This time, with a glance at his cypher card, and also at his watch, Basil backed red and not a number.
Each number in the wheel has its corresponding colour, red or black, and it was as easy for him to win on an even chance as it was upon a chance of thirty-five to one. He backed red, and, far away at the top of the Hotel Malmaison, Emile Deschamps pressed the key which magnetised the slot 18 in the wheel upon the green table--18 being a red number.
Basil placed the maximum upon red--that is, two hundred and forty pounds.
Red turned up. He had now won nearly eight hundred pounds, and round his chair were grouped a crowd of people three feet deep.
People were flocking from other tables, drawn by that nameless unknown mental telegraphy which tells the whole Casino when big wins are being made.
The whole of the great rooms became electric with an atmosphere of excitement. There was not a sound as the people thronged to Basil's table--at Monte Carlo the greatest successes, the most disastrous failures, happen in silence.
But, in that tense atmosphere, there was more than sound--there was a pressing together and focussing of human minds, converging upon one spot to witness the battle.
"_Faites vos jeux, messieurs._"
"_Le jeu est fait._"
"_Rien ne va plus._"
A rattle, a hushed silence--the player who had put a maximum of nine louis upon number 13 had lost!
Men and women nodded and whispered, whispered and nodded. "Monsieur's luck was about to change, _n'est-ce 'pas_?" "It is not going to be a big run after all, _hein_?"
Once more the wheel spun.
Monsieur, with extraordinary daring, placed the maximum upon 6.
Six turned up.
In front of Basil Gregory was a pile of gold, still more important and significant a bundle of crinkled blue and white notes.
He took the notes up with cool deliberation, folded many of them, and put them into the breast pocket of his coat, stretched out his hand, and put the maximum upon black.
"_Noir, dix-neuf_," the croupier croaked, and another two hundred and forty pounds was pushed over by the rakes to add to Basil's store.
By this time almost everyone at the table was playing as Basil played.
If he staked upon an 8, the number was plastered and covered with gold and notes.
Each time he won and by now a rumour of something utterly unique had spread through the whole vast building, other and lesser punters won with him. When he was up three thousand pounds against the Bank, the Bank had lost quite seventeen thousand.
The air was electric. The word had gone round. _Habitues_ of the Casino crowded to watch one of those extraordinary nights of play which occur now and then--far more rarely than is supposed--and which are talked about for long afterwards. New-comers joined the throng, and still Basil Gregory sat impa.s.sive in his place, conscious that he was the centre of attention, but allowing nothing whatever to divert him from his purpose.
He glanced at his watch.
Stakes were being put upon the table timidly. The players were waiting to see what he was going to do.
He glanced at his cypher-card. The moment was marked with a tiny cross.
He was now to adventure a bigger coup than ever before.
He placed the maximum of nine louis upon number 20--standing to win six thousand francs. He placed the maximum of sixty louis upon the line that covered the six figures from 16 to 21, including 20. Here also he stood to win 6,000 francs if 20 turned up.
Then he staked on black. Number 20 upon the roulette wheel is a black number, so here, again, he played the maximum and stood to win the highest possible. Finally he backed the middle dozen of the 36 numbers, here also staking the maximum of 150 louis, again making it possible to win 6,000 francs.
In that quiet place, where any outward expression of excitement or emotion is instantly suppressed, there came a low, sighing sound like the fluttering of leaves in the wind.
It was the spectators whispering to each other.
Such high play as this was beyond the experience of almost everyone.
This time, getting more cautious, the other players wagered heavily against Basil. They thought such phenomenal luck as he had had could not possibly continue, and for the first time during the evening a slight sardonic smile came upon the young man's face.
He knew, they did not, with what certainty number 20 would turn up.
The wheel swung, the ball spun. "_Noir et vingt_," croaked the croupier.
And now, as the rakes pursued their remorseless way, and swept in all the stakes upon the table except Basil's maximums, there was a low murmur of surprise and consternation. Anywhere else but in the Casino it would have been a babel of tongues.
In one single minute Basil Gregory had won the huge sum of 24,000 francs--960 English pounds.
Standing by the director of the table, who sat above and behind the croupier who spun the wheel, there was now seen a tall and un.o.btrusive man with a pale face, a short black beard, and wearing evening dress. It was one of the heads of the permanent staff of the Administration--a mysterious being who only entered the rooms upon special occasion, a person invested with unknown powers--one of the G.o.ds!
Basil had emptied his mind of thought.
He had focussed his whole being upon what he was doing. The huge pile of wealth before him affected him no more than if the notes and gold--and by now there were many notes and but little gold--were but so many counters. Mechanically he folded bundle after bundle of thousand franc notes and placed them in the inner pocket of his coat.
And then, in the stir and rustle, he heard a sharp exclamation--unremarked by the crowd around in that moment of tension, but like an arrow through his own consciousness.
He looked up.
Opposite him, down towards the end of the table, two ladies were sitting. He had been vaguely conscious of them before, but, during all his play, he had made a point of not allowing his thoughts or glances to be distracted by the other players.
It was from one of those ladies, the young one, that he, and he alone, heard a little gasping cry.
It was the girl he loved! It was Ethel McMahon!
A mist seemed to rise up from the table as if water had been poured upon a heated plate of steel. For a moment it swayed and blotted out everything. His mind seemed to be a turning wheel. He felt little needles p.r.i.c.king at the back of his eyes, his blood congealed into a jelly, and the palms of his hands suddenly became covered with a film of perspiration.
Ethel!... It was Ethel! And as the mist cleared away and his mind came to attention, he knew that this was no illusion, but that in very flesh and blood Ethel and her mother were sitting almost opposite to him playing at this table, playing roulette in the world's greatest gambling h.e.l.l!
The impulse to call out was almost unbearable, but he restrained it with an iron effort.
He stared hungrily at the two women, and as he did so he saw Ethel and Mrs. McMahon look up and meet his gaze. He saw this also--in their eyes was envy and consternation, but not the slightest glint of recognition.
And then he remembered his disguise--the spectacles, the shaved moustache, the foreign clothes, and swarthy complexion--and he realised that their interest in him was no more than that of any of the others.
The whole crowd, the croupiers also, were waiting to see what he would do.
The "_faites vos jeux_" was rapping out at him from all sides of the table.