Confession - Page 145/274

"They laugh who win," remarked Cleveland, with something of coldness

in his manner.

"Ha! ha! ha!" was the only answer of Kingsley to this remark. The

other continued--and I now clearly perceived that his purpose was

provocation:-"It is certainly a pleasure to win your money, Kingsley--you bear

it with so much philosophy. Nay, it seems to give you pleasure,

and thus lessens the pain I should otherwise feel in receiving the

fruits of my superiority."

"Ha! ha! ha!" again repeated Kingsley. "Excuse me, Mr. Cleveland.

I am reminded of your remark, 'They laugh who win.' I am laughing,

as it were, anticipatively. I am so certain that I shall have my

revenge to-night."

Cleveland looked at him for a moment with some curiosity, then

called:-"Philip!"

He was answered by a young mulatto--a tall, good-looking fellow,

who approached with a mixed air of equal deference and self-esteem,

plaited frills to a most immaculately white shirt-collar, a huge

bulbous breastpin in his bosom, chains and seals, and all the usual

equipments of Broadway dandyism. The fellow approached us with

a smile; his eyes looking alternately to Cleveland and Kingsley,

and, as I fancied, with no unequivocal sneer in their expression,

as they settled on the latter. A significance of another kind

appeared in the look of Cleveland as he addressed him.

"Get us the pictures, Philip--the latest cuts--and bring--ay, you

may bring the ivories."

In a few moments, the preliminaries being despatched, the two were

seated at a table, and a couple of packs of cards were laid beside

them. Kingsley drew my attention to the cards. They were of a

kind that my experience had never permitted me to see before. In

place of ordinary kings and queens and knaves, these figures were

represented in attitudes and costumes the most indecent--such

as the prolific genius of Parisian bawdry alone could conceive

and delineate. It seems to be a general opinion among rogues that

knavery is never wholly triumphant unless the mind is thoroughly

degraded; and for this reason it is, perhaps, that establishments

devoted to purposes like the present, have, in most countries, for

their invariable adjuncts, the brothel and the bar-room. If they

are not in the immediate tenement, they are sufficiently nigh to

make the work of moral prostitution comparatively easy, in all its

ramifications, with the young and inconsiderate mind. Kingsley

turned over the cards, and I could see that while affecting to

show me the pictures he was himself subjecting the cards to a close

inspection of another kind. This object was scarcely perceptible

to myself, who knew his suspicions, and could naturally conjecture

his policy. It did not excite the alarm of his antagonist.

The parties sat confronting each other. Kingsley drew forth a wallet,

somewhat ostentatiously, which he laid down beside him. The sight

of his wallet staggered me. By its bulk I should judge it to have

held thousands; yet he had assured me that he had nothing beside,

the one hundred dollars which he had procured from me. My surprise

increased as I saw him open the wallet, and draw from one of its

pockets the identical roll which I had put into his hands. The

bulk of the pocket-book seeemed (sic) scarcely to be diminished.

My suspicions were beginning to be roused. I began to think that

he had told me a falsehood; but he looked up at this instant, and

a bright manly smile on his deep purposeful countenance, reassured

me. I felt that there was some policy in the business which was not

for me then to fathom. The cards were cut. A box of dice was also

in the hands of Cleveland.