longer.â
âOh, yes, I do,â I said, âIâll take your bet. I was just thinking of something else â thatâs all.â
3
I WENT and fetched the money and we drew up the option right away on a sheet of notepaper and the nurse â who had returned by then â and the barman witnessed it. The option was to be taken up at 9 p.m. prompt in the same spot next day: the Other didnât want his gambling to be interrupted before his dinner-hour whether by good or bad news. Then I made him buy me a glass of whisky, though Moses had less trouble in extracting his drink from a rock in Sinai, and I watched him being pushed back to the Salle Privée . To all intents and purposes, for the next twenty-four hours, I was the owner of Sitra. Neither Dreuther nor Blixon in their endless war could make a move without the consent of their assistant accountant. It was strange to think that neither was aware of how the control of the business had changed â from a friend of Dreuther to an enemy of Dreuther. Blixon would be down in Hampshire reading up tomorrowâs lessons, polishing up his pronunciation of the names in Judges â he would feel no exhilaration. And Dreuther â Dreuther was at sea, out of reach, playing bridge probably with his social lions â he would not be touched by the sense of insecurity. I ordered another whisky: I no longer doubted my system and I had no sense of regret. Blixon would be the first to hear: I would telephone to the office on Monday morning. It would be tactful to inform him of the new position through my chief, Arnold. There must be no temporary rapprochement between Dreuther and Blixon against the intruder: I would have Arnold explain to Blixon that for the time being he could count on me. Dreuther would not even hear of the matter unless he rang up his office from some port of call. Even that I could prevent: I could tell Arnold that the secret must be kept till Dreutherâs return, for then I would have the pleasure of giving him the information in person.
I went out to tell Cary the news, forgetting about our engagements: I wanted to see her face when I told her she was the wife of the man who controlled the company. Youâve hated my system, I wanted to say to her, and the hours I have spent at the Casino, but there was no vulgar cause â it wasnât money I was after, and I quite forgot that until that evening I had no other motive than money. I began to believe that I had planned this from the first two-hundred-franc bet in the cuisine .
But of course there was no Cary to be found â âMadame went out with a gentleman,â the porter needlessly told me, and I remembered the date at the simple studentsâ café. Well, there had been a time in my life when I had found little difficulty in picking up a woman and I went back to the Casino to fulfil my word. But the beautiful woman had got a man with her now: their fingers nuzzled over their communal tokens, and I soon realized that single women who came to the Casino to gamble were seldom either beautiful or interested in men. The ball and not the bed was the focal point. I thought of Caryâs questions and my own lies â and there wasnât a lie she wouldnât see through.
I watched Birdâs Nest circling among the tables, making a quick pounce here and there, out of the croupierâs eye. She had a masterly technique: when a pile was large enough she would lay her fingers on a single piece and give a tender ogle at the owner as much as to say, âYou are so generous and I am all yours for the taking.â She was so certain of her own appeal that no one had the heart to expose her error. Tonight she was wearing long amber ear-rings and a purple evening dress that exposed her best feature â her shoulders. Her shoulders were magnificent, wide and animal, but then, like a revolving light, her face inevitably came round, the untidy false blonde