Boy Woodburn - LightNovelsOnl.com
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He nodded to the open trap-door overhead.
"She sleeps up there, don't she?" whispered the fat man.
"She never sleeps," muttered the other. "Got the stuff?" he asked drowsily.
Joses produced a bottle from the pocket of his cloak.
Monkey looked around.
"Where's a blurry bucket?" he asked, and with faltering hands inverted the one on which he had been sitting.
"Put a drop of water in," urged the fat man.
The little man obeyed, moving uncertainly.
"Is he dry?" asked Joses.
"I wish I'd only 'alf his thirst," drowsed the other.
The fat man removed the cork from the bottle. Monkey seized it rudely and sniffed it.
"What is it?" he asked sullenly.
"Nothing to hurt him," said Joses soothingly. "Just take the s.h.i.+ne out of him for a day or two."
The jockey was so drunk that he needed humouring. The tout cursed his faulty judgment in having given the little man money to spend before the deed had been done.
Monkey let his heavy-lidded eyes rest on the other. He was breathing almost stertorously. Then he pushed the bottle back toward Joses.
"I mush trush you," he said, "same as you trush me. You wouldn't deceive me, Oxford genelman and all."
"What d'you take me for?" answered Joses.
He poured the stuff into the bucket that Monkey held. It was dark and sweet-smelling. Four-Pound-the-Second sniffed with inflated nostrils.
"Hist!" cried Monkey.
"What's that?"
"Somebury at the door."
"The door's all right. I locked it."
"He's got a key."
"Who has?"
"Silver."
"Is he on the ramp?"
"Ain't he?" snorted Monkey. "Hundred thousand--and the gal." He added with a snort: "Thought I were a copper's nark. Good as told me so."
Joses stole down the gangway to the door.
When he came back Monkey was holding the bucket to Four-Pound-the-Second, who was drinking noisily.
"It was only the cat," he said. "I heard her scuttle."
"Don't it smell funny?" whispered Monkey, swirling the bucket gently under the horse's muzzle.
Joses patted the drinking horse.
"There's the beauty," he said. "Suck it down. It'll give you pleasant dreams."
Four-Pound-the-Second had his fill by now and moved away.
Joses picked up his twitch and made for the door.
Monkey placed himself between the fat man and the exit, heavy-lidded, stertorous, and menacing.
"One thing," he said.
"What's that?"
"Them little bits o' paper there was some talk about."
"Oh, aye, I was forgettin' them."
"Was you, then? I wasn't," said Monkey brutally. "Dole 'em out."
The fat man obeyed with a sn.i.g.g.e.r; then shuffled softly down the pa.s.sage and out.
Monkey Brand heard him open the door and cross the yard.
Then a voice called:
"Hi at him!"
There was a scurry of pursuing feet, a scuffle, and a yell.
The jockey rushed out into the yard.
Joses was disappearing over the gate, flinging something behind him, and Billy Bluff was smothered in a cape which he was worrying.
Jim Silver, racing across the yard, s.n.a.t.c.hed the cape from the dog.
A window flung open.