Slip’s mind ransacked the far places of which he had heard: Oklahoma, the Missouri River, California, the Mexican border, Texas. Far havens seemed safest, but against their lure he felt the balance of Buck’s comradeship.
Caruthersville had a sporting crowd with money, lots of money. The people there were liberal spenders, and they liked a square game better than any other sport in the world. The boat was making good money, big money. The two partners had only to break even in their own play to make a big living out of the kitty in the poker tables, and there was always a big percentage in favour of the boat, because Buck and Slip understood each other so well. Slip’s share often 96 amounted to more in a week than he had earned in two years up there in the mountains felling trees, rafting them in eddies, and tripping them down painfully to the sawmills. These never did pay the price they were advertised to pay for timber, and one had to watch the sealers to see that they didn’t short the measure in the under water and goose-egg good logs.
He remembered Jest Prebol, who was lying shot through in the boat alongside, and he went over to the boat, lighted the lamp, and sat down by the wounded man. Prebol was a little delirious, and Slip went over on his own boat, and called Buck out.
“We got a sick man on our hands,” he whispered. “Ain’t Doc Grell come oveh yet?”
“Come the last boat,” Buck said, and called the doctor out.
“Say, Doc, that sick feller out here, will you look’t him?”
Doctor Grell went over to the boat. He looked at the wounded man, and frowned as he took the limp wrist. He tried the temperature, too, and then shook his head.
“He’s a sick man, Slip,” he said. “Thought he was coming all right last night. Now––”
He looked at the wound, and gazed at the great, blue plate around the bullet hole.
“He’s bad?” Slip said, in alarm. “Poison’s workin’, Doc?”