<h2> CHAPTER XV </h2>
<h3> A GAME OF PRIMERO </h3><p> </p>
<p>At a table in the immediate center of the room a rotund gentleman in
doublet and breeches of cinnamon brown taffeta and voluminous lace cuffs
at the wrists was presiding over a game of Spanish primero.</p>
<p>A simple game enough, not difficult of comprehension, yet vastly
exciting, if one may form a judgment of its qualities through watching
the faces of the players.</p>
<p>The rotund gentleman dealt a card face downwards to each of his
opponents, who then looked at their cards and staked on them, by pushing
little piles of gold or silver forward.</p>
<p>Then the dealer turned up his own card, and gave the amount of the
respective stakes to those players whose cards were of higher value than
his own, whilst sweeping all other moneys to swell his own pile.</p>
<p>A simple means, forsooth, of getting rid of any superfluity of cash.</p>
<p>"Art winning, Endicott?" queried Lord Walterton as, he stood over the
other man, looking down on the game.</p>
<p>Endicott shrugged his fat shoulders, and gave an enigmatic chuckle.</p>
<p>"I pay King and Ace only," he called out imperturbably, as he turned up
a Queen.</p>
<p>Most of the stakes came to swell his own pile, but he passed a handful
of gold to a hollow-eyed youth who sat immediately opposite to him, and
who clutched at the money with an eager, trembling grasp.</p>
<p>"You have all the luck to-night, Segrave," he said with an oily smile
directed at the winner.</p>
<p>"Make your game, gentlemen," he added almost directly, as he once more
began to deal.</p>
<p>"I pay knave upwards!" he declared, turning up the ten of clubs.</p>
<p>"Mine is the ten of hearts," quoth one of the players.</p>
<p>"Ties pay the bank," quoth Endicott imperturbably.</p>
<p>"Mine is a queen," said Segrave in a hollow tone of voice.</p>
<p>Endicott with a comprehensive oath threw the entire pack of cards into a
distant corner of the room.</p>
<p>"A fresh pack, mistress!" he shouted peremptorily.</p>
<p>Then as an overdressed, florid woman, with high bullhead fringe and
old-fashioned Spanish farthingale, quickly obeyed his behests, he said
with a coarse laugh:</p>
<p>"Fresh cards may break Master Segrave's luck and improve yours, Sir
Michael."</p>
<p>"Before this round begins," said Sir James Overbury who was standing
close behind Lord Walterton, also watching the game, "I will bet you,
Walterton, that Segrave wins again."</p>
<p>"Done with you," replied the other, "and I'll back mine own opinion by
taking a hand."</p>
<p>The florid woman brought him a chair, and he sat down at the table, as
Endicott once more began to deal.</p>
<p>"Five pounds that Segrave wins," said Overbury.</p>
<p>"A queen," said Endicott, turning up his card. "I pay king and ace
only."</p>
<p>Everyone had to pay the bank, for all turned up low cards; Segrave alone
had not yet turned up his.</p>
<p>"Well! what is your card, Master Segrave?" queried Lord Walterton
lightly.</p>
<p>"An ace!" said Segrave simply, displaying the ace of hearts.</p>
<p>"No good betting against the luck," said young Walterton lightly, as he
handed five sovereigns over to his friend, "moreover it spoils my
system."</p>
<p>"Ye play primero on a system!" quoth Sir Michael Isherwood in deep
amazement.</p>
<p>"Yes!" replied the young man. "I have played on it for years . . . and it
is infallible, 'pon my honor."</p>
<p>In the meanwhile the doors leading to the second room had been thrown
open; serving men and women advanced carrying trays on which were
displayed glasses and bottles filled with Rhenish wine and Spanish
canary and muscadel, also buttered ale and mead and hypocras for the
ladies.</p>
<p>Editha did not occupy herself with serving but the florid woman was
most attentive to the guests. She darted in and out between the tables,
managing her unwieldy farthingale with amazing skill. She poured out the
wines, and offered tarts and dishes of anchovies and of cheese, also
strange steaming beverages lately imported into England called coffee
and chocolate.</p>
<p>The women liked the latter, and supped it out of mugs, with many little
cries of astonishment and appreciation of its sugariness.</p>
<p>The men drank heavily, chiefly of the heady Spanish wines; they ate the
anchovies and cheese with their fingers, and continually called for more
refreshments.</p>
<p>Play was of necessity interrupted. Groups of people eating and drinking
congregated round the tables. The men mostly discussed various phases of
the game; there was so little else for idlers to talk about these days.
No comedies or other diversions, neither cock-fighting nor bear-baiting,
and abuse of my Lord Protector and his rigorous disciplinarian laws had
already become stale.</p>
<p>The women talked dress and coiffure, the new puffs, the fanciful
pinners.</p>
<p>But at the center table Segrave still sat, refusing all refreshment,
waiting with obvious impatience for the ending of this unwelcome
interval. When first he found himself isolated in the crowd, he had
counted over with febrile eagerness the money which lay in a substantial
heap before him.</p>
<p>"Saved!" he muttered between his teeth, speaking to himself like one
who is dreaming, "saved! Thank God! . . . Two hundred and fifty pounds . . .
only another fifty and I'll never touch these cursed cards again . . .
only another fifty. . . ."</p>
<p>He buried his face in his hands; the moisture stood out in heavy drops
on his forehead. He looked all round him with ever-growing impatience.</p>
<p>"My God! why don't they come back! . . . Another fifty pounds . . . and I
can put the money back . . . before it has been missed. . . . Oh! why don't
they come back!"</p>
<p>Quite a tragedy expressed in those few muttered words, in the trembling
hands, the damp forehead. Money taken from an unsuspecting parent,
guardian or master, which? What matter? A tragedy of ordinary occurrence
even in those days when social inequalities were being abolished by act
of Parliament.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile Lord Walterton, halting of speech, insecure of
foothold, after his third bumper of heady sack, was explaining to Sir
Michael Isherwood the mysteries of his system for playing the noble game
of primero.</p>
<p>"It is sure to break the bank in time," he said confidently, "I am for
going to Paris where play runs high, and need not be carried on in this
hole and corner fashion to suit cursed Puritanical ideas."</p>
<p>"Tell me your secret, Walterton," urged worthy Sir Michael, whose broad
Shropshire acres were heavily mortgaged, after the rapine and pillage
of civil war.</p>
<p>"Well! I can but tell you part, my friend," rejoined the other, "yet
'tis passing simple. You begin with one golden guinea . . . and lose it
. . . then you put up two and lose again. . . ."</p>
<p>"Passing simple," assented Sir Michael ironically.</p>
<p>"But after that you put up four guineas."</p>
<p>"And lose it."</p>
<p>"Yea! yea! mayhap you lose it . . . but then you put up eight guineas . . .
and win. Whereupon you are just as you were before."</p>
<p>And with a somewhat unsteady hand the young man raised a bumper to his
lips, whilst eying Sir Michael with the shifty and inquiring eye
peculiar to the intoxicated.</p>
<p>"Meseems that if you but abstain from playing altogether," quoth Sir
Michael impatiently, "the result would still be the same. . . . And suppose
you lose the eight guineas, what then?"</p>
<p>"Oh! 'tis vastly simple—you put up sixteen."</p>
<p>"But if you lose that?"</p>
<p>"Put up thirty-two. . . ."</p>
<p>"But if you have not thirty-two guineas to put up?" urged Sir Michael,
who was obstinate.</p>
<p>"Nay! then, my friend," said Lord Walterton with a laugh which soon
broke into an ominous hiccough, "ye must not in that case play upon my
system."</p>
<p>"Well said, my lord," here interposed Endicott, who had most moderately
partaken of a cup of hypocras, and whose eye and hand were as steady as
heretofore. "Well said, pardi! . . . My old friend the Marquis of
Swarthmore used oft to say in the good old days of Goring's Club, that
'twas better to lose on a system, than to play on no system at all."</p>
<p>"A smart cavalier, old Swarthmore," assented Sir Michael gruffly, "and
nathless, a true friend to you, Endicott," he added significantly.</p>
<p>"Another deal, Master Endicott," said Segrave, who for the last quarter
of an hour had vainly tried to engage the bank-holder's attention.</p>
<p>Nor was Lord Walterton averse to this. The more the wine got into his
head, the more unsteady his hand became, the more strong was his desire
to woo the goddess whose broken-nosed image seemed to be luring him to
fortune.</p>
<p>"You are right, Master Segrave," he said thickly, "we are wasting
valuable time. Who knows but what old Noll's police-patrol is lurking in
this cutthroat alley? . . . Endicott, take the bank again. . . . I'll swear
I'll ruin ye ere the moon—which I do not see—disappears down the
horizon. Sir Michael, try my system. . . . Overbury, art a laggard? . . . Let
us laugh and be merry—to-morrow is the Jewish Sabbath—and after that
Puritanic Sunday . . . after which mayhap, we'll all go to hell, driven
thither by my Lord Protector. Wench, another bumper . . . canary, sack or
muscadel . . . no thin Rhenish wine shall e'er defile this throat!
Gentlemen, take your places. . . . Mistress Endicott, can none of these
wenches discourse sweet music whilst we do homage to the goddess of
Fortune? . . . To the tables . . . to the tables, gentlemen . . . here's to
King Charles, whom may God protect . . . and all in defiance of my Lord
Protector!"</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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