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your gold nickels put 'em in your pants and play the game! Is that right?" "Yes." They exchanged a wary handshake; then, one after another, they leaned back in their seats with the air of honest men who had done their day's work. Curfoot blinked at Brandes, at his excessively groomed person, at his rings. "You _look_ prosperous, Eddie." "It's his business to," remarked Stull. Brandes yawned: "It would be a raw deal if there's a war over here," he said listlessly. "Ah," said Curfoot, "there won't be none." "Why?" "The Jews and bankers won't let these kinks mix it." "That's right, too," nodded Brandes. But Stull said nothing and his sour, pasty visage turned sourer. It was the one possibility that disturbed him--the only fly in the amber--the only mote that troubled his clairvoyance. Also, he was the only man among the three who didn't think a thing was certain to happen merely because he wanted it to happen. There was another matter, too, which troubled him. Brandes was unreliable. And who but little Stull should know how unreliable? For Brandes had always been that. And now Stull knew him to be more than that--knew him to be treacherous. Whatever in Brandes had been decent, or had, blindly perhaps, aspired toward decency, was now in abeyance. Something within him had gone to smash since Minna Minti had struck him that night in the frightened presence of Rue Carew. And from that night, when he had lost the only woman who had ever stirred in him the faintest aspiration to better things, the man had gradually changed. Whatever in his nature had been unreliable became treacherous; his stolidity became sullenness. A slow ferocity burned within him; embers of a rage which no brooding ever quenched slumbered red in his brain until his endless meditation became a monomania. And his monomania was the ruin of this woman who had taken from him in the very moment of consummation all that he had ever really loved in the world--a thin, awkward, freckled, red-haired country girl, in whom, for the first and only time in all his life, he saw the vague and phantom promise of that trinity which he had never known--a wife, a child, and a home. He sat there by the car window glaring out of his dull green eyes at the pleasant countryside, his thin lips tightening and relaxing on his cigar. Curfoot, still pondering over the "new stuff" offered him, brooded silently in his corner, watching the othe
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