The Robber Gamblers
The Robber
Gamblers
by
Austin
Mitchell
Calton and Liston were playing
cards. They were playing poker. Carlton was wining the games. He knew that he
was better at any card game than Liston.
“How
much is your bike worth, Liston?” Calton asked.
Liston
smirked.
“You
will never own a bike like the one I have, guy," he boasted.
Calton
laughed, he knew he was close to cleaning out Liston. They shuffled the cards
again. They played for another forty five minutes. Liston threw down his last thousand dollars
and they began playing again. Calton won the game again. He stretched his hands
to pick up the money when suddenly Liston pulled a knife on him.
“Give
me all the money you have,” Liston ordered and took away Calton’s knife. He
then dug his hand into the man’s pocket and took out his wallet.
“Empty
out your other pockets,” Liston ordered.
Calton
did as Liston ordered.
“Okay,
take off your shoes and your hat.”
Calton’s
shoes and hat didn’t reveal any more money.
“You
won’t get away with this Liston,” Carlton warned.
"You want to do something about it,"Liston mocked.
"You want to do something about it,"Liston mocked.
Liston
jumped on his bike.
“Hey,
guy, a man who can’t defend himself shouldn’t gamble,” he said and laughed as
he rode away.
As
Liston rode away he knew he was lucky to get away. All the roads in Keswick
were guarded night and day. He counted
himself lucky as they were just on the outskirts of Keswick.
Calton
would soon tell the men in Keswick what had happened to him. They could only do
something to him if they caught him in Keswick. He thought he had been foolish
to get into that game of poker with Calton. He knew he had committed a grave mistake by
pulling his knife on Calton and robbing him of his winnings but the man had
cleaned him out. If he had begged him back some of the money he would probably have
given him a hundred dollar bill.
When
he reached his village of Dudley a man named Dixon came and told him that word
had already reached the community of what he had done.
Liston
explained why he had done it. He told Dixon that he suspected Calton of
cheating him.
Other
men came on the scene. They said that he had soured relations between Dudley
and Keswick. They said as far as they were concerned he was on his own. The
best thing for him to do was to give Calton back his money. Liston balked at
what the men were telling him to do.
Liston
told them that he was not afraid of the men from Keswick.
Liston
knew that he was permanently banned from Keswick. If he had a girl in that community
he couldn’t go and look for her nor could any woman from there come and look
for him.
About
three months later, Liston was in another community, Norris, and he was gambling
with a man named Bing. Liston was winning thousands of dollars off Bing. He
didn’t think that Bing knew anything about cards.
Suddenly
Liston was looking at Bing’s knife. Bing told him to give him all the money he
had on him. Bing drove away, warning Liston not to follow him on his bike.
Liston
sought help from the men from Dudley but they refused to help him. He bravely
rode to Keswick one night.
He
explained to the men in Keswick what had happened to him. They were some men
there who were threatening him. The men in Keswick said that they couldn’t help
him because of what he had done to Calton. They said that they knew Bing and he
was barred from their community. They also told him that they only allowed Liston
to come into Keswick because of what they heard had happened to him. The only
way the ban could be lifted was for him to repay Calton.
Liston
went to Norris but the men in Norris said that Bing was an outlaw whom they had
no control over. Liston returned to Dudley in a sour mood. Bing had completely cleaned
him out.
He
decided to concentrate on farming the two acres of land his father had left
him. It had on a lot of fruit trees. The land was overgrown with a lot of weeds.
He couldn’t pay a man to clean it up. He had to do it on his own. A month
later, he had the land cleaned up. He was now selling apples, some of which he
took on consignment from other growers. He was now making some money and he was
tempted to start gambling again. But he remembered what had happened to him
with Bing and Calton.
He
wanted to increase his acreage under cultivation and was getting three acres to rent
in Keswick. However the men in Keswick said that the only way he could farm in
their community was if he agreed to repay Calton his money. Liston agreed to
repay him from the profits of his crops.
Two
months after he started operating in Kewick, there was a big commotion in the
village. Calton and Bing were gambling when Bing held him up and took all his
money off him. But Bing met up on a roadblock as he made his way out of the
village. The men who set up the roadblock demanded that Bing repay Calton his
money before he would be allowed to leave the village. Bing, seeing no other
way out, complied with their demands and was allowed to leave the village. He
was warned not to visit Keswick again.
Liston
knows that he was lucky to be allowed the chance to farm in Keswick. When he looks at how hard he has to work and
then to let somebody clean him out over a gambling table was just not worth it,
Liston thought. He has therefore decided to give up gambling. The End.
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