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a better man. But I think I can skin him, and I'll give you a run for your money, you bet."

      "All right, then. But, look here," they told him, "you keep your face closed. Nobody gets in on this but us. Understand?"

      "Not a soul," Pop declared. They left him, gesturing a last warning from the wicker doors.

      In the street they saw Benson, his cane gripped in the middle, strolling through the white-clothed jabbering natives on the shady side. They semaphored to him eagerly. He came across cautiously, like a man who ventures into dangerous company.

      "We're going to get up a race. Pop and Fred. Pop swears he can skin 'im. This is a tip. Keep it dark. Say, won't Freddie be hot?"

      Benson looked as if he had been compelled to endure these exhibitions of insanity for a century. "Oh, you fellows are off. Pop can't beat Freddie. He's an old bat. Why, it's impossible. Pop can't beat Freddie."

      "Can't he? Want to bet he can't?" said the kids. "There now, let's see—you're talking so large."

      "Well, you——"

      "Oh, bet. Bet or else close your trap. That's the way."

      "How do you know you can pull off the race? Seen Freddie?"

      "No, but——"

      "Well, see him then. Can't bet with no race arranged. I'll bet with you all right—all right. I'll give you fellows a tip though—you're a pair of asses. Pop can't run any faster than a brick school-house."

      The kids scowled at him and defiantly said—"Can't he?" They left him and went to the Casa Verde. Freddie, beautiful in his white jacket, was holding one of his innumerable conversations across the bar. He smiled when he saw them. "Where you boys been?" he demanded, in a paternal tone. Almost all the proprietors of American cafés in the city used to adopt a paternal tone when they spoke to the kids.

      "Oh, been 'round,'" they replied.

      "Have a drink?" said the proprietor of the Casa Verde, forgetting his other social obligations. During the course of this ceremony one of the kids remarked—

      "Freddie, Pop says he can beat you running."

      "Does he?" observed Freddie without excitement. He was used to various snares of the kids.

      "That's what. He says he can leave you at the wire and not see you again."

      "Well, he lies," replied Freddie placidly.

      "And I'll bet you a bottle of wine that he can do it, too."

      "Rats!" said Freddie.

      "Oh, that's all right," pursued a kid. "You can throw bluffs all you like, but he can lose you in a hundred yards' dash, you bet."

      Freddie drank his whisky, and then settled his elbows on the bar.

      "Say, now, what do you boys keep coming in here with some pipe-story all the time for? You can't josh me. Do you think you can scare me about Pop? Why, I know I can beat him. He can't run with me. Certainly not. Why, you fellows are just jollying me."

      "Are we though!" said the kids. "You daren't bet the bottle of wine."

      "Oh, of course I can bet you a bottle of wine," said Freddie disdainfully. "Nobody cares about a bottle of wine, but——"

      "Well, make it five then," advised one of the kids.

      Freddie hunched his shoulders. "Why, certainly I will. Make it ten if you like, but——"

      "We do," they said.

      "Ten, is it? All right; that goes." A look of weariness came over Freddie's face. "But you boys are foolish. I tell you Pop is an old man. How can you expect him to run? Of course, I'm no great runner, but then I'm young and healthy and—and a pretty smooth runner too. Pop is old and fat, and then he doesn't do a thing but tank all day. It's a cinch."

      The kids looked at him and laughed rapturously. They waved their fingers at him. "Ah, there!" they cried. They meant that they had made a victim of him.

      But Freddie continued to expostulate. "I tell you he couldn't win—an old man like him. You're crazy. Of course, I know you don't care about ten bottles of wine, but, then—to make such bets as that. You're twisted."

      "Are we, though?" cried the kids in mockery. They had precipitated Freddie into a long and thoughtful treatise on every possible chance of the thing as he saw it. They disputed with him from time to time, and jeered at him. He laboured on through his argument. Their childish faces were bright with glee.

      In the midst of it Wilburson entered. Wilburson worked; not too much, though. He had hold of the Mexican end of a great importing house of New York, and as he was a junior partner, he worked. But not too much, though. "What's the howl?" he said.

      The kids giggled. "We've got Freddie rattled."

      "Why," said Freddie, turning to him, "these two Indians are trying to tell me that Pop can beat me running."

      "Like the devil," said Wilburson, incredulously.

      "Well, can't he?" demanded a kid.

      "Why, certainly not," said Wilburson, dismissing every possibility of it with a gesture. "That old bat? Certainly not. I'll bet fifty dollars that Freddie——"

      "Take you," said a kid.

      "What?" said Wilburson, "that Freddie won't beat Pop?"

      The kid that had spoken now nodded his head.

      "That Freddie won't beat Pop?" repeated Wilburson.

      "Yes. It's a go?"

      "Why, certainly," retorted Wilburson. "Fifty? All right."

      "Bet you five bottles on the side," ventured the other kid.

      "Why, certainly," exploded Wilburson wrathfully. "You fellows must take me for something easy. I'll take all those kinds of bets I can get. Cer—tain—ly."

      They settled the details. The course was to be paced off on the asphalt of one of the adjacent side-streets, and then, at about eleven o'clock in the evening, the match would be run. Usually in Mexico the streets of a city grow lonely and dark but a little after nine o'clock. There are occasional lurking figures, perhaps, but no crowds, lights and noise. The course would doubtless be undisturbed. As for the policeman in the vicinity, they—well, they were conditionally amiable.

      The kids went to see Pop; they told him of the arrangement, and then in deep tones they said, "Oh, Pop, if you throw us!"

      Pop appeared to be a trifle shaken by the weight of responsibility thrust upon him, but he spoke out bravely. "Boys, I'll pinch that race. Now you watch me. I'll pinch it."

      The kids went then on some business of their own, for they were not seen again till evening. When they returned to the neighbourhood of the Café Colorado the usual stream of carriages was whirling along the calle. The wheels hummed on the asphalt, and the coachmen towered in their great sombreros. On the sidewalk a gazing crowd sauntered, the better class self-satisfied and proud, in their Derby hats and cut-away coats, the lower classes muffling their dark faces in their blankets, slipping along in leather sandals. An electric light sputtered and fumed over the throng. The afternoon shower had left the pave wet and glittering. The air was still laden with the odour of rain on flowers, grass, leaves.

      In the Café Colorado a cosmopolitan crowd ate, drank, played billiards, gossiped, or read in the glaring yellow light. When the kids entered a large circle of men that had been gesticulating near the bar greeted them with a roar.

      "Here they are now!"

      "Oh, you pair of peaches!"

      "Say, got any more money to bet with?" Colonel Hammigan, grinning, pushed his way to them. "Say, boys, we'll all have a drink on you now because you won't have any money after eleven o'clock. You'll be going down the back stairs in your stocking feet."

      Although the kids remained unnaturally serene and quiet, argument in the Café Colorado became tumultuous.

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