Daughter of the Sun: A Tale of Adventure
"Follow your hand," said Ruiz Rios briefly.

That which followed next would have appeared unbelievable to any who have not over and over watched the inexplicable happenings of a gaming table.  Kendric made his second throw and lifted his eyebrows quizzically at the result.  He had turned out the deuce, the lowest number possible.  A little eagerly, while men began to mutter in their excitement, Rios snatched up cup and die and threw.  Once already he had counted ten thousand as good as won; now he made the same mistake. For the incredible happened and he, too, showed a deuce, making a second tie.

Ruiz cursed his disgust and hurled the box down.  Kendric burst into booming laughter.

"A game for men to talk about, friend Rios!" he said.  And at the moment he came near feeling a kindly feeling for a man whom he hated most cordially and with high reason.  "Follow your hand."

Rios received the box from a hand offering it and made his third throw swiftly.  The six again.

"Where we began, señor," he said, grown again impassive.

Kendric was all impatient eagerness to make his throw, looking like a boy chafing at a moment's restraint against his anticipated pleasures.

"A six to beat," he said.

And beat it he did, with the odds all against him.  He turned up the ace and won ten thousand dollars.

In the brief hush which came before the shouts and jabberings of many voices, Ruiz Rios's companion pulled him sharply by the arm, whispering quickly.  But this time Rios shook his head.

"I am through," he said bluntly.  "Another time, maybe."

But the fever, to which he had so eagerly surrendered, was just gripping Kendric.  That he was playing for big stakes was the thing that counted.  That he had won meant less to him than it would have meant to any other man in the room or any other man who had ever been in the room or any other man who would ever come into the room.  He saw that Ruiz was through.  But, as his dancing eyes sped around among other faces, he marked the twinkling lights of covetousness in Fat Ortega's rat eyes and he knew that, long ago, Ortega himself had played for any stake.  Beside Ortega there was another man present who might be inclined to accept a hazard, Tony Muñoz, who conducted the rival gambling house 
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