
+
+Kirtin, busy clearing the desk in his office and destroying the last
+papers that would reveal any connection between Kirtin, Investments,
+and the Long Investment Company, heard the news and shrugged his
+shoulders. He had tried to save the fools, and if they refused to be
+saved it was none of his affair. An hour later he and his suitcases
+were in the stateroom of a liner.
+
+At the Fair Grounds track in St. Louis, Big Jim Long set to work
+hastily to stave off disaster and revive the investment company. He
+had considered telegraphing the authorities to hold Kirtin, but had
+rejected the plan as unbecoming one in his profession. Long’s plan
+of procedure was simple and direct. He would fix a race, pay the
+horse owners well, and win enough money to declare another dividend,
+restoring the faith of the investors, who already had begun to show
+signs of uneasiness as rumors spread. It was not a problem of morals
+but of mathematics.
+
+The chief obstacle to his plan was lack of time, and he knew he must
+act rapidly. Already the rumors that the Long Investment Company was
+in trouble had spread through the uneasy ranks of the gamblers, and
+Long knew the first one who informed a district attorney of the affairs
+of the company would bring the avalanche. By rapid work he completed
+his preliminary plans during the races that afternoon. An overnight
+handicap was carded for the next day’s races, and Long selected eight
+owners whose morals he knew were below the par even of racing and each
+agreed to enter a horse in the race. The chief problem was to prevent
+other owners from naming their horses to start, and to avoid this one
+owner agreed to enter Attorney Jackson, a high-class racer, to frighten
+owners of slower horses out.
+
+That evening a caucus was held. Besides Long, eight owners were
+present. It was agreed that with Attorney Jackson the favorite, the
+odds against Mildred Rogers would be at least fifteen to one, therefore
+by simple arithmetic Mildred Rogers should win, because fifteen times
+one is fifteen, whereas two times one is two. Long intended to bet the
+remnants of the capital of the investment company, and, figuring the
+price would recede from fifteen or twenty to one to ten to one before
+the money was placed, he estimated that he would win close to five
+million dollars. Not a cent was to be wagered at the track.
+
+The caucus, after nominating Mildred Rogers to win, decided that
+Attorney Jackson was to make the early running, cutting out a terrific
+pace to the head of the stretch, while Betty M. and Pretty Dehon were
+to come up fast, crowd the leader far outside on the turn, allowing
+Mildred Rogers to come through along the rail, after which the entire
+field was to bunch behind her and shoo her home a winner, while
+Attorney Jackson pulled up as if lame.
+
+The rehearsal was progressing satisfactorily and each owner was
+receiving instructions as to the way his horse should run. The caucus
+was pleased. Long had agreed that he would bet at least four hundred
+thousand dollars, and that he would give twenty-five per cent of the
+total winnings to the owners. The eight who were playing deuces wild in
+the sport of kings were calculating that they would divide at least a
+million dollars among themselves when the disquieting news arrived.
+
+“What the hell do you think of that?” Sorgan, owner of Patsy Frewen,
+demanded. “Old Hardshell Gaines has entered old Swored at Gideon.”
+
+There were a chorus of curses.
+
+“That hound of his ain’t got a chanst,” declared Kinsley. “It’s ten to
+one he runs the wrong way of the track.”
+
+“He’s the worst actor at the post on the circuit,” said Stanley.
+
+“He’s liable to bust up the start.”
+
+“Better pick one of our horses to bump him and put him over a fence,”
+snarled McGuire. “He ain’t got any business in this. He knows Attorney
+Jackson can beat him.”
+
+It was a testimonial to his reputation for honesty that not one
+of the assembled crooks even suggested asking Gaines to enter the
+conspiracy. They cursed him for an interfering old fool, they cursed
+his stubbornness, they cursed his idiocy in still insisting that Sword
+of Gideon was a stake horse, they cursed his supposed parsimony and
+believed he had entered his aged racer in the hope of winning a few
+dollars by getting the place or show money. Not one suspected that
+anything excepting blind chance had caused him to enter his horse in
+the race.
+
+They were wrong. Hardshell Gaines, with an unsullied record of fifty
+years on the turf, had heard something. He had seen Long in conference
+with some owners, and when the same owners rushed to enter their horses
+in the overnight handicap Gaines’ suspicion had become certainty. He
+had entered Sword of Gideon in the handicap, and for an hour afterward
+had rubbed and stroked the old campaigner, and as he rolled bandages
+around the bad leg of the old horse and applied liniment to his throat,
+he had hummed a hymn.
+
+Occasionally his voice rose in song and he sang of the time when “the
+wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest.” It was after
+dark when he entered the Laclede downtown and sought out the assistant
+starter.
+
+“Joe,” he said solemnly, “I have been in this game, man an’ boy, clost
+to fifty year and tried to run straight and do right as a hossman and a
+Baptist. No man can say James Buchanan Gaines owes him a cent or ever
+done a dishonest thing. I’ve done had a wrastle with my conscience, and
+consarn me if I believe it’s wrong to skin a skunk!”
+
+Joe nodded approval.
+
+“There’s something doing, Joe,” said Hardshell. “Eight of them owners
+and that slick crook Jim Long is holdin’ a caucus. Nary a word to old
+Hardshell, and the Sword is entered.”
+
+Joe nodded understandingly.
+
+“Lissen, Joe,” said Hardshell, lowering his voice. “Long is planning a
+big killing, and it’s up to me and the Sword and you to stop him. The
+Sword is good for once, if that nigh left leg don’t overheat. He can
+beat any hoss in that race, ’ceptin’ Attorney Jackson, and I reckon
+they ain’t plannin’ to have no favorite win.”
+
+Joe nodded again and reserved speech, waiting for the proposition.
+
+“I ain’t asking no man to do anything dishonest, Joe,” the old man went
+on--“it’s agin my religion and my conscience too--but something’s _got_
+to be done.”
+
+Hardshell waited expectantly and hummed “When temptation sore assails
+me,” hoping that Joe would indicate his attitude or show receptivity,
+but the assistant starter nodded and smoked in silence.
+
+“’Tain’t as if I was trying to bribe anyone,” Hardshell explained
+painfully. “I don’t want no one to do anything that is agin his
+conscience.”
+
+“What do you want me to do?” Joe asked, breaking his silence.
+
+“All I ask is that you help the Sword get off straight, and me and you
+and the Sword’ll spile the crookedest plan ever hatched.”
+
+“Ain’t any law against my helping a bad actor get off right,” said Joe.
+
+Hardshell said no more. He gripped Joe’s hand hard, and, after buying
+him a cigar, strolled away, humming “Come, Holy Spirit, Heavenly Love,
+with all thy quickening powers.”
+
+There was an air of uneasiness hanging over the betting ring at the
+Fair Grounds track as the horses hand-galloped to the starting post in
+the fourth race. The air was surcharged with expectancy. Judges, always
+alert and watching for signs of dishonesty, stared at the horses and
+received frequent bulletins from the betting ring. Bookmakers, fearful
+of a sudden attack by betting commissioners backing a certain horse,
+held their chalk and erasers ready for rapid use. Bettors, hearing
+vague whispers of “something doing,” asked each other excitedly what
+was being played. Yet everything in the betting ring, paddock, and
+stand seemed tranquil. The betting was light. Attorney Jackson was
+favorite at seven to five, Patsy Frewen the second choice, at two to
+one, the others at odds of from four to twenty, with Mildred Rogers
+ranging from fifteen to twenty to one and only a few scattered bets
+registered on her. Yet from a score of cities all over America came
+frantic telegrams to gamblers, bookies, and owners, asking for track
+odds and inquiring the meaning of the terrific plunging on Mildred
+Rogers. Big Jim Long, using the efficient organization of the company,
+was betting the remaining funds of the concern. More than fifty
+thousand was bet in Chicago, thirty thousand in Louisville, twenty
+thousand in Cincinnati, then twelve thousand or more in other cities in
+which the Long Investment Company had offices.
+
+There was a last minute plunge on Mildred Rogers at St. Louis by
+gamblers who had heard the news from outside, and the odds dropped
+quickly from fifteen to four to one.
+
+As he tightened the girth for the last time, Hardshell Gaines
+whispered to Pete, his jockey:
+
+“Take a toe holt and a tooth holt, Pete. Joe’ll git you off a-runnin’,
+and I got a pill in him that’d blow up a bank. It’s timed to go off
+about the half-mile if you ain’t too long at the post. All you got to
+do is sit still and hold on.”
+
+Humming, he went to the book of his friend and wagered two dollars that
+Sword of Gideon would win. He was still humming when he went down to
+the rail to watch the horses start, and the hymn he hummed was, “Oh,
+for a thousand tongues to sing my great Redeemer’s praise.”
+
+Out by the barrier a perspiring starter was beseeching, swearing,
+threatening, and scolding, while a row of horses milled and maneuvered
+for position. In the midst of the mêlée of milling horses, Joe, the
+assistant starter, a buggy whip in one hand, sweated and swore as he
+appeared to be striving to make Sword of Gideon line up with the other
+horses. Out of the corner of his eye Joe watched the starter for the
+telltale movement which revealed the second that the starter would
+spring the barrier.
+
+When that movement came Joe held the bridle bit of Sword of Gideon, and
+before the barrier flashed he threw the horse’s head around, leaped
+aside, and slashed him sharply across the quarters with the whip.
+
+Sword of Gideon, stung into forgetfulness of fear, leaped forward. The
+barrier flashed past his nose and he leaped into full stride, two full
+lengths in the lead of the field before the others were under way.
+
+Big Jim Long, his florid face mottled, hurled his chewed cigar against
+the ground and swore viciously. Sword of Gideon, running like a wild
+horse, opened up a gap of eight lengths between himself and the nearest
+pursuer in the first eighth of a mile. In vain Attorney Jackson’s
+jockey, remembering his instructions, spurred and urged his mount,
+striving to catch the flying leader and set the pace. At the half
+Attorney Jackson dropped back, beaten and out of it. Mildred Rogers’
+rider, seeing the conspiracy going wrong, made a desperate effort to
+overtake the flying Sword. The nitroglycerine pellet had acted and the
+aged horse was running as he had run when he seemed destined to be
+champion. Length by length he increased his lead over the staggering,
+wabbling field, and tore down the stretch fifteen lengths ahead of
+Patsy Frewen.
+
+Big Jim Long, his heavy jaws sagging, his face mottled red and white,
+his big, soft hands clenched, watched until the horses were within
+a few yards of the finish. Then he turned and walked rapidly across
+through the edge of the betting ring toward the exit. At the back of
+the betting ring he met Hardshell Gaines moving toward the paddock to
+greet the victorious Sword of Gideon. Big Jim’s pent up wrath exploded.
+
+“You--and your blank blanked spavined hound!” he raged. “You blanked
+old fool, if it hadn’t been for you--”
+
+Hardshell Gaines looked straight ahead, unseeing, unhearing, and as he
+walked past the furious gambler he hummed contentedly; and even Big Jim
+recognized the long metre doxology.
+
+
+
+
+“JAUNDICE’S” LAST RACE
+
+
+
+
+“JAUNDICE’S” LAST RACE
+
+
+There remains some of the Christ-spirit in the worst of us, perhaps,
+but the most optimistic of missionaries would hardly have assayed
+the soul of “Jaundice” O’Keefe with the hope of discovering even a
+trace of that quality. Jaundice was a product, or by-product, of the
+race-track. He had run away from his home in St. Louis at the age of
+eleven, to escape the beatings administered by a drinking father and a
+sodden mother, and had found refuge in a freight car loaded with horses
+which were being shipped to a race-meeting in New Orleans. Two hostlers
+were drinking from a bottle when not sleeping on a pile of hay. They
+welcomed the boy, gave him a drink, fed him, and allowed him to burrow
+into the hay for warmth. Perhaps it was kindness, perhaps they saw in
+him a means of escaping the work of feeding and watering horses during
+the long journey.
+
+Jaundice was happy. He loved horses. Perhaps that was the remaining
+trace of good after the rest had been bred or beaten out of him. He
+had loved the horses which drew the coal wagon his father drove when
+sober, and the sight of the trim thoroughbreds filled him with awed
+admiration. Arrived in New Orleans, he followed the horses to the
+race-track, found refuge in the stables, and was adopted into the army
+of those who follow the races. A year later he had acquired a master’s
+degree in profanity and obscenity and developed a ratlike viciousness
+in fighting when cornered. He was undersized and undernourished, with
+the remnants of a fighting spirit from generations of Irish sustaining
+him. Stable-boys learned to fear the savageness of his methods and left
+him alone. Occasionally a trainer or stable boss beat him with a whip
+and cursed him.
+
+Instinctively horses loved him. In one year he was an exercise boy. At
+fourteen, with all the wickedness and viciousness of the race-track and
+stable concentrated in him, he could ride and was awarded a jockey’s
+license and a suit of gay-colored silks.
+
+He rode winners. Winning, with Jaundice, was unselfish. He rode not for
+personal glory or for money, but for the honor of the horse on which he
+was mounted. When he was beaten he gulped dry sobs and went away with
+his mount to console it.
+
+For four years he rode races on the flat, at tracks all over America.
+During these four years he made as much money as the average man makes
+in a lifetime, and at the end of it had nothing. To him money meant
+only expensive meals, clothes remarkable for colors and patterns,
+wine, women of a sort, and large yellow diamonds. At eighteen he was
+an old man. His face was yellow and drawn; he had ceased to be “Kid”
+O’Keefe and become “Jaundice.” He was gaining weight and beginning to
+pay the penalty of the carouses which followed each temporary period
+of prosperity. For a year he fought to hold his standing. His mounts
+became fewer and fewer. When the owners ceased to employ him to ride on
+the flat, he became a steeplechase jockey.
+
+Riding steeplechasers in races means in the majority of cases moral and
+physical suicide. Jaundice had no fear of physical consequence, nor
+any conception of morality. With two drinks of whisky poured into his
+outraged body, he would have tried to make his mount jump the Grand
+Cañon, had the course led in that direction. Falls and broken bones
+failed to break his nerve, but his subconscious honesty was shattered.
+On the flat he never had ridden a crooked race. He was restrained by
+no consciousness of right or wrong. He tried always to win because
+he loved the horses he rode. Over the jumps he had no such scruples.
+The steeplechase horses were “has-beens” like himself and entitled to
+no consideration. He commenced to ride queer-looking races. He was
+nineteen when he fell off the favorite in a steeplechase race to permit
+an outsider to win and the stewards ruled him off the tracks for one
+year.
+
+What Jaundice did in that year of banishment he alone knew in detail.
+Barred from the only home and the only associates he had ever known,
+the great loneliness came upon him. He was broke. He stole and was sent
+to prison. When the suspension was lifted he went back to the tracks.
+He had grown heavier and his eyes and his mind were blurred by drink.
+He lived with the horses, attaching himself to the stable for which he
+had been a star jockey, and lived in the stalls and the cars. His love
+of the animals themselves had waned. Drudgery and vicious living had
+warped even that instinct. When he dared he became a tout, whispering
+information to petty gamblers at the edge of the betting ring. When
+he left the tracks at night it was to betray stable information to
+bartenders in return for drinks.
+
+When he was twenty-two there remained two loves by which it was proved
+that all good can not be smelted out of a human being. One was for Doc
+Grausman, the gallant bay stake horse of the stable, whose dam he had
+ridden to victory many times. The other was for Lord James.
+
+On race-tracks there is something in a name. Jaundice received his
+because his complexion had become a dirty yellow. Lord James was
+so called because the one spark of decency remaining in him caused
+him to conceal his family name. It was reputed that he was the son
+of an English nobleman and that he could have a title and estate if
+he returned to England. Rags of an old pride and remnants of decent
+breeding restrained Lord James from mentioning the family name as his
+own or from returning home to disgrace them. He had come to America,
+a younger son, with a stable of race-horses and high hopes. Robbed,
+fleeced, he had “quit.” Jaundice can not be spoken of as having
+degenerated. His original height permitted but a slight fall. But Lord
+James had sunk to even lower levels. He was a cadger, a tout, and a
+sneak-thief at such times when no risk was involved.
+
+No one around the tracks hated either Lord James or Jaundice. They
+pitied Jaundice, but the touts themselves despised Lord James. He had
+lost all his courage, if he ever possessed any, and drink had sapped
+his health and his brain. Of the trio, only Doc Grausman bore his name
+honestly. His names were those of his sire and his granddam, and he was
+of royal blood and three years old.
+
+When Lord James and Jaundice had become friends no one knew. Probably
+it was during Jaundice’s career as a winning jockey, while he scattered
+money recklessly after every winning race. Upon such boys Lord James
+had preyed for years. These two had nothing in common. Race, religion,
+birth, breeding, and education made them different, but they met in the
+thick scum of vice and became inseparable. For Lord James, Jaundice
+stole and betrayed stable secrets, pulled race-horses, bought drinks,
+and furnished food and lodging. It is not recorded that Lord James ever
+did anything for Jaundice.
+
+These two sank lower and lower together. When the majority of the
+race-tracks of the country were closed, they disappeared from the
+world of sport, starved, and served prison terms together. When racing
+reopened, they reappeared. Jaundice had developed a cough. His wasted
+body revealed the ravages of tuberculosis. Lord James was wearing, with
+a pitiful effort to maintain an air of decency, a suit purchased with
+his last remittance money two years before.
+
+The horses were racing at Jamaica and the weather was raw and rainy.
+They experienced difficulty in gaining an entry to the track and were
+compelled to remain outside, shivering and wet, until the day’s sport
+ended. Then a negro stable-boy allowed them to sleep with him in a
+stall, and Jaundice procured food from the camp-fires, where no one
+ever is refused.
+
+Lord James did not get up the next morning. He had crawled into the hay
+with wet clothing and in the morning he had a fever. Jaundice brought
+him food, but he did not eat. All day he remained huddled in the hay,
+covered with horse blankets, his face turned to the board wall. He was
+thinking and his mind was Gethsemane.
+
+During the night Lord James touched Jaundice with his hand and waked
+him. Very quietly and with a return of long-forgotten dignity, he
+entrusted to Jaundice an envelope upon which was written an address in
+England, charging him to mail it and allow no one to see it. He asked
+Jaundice to see the boys and ask them to bury him decently. Then he
+gripped Jaundice’s hand and died gamely, sustained by the traditions of
+his race and class. Jaundice alone wept. It was the first time in many
+years he had wept, and he was ashamed of his tears.
+
+Around the race-track no man connected with the game dies and lacks a
+decent funeral, but there was scant sympathy for Lord James. The hat
+was passed, bookmakers, jockeys, trainers, owners, grafters, even the
+pickpockets, contributing, but their contributions were small. The
+whole amounted to eighty dollars. Jaundice was not satisfied. Had he
+been satisfied, there would have been no story to tell.
+
+On the day following the horses moved to Belmont Park to open the
+racing season on that track, and Doc Grausman was entered to start in
+a high-weight handicap. Doc Grausman belonged to a wealthy man whose
+colors Jaundice had often carried to victory. This owner had not
+entered the horse in the handicap with any expectation of winning. The
+colt needed work, and he wanted to see how well the three-year-old
+could carry weight racing against all aged horses.
+
+Jaundice had not slept. His clothing still was damp and he was
+coughing. For the time his abiding love for Doc Grausman was put in the
+background while he went from man to man begging money to give Lord
+James what he considered a proper and fitting funeral. The undertaker
+wanted one hundred and fifty dollars. Jaundice was determined to raise
+the sum before the afternoon’s sport ended.
+
+Shortly before the bugle sounded, calling the horses from the paddock
+for the first race, a fractious colt lashed out with his feet and
+kicked the jockey who had been employed to ride Doc Grausman in the
+fourth. Jaundice heard of the accident within a few minutes. It was he
+who hurried to the club-house and informed the owner.
+
+“Thanks, Jaundice,” the owner said carelessly. “I wanted the colt to
+have the workout. Now, I suppose I’ll have to scratch him. I don’t want
+to put a strange boy up.”
+
+“Mister Phil,” said Jaundice, inspired with a sudden idea, “let me ride
+Doc Grausman. I’m down to weight, Mister Phil. I only weigh a hundred
+and twenty-eight now. Let me ride him, Mister Phil, and I’ll win.”
+
+His voice was pleading, his eyes and manner appealing, and he coughed
+harder. The owner was surprised and laughed slightly. “I’m afraid it
+can not be fixed, Jaundice,” he said lightly. “How do you stand with
+the stewards?”
+
+“I’m clean with them now, Mister Phil. They ain’t got nothin’ on me.
+They never could prove I pulled Lady Rose. I’m down to weight, Mister
+Phil, and that Doc Grausman horse likes me.”
+
+His eagerness and the truth of the final statement decided the matter.
+
+“I’ll see the stewards and explain,” said the owner. “He’s only in
+for the workout, and perhaps they’ll stand for it. Sure you’re strong
+enough to handle the colt?”
+
+The owner had observed the cough, and Jaundice checked it with an
+effort.
+
+“Yes, Mister Phil, I’m all right. Just caught a cold. Get this mount
+for me, Mister Phil. I’ve got to plant Lord James decent.”
+
+“That old bum dead at last?”
+
+“Yes, sir. I’ve got to get a hundred and fifty to plant him, and the
+boys ain’t kicking in fast. Let me ride this Doc Grausman hoss and I’ll
+plant Lord James swell, like his family would want him.”
+
+The owner passed over a twenty-dollar banknote. What he told the track
+officials no one knows, but when the fourth race was called, Jaundice,
+carefully hiding his cough, rode forth for the first time in four years
+wearing the colors of his old stable.
+
+The bookmakers were laying thirty to one against Doc Grausman, and a
+wit in the ring said it was ten to one the colt, twenty to one the boy.
+What was not known was that Jaundice had taken the money that had been
+contributed to bury Lord James and wagered it three ways, straight,
+place, and show, on Doc Grausman. A new generation of jockeys faced
+the start, a generation that knew nothing of the skill of the boy who
+had ridden champions. The new boys, with the contempt that youth holds
+for the “has-been,” jeered at Jaundice, and hurled insulting epithets
+at him as they wheeled and maneuvered for the advantage of the break.
+Jaundice did not retort with oaths and vilifications as he would have
+done in other days. He was afraid he would start to cough.
+
+The barrier flashed. Jaundice had been holding Doc Grausman steady
+during the milling of the others. Out of the corner of the eye he had
+caught the betraying arm movement of the starter an instant before the
+barrier flashed upward, had shot Doc Grausman at the starting line
+just the instant it flickered past his nose, had beaten the start a
+length and a half while the others were taking the first jump and sent
+him roaring down the long straight-away for four and a half furlongs.
+Riding him out desperately at the end, he held the lead by half a
+length over the favorite.
+
+As the horses paraded back past the stands, he held his lips tightly
+pressed together. He staggered a little as he weighed out, and in the
+paddock his lips were reddened. The strain of the ride had opened the
+old wounds in his lungs.
+
+An hour later he ordered the undertaker to give Lord James the best
+funeral he could for one thousand two hundred dollars and paid over the
+money. There remained for his share of the victory just twenty-seven
+dollars.
+
+The news spread around the track that evening that Jaundice was to
+give Lord James a “swell funeral.” Curiosity was aroused. Touts,
+stable-boys, bookmakers’ helpers, a few jockeys, attended. It
+happened that Jaundice came to me to consult as to the minister, and
+I had secured the services of a wonderful little rector who is much
+interested in all human beings.
+
+The funeral was the strangest one I ever attended. The little minister
+was doing his best to comfort the mourners, but plainly was at a
+disadvantage because Jaundice was the only mourner. Jaundice, through
+some instinctive sense of respect for the dead, was standing very
+awkwardly and tears were rolling down his cheeks. He was weeping for
+the second time in his life. Finally the little rector read from the
+service: “He is not dead, but sleeping.”
+
+Jaundice started, then stared, reached instinctively for his pocket,
+and sobbed in a whisper: “Ten dollars will win you twenty-seven if you
+think old Lord James is only sleeping.”
+
+His reversion to instinct raised a laugh. For the first time the
+assemblage was getting its money’s worth. The little rector was
+very much shocked. He could not understand that Jaundice meant no
+disrespect. He argued that no man could live in the United States and
+be so completely ignorant of religion. I said that Jaundice thought
+Jesus Christ was a cuss word and that his only knowledge that he
+possessed an immortal soul was from hearing it God damned by trainers
+and others.
+
+A week later I heard that Jaundice was in a Brooklyn hospital and in
+bad shape. I went to see him to get for a newspaper the story of a
+jockey who, while sick to death, rode in a race to win money enough
+to bury a friend. He was propped up in bed, coughing. The doctor had
+told me he had but a little time to live. He was glad to see me and
+inquired how I liked Lord James’ funeral.
+
+“Great class to that, Jaundice; best I ever attended.”
+
+“No one can’t say that I piked,” he responded, beaming at the praise.
+“I planted Lord James swell, and his folks can’t ever say I didn’t.”
+
+“You’re looking better,” I lied. “Be back on the track pretty soon?”
+
+“Lord James won’t beat me more than a neck,” he said without emotion.
+“Something busted inside me during that race. Have you heard how Doc
+Grausman is comin’ along? He sure ought to win that stake this week.”
+
+Presently he spoke of the little rector. “What do you think of that
+guy?” he asked, rather contemptuous of the ignorance of the minister.
+“He thought Lord James was only sleeping, but he wouldn’t back his
+opinion with coin.”
+
+I strove to explain, without much success.
+
+“That little guy is all right,” said Jaundice. “Did you hear what he
+said about Lord James havin’ a chanst on that track he was talking
+about? Say, Lord James has about as much chanst as I have.”
+
+“Everyone has a chance,” I said feebly.
+
+“Me?” he asked in surprise.
+
+“Sure; the Book says everyone has who repents.”
+
+“I ain’t got nothin’ to repent of exceptin’ pullin’ three or four of
+them bum chasers. The stewards couldn’t get nothin’ on me at that.”
+
+“The Judges up there know it all.”
+
+“Know everything? Then, say, what chanst has a guy got?”
+
+As a religious prospect the case was too hard, so I telephoned the
+little rector and gave it over to him. He called upon Jaundice several
+times, and the following week I went to the hospital again. Jaundice
+was weak but smiling.
+
+“Say,” he whispered hoarsely, “I got a chanst. That little man says
+that them Judges up there knows I was carryin’ too much weight to run
+true and that you can’t blame anyone for losin’ when he is handicapped
+out of it. I told him about pulling them chasers and lyin’ and
+stealin’, and he said that didn’t make no difference, that the Judges
+don’t set a guy down forever if he is sorry he done wrong.” He remained
+thinking for a time.
+
+“He didn’t have to tell me to be sorry,” he whispered. “Honest, I
+always was sorry when I pulled one of them bum chasers when he was
+trying. It wasn’t square to the horse. This is the softest bet I ever
+had,” he whispered. “I’m going to play it. Them’s good odds--a chanst
+to win all them things he told me about and only be sorry. It’s like
+writing your own ticket.”
+
+I found the little rector very thoughtful and amazed at this new manner
+of man he had discovered, and when he buried Jaundice the next week he
+got right down among us and talked about handicaps and weights, and
+keeping on trying all the time. He talked just as if he had been in the
+paddock half his life, and the last thing he said was: “If I were a
+bookie, I’d lay odds that Jaundice cashes that last bet.”
+
+
+
+
+TOUTIN’ MISTAH FOX
+
+
+
+
+TOUTIN’ MISTAH FOX
+
+
+Prosias Trimble’s protuberant lower lip drooped dejectedly, his eyes
+shifted in a scowl until the pupils were dots in the corners of
+expanses of white, his russet shoes, rapier-pointed and uncomfortably
+overcrowded with feet, dragged laggingly along the marble floor of the
+St. Charles Hotel Turkish baths. He went about his task of distributing
+towels with the air of one who has suffered great wrong.
+
+In the private rooms and on cots ranged in the dormitory, white men
+snored, gurgled, choked, strangled. The sounds of sixty fat men snoring
+in sixty keys filled the rooms. Even the snore of the man in room six,
+which was a combination of shifting gears, a cut-out muffler, and a
+slipping clutch, passed unheard by “Pro.” Even the cheery whistle of
+his fellow rubber was unnoticed. The world was a place of darkness, and
+Pro’s mood was two shades darker than his skin, the color scheme of
+which was that of the ace of spades.
+
+It was a dull night. The St. Charles Hotel Turkish baths were but
+half filled with patrons, although overcrowded with snores. The light
+patronage and the dejected mood of Prosias were due to the same cause:
+the winter meeting at the Fair Grounds race-track in New Orleans had
+ended two days before, the army of men and horses that had encamped
+in the Crescent City during the winter, and the swarm of plump patrons
+which nightly had crowded the St. Charles, had moved northward to
+Baltimore, and Prosias Trimble, top sergeant in that army, with the
+rank of tout, was left behind, to eke out a livelihood by working
+as rubber in the bath-house. The pearl-colored spats, the pointed
+russet shoes, the fawn waistcoat checkerboarded in green, the massive
+watch-chain draped in two graceful curves from buttonhole to pockets,
+the four-carat near-diamond which glistened with fading brilliancy in
+the purple necktie, were of the vanities vain: the “hosses” were gone,
+and Pro, compelled to return to the profession he had disowned when he
+became a race-follower, was not with them.
+
+Two days before this night of gloom Prosias had strutted the streets
+of New Orleans--the envy of colored men, the admired of many colored
+women. His shining countenance, which reflected joy and happiness, had
+added color to the throngs in paddock and betting ring. In the evenings
+his presence had graced social affairs of the negro eight hundred, and
+Miss Luck had smiled consistently upon him. He had spent three evenings
+bidding farewell to the friends he had accumulated during the winter,
+had lightly promised half a dozen of his newly acquired lady friends
+to see them when the horses came back, and had created envy and dark
+hatred among the men by the casual carelessness with which he bade them
+polite farewells and expressed hopes of seeing them at Baltimore or
+Louisville or even at Saratoga during the meetings.
+
+Until the morning of “Get Away Day” Miss Luck had smiled, and on that
+morning she beamed. Prosias and his bankroll had prospered, waxed
+fat, and flourished. The customary rumors had circulated on that
+morning--the old, old story of the “Get Away Killing” and the feed
+man’s bill--and straight from the oats-box the rumor had come to Pro,
+alighted upon him, and stung him. It was a hot tip--so hot that it
+singed and burned. The tip was to the effect that Centerdrink had been
+nominated to win--that he was to be shooed in at long odds, and that
+all the grievances of the bettors against the bookmakers were to be
+evened up in one great killing.
+
+Pro had it from a jockey, who had it right out of the conference
+at which Centerdrink had been chosen to win. Pro had hurled his
+bankroll--the fortune accumulated during the entire winter--at the
+bookmakers, who, instead of breaking in panic, had handed him back
+smiles and bits of pasteboard with cabalistic charcoal characters on
+them. Pro had stood to win more than twelve thousand dollars--and he
+had stood dazedly while he watched Centerdrink finish eighth. When
+the truth dawned upon his benumbed brain he had reached one hand into
+the now vacant pocket, seeking car-fare, and, finding it not, had
+sought the bath-house and work--his dream of a summer jaunt around the
+race-courses wrecked.
+
+Pro completed his task of distributing towels and stood thinking.
+Daylight was commencing to show through the little windows just under
+the ceiling of the bath-house, and daylight brought with it fresh,
+bitter thoughts. He knew that a few hundred miles to the northward the
+sun was rising on a stretch of level land, a circular ribbon of loam
+laid upon a field of green. Birds were singing in the trees, meadow
+larks were rising from the infield. Rows of fires were springing up
+along the front of the circular line of low, whitewashed stables.
+Slender, graceful horses, blanketed to the knees, were being led around
+and around in little circles, the odor of frying bacon was in the
+air, the rhythmic drumming of the feet of a speedy colt was sounding
+from the track. Far across the velvet infield, near where the spidery
+pillars of the stand stood black against the lightening sky, men with
+watches in their hands were on the rail, timing in fractions of seconds
+the movements of the flying colt. He pictured one vacant spot on the
+pickets of the fence--a spot which, but for the fickleness of Miss Luck
+and the hot tip on Centerdrink, he would have been occupying.
+
+Slowly a light broke over his face--as sun striving to shine through
+thunder clouds.
+
+“Reckon as how maybe Ah’ll be dar yit,” he muttered to himself. “Mist’
+Jim Robin he say to me yistaddy mahnin’: ‘Pro, yuh wuthless niggah,
+gimme good rub dis mahnin’ an’ when Ah gits to Baltimo’ Ah’ll sen’ yoh
+a good thing.’ Yassah, dat ’zackly what he done say, an’ Ah done rub
+him till he yell ’nuff. Mist’ Jim Robin he done keep his promise. He’ll
+sen’ me dat good thing, den Ah’ll show dese Noo ’Leans shines a classy
+niggah. Ah’ll ride in Mistah Pullman’s cahr ’stid o’ Mistah Burton’s
+cahr--nothward. Yassah.”
+
+Visibly affected by a process of triumph of mind over condition, Pro
+achieved a more cheerful countenance. The happy smile which was his
+trademark, and the ingratiating grin which made him welcome among
+race-track followers, returned by degrees, and by the time the snorers
+aroused themselves and shuddered at the cold plunge before coming to
+the rubbing tables his ready laugh and the seductive manner in which he
+wielded the solicitous whisk-broom upon each departing guest won reward.
+
+“Um-um, Miss Luck comin’ back,” he muttered hopefully, as he counted
+his tips. “Um-um. Dis niggah in Baltimo’ foah Sattaday suah--jes’ in
+time foh to see de handicap. Wisht Mist’ Jim’d sen’ me dat tip he done
+promise me.”
+
+As if in answer to the wish, the page in the hotel under which the St.
+Charles baths are located was passing through lobbies and writing-rooms
+paging:
+
+“Mistah Prosias Trimble! Mistah Prosias Trimble!”
+
+“Hyah, boy,” the captain of the bell-boys called. “Doan’ be a-pagin’
+dat name ’roun’ de house. Prosias Trimble he dat buxom black niggah
+Pro, down in de baf-house.”
+
+“Tellygraft foh yoh, niggah,” the page announced disgustedly, as he
+tossed the yellow envelope toward Pro and abandoned all hope of a tip.
+
+“Miss Luck, favor me!” Pro pleaded devoutly as he held the envelope in
+his hand. “Miss Luck, bring de good news--doan’ betray me now. Ah needs
+yoh!”
+
+“What does he say, Pro?”
+
+“What who say?” demanded Pro, his lips suddenly bulging outward
+belligerently, as he swung about to face Mr. Clarence Fox, who had
+pursued the telegram from the lobby down into the bath-house.
+
+“What Mist’ Jim Robin say?” responded Mr. Fox, scowling.
+
+“How come yoh knows so much?”
+
+“Reckon Ah doan’ know he promise’ you a tip?”
+
+“How come yoh knows?”
+
+“Reckon yoh didn’t infohm a certain lady frien’ o’ mine?”
+
+“Dat yaller gal too brash wif her mouf!” Pro muttered regretfully, as
+he recalled the fact that the lady in question was manicurist in the
+Royal Crescent Palace barber shop, Clarence Fox owner.
+
+In spite of his appearance of displeasure, Pro was not displeased. His
+mind was working, and Mr. Fox was included in the thoughts. Mr. Fox
+possessed money. Pro’s cash capital consisted of the two dollars and
+twenty cents secured in tips during the night’s work. Further, he was
+aware that in order to turn even a sure thing on a race tip into money,
+working capital is required. His acquaintance with Mr. Clarence Fox
+had been incidental to his friendship for Miss Susie, the manicurist,
+and Pro recalled, with some regret, the fact that during the more
+prosperous times of the winter he had been inclined to treat Clarence
+Fox condescendingly. But Mr. Fox, proprietor of the five-chair barber
+shop catering to the swelldom of the negro district, he viewed in a
+different light now. If Mr. Fox could be persuaded to finance certain
+illegal but delectable operations, Pro saw a way to overcome lack of
+working capital.
+
+“’Scuse me, Mistah Fox, if Ah seem discurtous,” he said, “but a
+gennelman gotta be careful when he gits straight tips from gennelman
+white owners.”
+
+“Dat all right, Mistah Trimble,” said Clarence, responding to
+politeness with greater politeness. “Ah respects yoh sentiments. Reckon
+dat a wahm tip?”
+
+“Ah ’low she ’bout ninety-eight in de shade,” Pro responded.
+
+“Ah doan’ ’low dat yoh ’tends to bet enuff foh to cover all de
+han’-books in Noo ’Leans?” Clarence inquired flatteringly.
+
+“Don’t ’low as Ah can,” said Pro regretfully. “You ’low ef Ah tell yoh
+wha’ hoss Mist’ Jim done name’, kin yoh wait till Ah gits my bets down,
+so’s not influence de odds?”
+
+“Ah ’low dat Ah kin. Yoh ’low dat tip look good?”
+
+“Look good?” Pro’s voice quivered with outraged indignation. “Yoh ’low
+Mist’ Jim done tellygraft a niggah lessen it good?”
+
+“Nevah kin tell,” commented Mr. Fox cynically.
+
+Prosias hesitated. His mind was in panic for fear of losing the
+opportunity to secure working capital, yet the situation was
+embarrassing. He found it difficult to approach a business proposition
+without revealing the fact that he was embarrassed financially.
+
+“Reckon yoh do the right thing if Ah tell yoh de name ob de hoss?” he
+said tentatively.
+
+“Yoh knows me, Pro. Ah always does de right thing, doan’ Ah?”
+
+“Dat yoh repitation, Clarence,” said Pro, vaguely conscious of the fact
+that he knew nothing of Clarence’s reputation.
+
+“Always aims to do de right thing, Pro.”
+
+“Hyah she go, den,” said Pro, with sudden determination, as he tore
+open the envelope.
+
+“Miss Luck, be mine!” he breathed, as he unfolded the yellow paper.
+With Mr. Fox craning his neck to see over his shoulder, he read:
+
+ Shoot the roll on the filly in the fourth.
+
+ ROBIN.
+
+Mr. Fox wrinkled the end of his broad nose and looked puzzled.
+
+“De roll on de filly!” said Prosias, his eyes rolling.
+
+“Wha’ hoss he mean?” inquired the less informed Mr. Fox.
+
+“Wha’ hoss?” Pro repeated disdainfully. “Why, dat Ivory Gahter filly,
+dat who: Mist’ Jim’s filly, an’ she good. She ripe, niggah, she win
+suah, an’ de odds--um-um! Niggah, we rich!”
+
+“Ivory Gahter--I’m gwine!” exclaimed Mr. Fox excitedly. “Niggah, yoh
+play de books ’roun’ hyar. Ah’ll slaughtah dem Rampaht Street gamblahs.”
+
+The convinced Mr. Fox, hesitating at the barber shop only long enough
+to sweep the till clean, dashed toward Rampart Street, while Pro,
+waiting until his financial backer disappeared, ascended to the second
+story of the pool-room nearest the hotel, and, after considerable
+haggling, persuaded the handbook keeper to wager twenty dollars against
+two against the chances of Ivory Garter’s winning. Pro mourned because
+he knew that at the track the odds would be twenty to one.
+
+Instead of retiring for the day, Pro promenaded, ostensibly for
+pleasure, but always with a view of borrowing capital to wager.
+Several times he tentatively opened negotiations, but, meeting with
+scant encouragement, he contented himself with remarking airily that
+he had remained in New Orleans to consummate a betting commission for
+an owner, and was leaving to join the horses that evening, after the
+killing.
+
+His probably were the first eyes to read the ticker that afternoon,
+when in jerks and clicks the tape recorded the fact that Ivory Garter
+had won. Thirty minutes later, with twenty-two dollars in his pocket,
+Pro entered the bath-house.
+
+“Ah’s sorry to be ’bliged to notify yoh Ah resigns,” he announced.
+“Ah’s called No’th.”
+
+With light heart and faith in Miss Luck restored, he went forth to the
+Royal Crescent Palace barber shop by a devious route. At his first
+stop he remarked casually that he wouldn’t be surprised if he and Mr.
+Fox had cleaned up five hundred dollars, at the second stop he opined
+he and Mr. Fox had won seven hundred, and by the time he reached
+Canal Street his estimate of probable winnings had passed twelve
+hundred dollars and his cash capital had dwindled to eight dollars,
+due to sudden generosity in lending and to purchasing cigars for less
+fortunate acquaintances.
+
+His mental estimate of the amount won exceeded the figures he dared
+express openly. There was no limit to his imagination. Mr. Fox had
+money. A hundred dollars should yield fifteen hundred at proper
+pool-room odds. Mr. Fox rated himself a sport. Pro calculated that a
+proper sport, with money, would bet at least five hundred dollars on a
+tip straight from an owner, which at twelve to one--the lowest possible
+odds he figured Mr. Fox would accept--would be six thousand dollars,
+fifty per cent of which was three thousand dollars. Pro pictured
+himself riding into the track at Baltimore in an open automobile. He
+even determined to pay admission instead of soliciting an employee’s
+badge.
+
+He reached the Royal Crescent Palace barber shop in a state of excited
+anticipation. Mr. Fox, at ease, was draped over the cigar counter, and
+his very nonchalant calmness sent a shiver through Pro’s optimism.
+
+“Howdy, Clarence?” he exclaimed, under forced draught. “We suah slip
+dat one over!”
+
+“Suah did,” assented Mr. Fox, without enthusiasm.
+
+“We ’mos’ ruin dis hyah town, Ah reckon,” observed Pro, inviting
+information. “Ah suah clean mah end.”
+
+“Ah’s glad yoh hit ’em hahd, Pro,” said Mr. Fox, without warming. “Ah
+wah jest a-wishin’ Ah done had ez much faith in yoh frien’ ez yoh did.”
+
+“How come, Clarence?” asked Pro, with a sudden sinking suspicion.
+“Didn’ yoh plunge?”
+
+“Hadn’ no faith a-tall,” asserted Clarence.
+
+“Didn’ yoh win _nothin’_?” asked Pro, unbelief, suspicion, crushed
+hopes, all concentrated in his voice.
+
+“Jes’ li’l’ pikin’ bet, Pro,” said Mr. Fox resignedly. “Ah bin kickin’
+mahsef. Ah mought a-win ’nuff to be goin’ norf wif yoh. But Ah lack
+faith. Ah lack faith perdigious.”
+
+“Yoh win nuffin a-tall?” Pro reiterated, his voice expressing his
+ebbing hope.
+
+“Ah win jes’ twenty dollah,” said Mr. Fox positively. “Niggah on’y lay
+me ten to one, an’ Ah bet on’y two dollah.”
+
+He hesitated, waiting as if expecting passionate contradiction, and
+added:
+
+“Hyah yoh bit foh de tip.”
+
+He peeled a five-dollar bill from a huge roll extracted carelessly from
+a trousers pocket and flipped it toward Pro.
+
+“Dat a good tip, Pro,” he said in conciliatory tones. “Ah thanks yoh
+foh it. Wish Ah’d had moah faith. Ef yoh git any good ones in Baltimo’,
+wiah me.”
+
+Prosias, speechless, pocketed the bill and turned. At the door he
+paused.
+
+“Yas, sah, Clarence,” he said slowly. “Ah ain’ done fohgit. Ah’ll
+’membah yoh, Clarence.”
+
+His brain was dazed, but his heart seethed with bitter resentment. He
+knew that Clarence Fox had profited largely and had swindled him out of
+his just share. He walked slowly, bitterly regretting the generosity
+of the morning, but for which he still would have had enough money to
+reach the race-track. He went humbly back to the St. Charles baths and
+petitioned to be restored to his position. That night, while working
+upon the super-fattened carcasses of patrons, thoughts of Clarence Fox
+and his perfidy came to his mind, and he struck hard, eliciting howls
+of protest. And during that long night his brain slowly evolved a plan
+of vengeance.
+
+Three days later Clarence Fox, arrayed in a glory which neither
+Solomon nor the lilies ever could have rivaled, descended into the St.
+Charles baths.
+
+“Why, howdy, Pro?” he exclaimed, with well simulated surprise. “Ah
+thought yoh done gone Baltimo’.”
+
+“Not yit, Clarence, not yit.”
+
+His cheerful aspect and his failure to express either anger or sorrow
+puzzled Clarence.
+
+“How come?” he asked.
+
+“Frien’ ast me would Ah remain foh a few days an’ ack ez his bettin’
+c’missioner.”
+
+“Whafoh of a frien’?”
+
+“Same frien’ ez sen’ me that last tip.”
+
+Clarence Fox’s manner changed with startling suddenness. From a
+patronizing familiarity and superior condescension, he descended
+instantly to solicitous friendship.
+
+“Hear anythin’?” he inquired.
+
+“Ain’ ’spectin’ anythin’ foh a day er two.”
+
+“Gwine tell me when he wiahs yoh, Pro?”
+
+“Ain’ slippin’ no tips to niggahs da won’ bet no coin.” Pro’s contempt
+was impersonal.
+
+“Ah’s a bettin’ fool when Ah got faith,” asserted Mr. Fox earnestly,
+fitting the shoe to himself. “Las’ time Ah ain’ got no faith a-tall.”
+
+“Reckon maybe yoh won’ hab no faith dis hyah time,” Pro remarked
+disinterestedly. “Ah sabes mah tips foh gamblahs, not pikahs.”
+
+The term stung, but Mr. Fox, while writhing under the insult, chose to
+pretend dignity and ignored it.
+
+“Ah ain’ int’rusted in five-dollah bettahs,” Pro added, rubbing salt
+into the hurt.
+
+“Five dollah?” Mr. Fox exclaimed indignantly. “Pro, when Ah’s got
+faith Ah bets five hundred dollah.”
+
+“Mebbe so,” Pro commented in unconvinced accents. “Wha’ dat git me?”
+
+“Dat,” asserted Mr. Fox, with emphasis, “git yoh twenty-fibe pussent ob
+all Ah wins.”
+
+“Ah ain’ int’rusted,” said Pro, proceeding about his duties with an air
+of finality.
+
+“Lissen at reason, Pro,” Mr. Fox argued in quick alarm. “Twenty-fibe
+am mah reg’lar pussent, but ’tween frien’s lak yoh an’ me, it’s forty
+pussent.”
+
+“Fifty neahrer right,” commented Pro, still busy.
+
+“Fifty an’ me takin’ all de chanst? Fohty am gen’rous.”
+
+“An’ show me de tickets?” Pro’s tone was an ultimatum.
+
+“Doan yoh trus’ me, Pro?” Mr. Fox registered indignant surprise.
+
+“Suah Ah trust yoh, Clarence,” said Pro sulkily. “Didn’t yoh han’ me
+fibe dollah last time?”
+
+“Dat mah reg’lar twenty-fibe pussent,” responded Mr. Fox humbly,
+choosing to ignore the insinuation. “It fohty dis time.”
+
+“Undah dem circumstances, Clarence, Ah’m int’rusted,” said Pro. “Ah’m
+expectin’ de glad tidin’s ’bout day aftah to-morrah.”
+
+“Lemme know, Pro?”
+
+“Yas, sah, Clarence, Ah suah let you know,” Pro promised. And, as
+Mr. Clarence Fox departed, Pro, leaning upon the handle of a mop,
+suddenly commenced a jellylike flesh quake which concluded with a noisy
+irruption of laughter.
+
+“Dat niggah done broke!” he muttered, as his inward merriment subsided.
+“Dat niggah broke right now, on’y he doan’ know it.”
+
+His plot was working.
+
+That evening he sat in the bath-house, his mind concentrated upon the
+racing form. He was busy picking losers, instead of winners, and even
+the unmuffled snores of the sleepers failed to distract his attention.
+
+“Kunnel Campbell,” he read and considered. “Dat de dog what run las’
+foah times at de Fair Groun’s. He run las’ foah times, he seben dat
+othah time. Dat colt ain’t got no chanst a-tall.” He studied the
+entries for a moment.
+
+“Kunnel Campbell,” he repeated. “Dat mah s’lection foh Mistah Fox in de
+fust race.”
+
+He yelled with inward laughter for a moment and resumed his work on the
+dope sheet.
+
+“Jakmino,” he read. “Jakmino. He dat skate dat Mist’ Jim call de buggy
+hoss. Dat hoss got bow tendons, glandahs, an’ de boll weevil. He kain’t
+run fast ’nuff foh to wahm hisse’f good. He ain’t no runnin’ hoss. He
+ain’ fas ’nuff foh to pull a disc harrer.” He muttered over the form
+sheet a moment, then decided. “Jakmino--dat mah s’lection foh Mistah
+Fox in de third race.”
+
+Prosias went off into another spasm of inward mirth.
+
+He studied the entries for the last race, suddenly threw back his head
+and laughed until the snorers, disturbed, ceased snoring and turned
+over off their backs.
+
+“Irene W.,” he said, and laughed again. “Irene W.--dat hoss suah a
+houn’--wust houn’ on de circuit. She six yeah ole an’ a maiden--ain’t
+nebber bin in de money.”
+
+He laughed until near apoplexy and chuckled to himself.
+
+“Irene W.: dat man gran’ extra special tip foh Mistah Fox in de las’
+race.”
+
+Then he said to himself solemnly:
+
+“Mistah Clarence Fox, yoh done broke. Yoh broke, on’y yoh doan’ know
+it.”
+
+With the aid of the telegraph operator in the office upstairs, Pro
+evolved a telegram to himself, and early the next afternoon, as Mr.
+Clarence Fox, attired in the gorgeous clothes purchased with the
+illicit profits of the Ivory Garter race, entered the hotel, a negro
+bell-boy, propelled by the telegraph operator, hastened through the
+lobby.
+
+“Mistah Prosias Trimble!” he paged. “Mistah Prosias Trimble!”
+
+“Hyah, niggah,” the captain called sharply. “Ain’ Ah gwine tell yoh
+not foh to be pagin’ dat name ’roun’ de hotel? Dat Pro down in de
+baf-house.”
+
+Mr. Clarence Fox was two steps behind the bell-boy when the telegram
+was delivered to Pro.
+
+“Wha’ he say dis time, Pro?” he demanded eagerly.
+
+“Ain’t open it yet,” said Pro carelessly, moving as if to place the
+telegram in his pocket. “Ain’t openin’ tellygrafs while folks is
+pesticatin’ ’roun’.”
+
+“Yoh ain’t gwine t’row me down now, is yoh, Pro?” Mr. Fox’s voice was
+tremulous with surprised disappointment.
+
+“Ain’ sayin’ Ah is, is Ah?”
+
+“Ain’ hearin’ yoh sayin’ yoh ain’t,” retorted Mr. Fox. “’Membah yoh
+done mek a ’greement ’bout dat tip.”
+
+“Ain’t suah dis de tip,” Pro countered. “Reckon Ah bettah read it.”
+
+He ripped open the envelope and held the inclosed message at a
+tantalizing angle so that no craning of the neck of Mr. Fox sufficed to
+give him a glimpse of the contents.
+
+“Wha’ yoh make ob dat?” Pro exclaimed as in surprise. “Mist’ Jim suah
+gittin’ good, hittin’ ’em hahd.”
+
+“Wha’ he say?”
+
+“He say plenty,” said Pro mysteriously. “Dis clean-up day.”
+
+“Wha’ hoss he name?” quavered Mr. Fox.
+
+“Hoss? He done name three hosses--two hot tip an’ a gran’ special extra
+br’ilin’ hot one.”
+
+“Gimme dem names, Pro.” Mr. Fox, feeling the urge of excitement,
+reached as if to take the telegram from Pro.
+
+“Han’s off, niggah, han’s off!” Pro warned, scowling belligerently.
+
+“Ain’t us pahtners in dis?” quavered Mr. Fox.
+
+“Um. Ain’ so suah ’bout dat yit,” said Pro, exasperatingly cool.
+
+“But us made a ’greement.”
+
+“Ah ’membahs dat,” Pro admitted, as if reluctantly. “Le’s see, dey’s
+a hoss in de fust race, dey’s a hoss in de third race, an’ de gran’
+special suah thing in de las’. Reckon Ah tip yoh one at a time.”
+
+“Wha’ de fust, den?” pleaded Mr. Fox humbly.
+
+“How much yoh ’low yoh bet on dat fust hoss?”
+
+“Depen’s.”
+
+“Ain’ tippin’ nuffin’ on no ‘depen’s’.”
+
+“Ef it look good, Ah bet fifty dollah.” Mr. Fox stated the figure
+tentatively.
+
+“Fifty dollah? Ah ain’ tippin’ no pikahs.”
+
+“Ah bets a hunnerd ef de price look right.”
+
+“Ain’ tippin’ nuffin’ on no ‘ifs.’”
+
+“Ah bets a hunnerd dollah on dat fust hoss.”
+
+Mr. Fox had surrendered, and he stated the figure with the air of a man
+paying through the nose.
+
+“An’ fohty pussent foh me?”
+
+“Dat ouh ’greement, Pro.”
+
+“Dat hoss’ name,” said Pro, opening the message and stopping in
+maddening deliberation--“dat hoss’ name--how Ah know yoh play faih?”
+
+“Yoh knows me, Pro.”
+
+“Uh--reckon Ah do, Clarence.”
+
+“Den, what dat hoss’ name?”
+
+Mr. Fox’s voice bore a note of irritation, and Pro hastened to ease the
+situation.
+
+“K-u-n-n-e-l C-a-m-p-b-e-l-l,” Pro spelled from the message. “Kunnel
+Campbell--dat good hoss. Mist’ Jim bin hol’in’ him foh a killin’. Ought
+git a good price on dat hoss, Clarence.”
+
+“Kunnel Campbell,” repeated Mr. Fox. “Ah’s gwine. Ah’ll be back atter
+dat race.”
+
+“Ah’ll be waitin’ wif de second hoss,” Pro promised.
+
+When Mr. Fox disappeared with more haste than dignity, Pro threw back
+his head and indulged in prolonged laughter.
+
+“Mistah Fox,” he repeated, “yoh done broke--yoh broke, on’y yoh doan’
+know it yit.”
+
+For an hour and a half Pro tasted the sweets of vengeance.
+
+“He say he bet a hunnerd,” he soliloquized. “Dat mean he bet two
+hunnerd, mebby two hunnerd an’ fifty, an’ lie me outen mah share ef he
+win. When he lose he ’low he bet foah hunnerd.”
+
+He was rehearsing reasons for the defeat of Colonel Campbell and
+additional reasons for increasing the size of the next bet, when the
+door opened and Mr. Fox, wildly agitated and with shining face, hurtled
+into the bath-house.
+
+“Did--did--did he win?” Pro’s eyes were bulging.
+
+“Did he win? We kill’m, Pro!” panted Mr. Fox. “Done clean up Rampaht
+Street. Gimme dat nex’ tip.”
+
+“Wha’--wha’--what odds yoh git?” Pro, dazed with the unexpectedness of
+developments, managed to gasp.
+
+“Niggah on’y lay me five to one,” lied Mr. Fox breathlessly. “Ah bets a
+hunnerd at five to one. We win five hundred dollah.”
+
+“Wha’ dem ticket?”
+
+“Dat a s’picious niggah gamblah, Pro,” said Mr. Fox. “He done say he
+ain’ makin’ no ticket, foh fear de p’lice git evidence.”
+
+Pro saw the uselessness of argument.
+
+“Two hunnerd--dat mah share,” he stated, after an arithmetical
+parturition. “Gimme dat money.”
+
+“Ah ain’ c’lect yit.”
+
+“Bettah c’lect foh Ah tell yoh dat nex’ hoss.”
+
+“Ain’ got time befoh de next race.”
+
+“Den pay me yohsef.”
+
+“An’ take chances dat niggah welch?”
+
+“Reckon’ Ah keep dat nex’ tip foh mahsef.”
+
+“Ah’ll take de chanst,” Mr. Fox decided. “Ah low dat niggah pay,
+lessen he done broke.”
+
+He counted two hundred dollars off a huge roll of bills and passed them
+to Pro reluctantly.
+
+“How much yoh ’low yoh bet dis time?” demanded Pro, recounting the
+money.
+
+“Reckon Ah shoot another hunnerd.”
+
+“A hunnerd, an’ all dat gravy in de bowl!” Pro registered indignant
+protest. “Yoh gwine shoot two hunnerd or nothin’. Dat’ll leave yoh on
+velvet, an’ de special extra comin’.”
+
+“Ah’s gamblin’,” Mr. Fox declared shortly. “What his name?”
+
+“An’ mek de bets whar dey writes de tickets?” Pro added, imposing a new
+condition.
+
+“Ah knows a place.”
+
+“An’ fohty pussent foh me?”
+
+“Dat ouh ’greement.”
+
+“Dat nex’ hoss”--Pro studied the telegram tantalizingly--“dat nex’ hoss
+J-a-k-m-i-n-o.”
+
+“See yeh latah,” said Mr. Fox, dashing for the exit.
+
+“Wha’ yoh think ob dat?” Pro asked himself wonderingly, as he felt the
+money to make certain it was real. “Dat hoss ain’t got a chanst, an’ he
+win!”
+
+“Miss Luck she suah smile!” he continued. “Ah kain’t lose, an’ Ah still
+break dat niggah. Ah bets dat niggah bet three hunnerd dollar, an’ git
+eight to one an’ pay me dis.”
+
+The two hundred dollars suddenly decreased in value by comparison with
+Clarence’s supposed winnings. Then Pro’s face lighted.
+
+“Ah’s _got_ mine,” he reflected, “an’ Ah gwine keep it. Wait twell
+Clarence done git de bad news ’bout dat Jakmino race! Dat hoss ain’
+got no moah chanst ob winnin’ dan a niggah has bein’ ’lected gubonor ob
+Louisiana.”
+
+An hour later his comforting reflections were interrupted by the second
+avalanche descent of Clarence Fox into the bath-house. His eyes were
+protruding and his face shining, and money bulged from every pocket.
+
+“Did--did--did--did dat one win, too?” Pro’s eyes rolled wildly and
+amazement was portrayed on every feature.
+
+“He roll home, Pro!” cried Mr. Fox. “Win all de way, by foah length. Ah
+lef’ a trail o’ bankrupt niggahs from de Levee to de basin.”
+
+“What odds yoh git, niggah?” demanded Pro, suddenly stern.
+
+“Ah git seben,” Mr. Fox lied cautiously. “What yoh git?”
+
+“Ah git nine foh mine,” Pro lied. “Show me dem ticket.”
+
+“Ah git nine foh paht o’ mine, too,” declared Mr. Fox, weakening.
+
+“Ah git seben foh a hunnerd, an’ nine foh a hunnerd. Hyar de ticket foh
+de nine. Dat othah niggah de one dat doan’ write no ticket.”
+
+“Pay me, niggah!” said Pro sternly. “Pay me six hunnerd an’ forty
+dollar.”
+
+“Count it yohsef,” said Mr. Fox, suddenly reckless in his prosperity as
+he dragged money from pockets and tossed it in scrambled heaps on the
+cigar counter. “Count dat triflin’ six hunnerd an’ fohty dollah, an’
+tell me dat special. Ah gwine staht an epidemic ob bankruptcy ’mongst
+dem niggah gamblahs from de levee to de lake.”
+
+Pro counted his share, feeling the money as if striving to make certain
+he was awake. His eyes rolled, and he blinked. He knew Mr. Fox had won
+more than he admitted winning, but in his amazement he failed to feel
+even resentment.
+
+“Git a move on, niggah,” commanded Mr. Fox. “Doan’ be all day countin’
+dat triflin’ money. Le’s go git de real coin. What dat las’ hoss’ name?”
+
+Pro arose, stuffed his share of the loot into his pockets, shoved the
+remainder back toward Mr. Fox, and suddenly gave voice to long pent
+feelings.
+
+“Run ’long an’ _guess_, niggah, _guess_,” he said witheringly. “Ah’s
+done tippin’ lyin’, stealin’, cheatin’ niggahs.”
+
+“What yoh mean?” demanded Mr. Fox, but weakly. “Ain’ Ah done slip yoh
+eight hunnerd an’ forty dollah?”
+
+“Yoh suah done so,” admitted Pro, “an’ yeh done win twicet ez much ez
+yoh ’mit yoh win. Ah mean yoh done cheat an’ lie an’ steal. Ah say Ah’s
+done, an’ Ah mean Ah’s done. Hyah whar yoh an’ me paht. Ah do mah own
+bettin’, an’ Ah doan’ tip no pikah.”
+
+He strode indignantly from the bath-house, leaving Mr. Fox crushed.
+Presently he rallied and pursued, striving to learn what horse Prosias
+was betting on.
+
+Up narrow stairways and down narrower steps into basements, into rooms
+behind pool parlors and rooms behind barber shops, into cigar stands,
+Pro dashed and dodged, leaving behind him a trail of quaking, alarmed
+colored men. The word spread over New Orleans that Prosias Trimble
+was plunging, but the bookmakers, anxious to lay off the bets, were
+close-mouthed and Clarence Fox strove in vain to discover which horse
+Pro was playing. By fifties, twenty-fives, and hundreds, Pro wagered
+his discounted share of Clarence Fox’s winnings, and slowly the odds
+on Irene W. to win the last race at Baltimo’ were driven downward from
+forty to one to six to one.
+
+Just before post time for the final race, Pro, flushed and breathless,
+wagered the last ten dollars and stood in a small room where a
+telegraph operator clicked away at a key and received the news from the
+distant track.
+
+“Two hundred at fohty mek eight thousan’,” he figured, “a hunnerd at
+thutty mek three thousan’, a hunnerd at twenty-five mek two thousan’
+five hunnerd.”
+
+Laboriously he checked off his bets and strove to strike the total.
+
+“Ah win t’irteen thousan’ fibe hunnerd dollah,” he said dazedly. “Add
+dat eight hunnerd an’ fohty, and dat’ll mek me win fo’teen thousan’
+t’ree hunnerd an’ fohty dollah.”
+
+“Ah ’low when Ah gits to Baltimo’ Ah staht a stable ob hosses,” he
+said. “Ah ’low Ah call it de Miss Luck Stable. Mah colahs will be
+scahlet an’ puhple, wif a yaller sash an’ a green cap--”
+
+His reverie was interrupted by the man at the telegraph instrument
+calling aloud what the clicking instrument told him.
+
+“Mai-Blanc at the quarter,” he said. “Mayor Behrmann second, Maude
+G. third. At the half: Mai-Blanc leads, Chicago Fritz second, Mayor
+Behrmann third. The three quarters: Mayor Behrmann by half a length,
+Mai-Blanc second, Al Kray third.”
+
+There was a pause.
+
+“Hyar come Irene,” said Pro softly to himself, seeing with the eyes of
+desire.
+
+“Stretch, the same,” said the caller wearily. “The winner--”
+
+There was another long pause, and Pro, swallowing hard, said:
+
+“Come on, yoh Irene W.!”
+
+“The winner--Mayor Behrmann, Chicago Fritz second, Vicksburg Sal third.”
+
+Pro stood with his lower lip quivering and his eyes big with
+bewilderment. Then he edged slowly toward the operator. “Mistah,” he
+said, striving to speak casually, “Irene W. wah scratched in dat race,
+wah she?”
+
+“Irene W.?” said the operator disdainfully. “Bah! She ran last.”
+
+Slowly, as if in a trance, Prosias made his way down into the street
+and stood staring across toward the barber shop of Clarence Fox. Light
+broke upon his bewildered brain, and he muttered:
+
+“Ah done touted mahsef!”
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
+
+
+ Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
+
+ Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75271 ***
diff --git a/75271-h/75271-h.htm b/75271-h/75271-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7f3c80b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75271-h/75271-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,2508 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+<head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>
+ Tales of the turf | Project Gutenberg
+ </title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+ h1,h2 {
+ text-align: center;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .51em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .49em;
+}
+
+hr {
+ width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: 33.5%;
+ margin-right: 33.5%;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
+@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} }
+
+div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
+h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
+
+.pagenum {
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: right;
+ font-style: normal;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ font-variant: normal;
+ text-indent: 0;
+}
+
+.blockquot {
+ margin-left: 17.5%;
+ margin-right: 17.5%;
+}
+
+.x-ebookmaker .blockquot {
+ margin-left: 7.5%;
+ margin-right: 7.5%;
+}
+
+.center {text-align: center;}
+
+.right {text-align: right;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+.ph1 {text-align: center; font-size: large; font-weight: bold;}
+.ph3 {text-align: center; font-size: x-large; font-weight: bold;}
+
+div.titlepage {text-align: center; page-break-before: always; page-break-after: always;}
+div.titlepage p {text-align: center; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: 2em;}
+
+.antiqua {
+ font-family: Blackletter, Fraktur, Textur, "Old English Text MT", "Olde English Mt", "Olde English", "Old English", "Engravers Old English BT",
+ "Collins Old English", "New Old English", Gothic, serif, sans-serif;}
+
+.large {font-size: 125%;}
+
+.x-ebookmaker .hide {display: none; visibility: hidden;}
+
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+ page-break-inside: avoid;
+ max-width: 100%;
+}
+
+p.drop-cap {
+ text-indent: -0.35em;
+}
+p.drop-cap2 {
+ text-indent: -0.75em;
+}
+p.drop-cap:first-letter, p.drop-cap2:first-letter
+{
+ float: left;
+ margin: 0em 0.15em 0em 0em;
+ font-size: 250%;
+ line-height:0.85em;
+ text-indent: 0em;
+}
+.x-ebookmaker p.drop-cap, .x-ebookmaker p.drop-cap2 {
+ text-indent: 0em;
+}
+.x-ebookmaker p.drop-cap:first-letter, .x-ebookmaker p.drop-cap2:first-letter
+{
+ float: none;
+ margin: 0;
+ font-size: 100%;
+}
+
+.poetry-container {display: flex; justify-content: center;}
+.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
+.poetry {text-align: left; margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;}
+.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
+.poetry .verse {text-indent: -2.5em; padding-left: 3em;}
+.poetry .verseright { text-align: right;}
+
+.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
+ color: black;
+ font-size:smaller;
+ margin-left: 17.5%;
+ margin-right: 17.5%;
+ padding: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
+
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75271 ***</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt=""></div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="title page"></div>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="titlepage">
+<h1>TALES<br>
+<small>OF THE</small><br>
+TURF</h1>
+
+<p><i>By</i><br>
+<span class="large">HUGH S. FULLERTON</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titledeco.jpg" alt=""></div>
+
+<p><span class="large">A. R. DE BEER</span><br>
+PUBLISHER<br>
+New York City</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">Copyright, 1922<br>
+by<br>
+A. R. DE BEER<br>
+<br>
+<i>All Rights Reserved</i></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak">FOREWORD</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">THE publisher feels highly honored at being
+able, at this time, to present to the American
+public, from the pen of America’s foremost
+sports-writer and recognized authority, Hugh S.
+Fullerton, these stories of the American Turf,
+feeling sanguine that these tales, saturated with
+human interest, will be digested with as much
+pleasure and delight as the author took in writing
+and the publisher in publishing them.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak">AUTHOR’S PREFACE</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="drop-cap2">ALL men love a horse who know a horse. The
+love of contest and struggle forms a kinship
+between man and horse that exists between no
+others. It is the gameness, the courage, the
+fighting spirit of the thoroughbred which
+arouses in man the finest instincts, and it is these
+qualities that cause the love of man for the
+thoroughbred. It is noticeable too, that the
+thoroughbred horse loves only those human
+beings who possess those same qualities.</p>
+
+<p>On the race-track we find the only pure
+democracy of the world, a democracy which
+includes all classes, all strata of society. It is
+more liberal, more forgiving of human frailties
+and human weakness, than any other place, because
+men who know racing understand how
+hearts break when the weight cloths are too
+heavy and the distance too great.</p>
+
+<p>These little tales of the turf are based upon
+real incidents and real characters. Perhaps
+those lovers of racing who have lived the life
+will recognize the characters, and to those I
+would plead that they extend to them the same
+broad understanding and forgiveness that they
+give to the tout, the cadger, and the down and
+outer in real life.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">The Author</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="ph1"><span class="antiqua">To Morvich</span></p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>SON OF<br>
+RUNNYMEAD AND HYMIR</i></p>
+
+<p><i>who has demonstrated to the world
+that handicaps of birth and breeding
+are not insurmountable—that the offspring
+of a sprinter can carry weight
+over a distance if he has the heart,
+that neither straight stifles, weight
+cloths nor distance counts against
+gameness and courage—this little volume
+is dedicated.</i></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>THE AUTHOR.</i></p>
+</div></div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">“HARDSHELL” GAINES</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>“Hardshell” Gaines was the only name we
+knew him by, although had anyone been sufficiently
+interested to look through the list of registered
+owners of race-horses, he would have
+learned that Hardshell had been christened
+James Buchanan Gaines. The name might also
+have furnished a clue as to his age.</p>
+
+<p>Tradition was that he came from somewhere
+in Pennsylvania, as he spoke sometimes of the
+horses “up the valley”; but beyond the fact that
+he had a farm in Tennessee, where he bred and
+trained the horses he raced, nothing was set
+down in the “Who’s Who” of the turf. He was
+called Hardshell because he had once explained
+the difference between the Hardshell Baptists,
+to which denomination he belonged, and the
+Washfoots.</p>
+
+<p>He was an old man, thin and poorly dressed
+in baggy garments which carried the odor of
+horses and were covered with horse hairs. He
+loved horses, lived with them and for them and
+by them. In those days he emerged from his
+hibernation on the Tennessee farm when racing
+started at New Orleans and moved northward
+to Memphis, Louisville, Cincinnati, St. Louis,
+and Chicago, and in the fall he retraced the
+route and disappeared. He usually could be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
+found working with some horse and humming
+an old hymn, and occasionally, when forgetful,
+he sang hymns aloud while brushing the horses.</p>
+
+<p>He was honest, which fact set him apart from
+the majority of the persons who follow horse-racing.
+According to the unwritten law of the
+turf, it was all right for a millionaire to race
+horses for sport and the purses, but a poor man
+was expected to do the best he could, dodge the
+feed man’s bill when possible, get a shade the
+best of the odds, keep under cover the fact that
+one of his horses was fit for a race until the odds
+were right, and, if possible, sell one or two colts
+to the wealthy owners at a fancy price to even
+the losses on the season.</p>
+
+<p>Hardshell Gaines violated all these rules. He
+was poor. He bred and raced horses because
+he loved them and loved the sport. He wagered
+two dollars on each horse he entered in a race,
+never more or less. He depended upon winning
+purses to meet expenses, and he refused to sell
+his best colts at any price. Each year he emerged
+from Tennessee with three or four fair selling-platers,
+a string of two-year-olds from which he
+hoped to develop a champion, and Sword of
+Gideon, better known as Swored at Gideon, his
+alleged stake horse and the pride of the Big
+Bend stables.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the race followers believed Hardshell
+to be rich. The suspicious ones (and suspicion
+has its breeding place on race-tracks) thought
+the old man laid big bets through secret agents
+whenever he was ready to win a race. When,
+at not too frequent intervals, one of his horses
+won, the wise ones nodded and whispered that
+old Hardshell had made another killing. Others<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
+of us who knew how many of the purses offered
+in selling races must be won to feed, care for,
+and transport eighteen or twenty horses, estimated
+his financial rating more closely. I knew
+there were times when second or third money in
+cheap races was welcome to help pay feed bills
+and jockey fees, and that in several lean times
+colts had disappeared from the Big Bend stables,
+having been sold secretly at low prices.</p>
+
+<p>No one ever heard Hardshell complain. His
+health was always “tol’able,” his horses were
+always “tol’able fast,” his luck was “tol’able,”
+and after replying thus to inquiries he hummed
+a hymn and went away. He never was with the
+crowd of owners and bookmakers around hotels
+or restaurants, but lived in the stables; and when
+little Pete, the diminutive negro jockey, rode
+out of the paddock, Hardshell, a timothy straw
+in his mouth and trousers laced into the tops of
+disreputable boots, sauntered into the betting
+ring, went to the stand of a bookmaker who had
+been his friend for years, wagered two dollars
+that his horse would win, and, without looking
+to see what the odds were, went down to the rail
+to root for his horse.</p>
+
+<p>Few knew that Hardshell cherished either an
+ambition or an enmity—but he did. His ambition
+was to breed and train a champion colt, and
+the object of his hatred was Big Jim Long,
+gambler, bookmaker, sure thing man, and the
+head of the Long Investment Company—and the
+ambition and the hatred were associated.</p>
+
+<p>Long was the Long Investment Company so
+far as advertising and general knowledge went,
+but the real head sat at a desk in a suite of
+offices in the lower Broadway district in New<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
+York, and, so far as anyone knew, never had
+been near a race-track. Not even his name was
+to be found in connection with the Long Investment
+Company. All letters, remittances, and
+transfers from branch offices were addressed to
+James Long, but the man who opened them was
+Thomas J. Kirtin, whose business, according to
+the modest lettering on the door of the back
+room, which opened upon an entirely different
+corridor from that upon which the Long Investment
+Company fronted, was “Investments.”</p>
+
+<p>Kirtin’s brain had evolved the idea of applying
+the all Tontine game to betting upon horse-races,
+and he had organized the Long Investment
+Company. In addition to the promise of certain
+dividends, the company added the appeal to the
+gambling instinct in human beings. It claimed
+that the reason persons who bet upon horse-races
+fail to beat the bookmakers is that the bookmakers
+have the preponderance of capital. The
+small bettor could not withstand a run of losses
+and the gamblers could. It proposed to turn the
+tables: all bettors were to pool their capital with
+the Long Investment Company, which, with its
+elaborate system of doping horse-races, its exclusive
+sources of information from owners and
+jockeys who were “interested,” and its perfect
+system of laying bets which would assure investors
+of the best odds on each race, would beat
+the game. Further, it was not as if a bettor
+wagered all on one race; the company would bet
+on three, four, possibly six, races a day on different
+tracks, betting only on inside information,
+and the winnings would be pooled and divided.
+One hundred per cent was guaranteed, and more
+if the winnings were larger.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>The public had shied at the proposition at
+first. Then those who had been lured by golden
+promises commenced to draw ten, fifteen, even
+twenty-five, per cent a month on their investments.
+On one occasion a “dividend” of seventy
+per cent was declared. The first investors
+had their money back and still were credited
+with the original investment. The news was
+received with incredulity, but as more and
+greater dividends were declared hundreds and
+then thousands had flocked to invest. Branch
+offices of the company, lavishly furnished and
+equipped with telegraph and telephone communications
+with all tracks, were established in a
+score of cities. Money poured into the Long
+Investment Company by tens of thousands, then
+almost by millions. Each month the “investors”
+received astonishing dividends. Some perhaps
+knew or suspected that the dividends were
+being paid out of the fresh capital, but, being
+gamblers, they threw their money into the gamble,
+betting that they would draw out their principal
+and more before the bubble burst.</p>
+
+<p>In New York, Kirtin waited, watching the
+expansion of the bubble and timing almost to
+the hour when the crash must come. In his safe
+nearly fifty per cent of the money received,
+changed into bills of large denominations, was
+packed in cases, and in his desk were reservations
+of staterooms on every vessel departing for
+Europe in the next fortnight. The bubble had
+endured longer than he expected. There was
+more than a million dollars packed in the cases,
+and more than that amount already had been
+transferred and deposited in various European
+banks. He hesitated, undecided as to whether<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
+to risk another week of delay—and decided that
+the time had come to reap the last harvest and
+permit the gleanings to remain.</p>
+
+<p>On the race-tracks Big Jim Long swaggered
+and continued his rôle as head of the company
+spending thousands and talking millions. He
+was a huge man, with a huge laugh, a round,
+ruddy face pink from much massage. He wore
+clothing of striking cut and colors, and his diamonds
+dazzled the eyes of jockeys and touts. He
+maintained an air of condescending familiarity
+with some and patronizing good fellowship with
+others, and he treated money as dross. Judges,
+stewards, and club officials watched Long closely
+and with some disappointment. Rumors that he
+had bribed jockeys, had influenced owners, that
+he had fixed races and engineered great killings,
+were whispered around the tracks, yet the officials
+could not discover any evidences of his
+guilt. Big Jim made no denials of the whispered
+accusations, but blatantly defied the officials
+to “get anything on him.” Moreover, the
+bookmakers, who watched his movements even
+more closely than the racing officials did, knew
+that he never had bet any large sums at the
+track, and Big Jim had sarcastically inquired if
+they thought him a fool to make bets for the
+company at the tracks, where the odds were
+made, when the company system was to scatter
+the bets over a score of cities and get better
+odds. Such bets as he made at the tracks were
+for his own account, and generally he lost, so
+that the small bettors who spied upon him, hoping
+to learn which horses the company were
+backing, suspected that he bet to blind them to
+the real identity of the horses the “killings”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
+were made on. They believed that the Long
+Investment Company was winning vast sums.
+As a matter of fact, the Long Investment Company
+did not bet at all. Kirtin did not believe
+in gambling. Yet, oddly enough, Big Jim Long
+believed firmly and unshakably that, if he had
+complete control of the finances of the company,
+he could beat the races. He was convinced
+that with the capital of the Long Investment
+Company he could corrupt enough jockeys and
+owners to pay dividends legitimately and make
+a fortune for himself. Long would have been
+an easy victim of the game which he was helping
+perpetrate upon the public. Kirtin had no
+such illusions. Long had once argued the point
+with Kirtin in the privacy of the back room in
+New York, and Kirtin had called him a fool,
+with variations, prefix and addenda. And, as
+Kirtin sent him five thousand dollars a week
+with which to keep up the front of the Long
+Investment Company, Long had not pressed the
+point. Neither had he been convinced.</p>
+
+<p>It was against Big Jim Long that Hardshell
+Gaines cherished the one hatred of his life. It
+had started when Long sought to amuse himself
+and his friends by ridiculing Gaines and his
+stable. He had joked at the old man’s clothes,
+at his stable, his colors, and his jockey—and
+then had made the fatal blunder of ridiculing
+Sword of Gideon, calling him a “hound.”</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps nothing else would have aroused
+vengeful hate in the bosom of Hardshell, but to
+speak scornfully of Sword of Gideon was the
+unbearable insult. The Sword was Hardshell’s
+weakness, the consummation of his life’s ambition<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
+gone wrong. It was as if he had reared a
+strong, handsome son and seen him crippled and
+then laughed at.</p>
+
+<p>Hardshell had bred and reared the colt and
+named him, as he did all his other colts, from
+the Bible. As a two-year-old, racing against
+the best of the baby thoroughbreds of the West,
+the Sword had shown stamina, gameness, a
+racing instinct, and a dazzling burst of speed.
+He was royally sired, and even the millionaire
+owners agreed that Hardshell had at last produced
+a great colt. In mid-season he was rated
+as one of the two best two-year-olds of the year,
+and offers of large sums were made for him. He
+was eligible to race in all the big three-year-old
+stake races the next season, and Hardshell had
+refused to listen to any offer or set any price.
+He had set out to develop a champion racer
+down there on the little farm in the Big Bend
+of the Tennessee, a champion which would outrun
+and outgame the best of the country and
+win the American derby—then the greatest of
+all turf prizes.</p>
+
+<p>Late in August the thing happened. The colt
+was at the starting post in a six-furlong dash
+on the Hawthorne track when the barrier, a
+band of elastic, was broken by the lunging of
+another colt. The elastic band struck Sword of
+Gideon in the eye and maddened him with
+fright and pain. The accident seemed trivial,
+but the effect was the destruction of Hardshell’s
+life dream. Never thereafter would Sword of
+Gideon face the barrier without a fight. The
+memory of the stinging agony of that flying
+elastic was not to be effaced. A dozen times
+exasperated starters ordered him out of races<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
+and sent him back for further schooling at the
+barrier. Schooling was useless. He refused to
+face the thing which had hurt him. The only
+way in which he could be handled at the start
+of a race was for the jockey to turn his head
+away from the barrier, wait until the other
+horses started, then throw him around and send
+him after the flying field. Occasionally when
+the jockey swung him at the right second he had
+a chance to win. The majority of times he was
+handicapped five or six lengths on every start,
+and not infrequently when he heard the swish
+of the barrier he bolted the wrong way of the
+track. Look in the guide and after his name in
+many races you will find the brief record of a
+tragedy in the words, “Left at post.”</p>
+
+<p>The champion was ruined. But in the heart
+of Hardshell Gaines Sword of Gideon still was
+the champion. He worked over him as tenderly
+as a mother over a crippled child, and for him
+he sang his favorite hymns, as if striving to comfort
+the horse when he had behaved badly at the
+post. The newspapers, on account of his bad acting
+at the start, wrote of him as “Swored at
+Gideon.”</p>
+
+<p>Big Jim Long had called the Sword a
+“hound,” and thereafter Hardshell never spoke
+to him but passed him unseeing. At the bar one
+day Big Jim had noisily invited everyone to
+drink with him, and Hardshell had thrown
+away his beer and spat before walking away—and
+the open insult stung even Big Jim Long.</p>
+
+<p>All this was three years prior to the day when
+the affairs of the Long Investment Company
+reached their climax. In his New York offices,
+Kirtin realized that the finish was at hand. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
+bags filled with money had been removed from
+the safe in the luxurious offices of the Long Investment
+Company, carried through the door
+connecting them with the little office of Thos. J.
+Kirtin, Investments, and the door locked on
+both sides. Then Kirtin did the one decent thing
+of his career. He sent a code telegram to Long
+and to every agent of the company over the
+ganglia of leased wires, warning them that the
+jig was up and it was time to disappear.</p>
+
+<p>Probably it was not until he read that message
+that Big Jim Long understood the full significance
+of the situation. He never had stopped
+to ask himself why Kirtin had bestowed rank
+and titles upon him, why he had elected him
+president, and why all the ornate stationery and
+the many messages bore his name, or even why
+he had been paid five thousand dollars a week.
+Perhaps he thought he earned it by virtue of
+his influence among racing people. He understood
+now that he, Jim Long, would be held
+accountable to the law, that he would be fugitive
+or prisoner while Kirtin, with the millions
+of dollars looted from the public, could not be
+connected with the swindle and would be safe in
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>He cursed Kirtin, and, strangely, not because
+Kirtin was a thief and worse. He cursed him
+because he considered Kirtin a fool. Had Kirtin
+followed his plan and advice, the scheme
+would have worked. With that almost unlimited
+capital behind him he could have fixed enough
+races and won enough money to pay the dividends.</p>
+
+<p>Long knew that within a day or two, three at
+the longest, the authorities would descend upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
+the company offices. With a sudden determination,
+Long sent a code order to every agent of
+the company to ignore Kirtin’s message and prepare
+for a killing.</p>
+
+<p>Let Kirtin go his cowardly way. He, Big
+Jim Long, would face the situation, pay the dividends,
+and handle the big money himself. He
+knew that at least a half million dollars remained
+in the hands of the agents of the company
+in different cities—the gleanings which
+Kirtin had not considered worth the risk to
+remain and collect. Long telegraphed, ordering
+the agents to hold all funds subject to his order
+instead of forwarding them to New York.</p>
+
+<p>Kirtin, busy clearing the desk in his office and
+destroying the last papers that would reveal
+any connection between Kirtin, Investments,
+and the Long Investment Company, heard the
+news and shrugged his shoulders. He had tried
+to save the fools, and if they refused to be saved
+it was none of his affair. An hour later he and
+his suitcases were in the stateroom of a liner.</p>
+
+<p>At the Fair Grounds track in St. Louis, Big
+Jim Long set to work hastily to stave off disaster
+and revive the investment company. He had
+considered telegraphing the authorities to hold
+Kirtin, but had rejected the plan as unbecoming
+one in his profession. Long’s plan of procedure
+was simple and direct. He would fix a race,
+pay the horse owners well, and win enough
+money to declare another dividend, restoring
+the faith of the investors, who already had begun
+to show signs of uneasiness as rumors
+spread. It was not a problem of morals but of
+mathematics.</p>
+
+<p>The chief obstacle to his plan was lack of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
+time, and he knew he must act rapidly. Already
+the rumors that the Long Investment Company
+was in trouble had spread through the uneasy
+ranks of the gamblers, and Long knew the first
+one who informed a district attorney of the
+affairs of the company would bring the avalanche.
+By rapid work he completed his preliminary
+plans during the races that afternoon.
+An overnight handicap was carded for the next
+day’s races, and Long selected eight owners
+whose morals he knew were below the par even
+of racing and each agreed to enter a horse in
+the race. The chief problem was to prevent
+other owners from naming their horses to start,
+and to avoid this one owner agreed to enter Attorney
+Jackson, a high-class racer, to frighten
+owners of slower horses out.</p>
+
+<p>That evening a caucus was held. Besides
+Long, eight owners were present. It was agreed
+that with Attorney Jackson the favorite, the
+odds against Mildred Rogers would be at least
+fifteen to one, therefore by simple arithmetic
+Mildred Rogers should win, because fifteen times
+one is fifteen, whereas two times one is two. Long
+intended to bet the remnants of the capital of the
+investment company, and, figuring the price
+would recede from fifteen or twenty to one to
+ten to one before the money was placed, he estimated
+that he would win close to five million
+dollars. Not a cent was to be wagered at the
+track.</p>
+
+<p>The caucus, after nominating Mildred Rogers
+to win, decided that Attorney Jackson was to
+make the early running, cutting out a terrific
+pace to the head of the stretch, while Betty M.
+and Pretty Dehon were to come up fast, crowd<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
+the leader far outside on the turn, allowing
+Mildred Rogers to come through along the rail,
+after which the entire field was to bunch behind
+her and shoo her home a winner, while Attorney
+Jackson pulled up as if lame.</p>
+
+<p>The rehearsal was progressing satisfactorily
+and each owner was receiving instructions as to
+the way his horse should run. The caucus was
+pleased. Long had agreed that he would bet at
+least four hundred thousand dollars, and that he
+would give twenty-five per cent of the total winnings
+to the owners. The eight who were playing
+deuces wild in the sport of kings were calculating
+that they would divide at least a million
+dollars among themselves when the disquieting
+news arrived.</p>
+
+<p>“What the hell do you think of that?” Sorgan,
+owner of Patsy Frewen, demanded. “Old
+Hardshell Gaines has entered old Swored at
+Gideon.”</p>
+
+<p>There were a chorus of curses.</p>
+
+<p>“That hound of his ain’t got a chanst,” declared
+Kinsley. “It’s ten to one he runs the
+wrong way of the track.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’s the worst actor at the post on the circuit,”
+said Stanley.</p>
+
+<p>“He’s liable to bust up the start.”</p>
+
+<p>“Better pick one of our horses to bump him
+and put him over a fence,” snarled McGuire.
+“He ain’t got any business in this. He knows
+Attorney Jackson can beat him.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a testimonial to his reputation for
+honesty that not one of the assembled crooks
+even suggested asking Gaines to enter the conspiracy.
+They cursed him for an interfering old
+fool, they cursed his stubbornness, they cursed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
+his idiocy in still insisting that Sword of Gideon
+was a stake horse, they cursed his supposed parsimony
+and believed he had entered his aged
+racer in the hope of winning a few dollars by
+getting the place or show money. Not one suspected
+that anything excepting blind chance
+had caused him to enter his horse in the race.</p>
+
+<p>They were wrong. Hardshell Gaines, with an
+unsullied record of fifty years on the turf, had
+heard something. He had seen Long in conference
+with some owners, and when the same owners
+rushed to enter their horses in the overnight
+handicap Gaines’ suspicion had become certainty.
+He had entered Sword of Gideon in the
+handicap, and for an hour afterward had rubbed
+and stroked the old campaigner, and as he
+rolled bandages around the bad leg of the old
+horse and applied liniment to his throat, he had
+hummed a hymn.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally his voice rose in song and he
+sang of the time when “the wicked cease from
+troubling and the weary are at rest.” It was
+after dark when he entered the Laclede downtown
+and sought out the assistant starter.</p>
+
+<p>“Joe,” he said solemnly, “I have been in this
+game, man an’ boy, clost to fifty year and tried
+to run straight and do right as a hossman and
+a Baptist. No man can say James Buchanan
+Gaines owes him a cent or ever done a dishonest
+thing. I’ve done had a wrastle with my conscience,
+and consarn me if I believe it’s wrong
+to skin a skunk!”</p>
+
+<p>Joe nodded approval.</p>
+
+<p>“There’s something doing, Joe,” said Hardshell.
+“Eight of them owners and that slick
+crook Jim Long is holdin’ a caucus. Nary a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
+word to old Hardshell, and the Sword is entered.”</p>
+
+<p>Joe nodded understandingly.</p>
+
+<p>“Lissen, Joe,” said Hardshell, lowering his
+voice. “Long is planning a big killing, and it’s
+up to me and the Sword and you to stop him.
+The Sword is good for once, if that nigh left leg
+don’t overheat. He can beat any hoss in that
+race, ’ceptin’ Attorney Jackson, and I reckon
+they ain’t plannin’ to have no favorite win.”</p>
+
+<p>Joe nodded again and reserved speech, waiting
+for the proposition.</p>
+
+<p>“I ain’t asking no man to do anything dishonest,
+Joe,” the old man went on—“it’s agin
+my religion and my conscience too—but something’s
+<i>got</i> to be done.”</p>
+
+<p>Hardshell waited expectantly and hummed
+“When temptation sore assails me,” hoping
+that Joe would indicate his attitude or show receptivity,
+but the assistant starter nodded and
+smoked in silence.</p>
+
+<p>“’Tain’t as if I was trying to bribe anyone,”
+Hardshell explained painfully. “I don’t
+want no one to do anything that is agin his
+conscience.”</p>
+
+<p>“What do you want me to do?” Joe asked,
+breaking his silence.</p>
+
+<p>“All I ask is that you help the Sword get off
+straight, and me and you and the Sword’ll spile
+the crookedest plan ever hatched.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’t any law against my helping a bad
+actor get off right,” said Joe.</p>
+
+<p>Hardshell said no more. He gripped Joe’s
+hand hard, and, after buying him a cigar,
+strolled away, humming “Come, Holy Spirit,
+Heavenly Love, with all thy quickening powers.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>There was an air of uneasiness hanging over
+the betting ring at the Fair Grounds track as
+the horses hand-galloped to the starting post in
+the fourth race. The air was surcharged with
+expectancy. Judges, always alert and watching
+for signs of dishonesty, stared at the horses and
+received frequent bulletins from the betting
+ring. Bookmakers, fearful of a sudden attack
+by betting commissioners backing a certain
+horse, held their chalk and erasers ready for
+rapid use. Bettors, hearing vague whispers of
+“something doing,” asked each other excitedly
+what was being played. Yet everything in the
+betting ring, paddock, and stand seemed tranquil.
+The betting was light. Attorney Jackson
+was favorite at seven to five, Patsy Frewen the
+second choice, at two to one, the others at odds
+of from four to twenty, with Mildred Rogers
+ranging from fifteen to twenty to one and only
+a few scattered bets registered on her. Yet
+from a score of cities all over America came
+frantic telegrams to gamblers, bookies, and
+owners, asking for track odds and inquiring the
+meaning of the terrific plunging on Mildred
+Rogers. Big Jim Long, using the efficient organization
+of the company, was betting the remaining
+funds of the concern. More than fifty
+thousand was bet in Chicago, thirty thousand in
+Louisville, twenty thousand in Cincinnati, then
+twelve thousand or more in other cities in which
+the Long Investment Company had offices.</p>
+
+<p>There was a last minute plunge on Mildred
+Rogers at St. Louis by gamblers who had heard
+the news from outside, and the odds dropped
+quickly from fifteen to four to one.</p>
+
+<p>As he tightened the girth for the last time,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
+Hardshell Gaines whispered to Pete, his jockey:</p>
+
+<p>“Take a toe holt and a tooth holt, Pete. Joe’ll
+git you off a-runnin’, and I got a pill in him
+that’d blow up a bank. It’s timed to go off
+about the half-mile if you ain’t too long at the
+post. All you got to do is sit still and hold on.”</p>
+
+<p>Humming, he went to the book of his friend
+and wagered two dollars that Sword of Gideon
+would win. He was still humming when he
+went down to the rail to watch the horses start,
+and the hymn he hummed was, “Oh, for a
+thousand tongues to sing my great Redeemer’s
+praise.”</p>
+
+<p>Out by the barrier a perspiring starter was
+beseeching, swearing, threatening, and scolding,
+while a row of horses milled and maneuvered for
+position. In the midst of the mêlée of milling
+horses, Joe, the assistant starter, a buggy whip in
+one hand, sweated and swore as he appeared to
+be striving to make Sword of Gideon line up
+with the other horses. Out of the corner of his
+eye Joe watched the starter for the telltale movement
+which revealed the second that the starter
+would spring the barrier.</p>
+
+<p>When that movement came Joe held the bridle
+bit of Sword of Gideon, and before the barrier
+flashed he threw the horse’s head around, leaped
+aside, and slashed him sharply across the quarters
+with the whip.</p>
+
+<p>Sword of Gideon, stung into forgetfulness of
+fear, leaped forward. The barrier flashed past
+his nose and he leaped into full stride, two full
+lengths in the lead of the field before the others
+were under way.</p>
+
+<p>Big Jim Long, his florid face mottled, hurled
+his chewed cigar against the ground and swore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
+viciously. Sword of Gideon, running like a wild
+horse, opened up a gap of eight lengths between
+himself and the nearest pursuer in the first
+eighth of a mile. In vain Attorney Jackson’s
+jockey, remembering his instructions, spurred
+and urged his mount, striving to catch the flying
+leader and set the pace. At the half Attorney
+Jackson dropped back, beaten and out of it.
+Mildred Rogers’ rider, seeing the conspiracy going
+wrong, made a desperate effort to overtake
+the flying Sword. The nitroglycerine pellet had
+acted and the aged horse was running as he had
+run when he seemed destined to be champion.
+Length by length he increased his lead over the
+staggering, wabbling field, and tore down the
+stretch fifteen lengths ahead of Patsy Frewen.</p>
+
+<p>Big Jim Long, his heavy jaws sagging, his face
+mottled red and white, his big, soft hands
+clenched, watched until the horses were within
+a few yards of the finish. Then he turned and
+walked rapidly across through the edge of the
+betting ring toward the exit. At the back of
+the betting ring he met Hardshell Gaines moving
+toward the paddock to greet the victorious
+Sword of Gideon. Big Jim’s pent up wrath
+exploded.</p>
+
+<p>“You—and your blank blanked spavined
+hound!” he raged. “You blanked old fool, if it
+hadn’t been for you—”</p>
+
+<p>Hardshell Gaines looked straight ahead, unseeing,
+unhearing, and as he walked past the
+furious gambler he hummed contentedly; and
+even Big Jim recognized the long metre doxology.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
+
+<p class="ph3">“JAUNDICE’S” LAST<br>
+RACE</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
+<h2 class="nobreak">“JAUNDICE’S” LAST RACE</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>There remains some of the Christ-spirit in the
+worst of us, perhaps, but the most optimistic of
+missionaries would hardly have assayed the soul
+of “Jaundice” O’Keefe with the hope of discovering
+even a trace of that quality. Jaundice
+was a product, or by-product, of the race-track.
+He had run away from his home in St. Louis at
+the age of eleven, to escape the beatings administered
+by a drinking father and a sodden mother,
+and had found refuge in a freight car loaded
+with horses which were being shipped to a race-meeting
+in New Orleans. Two hostlers were
+drinking from a bottle when not sleeping on a
+pile of hay. They welcomed the boy, gave him a
+drink, fed him, and allowed him to burrow into
+the hay for warmth. Perhaps it was kindness,
+perhaps they saw in him a means of escaping
+the work of feeding and watering horses during
+the long journey.</p>
+
+<p>Jaundice was happy. He loved horses. Perhaps
+that was the remaining trace of good after
+the rest had been bred or beaten out of him. He
+had loved the horses which drew the coal wagon
+his father drove when sober, and the sight of the
+trim thoroughbreds filled him with awed admiration.
+Arrived in New Orleans, he followed the
+horses to the race-track, found refuge in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
+stables, and was adopted into the army of those
+who follow the races. A year later he had acquired
+a master’s degree in profanity and
+obscenity and developed a ratlike viciousness in
+fighting when cornered. He was undersized and
+undernourished, with the remnants of a fighting
+spirit from generations of Irish sustaining him.
+Stable-boys learned to fear the savageness of his
+methods and left him alone. Occasionally a
+trainer or stable boss beat him with a whip and
+cursed him.</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively horses loved him. In one year
+he was an exercise boy. At fourteen, with all
+the wickedness and viciousness of the race-track
+and stable concentrated in him, he could ride
+and was awarded a jockey’s license and a suit of
+gay-colored silks.</p>
+
+<p>He rode winners. Winning, with Jaundice,
+was unselfish. He rode not for personal glory
+or for money, but for the honor of the horse on
+which he was mounted. When he was beaten he
+gulped dry sobs and went away with his mount
+to console it.</p>
+
+<p>For four years he rode races on the flat, at
+tracks all over America. During these four
+years he made as much money as the average
+man makes in a lifetime, and at the end of it
+had nothing. To him money meant only expensive
+meals, clothes remarkable for colors and
+patterns, wine, women of a sort, and large yellow
+diamonds. At eighteen he was an old man. His
+face was yellow and drawn; he had ceased to be
+“Kid” O’Keefe and become “Jaundice.” He
+was gaining weight and beginning to pay the
+penalty of the carouses which followed each temporary
+period of prosperity. For a year he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
+fought to hold his standing. His mounts became
+fewer and fewer. When the owners ceased to
+employ him to ride on the flat, he became a
+steeplechase jockey.</p>
+
+<p>Riding steeplechasers in races means in the
+majority of cases moral and physical suicide.
+Jaundice had no fear of physical consequence,
+nor any conception of morality. With two
+drinks of whisky poured into his outraged body,
+he would have tried to make his mount jump
+the Grand Cañon, had the course led in that
+direction. Falls and broken bones failed to
+break his nerve, but his subconscious honesty
+was shattered. On the flat he never had ridden
+a crooked race. He was restrained by no consciousness
+of right or wrong. He tried always
+to win because he loved the horses he rode. Over
+the jumps he had no such scruples. The steeplechase
+horses were “has-beens” like himself and
+entitled to no consideration. He commenced to
+ride queer-looking races. He was nineteen when
+he fell off the favorite in a steeplechase race to
+permit an outsider to win and the stewards ruled
+him off the tracks for one year.</p>
+
+<p>What Jaundice did in that year of banishment
+he alone knew in detail. Barred from the only
+home and the only associates he had ever known,
+the great loneliness came upon him. He was
+broke. He stole and was sent to prison. When
+the suspension was lifted he went back to the
+tracks. He had grown heavier and his eyes and
+his mind were blurred by drink. He lived with
+the horses, attaching himself to the stable for
+which he had been a star jockey, and lived in
+the stalls and the cars. His love of the animals
+themselves had waned. Drudgery and vicious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
+living had warped even that instinct. When he
+dared he became a tout, whispering information
+to petty gamblers at the edge of the betting ring.
+When he left the tracks at night it was to betray
+stable information to bartenders in return for
+drinks.</p>
+
+<p>When he was twenty-two there remained two
+loves by which it was proved that all good can
+not be smelted out of a human being. One was
+for Doc Grausman, the gallant bay stake horse
+of the stable, whose dam he had ridden to victory
+many times. The other was for Lord James.</p>
+
+<p>On race-tracks there is something in a name.
+Jaundice received his because his complexion
+had become a dirty yellow. Lord James was so
+called because the one spark of decency remaining
+in him caused him to conceal his family
+name. It was reputed that he was the son of an
+English nobleman and that he could have a title
+and estate if he returned to England. Rags of
+an old pride and remnants of decent breeding
+restrained Lord James from mentioning the family
+name as his own or from returning home to
+disgrace them. He had come to America, a
+younger son, with a stable of race-horses and
+high hopes. Robbed, fleeced, he had “quit.”
+Jaundice can not be spoken of as having degenerated.
+His original height permitted but a
+slight fall. But Lord James had sunk to even
+lower levels. He was a cadger, a tout, and a
+sneak-thief at such times when no risk was
+involved.</p>
+
+<p>No one around the tracks hated either Lord
+James or Jaundice. They pitied Jaundice, but
+the touts themselves despised Lord James. He
+had lost all his courage, if he ever possessed any,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
+and drink had sapped his health and his brain.
+Of the trio, only Doc Grausman bore his name
+honestly. His names were those of his sire and
+his granddam, and he was of royal blood and
+three years old.</p>
+
+<p>When Lord James and Jaundice had become
+friends no one knew. Probably it was during
+Jaundice’s career as a winning jockey, while he
+scattered money recklessly after every winning
+race. Upon such boys Lord James had preyed
+for years. These two had nothing in common.
+Race, religion, birth, breeding, and education
+made them different, but they met in the thick
+scum of vice and became inseparable. For Lord
+James, Jaundice stole and betrayed stable secrets,
+pulled race-horses, bought drinks, and furnished
+food and lodging. It is not recorded that
+Lord James ever did anything for Jaundice.</p>
+
+<p>These two sank lower and lower together.
+When the majority of the race-tracks of the
+country were closed, they disappeared from the
+world of sport, starved, and served prison terms
+together. When racing reopened, they reappeared.
+Jaundice had developed a cough. His
+wasted body revealed the ravages of tuberculosis.
+Lord James was wearing, with a pitiful effort to
+maintain an air of decency, a suit purchased
+with his last remittance money two years before.</p>
+
+<p>The horses were racing at Jamaica and the
+weather was raw and rainy. They experienced
+difficulty in gaining an entry to the track and
+were compelled to remain outside, shivering and
+wet, until the day’s sport ended. Then a negro
+stable-boy allowed them to sleep with him in a
+stall, and Jaundice procured food from the
+camp-fires, where no one ever is refused.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>Lord James did not get up the next morning.
+He had crawled into the hay with wet clothing
+and in the morning he had a fever. Jaundice
+brought him food, but he did not eat. All day
+he remained huddled in the hay, covered with
+horse blankets, his face turned to the board wall.
+He was thinking and his mind was Gethsemane.</p>
+
+<p>During the night Lord James touched Jaundice
+with his hand and waked him. Very
+quietly and with a return of long-forgotten dignity,
+he entrusted to Jaundice an envelope upon
+which was written an address in England,
+charging him to mail it and allow no one to see
+it. He asked Jaundice to see the boys and ask
+them to bury him decently. Then he gripped
+Jaundice’s hand and died gamely, sustained by
+the traditions of his race and class. Jaundice
+alone wept. It was the first time in many years
+he had wept, and he was ashamed of his tears.</p>
+
+<p>Around the race-track no man connected with
+the game dies and lacks a decent funeral, but
+there was scant sympathy for Lord James. The
+hat was passed, bookmakers, jockeys, trainers,
+owners, grafters, even the pickpockets, contributing,
+but their contributions were small. The
+whole amounted to eighty dollars. Jaundice
+was not satisfied. Had he been satisfied, there
+would have been no story to tell.</p>
+
+<p>On the day following the horses moved to
+Belmont Park to open the racing season on that
+track, and Doc Grausman was entered to start
+in a high-weight handicap. Doc Grausman belonged
+to a wealthy man whose colors Jaundice
+had often carried to victory. This owner had
+not entered the horse in the handicap with any
+expectation of winning. The colt needed work,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
+and he wanted to see how well the three-year-old
+could carry weight racing against all aged
+horses.</p>
+
+<p>Jaundice had not slept. His clothing still
+was damp and he was coughing. For the time
+his abiding love for Doc Grausman was put in
+the background while he went from man to man
+begging money to give Lord James what he considered
+a proper and fitting funeral. The undertaker
+wanted one hundred and fifty dollars.
+Jaundice was determined to raise the sum before
+the afternoon’s sport ended.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly before the bugle sounded, calling the
+horses from the paddock for the first race, a
+fractious colt lashed out with his feet and kicked
+the jockey who had been employed to ride Doc
+Grausman in the fourth. Jaundice heard of the
+accident within a few minutes. It was he who
+hurried to the club-house and informed the
+owner.</p>
+
+<p>“Thanks, Jaundice,” the owner said carelessly.
+“I wanted the colt to have the workout.
+Now, I suppose I’ll have to scratch him. I don’t
+want to put a strange boy up.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mister Phil,” said Jaundice, inspired with
+a sudden idea, “let me ride Doc Grausman.
+I’m down to weight, Mister Phil. I only weigh
+a hundred and twenty-eight now. Let me ride
+him, Mister Phil, and I’ll win.”</p>
+
+<p>His voice was pleading, his eyes and manner
+appealing, and he coughed harder. The owner
+was surprised and laughed slightly. “I’m
+afraid it can not be fixed, Jaundice,” he said
+lightly. “How do you stand with the stewards?”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m clean with them now, Mister Phil. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
+ain’t got nothin’ on me. They never could
+prove I pulled Lady Rose. I’m down to weight,
+Mister Phil, and that Doc Grausman horse likes
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>His eagerness and the truth of the final statement
+decided the matter.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll see the stewards and explain,” said the
+owner. “He’s only in for the workout, and
+perhaps they’ll stand for it. Sure you’re strong
+enough to handle the colt?”</p>
+
+<p>The owner had observed the cough, and Jaundice
+checked it with an effort.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Mister Phil, I’m all right. Just caught
+a cold. Get this mount for me, Mister Phil.
+I’ve got to plant Lord James decent.”</p>
+
+<p>“That old bum dead at last?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sir. I’ve got to get a hundred and
+fifty to plant him, and the boys ain’t kicking in
+fast. Let me ride this Doc Grausman hoss and
+I’ll plant Lord James swell, like his family
+would want him.”</p>
+
+<p>The owner passed over a twenty-dollar banknote.
+What he told the track officials no one
+knows, but when the fourth race was called,
+Jaundice, carefully hiding his cough, rode forth
+for the first time in four years wearing the colors
+of his old stable.</p>
+
+<p>The bookmakers were laying thirty to one
+against Doc Grausman, and a wit in the ring
+said it was ten to one the colt, twenty to one
+the boy. What was not known was that Jaundice
+had taken the money that had been contributed
+to bury Lord James and wagered it three
+ways, straight, place, and show, on Doc Grausman.
+A new generation of jockeys faced the
+start, a generation that knew nothing of the skill<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
+of the boy who had ridden champions. The
+new boys, with the contempt that youth holds
+for the “has-been,” jeered at Jaundice, and
+hurled insulting epithets at him as they wheeled
+and maneuvered for the advantage of the
+break. Jaundice did not retort with oaths and
+vilifications as he would have done in other
+days. He was afraid he would start to
+cough.</p>
+
+<p>The barrier flashed. Jaundice had been holding
+Doc Grausman steady during the milling of
+the others. Out of the corner of the eye he
+had caught the betraying arm movement of the
+starter an instant before the barrier flashed upward,
+had shot Doc Grausman at the starting
+line just the instant it flickered past his nose,
+had beaten the start a length and a half while
+the others were taking the first jump and sent
+him roaring down the long straight-away for
+four and a half furlongs. Riding him out desperately
+at the end, he held the lead by half a
+length over the favorite.</p>
+
+<p>As the horses paraded back past the stands,
+he held his lips tightly pressed together. He
+staggered a little as he weighed out, and in the
+paddock his lips were reddened. The strain of
+the ride had opened the old wounds in his lungs.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later he ordered the undertaker to
+give Lord James the best funeral he could for
+one thousand two hundred dollars and paid over
+the money. There remained for his share of
+the victory just twenty-seven dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The news spread around the track that evening
+that Jaundice was to give Lord James a
+“swell funeral.” Curiosity was aroused. Touts,
+stable-boys, bookmakers’ helpers, a few jockeys,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
+attended. It happened that Jaundice came to
+me to consult as to the minister, and I had
+secured the services of a wonderful little rector
+who is much interested in all human beings.</p>
+
+<p>The funeral was the strangest one I ever attended.
+The little minister was doing his best
+to comfort the mourners, but plainly was at a
+disadvantage because Jaundice was the only
+mourner. Jaundice, through some instinctive
+sense of respect for the dead, was standing very
+awkwardly and tears were rolling down his
+cheeks. He was weeping for the second time in
+his life. Finally the little rector read from
+the service: “He is not dead, but sleeping.”</p>
+
+<p>Jaundice started, then stared, reached instinctively
+for his pocket, and sobbed in a whisper:
+“Ten dollars will win you twenty-seven if you
+think old Lord James is only sleeping.”</p>
+
+<p>His reversion to instinct raised a laugh. For
+the first time the assemblage was getting its
+money’s worth. The little rector was very much
+shocked. He could not understand that Jaundice
+meant no disrespect. He argued that no
+man could live in the United States and be so
+completely ignorant of religion. I said that
+Jaundice thought Jesus Christ was a cuss word
+and that his only knowledge that he possessed
+an immortal soul was from hearing it God
+damned by trainers and others.</p>
+
+<p>A week later I heard that Jaundice was in
+a Brooklyn hospital and in bad shape. I went
+to see him to get for a newspaper the story of
+a jockey who, while sick to death, rode in a race
+to win money enough to bury a friend. He was
+propped up in bed, coughing. The doctor had
+told me he had but a little time to live. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
+was glad to see me and inquired how I liked
+Lord James’ funeral.</p>
+
+<p>“Great class to that, Jaundice; best I ever
+attended.”</p>
+
+<p>“No one can’t say that I piked,” he responded,
+beaming at the praise. “I planted
+Lord James swell, and his folks can’t ever say
+I didn’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re looking better,” I lied. “Be back
+on the track pretty soon?”</p>
+
+<p>“Lord James won’t beat me more than a
+neck,” he said without emotion. “Something
+busted inside me during that race. Have you
+heard how Doc Grausman is comin’ along? He
+sure ought to win that stake this week.”</p>
+
+<p>Presently he spoke of the little rector. “What
+do you think of that guy?” he asked, rather
+contemptuous of the ignorance of the minister.
+“He thought Lord James was only sleeping,
+but he wouldn’t back his opinion with coin.”</p>
+
+<p>I strove to explain, without much success.</p>
+
+<p>“That little guy is all right,” said Jaundice.
+“Did you hear what he said about Lord James
+havin’ a chanst on that track he was talking
+about? Say, Lord James has about as much
+chanst as I have.”</p>
+
+<p>“Everyone has a chance,” I said feebly.</p>
+
+<p>“Me?” he asked in surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Sure; the Book says everyone has who repents.”</p>
+
+<p>“I ain’t got nothin’ to repent of exceptin’
+pullin’ three or four of them bum chasers. The
+stewards couldn’t get nothin’ on me at that.”</p>
+
+<p>“The Judges up there know it all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Know everything? Then, say, what chanst
+has a guy got?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>As a religious prospect the case was too hard,
+so I telephoned the little rector and gave it
+over to him. He called upon Jaundice several
+times, and the following week I went to the hospital
+again. Jaundice was weak but smiling.</p>
+
+<p>“Say,” he whispered hoarsely, “I got a
+chanst. That little man says that them Judges
+up there knows I was carryin’ too much weight
+to run true and that you can’t blame anyone
+for losin’ when he is handicapped out of it. I
+told him about pulling them chasers and lyin’
+and stealin’, and he said that didn’t make no
+difference, that the Judges don’t set a guy down
+forever if he is sorry he done wrong.” He remained
+thinking for a time.</p>
+
+<p>“He didn’t have to tell me to be sorry,” he
+whispered. “Honest, I always was sorry when
+I pulled one of them bum chasers when he was
+trying. It wasn’t square to the horse. This
+is the softest bet I ever had,” he whispered.
+“I’m going to play it. Them’s good odds—a
+chanst to win all them things he told me about
+and only be sorry. It’s like writing your own
+ticket.”</p>
+
+<p>I found the little rector very thoughtful and
+amazed at this new manner of man he had discovered,
+and when he buried Jaundice the next
+week he got right down among us and talked
+about handicaps and weights, and keeping on
+trying all the time. He talked just as if he had
+been in the paddock half his life, and the last
+thing he said was: “If I were a bookie, I’d
+lay odds that Jaundice cashes that last bet.”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
+
+<p class="ph3">TOUTIN’ MISTAH FOX</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
+<h2 class="nobreak">TOUTIN’ MISTAH FOX</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>Prosias Trimble’s protuberant lower lip
+drooped dejectedly, his eyes shifted in a scowl
+until the pupils were dots in the corners of
+expanses of white, his russet shoes, rapier-pointed
+and uncomfortably overcrowded with
+feet, dragged laggingly along the marble floor
+of the St. Charles Hotel Turkish baths. He
+went about his task of distributing towels with
+the air of one who has suffered great wrong.</p>
+
+<p>In the private rooms and on cots ranged in
+the dormitory, white men snored, gurgled,
+choked, strangled. The sounds of sixty fat men
+snoring in sixty keys filled the rooms. Even
+the snore of the man in room six, which was
+a combination of shifting gears, a cut-out muffler,
+and a slipping clutch, passed unheard by
+“Pro.” Even the cheery whistle of his fellow
+rubber was unnoticed. The world was a place
+of darkness, and Pro’s mood was two shades
+darker than his skin, the color scheme of which
+was that of the ace of spades.</p>
+
+<p>It was a dull night. The St. Charles Hotel
+Turkish baths were but half filled with patrons,
+although overcrowded with snores. The light
+patronage and the dejected mood of Prosias
+were due to the same cause: the winter meeting
+at the Fair Grounds race-track in New Orleans
+had ended two days before, the army of men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
+and horses that had encamped in the Crescent
+City during the winter, and the swarm of plump
+patrons which nightly had crowded the St.
+Charles, had moved northward to Baltimore,
+and Prosias Trimble, top sergeant in that army,
+with the rank of tout, was left behind, to eke
+out a livelihood by working as rubber in the
+bath-house. The pearl-colored spats, the pointed
+russet shoes, the fawn waistcoat checkerboarded
+in green, the massive watch-chain draped in two
+graceful curves from buttonhole to pockets, the
+four-carat near-diamond which glistened with
+fading brilliancy in the purple necktie, were of
+the vanities vain: the “hosses” were gone, and
+Pro, compelled to return to the profession he
+had disowned when he became a race-follower,
+was not with them.</p>
+
+<p>Two days before this night of gloom Prosias
+had strutted the streets of New Orleans—the
+envy of colored men, the admired of many colored
+women. His shining countenance, which
+reflected joy and happiness, had added color to
+the throngs in paddock and betting ring. In
+the evenings his presence had graced social affairs
+of the negro eight hundred, and Miss Luck
+had smiled consistently upon him. He had
+spent three evenings bidding farewell to the
+friends he had accumulated during the winter,
+had lightly promised half a dozen of his newly
+acquired lady friends to see them when the
+horses came back, and had created envy and
+dark hatred among the men by the casual carelessness
+with which he bade them polite farewells
+and expressed hopes of seeing them at
+Baltimore or Louisville or even at Saratoga during
+the meetings.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>Until the morning of “Get Away Day” Miss
+Luck had smiled, and on that morning she
+beamed. Prosias and his bankroll had prospered,
+waxed fat, and flourished. The customary
+rumors had circulated on that morning—the old,
+old story of the “Get Away Killing” and the
+feed man’s bill—and straight from the oats-box
+the rumor had come to Pro, alighted upon him,
+and stung him. It was a hot tip—so hot that
+it singed and burned. The tip was to the effect
+that Centerdrink had been nominated to win—that
+he was to be shooed in at long odds, and
+that all the grievances of the bettors against the
+bookmakers were to be evened up in one great
+killing.</p>
+
+<p>Pro had it from a jockey, who had it right
+out of the conference at which Centerdrink had
+been chosen to win. Pro had hurled his bankroll—the
+fortune accumulated during the entire
+winter—at the bookmakers, who, instead of
+breaking in panic, had handed him back smiles
+and bits of pasteboard with cabalistic charcoal
+characters on them. Pro had stood to win more
+than twelve thousand dollars—and he had stood
+dazedly while he watched Centerdrink finish
+eighth. When the truth dawned upon his benumbed
+brain he had reached one hand into
+the now vacant pocket, seeking car-fare, and,
+finding it not, had sought the bath-house and
+work—his dream of a summer jaunt around the
+race-courses wrecked.</p>
+
+<p>Pro completed his task of distributing towels
+and stood thinking. Daylight was commencing
+to show through the little windows just under
+the ceiling of the bath-house, and daylight
+brought with it fresh, bitter thoughts. He knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
+that a few hundred miles to the northward the
+sun was rising on a stretch of level land, a circular
+ribbon of loam laid upon a field of green.
+Birds were singing in the trees, meadow larks
+were rising from the infield. Rows of fires were
+springing up along the front of the circular line
+of low, whitewashed stables. Slender, graceful
+horses, blanketed to the knees, were being led
+around and around in little circles, the odor
+of frying bacon was in the air, the rhythmic
+drumming of the feet of a speedy colt was
+sounding from the track. Far across the velvet
+infield, near where the spidery pillars of the
+stand stood black against the lightening sky,
+men with watches in their hands were on the
+rail, timing in fractions of seconds the movements
+of the flying colt. He pictured one vacant
+spot on the pickets of the fence—a spot which,
+but for the fickleness of Miss Luck and the hot
+tip on Centerdrink, he would have been occupying.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly a light broke over his face—as sun
+striving to shine through thunder clouds.</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon as how maybe Ah’ll be dar yit,” he
+muttered to himself. “Mist’ Jim Robin he say
+to me yistaddy mahnin’: ‘Pro, yuh wuthless
+niggah, gimme good rub dis mahnin’ an’ when
+Ah gits to Baltimo’ Ah’ll sen’ yoh a good thing.’
+Yassah, dat ’zackly what he done say, an’ Ah
+done rub him till he yell ’nuff. Mist’ Jim Robin
+he done keep his promise. He’ll sen’ me
+dat good thing, den Ah’ll show dese Noo ’Leans
+shines a classy niggah. Ah’ll ride in Mistah
+Pullman’s cahr ’stid o’ Mistah Burton’s cahr—nothward.
+Yassah.”</p>
+
+<p>Visibly affected by a process of triumph of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
+mind over condition, Pro achieved a more cheerful
+countenance. The happy smile which was
+his trademark, and the ingratiating grin which
+made him welcome among race-track followers,
+returned by degrees, and by the time the snorers
+aroused themselves and shuddered at the cold
+plunge before coming to the rubbing tables his
+ready laugh and the seductive manner in which
+he wielded the solicitous whisk-broom upon each
+departing guest won reward.</p>
+
+<p>“Um-um, Miss Luck comin’ back,” he muttered
+hopefully, as he counted his tips. “Um-um.
+Dis niggah in Baltimo’ foah Sattaday
+suah—jes’ in time foh to see de handicap.
+Wisht Mist’ Jim’d sen’ me dat tip he done
+promise me.”</p>
+
+<p>As if in answer to the wish, the page in the
+hotel under which the St. Charles baths are located
+was passing through lobbies and writing-rooms
+paging:</p>
+
+<p>“Mistah Prosias Trimble! Mistah Prosias
+Trimble!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hyah, boy,” the captain of the bell-boys
+called. “Doan’ be a-pagin’ dat name ’roun’ de
+house. Prosias Trimble he dat buxom black
+niggah Pro, down in de baf-house.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tellygraft foh yoh, niggah,” the page announced
+disgustedly, as he tossed the yellow
+envelope toward Pro and abandoned all hope
+of a tip.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Luck, favor me!” Pro pleaded devoutly
+as he held the envelope in his hand. “Miss
+Luck, bring de good news—doan’ betray me
+now. Ah needs yoh!”</p>
+
+<p>“What does he say, Pro?”</p>
+
+<p>“What who say?” demanded Pro, his lips<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
+suddenly bulging outward belligerently, as he
+swung about to face Mr. Clarence Fox, who had
+pursued the telegram from the lobby down into
+the bath-house.</p>
+
+<p>“What Mist’ Jim Robin say?” responded Mr.
+Fox, scowling.</p>
+
+<p>“How come yoh knows so much?”</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon Ah doan’ know he promise’ you a
+tip?”</p>
+
+<p>“How come yoh knows?”</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon yoh didn’t infohm a certain lady
+frien’ o’ mine?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat yaller gal too brash wif her mouf!”
+Pro muttered regretfully, as he recalled the fact
+that the lady in question was manicurist in the
+Royal Crescent Palace barber shop, Clarence
+Fox owner.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his appearance of displeasure, Pro
+was not displeased. His mind was working, and
+Mr. Fox was included in the thoughts. Mr. Fox
+possessed money. Pro’s cash capital consisted
+of the two dollars and twenty cents secured in
+tips during the night’s work. Further, he was
+aware that in order to turn even a sure thing
+on a race tip into money, working capital is
+required. His acquaintance with Mr. Clarence
+Fox had been incidental to his friendship for
+Miss Susie, the manicurist, and Pro recalled,
+with some regret, the fact that during the more
+prosperous times of the winter he had been inclined
+to treat Clarence Fox condescendingly.
+But Mr. Fox, proprietor of the five-chair barber
+shop catering to the swelldom of the negro district,
+he viewed in a different light now. If Mr.
+Fox could be persuaded to finance certain illegal
+but delectable operations, Pro saw a way to overcome
+lack of working capital.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>“’Scuse me, Mistah Fox, if Ah seem discurtous,”
+he said, “but a gennelman gotta be
+careful when he gits straight tips from gennelman
+white owners.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat all right, Mistah Trimble,” said Clarence,
+responding to politeness with greater politeness.
+“Ah respects yoh sentiments. Reckon
+dat a wahm tip?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ’low she ’bout ninety-eight in de shade,”
+Pro responded.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah doan’ ’low dat yoh ’tends to bet enuff
+foh to cover all de han’-books in Noo ’Leans?”
+Clarence inquired flatteringly.</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t ’low as Ah can,” said Pro regretfully.
+“You ’low ef Ah tell yoh wha’ hoss Mist’ Jim
+done name’, kin yoh wait till Ah gits my bets
+down, so’s not influence de odds?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ’low dat Ah kin. Yoh ’low dat tip look
+good?”</p>
+
+<p>“Look good?” Pro’s voice quivered with outraged
+indignation. “Yoh ’low Mist’ Jim done
+tellygraft a niggah lessen it good?”</p>
+
+<p>“Nevah kin tell,” commented Mr. Fox cynically.</p>
+
+<p>Prosias hesitated. His mind was in panic for
+fear of losing the opportunity to secure working
+capital, yet the situation was embarrassing. He
+found it difficult to approach a business proposition
+without revealing the fact that he was
+embarrassed financially.</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon yoh do the right thing if Ah tell
+yoh de name ob de hoss?” he said tentatively.</p>
+
+<p>“Yoh knows me, Pro. Ah always does de
+right thing, doan’ Ah?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat yoh repitation, Clarence,” said Pro,
+vaguely conscious of the fact that he knew
+nothing of Clarence’s reputation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>“Always aims to do de right thing, Pro.”</p>
+
+<p>“Hyah she go, den,” said Pro, with sudden
+determination, as he tore open the envelope.</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Luck, be mine!” he breathed, as he
+unfolded the yellow paper. With Mr. Fox
+craning his neck to see over his shoulder, he
+read:</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="verse">Shoot the roll on the filly in the fourth.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="verseright">ROBIN.</div>
+</div></div></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Fox wrinkled the end of his broad nose
+and looked puzzled.</p>
+
+<p>“De roll on de filly!” said Prosias, his eyes
+rolling.</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ hoss he mean?” inquired the less informed
+Mr. Fox.</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ hoss?” Pro repeated disdainfully.
+“Why, dat Ivory Gahter filly, dat who: Mist’
+Jim’s filly, an’ she good. She ripe, niggah, she
+win suah, an’ de odds—um-um! Niggah, we
+rich!”</p>
+
+<p>“Ivory Gahter—I’m gwine!” exclaimed Mr.
+Fox excitedly. “Niggah, yoh play de books
+’roun’ hyar. Ah’ll slaughtah dem Rampaht
+Street gamblahs.”</p>
+
+<p>The convinced Mr. Fox, hesitating at the barber
+shop only long enough to sweep the till clean,
+dashed toward Rampart Street, while Pro, waiting
+until his financial backer disappeared,
+ascended to the second story of the pool-room
+nearest the hotel, and, after considerable haggling,
+persuaded the handbook keeper to wager
+twenty dollars against two against the chances
+of Ivory Garter’s winning. Pro mourned because
+he knew that at the track the odds would
+be twenty to one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>Instead of retiring for the day, Pro promenaded,
+ostensibly for pleasure, but always with
+a view of borrowing capital to wager. Several
+times he tentatively opened negotiations, but,
+meeting with scant encouragement, he contented
+himself with remarking airily that he had remained
+in New Orleans to consummate a betting
+commission for an owner, and was leaving to
+join the horses that evening, after the killing.</p>
+
+<p>His probably were the first eyes to read the
+ticker that afternoon, when in jerks and clicks
+the tape recorded the fact that Ivory Garter had
+won. Thirty minutes later, with twenty-two
+dollars in his pocket, Pro entered the bath-house.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’s sorry to be ’bliged to notify yoh Ah
+resigns,” he announced. “Ah’s called No’th.”</p>
+
+<p>With light heart and faith in Miss Luck restored,
+he went forth to the Royal Crescent
+Palace barber shop by a devious route. At his
+first stop he remarked casually that he wouldn’t
+be surprised if he and Mr. Fox had cleaned up
+five hundred dollars, at the second stop he
+opined he and Mr. Fox had won seven hundred,
+and by the time he reached Canal Street his
+estimate of probable winnings had passed twelve
+hundred dollars and his cash capital had dwindled
+to eight dollars, due to sudden generosity
+in lending and to purchasing cigars for less
+fortunate acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p>His mental estimate of the amount won exceeded
+the figures he dared express openly.
+There was no limit to his imagination. Mr. Fox
+had money. A hundred dollars should yield
+fifteen hundred at proper pool-room odds. Mr.
+Fox rated himself a sport. Pro calculated that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
+a proper sport, with money, would bet at least
+five hundred dollars on a tip straight from an
+owner, which at twelve to one—the lowest possible
+odds he figured Mr. Fox would accept—would
+be six thousand dollars, fifty per cent of
+which was three thousand dollars. Pro pictured
+himself riding into the track at Baltimore in
+an open automobile. He even determined to
+pay admission instead of soliciting an employee’s
+badge.</p>
+
+<p>He reached the Royal Crescent Palace barber
+shop in a state of excited anticipation. Mr. Fox,
+at ease, was draped over the cigar counter, and
+his very nonchalant calmness sent a shiver
+through Pro’s optimism.</p>
+
+<p>“Howdy, Clarence?” he exclaimed, under
+forced draught. “We suah slip dat one over!”</p>
+
+<p>“Suah did,” assented Mr. Fox, without enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>“We ’mos’ ruin dis hyah town, Ah reckon,”
+observed Pro, inviting information. “Ah suah
+clean mah end.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’s glad yoh hit ’em hahd, Pro,” said Mr.
+Fox, without warming. “Ah wah jest a-wishin’
+Ah done had ez much faith in yoh frien’ ez
+yoh did.”</p>
+
+<p>“How come, Clarence?” asked Pro, with a
+sudden sinking suspicion. “Didn’ yoh plunge?”</p>
+
+<p>“Hadn’ no faith a-tall,” asserted Clarence.</p>
+
+<p>“Didn’ yoh win <i>nothin’</i>?” asked Pro, unbelief,
+suspicion, crushed hopes, all concentrated
+in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Jes’ li’l’ pikin’ bet, Pro,” said Mr. Fox resignedly.
+“Ah bin kickin’ mahsef. Ah mought
+a-win ’nuff to be goin’ norf wif yoh. But Ah
+lack faith. Ah lack faith perdigious.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>“Yoh win nuffin a-tall?” Pro reiterated, his
+voice expressing his ebbing hope.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah win jes’ twenty dollah,” said Mr. Fox
+positively. “Niggah on’y lay me ten to one,
+an’ Ah bet on’y two dollah.”</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated, waiting as if expecting passionate
+contradiction, and added:</p>
+
+<p>“Hyah yoh bit foh de tip.”</p>
+
+<p>He peeled a five-dollar bill from a huge roll
+extracted carelessly from a trousers pocket and
+flipped it toward Pro.</p>
+
+<p>“Dat a good tip, Pro,” he said in conciliatory
+tones. “Ah thanks yoh foh it. Wish Ah’d
+had moah faith. Ef yoh git any good ones in
+Baltimo’, wiah me.”</p>
+
+<p>Prosias, speechless, pocketed the bill and
+turned. At the door he paused.</p>
+
+<p>“Yas, sah, Clarence,” he said slowly. “Ah
+ain’ done fohgit. Ah’ll ’membah yoh, Clarence.”</p>
+
+<p>His brain was dazed, but his heart seethed
+with bitter resentment. He knew that Clarence
+Fox had profited largely and had swindled him
+out of his just share. He walked slowly, bitterly
+regretting the generosity of the morning,
+but for which he still would have had enough
+money to reach the race-track. He went humbly
+back to the St. Charles baths and petitioned to
+be restored to his position. That night, while
+working upon the super-fattened carcasses of
+patrons, thoughts of Clarence Fox and his perfidy
+came to his mind, and he struck hard, eliciting
+howls of protest. And during that long
+night his brain slowly evolved a plan of vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>Three days later Clarence Fox, arrayed in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
+glory which neither Solomon nor the lilies ever
+could have rivaled, descended into the St.
+Charles baths.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, howdy, Pro?” he exclaimed, with well
+simulated surprise. “Ah thought yoh done
+gone Baltimo’.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not yit, Clarence, not yit.”</p>
+
+<p>His cheerful aspect and his failure to express
+either anger or sorrow puzzled Clarence.</p>
+
+<p>“How come?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Frien’ ast me would Ah remain foh a few
+days an’ ack ez his bettin’ c’missioner.”</p>
+
+<p>“Whafoh of a frien’?”</p>
+
+<p>“Same frien’ ez sen’ me that last tip.”</p>
+
+<p>Clarence Fox’s manner changed with startling
+suddenness. From a patronizing familiarity
+and superior condescension, he descended
+instantly to solicitous friendship.</p>
+
+<p>“Hear anythin’?” he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ ’spectin’ anythin’ foh a day er two.”</p>
+
+<p>“Gwine tell me when he wiahs yoh, Pro?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ slippin’ no tips to niggahs da won’
+bet no coin.” Pro’s contempt was impersonal.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’s a bettin’ fool when Ah got faith,”
+asserted Mr. Fox earnestly, fitting the shoe
+to himself. “Las’ time Ah ain’ got no faith
+a-tall.”</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon maybe yoh won’ hab no faith dis
+hyah time,” Pro remarked disinterestedly. “Ah
+sabes mah tips foh gamblahs, not pikahs.”</p>
+
+<p>The term stung, but Mr. Fox, while writhing
+under the insult, chose to pretend dignity and
+ignored it.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ain’ int’rusted in five-dollah bettahs,”
+Pro added, rubbing salt into the hurt.</p>
+
+<p>“Five dollah?” Mr. Fox exclaimed indignantly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
+“Pro, when Ah’s got faith Ah bets five
+hundred dollah.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mebbe so,” Pro commented in unconvinced
+accents. “Wha’ dat git me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat,” asserted Mr. Fox, with emphasis, “git
+yoh twenty-fibe pussent ob all Ah wins.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ain’ int’rusted,” said Pro, proceeding
+about his duties with an air of finality.</p>
+
+<p>“Lissen at reason, Pro,” Mr. Fox argued in
+quick alarm. “Twenty-fibe am mah reg’lar pussent,
+but ’tween frien’s lak yoh an’ me, it’s
+forty pussent.”</p>
+
+<p>“Fifty neahrer right,” commented Pro, still
+busy.</p>
+
+<p>“Fifty an’ me takin’ all de chanst? Fohty
+am gen’rous.”</p>
+
+<p>“An’ show me de tickets?” Pro’s tone was
+an ultimatum.</p>
+
+<p>“Doan yoh trus’ me, Pro?” Mr. Fox registered
+indignant surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Suah Ah trust yoh, Clarence,” said Pro
+sulkily. “Didn’t yoh han’ me fibe dollah last
+time?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat mah reg’lar twenty-fibe pussent,” responded
+Mr. Fox humbly, choosing to ignore
+the insinuation. “It fohty dis time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Undah dem circumstances, Clarence, Ah’m
+int’rusted,” said Pro. “Ah’m expectin’ de
+glad tidin’s ’bout day aftah to-morrah.”</p>
+
+<p>“Lemme know, Pro?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yas, sah, Clarence, Ah suah let you know,”
+Pro promised. And, as Mr. Clarence Fox departed,
+Pro, leaning upon the handle of a mop,
+suddenly commenced a jellylike flesh quake
+which concluded with a noisy irruption of
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>“Dat niggah done broke!” he muttered, as
+his inward merriment subsided. “Dat niggah
+broke right now, on’y he doan’ know it.”</p>
+
+<p>His plot was working.</p>
+
+<p>That evening he sat in the bath-house, his
+mind concentrated upon the racing form. He
+was busy picking losers, instead of winners, and
+even the unmuffled snores of the sleepers failed
+to distract his attention.</p>
+
+<p>“Kunnel Campbell,” he read and considered.
+“Dat de dog what run las’ foah times at de
+Fair Groun’s. He run las’ foah times, he seben
+dat othah time. Dat colt ain’t got no chanst
+a-tall.” He studied the entries for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“Kunnel Campbell,” he repeated. “Dat mah
+s’lection foh Mistah Fox in de fust race.”</p>
+
+<p>He yelled with inward laughter for a moment
+and resumed his work on the dope sheet.</p>
+
+<p>“Jakmino,” he read. “Jakmino. He dat
+skate dat Mist’ Jim call de buggy hoss. Dat
+hoss got bow tendons, glandahs, an’ de boll
+weevil. He kain’t run fast ’nuff foh to wahm
+hisse’f good. He ain’t no runnin’ hoss. He ain’
+fas ’nuff foh to pull a disc harrer.” He muttered
+over the form sheet a moment, then decided.
+“Jakmino—dat mah s’lection foh Mistah
+Fox in de third race.”</p>
+
+<p>Prosias went off into another spasm of inward
+mirth.</p>
+
+<p>He studied the entries for the last race, suddenly
+threw back his head and laughed until
+the snorers, disturbed, ceased snoring and
+turned over off their backs.</p>
+
+<p>“Irene W.,” he said, and laughed again.
+“Irene W.—dat hoss suah a houn’—wust houn’
+on de circuit. She six yeah ole an’ a maiden—ain’t
+nebber bin in de money.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>He laughed until near apoplexy and chuckled
+to himself.</p>
+
+<p>“Irene W.: dat man gran’ extra special tip
+foh Mistah Fox in de las’ race.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he said to himself solemnly:</p>
+
+<p>“Mistah Clarence Fox, yoh done broke. Yoh
+broke, on’y yoh doan’ know it.”</p>
+
+<p>With the aid of the telegraph operator in the
+office upstairs, Pro evolved a telegram to himself,
+and early the next afternoon, as Mr. Clarence
+Fox, attired in the gorgeous clothes purchased
+with the illicit profits of the Ivory Garter
+race, entered the hotel, a negro bell-boy,
+propelled by the telegraph operator, hastened
+through the lobby.</p>
+
+<p>“Mistah Prosias Trimble!” he paged. “Mistah
+Prosias Trimble!”</p>
+
+<p>“Hyah, niggah,” the captain called sharply.
+“Ain’ Ah gwine tell yoh not foh to be pagin’
+dat name ’roun’ de hotel? Dat Pro down in
+de baf-house.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Clarence Fox was two steps behind the
+bell-boy when the telegram was delivered to Pro.</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ he say dis time, Pro?” he demanded
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’t open it yet,” said Pro carelessly, moving
+as if to place the telegram in his pocket.
+“Ain’t openin’ tellygrafs while folks is pesticatin’
+’roun’.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yoh ain’t gwine t’row me down now, is yoh,
+Pro?” Mr. Fox’s voice was tremulous with
+surprised disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ sayin’ Ah is, is Ah?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ hearin’ yoh sayin’ yoh ain’t,” retorted
+Mr. Fox. “’Membah yoh done mek a ’greement
+’bout dat tip.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>“Ain’t suah dis de tip,” Pro countered.
+“Reckon Ah bettah read it.”</p>
+
+<p>He ripped open the envelope and held the
+inclosed message at a tantalizing angle so that
+no craning of the neck of Mr. Fox sufficed to
+give him a glimpse of the contents.</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ yoh make ob dat?” Pro exclaimed as
+in surprise. “Mist’ Jim suah gittin’ good, hittin’
+’em hahd.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ he say?”</p>
+
+<p>“He say plenty,” said Pro mysteriously.
+“Dis clean-up day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ hoss he name?” quavered Mr. Fox.</p>
+
+<p>“Hoss? He done name three hosses—two hot
+tip an’ a gran’ special extra br’ilin’ hot one.”</p>
+
+<p>“Gimme dem names, Pro.” Mr. Fox, feeling
+the urge of excitement, reached as if to take the
+telegram from Pro.</p>
+
+<p>“Han’s off, niggah, han’s off!” Pro warned,
+scowling belligerently.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’t us pahtners in dis?” quavered Mr.
+Fox.</p>
+
+<p>“Um. Ain’ so suah ’bout dat yit,” said Pro,
+exasperatingly cool.</p>
+
+<p>“But us made a ’greement.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ’membahs dat,” Pro admitted, as if reluctantly.
+“Le’s see, dey’s a hoss in de fust
+race, dey’s a hoss in de third race, an’ de gran’
+special suah thing in de las’. Reckon Ah tip
+yoh one at a time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ de fust, den?” pleaded Mr. Fox humbly.</p>
+
+<p>“How much yoh ’low yoh bet on dat fust
+hoss?”</p>
+
+<p>“Depen’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ tippin’ nuffin’ on no ‘depen’s’.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>“Ef it look good, Ah bet fifty dollah.” Mr.
+Fox stated the figure tentatively.</p>
+
+<p>“Fifty dollah? Ah ain’ tippin’ no pikahs.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah bets a hunnerd ef de price look right.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ tippin’ nuffin’ on no ‘ifs.’”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah bets a hunnerd dollah on dat fust hoss.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fox had surrendered, and he stated the
+figure with the air of a man paying through
+the nose.</p>
+
+<p>“An’ fohty pussent foh me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat ouh ’greement, Pro.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat hoss’ name,” said Pro, opening the message
+and stopping in maddening deliberation—“dat
+hoss’ name—how Ah know yoh play
+faih?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yoh knows me, Pro.”</p>
+
+<p>“Uh—reckon Ah do, Clarence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Den, what dat hoss’ name?”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fox’s voice bore a note of irritation, and
+Pro hastened to ease the situation.</p>
+
+<p>“K-u-n-n-e-l C-a-m-p-b-e-l-l,” Pro spelled
+from the message. “Kunnel Campbell—dat
+good hoss. Mist’ Jim bin hol’in’ him foh a
+killin’. Ought git a good price on dat hoss,
+Clarence.”</p>
+
+<p>“Kunnel Campbell,” repeated Mr. Fox.
+“Ah’s gwine. Ah’ll be back atter dat race.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’ll be waitin’ wif de second hoss,” Pro
+promised.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Fox disappeared with more haste
+than dignity, Pro threw back his head and indulged
+in prolonged laughter.</p>
+
+<p>“Mistah Fox,” he repeated, “yoh done broke—yoh
+broke, on’y yoh doan’ know it yit.”</p>
+
+<p>For an hour and a half Pro tasted the sweets
+of vengeance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>“He say he bet a hunnerd,” he soliloquized.
+“Dat mean he bet two hunnerd, mebby two
+hunnerd an’ fifty, an’ lie me outen mah share
+ef he win. When he lose he ’low he bet foah
+hunnerd.”</p>
+
+<p>He was rehearsing reasons for the defeat of
+Colonel Campbell and additional reasons for increasing
+the size of the next bet, when the door
+opened and Mr. Fox, wildly agitated and with
+shining face, hurtled into the bath-house.</p>
+
+<p>“Did—did—did he win?” Pro’s eyes were
+bulging.</p>
+
+<p>“Did he win? We kill’m, Pro!” panted Mr.
+Fox. “Done clean up Rampaht Street. Gimme
+dat nex’ tip.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’—wha’—what odds yoh git?” Pro,
+dazed with the unexpectedness of developments,
+managed to gasp.</p>
+
+<p>“Niggah on’y lay me five to one,” lied Mr.
+Fox breathlessly. “Ah bets a hunnerd at five
+to one. We win five hundred dollah.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ dem ticket?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat a s’picious niggah gamblah, Pro,” said
+Mr. Fox. “He done say he ain’ makin’ no
+ticket, foh fear de p’lice git evidence.”</p>
+
+<p>Pro saw the uselessness of argument.</p>
+
+<p>“Two hunnerd—dat mah share,” he stated,
+after an arithmetical parturition. “Gimme dat
+money.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ain’ c’lect yit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bettah c’lect foh Ah tell yoh dat nex’ hoss.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’ got time befoh de next race.”</p>
+
+<p>“Den pay me yohsef.”</p>
+
+<p>“An’ take chances dat niggah welch?”</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon’ Ah keep dat nex’ tip foh mahsef.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’ll take de chanst,” Mr. Fox decided.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
+“Ah low dat niggah pay, lessen he done
+broke.”</p>
+
+<p>He counted two hundred dollars off a huge
+roll of bills and passed them to Pro reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>“How much yoh ’low yoh bet dis time?”
+demanded Pro, recounting the money.</p>
+
+<p>“Reckon Ah shoot another hunnerd.”</p>
+
+<p>“A hunnerd, an’ all dat gravy in de bowl!”
+Pro registered indignant protest. “Yoh gwine
+shoot two hunnerd or nothin’. Dat’ll leave yoh
+on velvet, an’ de special extra comin’.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’s gamblin’,” Mr. Fox declared shortly.
+“What his name?”</p>
+
+<p>“An’ mek de bets whar dey writes de tickets?”
+Pro added, imposing a new condition.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah knows a place.”</p>
+
+<p>“An’ fohty pussent foh me?”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat ouh ’greement.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dat nex’ hoss”—Pro studied the telegram
+tantalizingly—“dat nex’ hoss J-a-k-m-i-n-o.”</p>
+
+<p>“See yeh latah,” said Mr. Fox, dashing for
+the exit.</p>
+
+<p>“Wha’ yoh think ob dat?” Pro asked himself
+wonderingly, as he felt the money to make certain
+it was real. “Dat hoss ain’t got a chanst,
+an’ he win!”</p>
+
+<p>“Miss Luck she suah smile!” he continued.
+“Ah kain’t lose, an’ Ah still break dat niggah.
+Ah bets dat niggah bet three hunnerd dollar,
+an’ git eight to one an’ pay me dis.”</p>
+
+<p>The two hundred dollars suddenly decreased
+in value by comparison with Clarence’s supposed
+winnings. Then Pro’s face lighted.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah’s <i>got</i> mine,” he reflected, “an’ Ah gwine
+keep it. Wait twell Clarence done git de bad
+news ’bout dat Jakmino race! Dat hoss ain’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
+got no moah chanst ob winnin’ dan a niggah
+has bein’ ’lected gubonor ob Louisiana.”</p>
+
+<p>An hour later his comforting reflections were
+interrupted by the second avalanche descent of
+Clarence Fox into the bath-house. His eyes
+were protruding and his face shining, and
+money bulged from every pocket.</p>
+
+<p>“Did—did—did—did dat one win, too?”
+Pro’s eyes rolled wildly and amazement was
+portrayed on every feature.</p>
+
+<p>“He roll home, Pro!” cried Mr. Fox. “Win
+all de way, by foah length. Ah lef’ a trail o’
+bankrupt niggahs from de Levee to de basin.”</p>
+
+<p>“What odds yoh git, niggah?” demanded
+Pro, suddenly stern.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah git seben,” Mr. Fox lied cautiously.
+“What yoh git?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah git nine foh mine,” Pro lied. “Show
+me dem ticket.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah git nine foh paht o’ mine, too,” declared
+Mr. Fox, weakening.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah git seben foh a hunnerd, an’ nine foh
+a hunnerd. Hyar de ticket foh de nine. Dat
+othah niggah de one dat doan’ write no ticket.”</p>
+
+<p>“Pay me, niggah!” said Pro sternly. “Pay
+me six hunnerd an’ forty dollar.”</p>
+
+<p>“Count it yohsef,” said Mr. Fox, suddenly
+reckless in his prosperity as he dragged money
+from pockets and tossed it in scrambled heaps
+on the cigar counter. “Count dat triflin’ six
+hunnerd an’ fohty dollah, an’ tell me dat special.
+Ah gwine staht an epidemic ob bankruptcy
+’mongst dem niggah gamblahs from de
+levee to de lake.”</p>
+
+<p>Pro counted his share, feeling the money as
+if striving to make certain he was awake. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
+eyes rolled, and he blinked. He knew Mr. Fox
+had won more than he admitted winning, but
+in his amazement he failed to feel even resentment.</p>
+
+<p>“Git a move on, niggah,” commanded Mr.
+Fox. “Doan’ be all day countin’ dat triflin’
+money. Le’s go git de real coin. What dat
+las’ hoss’ name?”</p>
+
+<p>Pro arose, stuffed his share of the loot into his
+pockets, shoved the remainder back toward Mr.
+Fox, and suddenly gave voice to long pent feelings.</p>
+
+<p>“Run ’long an’ <i>guess</i>, niggah, <i>guess</i>,” he said
+witheringly. “Ah’s done tippin’ lyin’, stealin’,
+cheatin’ niggahs.”</p>
+
+<p>“What yoh mean?” demanded Mr. Fox, but
+weakly. “Ain’ Ah done slip yoh eight hunnerd
+an’ forty dollah?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yoh suah done so,” admitted Pro, “an’ yeh
+done win twicet ez much ez yoh ’mit yoh win.
+Ah mean yoh done cheat an’ lie an’ steal. Ah
+say Ah’s done, an’ Ah mean Ah’s done. Hyah
+whar yoh an’ me paht. Ah do mah own bettin’,
+an’ Ah doan’ tip no pikah.”</p>
+
+<p>He strode indignantly from the bath-house,
+leaving Mr. Fox crushed. Presently he rallied
+and pursued, striving to learn what horse Prosias
+was betting on.</p>
+
+<p>Up narrow stairways and down narrower
+steps into basements, into rooms behind pool
+parlors and rooms behind barber shops, into
+cigar stands, Pro dashed and dodged, leaving
+behind him a trail of quaking, alarmed colored
+men. The word spread over New Orleans that
+Prosias Trimble was plunging, but the bookmakers,
+anxious to lay off the bets, were close-mouthed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
+and Clarence Fox strove in vain to discover
+which horse Pro was playing. By fifties,
+twenty-fives, and hundreds, Pro wagered his
+discounted share of Clarence Fox’s winnings,
+and slowly the odds on Irene W. to win the last
+race at Baltimo’ were driven downward from
+forty to one to six to one.</p>
+
+<p>Just before post time for the final race, Pro,
+flushed and breathless, wagered the last ten dollars
+and stood in a small room where a telegraph
+operator clicked away at a key and received the
+news from the distant track.</p>
+
+<p>“Two hundred at fohty mek eight thousan’,”
+he figured, “a hunnerd at thutty mek three
+thousan’, a hunnerd at twenty-five mek two
+thousan’ five hunnerd.”</p>
+
+<p>Laboriously he checked off his bets and strove
+to strike the total.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah win t’irteen thousan’ fibe hunnerd dollah,”
+he said dazedly. “Add dat eight hunnerd
+an’ fohty, and dat’ll mek me win fo’teen thousan’
+t’ree hunnerd an’ fohty dollah.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah ’low when Ah gits to Baltimo’ Ah staht
+a stable ob hosses,” he said. “Ah ’low Ah call
+it de Miss Luck Stable. Mah colahs will be
+scahlet an’ puhple, wif a yaller sash an’ a green
+cap—”</p>
+
+<p>His reverie was interrupted by the man at
+the telegraph instrument calling aloud what the
+clicking instrument told him.</p>
+
+<p>“Mai-Blanc at the quarter,” he said. “Mayor
+Behrmann second, Maude G. third. At the
+half: Mai-Blanc leads, Chicago Fritz second,
+Mayor Behrmann third. The three quarters:
+Mayor Behrmann by half a length, Mai-Blanc
+second, Al Kray third.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>There was a pause.</p>
+
+<p>“Hyar come Irene,” said Pro softly to himself,
+seeing with the eyes of desire.</p>
+
+<p>“Stretch, the same,” said the caller wearily.
+“The winner—”</p>
+
+<p>There was another long pause, and Pro, swallowing
+hard, said:</p>
+
+<p>“Come on, yoh Irene W.!”</p>
+
+<p>“The winner—Mayor Behrmann, Chicago
+Fritz second, Vicksburg Sal third.”</p>
+
+<p>Pro stood with his lower lip quivering and
+his eyes big with bewilderment. Then he edged
+slowly toward the operator. “Mistah,” he said,
+striving to speak casually, “Irene W. wah
+scratched in dat race, wah she?”</p>
+
+<p>“Irene W.?” said the operator disdainfully.
+“Bah! She ran last.”</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, as if in a trance, Prosias made his
+way down into the street and stood staring
+across toward the barber shop of Clarence Fox.
+Light broke upon his bewildered brain, and he
+muttered:</p>
+
+<p>“Ah done touted mahsef!”</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="transnote">
+<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
+
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
+
+<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75271 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/75271-h/images/cover.jpg b/75271-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f1d85c5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75271-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/75271-h/images/coversmall.jpg b/75271-h/images/coversmall.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4edbd2f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75271-h/images/coversmall.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/75271-h/images/i_title.jpg b/75271-h/images/i_title.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3486470
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75271-h/images/i_title.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/75271-h/images/i_titledeco.jpg b/75271-h/images/i_titledeco.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9b41f4f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/75271-h/images/i_titledeco.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..61572b9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75271 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75271)