Read The Gambler Page 10

apartments she praised a few, while to others she remained

  indifferent. Concerning everything, however, she asked

  questions. Finally we reached the gaming-salons, where a lacquey

  who was, acting as guard over the doors, flung them open as

  though he were a man possessed.

  The Grandmother's entry into the roulette-salon produced a

  profound impression upon the public. Around the tables, and at

  the further end of the room where the trente-et-quarante table

  was set out, there may have been gathered from 150 to 200

  gamblers, ranged in several rows. Those who had succeeded in

  pushing their way to the tables were standing with their feet

  firmly planted, in order to avoid having to give up their places

  until they should have finished their game (since merely to

  stand looking on--thus occupying a gambler's place for

  nothing--was not permitted). True, chairs were provided around

  the tables, but few players made use of them--more especially if

  there was a large attendance of the general public; since to

  stand allowed of a closer approach; and, therefore, of greater

  facilities for calculation and staking. Behind the foremost row

  were herded a second and a third row of people awaiting their

  turn; but sometimes their impatience led these people to

  stretch a hand through the first row, in order to deposit their

  stakes. Even third-row individuals would dart forward to stake;

  whence seldom did more than five or ten minutes pass without a

  scene over disputed money arising at one or another end of the

  table. On the other hand, the police of the Casino were an able

  body of men; and though to escape the crush was an

  impossibility, however much one might wish it, the eight

  croupiers apportioned to each table kept an eye upon the stakes,

  performed the necessary reckoning, and decided disputes as they

  arose.

  In the last resort they always called in the Casino

  police, and the disputes would immediately come to an end.

  Policemen were stationed about the Casino in ordinary costume,

  and mingled with the spectators so as to make it impossible to

  recognise them. In particular they kept a lookout for

  pickpockets and swindlers, who simply swanned in the roulette

  salons, and reaped a rich harvest. Indeed, in every direction

  money was being filched from pockets or purses--though, of

  course, if the attempt miscarried, a great uproar ensued. One

  had only to approach a roulette table, begin to play, and

  then openly grab some one else's winnings, for a din to be

  raised, and the thief to start vociferating that the stake was

  HIS; and, if the coup had been carried out with sufficient skill,

  and the witnesses wavered at all in their testimony, the thief

  would as likely as not succeed in getting away with the money,

  provided that the sum was not a large one--not large enough to

  have attracted the attention of the croupiers or some

  fellow-player. Moreover, if it were a stake of insignificant

  size, its true owner would sometimes decline to continue the

  dispute, rather than become involved in a scandal. Conversely,

  if the thief was detected, he was ignominiously expelled the

  building.

  Upon all this the Grandmother gazed with open-eyed curiosity;

  and, on some thieves happening to be turned out of the place,

  she was delighted. Trente-et-quarante interested her but little;

  she preferred roulette, with its ever-revolving wheel. At length

  she expressed a wish to view the game closer; whereupon in some

  mysterious manner, the lacqueys and other officious agents

  (especially one or two ruined Poles of the kind who keep

  offering their services to successful gamblers and foreigners in

  general) at once found and cleared a space for the old lady

  among the crush, at the very centre of one of the tables, and

  next to the chief croupier; after which they wheeled her chair

  thither. Upon this a number of visitors who were not playing,

  but only looking on (particularly some Englishmen with their

  families), pressed closer forward towards the table, in order

  to watch the old lady from among the ranks of the gamblers. Many

  a lorgnette I saw turned in her direction, and the croupiers'

  hopes rose high that such an eccentric player was about to

  provide them with something out of the common. An old lady of

  seventy-five years who, though unable to walk, desired to play

  was not an everyday phenomenon. I too pressed forward towards

  the table, and ranged myself by the Grandmother's side; while

  Martha and Potapitch remained somewhere in the background among

  the crowd, and the General, Polina, and De Griers, with Mlle.

  Blanche, also remained hidden among the spectators.

  At first the old lady did no more than watch the gamblers, and

  ply me, in a half-whisper, with sharp-broken questions as to who

  was so-and-so. Especially did her favour light upon a very young

  man who was plunging heavily, and had won (so it was whispered)

  as much as 40,000 francs, which were lying before him on the

  table in a heap of gold and bank-notes. His eyes kept flashing,

  and his hands shaking; yet all the while he staked without any

  sort of calculation--just what came to his hand, as he kept

  winning and winning, and raking and raking in his gains. Around

  him lacqueys fussed--placing chairs just behind where he was

  standing-- and clearing the spectators from his vicinity, so that

  he should have more room, and not be crowded--the whole done, of

  course, in expectation of a generous largesse. From time to time

  other gamblers would hand him part of their winnings--being glad

  to let him stake for them as much as his hand could grasp; while

  beside him stood a Pole in a state of violent, but respectful,

  agitation, who, also in expectation of a generous largesse, kept

  whispering to him at intervals (probably telling him what to

  stake, and advising and directing his play). Yet never once did

  the player throw him a glance as he staked and staked, and raked

  in his winnings. Evidently, the player in question was dead to

  all besides.

  For a few minutes the Grandmother watched him.

  "Go and tell him," suddenly she exclaimed with a nudge at my

  elbow, "--go and tell him to stop, and to take his money with

  him, and go home. Presently he will be losing--yes, losing

  everything that he has now won." She seemed almost breathless

  with excitement.

  "Where is Potapitch?" she continued. "Send Potapitch to speak

  to him. No, YOU must tell him, you must tell him,"--here she

  nudged me again--"for I have not the least notion where

  Potapitch is. Sortez, sortez," she shouted to the young man,

  until I leant over in her direction and whispered in her ear

  that no shouting was allowed, nor even loud speaking, since to

  do so disturbed the calculations of the players, and might lead

  to our being ejected.

  "How provoking!" she retorted. "Then the young man is done

  for! I suppose he WISHES to be ruined. Yet I could not bear to

  see him
have to return it all. What a fool the fellow is!" and

  the old lady turned sharply away.

  On the left, among the players at the other half of the table, a

  young lady was playing, with, beside her, a dwarf. Who the dwarf

  may have been--whether a relative or a person whom she took with

  her to act as a foil--I do not know; but I had noticed her there

  on previous occasions, since, everyday, she entered the Casino

  at one o'clock precisely, and departed at two--thus playing for

  exactly one hour. Being well-known to the attendants, she always

  had a seat provided for her; and, taking some gold and a few

  thousand-franc notes out of her pocket--would begin quietly,

  coldly, and after much calculation, to stake, and mark down the

  figures in pencil on a paper, as though striving to work out a

  system according to which, at given moments, the odds might

  group themselves. Always she staked large coins, and either lost

  or won one, two, or three thousand francs a day, but not more;

  after which she would depart. The Grandmother took a long look

  at her.

  "THAT woman is not losing," she said. "To whom does she

  belong? Do you know her? Who is she?"

  "She is, I believe, a Frenchwoman," I replied.

  "Ah! A bird of passage, evidently. Besides, I can see that she

  has her shoes polished. Now, explain to me the meaning of each

  round in the game, and the way in which one ought to stake."

  Upon this I set myself to explain the meaning of all the

  combinations--of "rouge et noir," of "pair et impair," of

  "manque et passe," with, lastly, the different values in the

  system of numbers. The Grandmother listened attentively, took

  notes, put questions in various forms, and laid the whole thing

  to heart. Indeed, since an example of each system of stakes kept

  constantly occurring, a great deal of information could be

  assimilated with ease and celerity. The Grandmother was vastly

  pleased.

  "But what is zero?" she inquired. "Just now I heard the

  flaxen-haired croupier call out 'zero!' And why does he keep

  raking in all the money that is on the table? To think that he

  should grab the whole pile for himself! What does zero mean?"

  "Zero is what the bank takes for itself. If the wheel stops at

  that figure, everything lying on the table becomes the absolute

  property of the bank. Also, whenever the wheel has begun to

  turn, the bank ceases to pay out anything."

  "Then I should receive nothing if I were staking?"

  "No; unless by any chance you had PURPOSELY staked on zero; in

  which case you would receive thirty-five times the value of your

  stake."

  "Why thirty-five times, when zero so often turns up? And if so,

  why do not more of these fools stake upon it?"

  "Because the number of chances against its occurrence is

  thirty-six."

  "Rubbish! Potapitch, Potapitch! Come here, and I will give you

  some money." The old lady took out of her pocket a

  tightly-clasped purse, and extracted from its depths a

  ten-gulden piece. "Go at once, and stake that upon zero."

  "But, Madame, zero has only this moment turned up," I

  remonstrated; "wherefore, it may not do so again for ever so

  long. Wait a little, and you may then have a better chance."

  "Rubbish! Stake, please."

  "Pardon me, but zero might not turn up again until, say,

  tonight, even though you had staked thousands upon it. It often

  happens so."

  "Rubbish, rubbish! Who fears the wolf should never enter the

  forest. What? We have lost? Then stake again."

  A second ten-gulden piece did we lose, and then I put down a

  third. The Grandmother could scarcely remain seated in her

  chair, so intent was she upon the little ball as it leapt

  through the notches of the ever-revolving wheel. However, the

  third ten-gulden piece followed the first two. Upon this the

  Grandmother went perfectly crazy. She could no longer sit still,

  and actually struck the table with her fist when the croupier

  cried out, "Trente-six," instead of the desiderated zero.

  "To listen to him!" fumed the old lady. "When will that

  accursed zero ever turn up? I cannot breathe until I see it. I

  believe that that infernal croupier is PURPOSELY keeping it from

  turning up. Alexis Ivanovitch, stake TWO golden pieces this

  time. The moment we cease to stake, that cursed zero will come

  turning up, and we shall get nothing."

  "My good Madame--"

  "Stake, stake! It is not YOUR money."

  Accordingly I staked two ten-gulden pieces. The ball went

  hopping round the wheel until it began to settle through the

  notches. Meanwhile the Grandmother sat as though petrified, with

  my hand convulsively clutched in hers.

  "Zero!" called the croupier.

  "There! You see, you see!" cried the old lady, as she turned

  and faced me, wreathed in smiles. "I told you so! It was the

  Lord God himself who suggested to me to stake those two coins.

  Now, how much ought I to receive? Why do they not pay it out to

  me? Potapitch! Martha! Where are they? What has become of our

  party? Potapitch, Potapitch!"

  "Presently, Madame," I whispered. "Potapitch is outside, and

  they would decline to admit him to these rooms. See! You are

  being paid out your money. Pray take it." The croupiers were

  making up a heavy packet of coins, sealed in blue paper, and

  containing fifty ten gulden pieces, together with an unsealed

  packet containing another twenty. I handed the whole to the old

  lady in a money-shovel.

  "Faites le jeu, messieurs! Faites le jeu, messieurs! Rien ne va

  plus," proclaimed the croupier as once more he invited the

  company to stake, and prepared to turn the wheel.

  "We shall be too late! He is going to spin again! Stake, stake!"

  The Grandmother was in a perfect fever. "Do not hang back! Be

  quick!" She seemed almost beside herself, and nudged me as hard

  as she could.

  "Upon what shall I stake, Madame?"

  "Upon zero, upon zero! Again upon zero! Stake as much as ever

  you can. How much have we got? Seventy ten-gulden pieces? We

  shall not miss them, so stake twenty pieces at a time."

  "Think a moment, Madame. Sometimes zero does not turn up for

  two hundred rounds in succession. I assure you that you may lose

  all your capital."

  "You are wrong--utterly wrong. Stake, I tell you! What a

  chattering tongue you have! I know perfectly well what I am

  doing." The old lady was shaking with excitement.

  "But the rules do not allow of more than 120 gulden being

  staked upon zero at a time."

  "How 'do not allow'? Surely you are wrong? Monsieur, monsieur--"

  here she nudged the croupier who was sitting on her left, and

  preparing to spin-- "combien zero? Douze? Douze?"

  I hastened to translate.

  "Oui, Madame," was the croupier's polite reply. "No single

  stake must exceed four thousand florins. That is the regulation."

  "Then there is nothing else for it. We must risk in gulden."

  "Le jeu est fait!" the croupier call
ed. The wheel revolved,

  and stopped at thirty. We had lost!

  "Again, again, again! Stake again!" shouted the old lady.

  Without attempting to oppose her further, but merely shrugging

  my shoulders, I placed twelve more ten-gulden pieces upon the

  table. The wheel whirled around and around, with the Grandmother

  simply quaking as she watched its revolutions.

  "Does she again think that zero is going to be the winning

  coup?" thought I, as I stared at her in astonishment. Yet an

  absolute assurance of winning was shining on her face; she

  looked perfectly convinced that zero was about to be called

  again. At length the ball dropped off into one of the notches.

  "Zero!" cried the croupier.

  "Ah!!!" screamed the old lady as she turned to me in a whirl

  of triumph.

  I myself was at heart a gambler. At that moment I became acutely

  conscious both of that fact and of the fact that my hands and

  knees were shaking, and that the blood was beating in my brain.

  Of course this was a rare occasion--an occasion on which zero had

  turned up no less than three times within a dozen rounds; yet in

  such an event there was nothing so very surprising, seeing that,

  only three days ago, I myself had been a witness to zero turning

  up THREE TIMES IN SUCCESSION, so that one of the players who was

  recording the coups on paper was moved to remark that for

  several days past zero had never turned up at all!

  With the Grandmother, as with any one who has won a very large

  sum, the management settled up with great attention and respect,

  since she was fortunate to have to receive no less than 4200

  gulden. Of these gulden the odd 200 were paid her in gold, and

  the remainder in bank notes.

  This time the old lady did not call for Potapitch; for that she

  was too preoccupied. Though not outwardly shaken by the event

  (indeed, she seemed perfectly calm), she was trembling inwardly

  from head to foot. At length, completely absorbed in the game,

  she burst out:

  "Alexis Ivanovitch, did not the croupier just say that 4000

  florins were the most that could be staked at any one time?

  Well, take these 4000, and stake them upon the red."

  To oppose her was useless. Once more the wheel revolved.

  "Rouge!" proclaimed the croupier.

  Again 4000 florins--in all 8000!

  "Give me them," commanded the Grandmother, "and stake the other

  4000 upon the red again."

  I did so.

  "Rouge!" proclaimed the croupier.

  "Twelve thousand!" cried the old lady. "Hand me the whole

  lot. Put the gold into this purse here, and count the bank

  notes. Enough! Let us go home. Wheel my chair away."

  XI

  THE chair, with the old lady beaming in it, was wheeled away

  towards the doors at the further end of the salon, while our

  party hastened to crowd around her, and to offer her their

  congratulations. In fact, eccentric as was her conduct, it was

  also overshadowed by her triumph; with the result that the

  General no longer feared to be publicly compromised by being

  seen with such a strange woman, but, smiling in a condescending,

  cheerfully familiar way, as though he were soothing a child, he

  offered his greetings to the old lady. At the same time, both he

  and the rest of the spectators were visibly impressed.

  Everywhere people kept pointing to the Grandmother, and talking

  about her. Many people even walked beside her chair, in order to

  view her the better while, at a little distance, Astley was

  carrying on a conversation on the subject with two English

  acquaintances of his. De Griers was simply overflowing with

  smiles and compliments, and a number of fine ladies were staring

  at the Grandmother as though she had been something curious.

  "Quelle victoire!" exclaimed De Griers.

  "Mais, Madame, c'etait du feu!" added Mlle. Blanche with an

  elusive smile.

  "Yes, I have won twelve thousand florins," replied the old

  lady. "And then there is all this gold. With it the total ought