"Sure ting I did. Tole 'im all you tole me. He said 'twar all right. Ef he comes out on dis deal he'll be back in a while, an' he'll go down dere ef you want him. He said he'd bring a little wad back to make things go ef dis deal went troo."
"Do you know what the deal is, Sam?"
"Sure!"
"Is it dis--is it"--he paused for a word that would convey his meaning and yet not offend--"is it--dangerous, Sam?"
"Sure!" admitted Sam solemnly as though it hurt him to pain his friend.
"Do you mean it will make more hiding for him?"
"Sure!" emphatically grave.
"I wish he hadn't gone!" There was sharp pain in Michael's voice.
"I wisht so too!'" said Sam with a queer little choke to his voice, "Mebbe 'twon't come off after all. Mebbe it'll git blocked. Mebbe he'll come back."
The anxiety in Sam's tone touched Michael, but another thought had struck him hard.
"Sam," said he plucking at the others sleeve in the darkness, "Sam, tell me, what was Buck doing--before he went away. Was it all straight? Was he in the same business with you?"
Sam breathed heavily but did not answer. At last with difficulty he answered a gruff, "Nope!"
"What was it, Sam? Won't you tell me?"
"It would be snitchin'."
"Not to me, Sam. You know I belong to you all."
"But you've got new notions."
"Yes," admitted Michael, "I can't help that, but I don't go back on you, do I?"
"No, you don't go back on we'uns, that's so. But you don't like we's doin's."
"Never mind. Tell me, Sam. I think I must know."
"He kep a gamein' den--"
"Oh, Sam!" Michael's voice was stricken, and his great athletic hand gripped Sam's hard skinny one, and Sam in the darkness gripped back.
"I knowed you'd feel thet way," he mourned as if the fault were all in his telling. "I wisht I hadn't 'a tole yer."
"Never mind, Sam, you couldn't help it, and I suppose I wouldn't have known the difference myself if I hadn't gone away. We mustn't judge Buck harshly. He'll see it the other way by and by."
Sam straightened perceptibly. There was something in this speech that put him in the same class with Michael. He had never before had any qualms of conscience concerning gambling, but now he found himself almost unawares arrayed against it.