forty, but that both of them had packed a world of experience and
wandering into that short span, They recognized in each other that same
restlessness that was always driving them on to new adventure, never
staying long enough in one place or at one job to grow roots,
unfettered by offspring or possessions, by spouse or
responsibilities,
taking up each new adventure eagerly and discarding it again without
qualms or regrets, Always moving onwards never looking backwards.
Understanding each other a little, they began to respect one another.
Halfway through the meal, they were no longer scornful of the other's
differences. Neither of them thought of the other as Limey or
Yank any longer but this didn't mean that Jake was about to accept any
cheques or that Gareth had given up his plans to acquire the five
armoured cars. At last Gareth swilled the last few drops around his
brandy balloon and glanced at his pocket watch.
"Nine o'clock. It's too early for bed. What shall we do now?"
Jake suggested, "There are two new girls down at Madame Cecile's. They
came in on the mail boat." Gareth quickly turned the suggestion
aside.
"Later perhaps but too soon after dinner, it gives me heartburn.
You don't, by any chance, feel like a few hands at cards? There is
usually a decent game down at the club."
"We can't go in there. We aren't members."
"I have reciprocity with my London club, old boy.
Sign you in, what?" They had played for an hour and a half. Jake was
enjoying the game. He liked the style of the establishment, for he
usually played in less salubrious surroundings the back room behind the
bar, an upturned fruit-crate behind the main boiler in an engine room,
or a scratch game in a dockside warehouse.
This was a hushed room with draped velvet curtains, expanses of dark
wood panelling, dark-toned oil paintings and hunting trophies
shaggy-maned lions, buffalo with huge bossed horns drooping
mournfully,
all of them staring down with glassy eyes from the walls.
From the three billiard tables came the discreet click of the ivory
balls, as half a dozen players in dress shirts and braces, black ties
and black trousers, evening jackets discarded for the game, leaned
across the heavy green-topped tables to play their shots.
There were three tables of contract bridge from which came the murmur
of bid and counter bid in the cultivated tones of the British upper
class, all the players in the dress that Jake thought of as penguin
suits black and white, with black bows.
Between the tables, the waiters moved on silent bare feet, in
ankle-length white robes and pillbox fez, like priests of some ancient
religion bearing trays of sparkling crystal glass.
There was only one table of draw poker, a huge teak structure with
brass ashtrays set into the woodwork, and niches and trays to hold the
whisky glasses and the coloured ivory chips. At the table sat five
players, and only Jake was not in evening dress the other three were
the type of poker players that Jake would dearly love to have kept
locked up for his exclusive pleasure.
There was a minor British peer, out in Africa to decimate the wildlife.
He had recently returned from the interior, where a white hunter had
stood respectfully at his elbow with a heavy-calibre rifle,
while the peer mowed down vast numbers of buffalo, lion and
rhinoceros.
This gentleman had a nervous tic under his right eye which jumped
whenever he held three of a kind or better in his hand.
Despite this affliction, a phenomenal run of good cards had allowed him
to be the only winner, other than Jake, at the table.
There was a coffee planter with a deeply tanned and wrinkled face who
made an involuntary little hissing sound whenever he improvised on the
draw or squeezed out a pleasing combination.
On Jake's right hand was an elderly civil servant with thinning hair
and a fever-yellow complexion who broke out in a muck sweat whenever he
judged himself on the point of winning a pot an expectation which was
seldom realized.
In an hour's careful play, Jake had built up his winnings to a little
over a hundred pounds and he felt very warm and contented down there
where his dinner was digesting. The only element in his life that
afforded him any disquiet was his new friend and sponsor.
Gareth Swales sat at his ease, conversing with the peer as an equal,
condescending graciously to the planter and commiserating with the
civil servant on his run of luck. He had neither won nor lost any
significant amount, yet he handled the cards with a dexterity that was
impressive. In those long tapering fingers with the carefully
manicured nails, the pasteboards rustled and rippled, blurred and
snapped, with a speed that defied the eye.
Jake watched carefully, without appearing to do so, whenever the deal
passed to Major Gareth Swales. There is no way that a dealer,
even with the most magical touch, can stack a deck of cards without
facing them during the shuffle and Gareth never faced the deck as he
manipulated it. His eyes never even dropped to the cards, but played