The imperturbable gamester became a feature of the[Pg 54] sale. He was the best rider on the ground. He put his hard, freckled hand into the jaws of stallions, and cowed the wickedest mule with his spotted eye. He knew prices as well as values, and had, withal, a dashing way of bargaining, which baffled the traders and amused his patron. [Pg 54] "You have saved me much money and many mistakes," said the latter, at nightfall. "Who are you?" "I am the man," answered Risque, straightforwardly, "to work on your stage-line, and I am dead broke." The man invited Risque to dinner; they rode together on the Champs Elysées; and next morning at daylight the gamester left Paris without a thought or a farewell for the Colony. It was in the Grand Hotel that Messrs. Hugenot and Plade met by chance the evening succeeding the dinner. "I shall leave Paris, Andy," said Hugenot, regarding his pumps through his eye-glass. "My ancestry would blush in their coffins if they knew ou-ah cause to be represented by such individuals as those of last evening." "Let us go together," replied Plade, in his plausible way; "you cannot speak a word of any continental language. Take me along as courier and companion; pay my travelling expenses, and I will pay my own board." "Can I trust you, Suth Kurlinian?" said Hugenot, irresolutely; "you had no money yesterday." "But I have a plan of raising a thousand francs to-day. What say you?"[Pg 55] [Pg 55] "My family have been wont to see the evidence prior to committing themselves. First show me the specie." "Voila!" cried Plade, counting out forty louis; "the day after to-morrow I guarantee to own eighteen hundred francs." It did not occur to Mr. Hugenot to inquire how his friend came to possess so much money; for Hugenot was not a clever man, and somewhat in dread of Andy Plade, who, as his school-mate, had thrashed him repeatedly, and even now that one had grown rich and the other was a vagabond, the latter's strong will and keen, bad intelligence made him the master man. Hugenot's good fortune was accidental; his cargoes had passed the blockade and given handsome returns; but he shared none of the