Jack usually ran his Annual Park-a-thon for the Little League at night, but he was incensed enough now to make an exception for this monte crew.
He studied the sticks, then turned and checked out the slides. Most likely they were all carrying knives; none of them looked to be packing heat, but damn near impossible to tell under those bulky coats.
He made a decision as he turned back to the game: He would accept a donation from these generous fellows, allowing them the honor of being the first contributors to this year's Little League fund.
He felt his pulse quicken a little. He hadn't come prepared for this. Usually he avoided spur-of-the-moment gigs, but the opportunity was here, so why not grab it?
Jack watched the shaker and his flying hands. Same routine as before, then the caps were pushed forward.
"Didja see it?" Nocap whispered again.
"Sure did," Jack said, nodding and smiling, looking like a guy taking the bait and waiting to be reeled in.
Santo picked the money cap, but the ball rolled out from under the center cap.
"Shit!"
His wife wailed again as the earring disappeared into the shaker's pocket.
"Hang on a sec," Jack said, grabbing the stricken Santo's arm as he turned to go.
"No!" the wife shouted, her voice rising in pitch. "No more!"
"Please," Jack said. "I think I've got this figured and I want witnesses. I'll make it worth your while when I win."
Jack was telling the truth. He didn't want to be alone at the table when he played.
The possibility of salvaging something from their disaster changed their minds, and Santo and his wife nodded. He looked sullen, chastened; she stood teary eyed with her arms folded across her chest.
"Great," Jack said. He turned to Nocap and said, "You were next, I believe."
"Hey, no, that's okay," Nocap said, grinning. "Be my guest. Wanna see if you really do got this thing scoped, yo. 'Cause then you can tell me."
"Thanks." Jack pulled two fifties from his wallet. "What does this get me?"
"Two-fifty," the shaker said.
"Come on," Jack said. "A hundred bucks on one play—that should get me at least three hundred."
"Sorry, man. Two-fifty's the limit."
"Hey, yo, c'mon," said Knitcap, playing his advocate's role to the hilt. "Pay the guy three!"
Jack said, "How about two-fifty and the earring?"
"Yeah!" said Nocap. "That's fair!"
"Awright," said the shaker with another of his put-upon shrugs, making a show of reluctantly bowing to pressure.
Truth was, Jack could have been asking for five hundred and it wouldn't have mattered—no way, no how was the sucker going to win—but he didn't want to push it too far.
"But I need to know if you've got two-fifty," Jack said.
"I got it," the shaker said, holding up the stack in his left hand.
Jack shook his head. "If my money's on the table, so's yours. And the earring with it."
Another shrug, but wary this time. "Awright. If that's the way you wants to play, what else is there for me to say?"
Jack laid his money down. The shaker counted out two-fifty in tens and twenties next to Jack's bills, then dropped the earring on top.
"If everything's okay with you, now I got my work to do."
"Just one more thing," Jack said. He turned to Santo and his wife. "I want you two on either side of me, watching, okay?"
He centered himself on the makeshift table, then positioned Santo on his right and the wife on his left.
"All right," he told the couple. "Don't let that ball out of your sight."
"Now are we ready?" the shaker said.
Jack nodded. "Okay. Do it."
Jack felt his muscles coil as the shaker started his yammer and went into the skedaddle. Finally he stopped, pushed the caps forward.
"The ball is hidden in its groove. Time for you to make your move."
Jack took a deep, tension-easing breath, then squared himself in front of the table. He pointed at the caps with both index fingers, moving them in circles as if they were fleshy divining rods.
"I choose…I choose…"
He moved his hands closer to the caps.
"…I choose…"
Closer…quick glances at the positions of the sticks…
Then he struck.
"…the middle!"
With one lightning move he overturned the two end caps, shouted, "I win!" when no ball showed, then snatched up the two piles of bills and the earring.
"What the fuck?" said Nocap.
Jack was already moving as he shoved the earring into Santo's hand.
"Bye."
"Hey!" yelled the shaker.
"That's okay," Jack said, backpedaling away down the path. "I don't need to see the ball. I trust you."
He turned and broke into a jog. Behind him he heard Santo laugh. He glanced back and saw his wife hugging him. He also saw Knitcap and one of the slides starting after him.
He quickened his pace. He knew he wasn't going to lose them. Fifth Avenue was less than a hundred yards away, but even if he got there ahead of them, that wouldn't stop them. They'd jump him on the sidewalk and take back the money. Or try to. Jack didn't want to deal with them in public; witnesses could describe him, a camera-toting tourist might even snap a photo. Or worst case—a cop might come to his rescue.
No, he'd have to deal with both of them here. He needed a spot where they'd think they had him all to themselves. And up ahead he saw just the place.
He hopped over a low fence onto the grass and half ran, half slid down a steep slope to a lower walkway that ran into a short tunnel beneath the path he'd been on. He stopped midway in the brick-lined underpass and ducked into one of the shallow arched recesses that lined the walls. He pulled his Semmerling LM-4 from its ankle holster and stuck it in the side pocket of his jeans for easier access.
He was hoping he wouldn't have to use it—that simply showing it would be enough. Trouble with the world's smallest .45 automatic was its size. People saw it and thought it was a toy. But it packed a wallop, especially loaded as it was the MagSafe Defenders.
The frangible loads gave Jack the option of inflicting a disabling wound—say, to the thigh—or an almost guaranteed kill with a shot anywhere into the chest. And he didn't have to worry about the bullet coming out the other side and hitting an innocent passerby—frangibles did devastating damage to their target, but stayed put.
He was making a show of counting his money when they found him.
"Awright, mothahfuckah," Knitcap said. He held a six-inch blade point down by his right thigh.
Jack slid his hand toward the Semmerling pocket but stopped it halfway there. He'd been expecting knives; he hadn't expected the pearl-handled .38 revolver in the young slide's hand.
"Yeah," said the slide, pointing the pistol at Jack's head. "Yeah!"
For one frozen, heart-stopping, bladder-squeezing second as the barrel lined up with his face, Jack thought he was going to die. He saw murder in the slide's face. The kid was all of seventeen, but his cold dark eyes said he hadn't been a real kid for a long time.
But Jack calmed somewhat when he saw how the kid was holding it. Maybe he'd been watching too many gangsta videos, or bad shoot-'em-up flicks. Whatever the reason, the slide was holding his pistol sideways…beyond sideways—he'd rotated it a good 150 degrees so that the heel of the grip was higher than the barrel. And he had his ring and pinky fingers sticking up in the air like he was having afternoon tea.
When he was ready to pull the trigger he'd need to get a firmer grip or risk having the pistol jump out of his hand.
So Jack figured he was safe for the moment—the kid was stylin' now, showing off for the older stick—but as soon as those waving fingers wrapped themselves around the grip…