“One without lookin’, or what?” I says.
“One no trump, if I got to explain it,” she says.
“Oh, that’s different,” I says; but I found out that most all o’ them said “One without” when they meant one no trump.
I looked at my hand; but about all as I had was four hearts, with the king and jack high.
“Pardner,” I says, “I don’t see nothin’ I can bid, unless it’d be one heart. Does that hit you?”
“No talkin’ acrost the boards,” says Mrs. Garrett. “And besides, one heart ain’t over my bid.”
So I passed and Mr. Messenger bid two spades. Then my pardner passed and Mrs. Garrett thought it over a w’ile and then bid two without. So I passed again and the rest o’ them passed, and it was my first lead.
Well, I didn’t have only one spade—the eight-spot—and I knew it wouldn’t do my hand no good as long as I couldn’t trump in with it; so I led it out. Messenger was dummy, and he laid his hand down. He had about eight spades, with the ace and queen high.
“I might as well take a chance,” says Mrs. Garrett, and she throwed on Messenger’s ten-spot.
Out come my pardner with the king, and it was our trick.
“What kind of a lead was that?” says Mrs. Garrett to me.
“Pretty good one, I guess,” says I. “It fooled you, anyway.”
And she acted like she was sore as a boil. Come to find out, she’d thought I was leadin’ from the king and was goin’ to catch it later on.
Well, her and Messenger took all the rest o’ the tricks except my king o’ hearts, and they had a game on us, besides forty for their four aces.
“I could of made a little slam as well as not,” she says when it was over. “But I misunderstood our friend’s lead. It’s the first time I ever seen a man lead from a sneak in no trump.”
“I’ll do a whole lot o’ things you never seen before,” I says.
“I don’t doubt it,” says she, still actin’ like I’d spilled salad dressin’ on her skirt.
It was my first bid next time and hearts was my only suit again. I had the ace, queen and three others.
“Pardner,” I says, “I’m goin’ to bid one heart and if you got somethin’ to help me out with, don’t let ’em take it away from me.”
“I’ll double a heart,” says Messenger.
“Oh, somebody else is gettin’ cute!” says I. “Well, I’ll double right back at you.”
“Will you just wait till it comes your turn?” says Mrs. Garrett. “And besides, you can’t redouble.”
“I guess I can,” says I. “I got five o’ them.”
“It’s against our rules,” she says.
So my partner done nothin’, as usual, and Mrs. Garrett bid one without again.
“I guess you want to play ’em all,” I says; “but you’ll have to come higher’n that. I’m goin’ to bid two hearts.”
“Two no trump,” says Messenger, and my pardner says “Pass” once more.
“You’ll get a sore throat sayin’ that,” I told her. “Don’t you never hold nothin’?”
“It don’t look like it,” she says.
“Maybe you don’t know what’s worth biddin’ on,” I says.
“Maybe she’d better take a few lessons from you,” says Mrs. Garrett.
“No,” I says, kiddin’ her. “You don’t want no more female experts in the club or you might have to buy some cut glass once in a w’ile instead o’ winnin’ it.”
Well, I bid three hearts; but Mrs. Garrett come up to three no trump and I couldn’t go no higher. This time I led out my ace o’ hearts, hopin’ maybe to catch their king; but I didn’t get it. And Mrs. Garrett copped all the rest of ’em for a little slam.
“If your husband ever starts drinkin’ hard,” I says, “you can support yourself by sellin’ some o’ your horseshoes to the Russian government.”
It wasn’t no lie, neither. I never seen such hands as that woman held, and Messenger’s was pretty near as good. In the four deals they grabbed two rubbers and a couple o’ little slams, and when they left our table they had over nine hundred to our nothin’.
Mr. Collins and another woman was the next ones to set down with us. The rules was to change pardners and Collins took the one I’d been playin’ with. And what does she do but get lucky and they give us another trimmin’, though nothin’ near as bad as the first one. My pardner, this time, was a woman about forty-eight, and she acted like it was way past her bedtime. When it was her turn to say somethin’ we always had to wait about five minutes, and all the other tables was through a long w’ile before us. Once she says:
“You’ll have to excuse me tonight. I don’t somehow seem to be able to keep my mind on the game.”
“No,” I says; “but I bet you’d perk up if the lady’s prize was a mattress. When you’re goin’ to be up late you should ought to take a nap in the afternoon.”
Well, sir, my next pardner wasn’t nobody else but the Missus. She’d started at the fourth table and lost the first time, but win the second. She come along with the husband o’ the pardner I’d just had; so here we was family against family, you might say.
“What kind o’ luck you been havin’?” the fella ast me.
“No luck at all,” I says. “But if you’re anywheres near as sleepy as your Missus, I and my wife should ought to clean up this time.”
We didn’t. They held all the cards except in one hand, and that was one my Missus tried to play. I bid first and made it a no trump, as they was three aces in my hand. Old Slumber began to talk in her sleep and says: “Two diamonds.” The Missus bid two hearts. Mr. Sleeper passed, and so did I, as I didn’t have a single heart in my hand and figured
