Lady Lihn dropped the ball into the wheel. It raced, then rattled into a slot, and she raked all the bets off the table. Coyote cursed and let out a howl. The woman playing next to him staggered back and wandered away, carrying visions of her children wearing paper hats and saying, "I was going to go to college, but my mother went to Vegas instead. Would you like fries with that?"
Coyote looked at Minty Fresh. "She was bad luck. I lost half of my chips because of her."
"Perhaps you should move to a different table," Minty said. "We can open a private table just for you."
Coyote grinned at Minty. "You think you have a table where you can trick me?"
"No, sir," Minty said, a little embarrassed. "We don't wish to trick you."
"There's nothing wrong with tricking people. They pay you to be tricked."
"We like to think of it as entertainment."
Coyote laughed. "Like movie stars and magicians? Tricksters. People want to be tricked. But you know that, don't you?" He picked up his chips and walked to a crap table.
Minty thought for a moment before following the Indian. He prided himself on being able to handle any situation with complete calm, but he found dealing with this Indian made him nervous, and a little afraid. But of what? Something in the eyes. He moved in behind Coyote, who was throwing chips on the crap table.
"You can't bet the numbers until the point has been made, sir," said the stickman, a thin, balding man in his forties. He pushed Coyote's chips back across the table. The stickman looked over Coyote's head and nodded to Minty Fresh before pushing the dice to the shooter. "Place your bets," he said, and the dealers working at either end of the table checked the bets on the felt. "New shooter coming out," the stickman said.
A blond woman in a business suit and perfect newswoman makeup picked up the dice and blew on them. "Come on, seven," she said. "Baby needs new shoes."
Coyote twisted his neck to look at Minty Fresh. "Does talking to them work?"
Minty nodded to the table as the woman let fly with the dice, rolling a two.
"Snake eyes!" the croupier said.
"Lizard dick!" Coyote shouted back.
The blond woman cursed and walked away from the table. The stickman shot a glance to Minty, then continued. "Two. Craps. No pass. No come. Place your bets. New shooter coming out." He pushed the dice to Coyote, who threw a handful of black chips on the table and picked up the dice.
"You are small, but I am your friend," Coyote said to the dice. "You have beautiful spots." He pulled the rawhide pouch from his belt and poured a fine powder on the dice.
"You can't do that, sir," the stickman said.
Minty Fresh gently took the dice from Coyote and handed them to the boxman, who sat across from the stickman watching an enormous rack of chips that was the table's bank. He inspected the dice, then gave them to the stickman, who dropped them in his tray and pushed a fresh pair to the trickster.
"What is this, shade?" Coyote said. "The shaman gets to use his power stick but I can't use my cheating powder?"
"I'm afraid not," Minty said.
Coyote picked up the new dice and chucked them to the end of the table.
"Eight! Easy," the stickman said.
"Did I win?" Coyote asked Minty.
"No, now you have to roll another eight before you roll a seven or eleven."
Coyote rolled again. The dice showed a pair of fours.
"Eight. Winner. Hard way," the stickman chanted. The dealer placed a stack of black chips next to Coyote's bet.
"Ha," Coyote said, taunting Minty Fresh. "See, I am good at this game."
"Very good," Minty said with a smile. "You roll again."
Coyote placed the remainder of his chips on the table. The dealer immediately shot a glance to the boxman, who looked to Minty Fresh. Minty nodded. The boxman nodded. The dealer counted Coyote's chips and stacked them on the pass line. "Playing twenty-one thousand."
Coyote threw the dice.
"Two!" the stickman said. The dealer raked in Coyote's chips and handed them to the boxman, who stacked the racks in the table bank.
"I lost?" Coyote said incredulously.
"Sorry," Minty said. "But you didn't crap out. You can shoot again."
"I'll be back," Coyote said. He walked away and Minty followed him through the casino, into the lobby, and out the door. Coyote handed the valet ticket to a kid named Squire Jeff, then turned to Minty, who stood by the valet counter.
"I'll be back with more money."
"We'll hold a place for you, sir," Minty said, relieved that the Indian was leaving.
"I was just learning your game, shade. You didn't trick me."
"Of course not, sir."
Squire Jeff pulled up in the Mercedes, got out, and waited with his hand out. Coyote started to get into the car, then stopped and looked at the valet. He took the pouch from his belt and poured a bit of powder into the kid's hand, then got in the car and drove away.
Minty felt a wave of relief wash over him as he watched the Mercedes cross the drawbridge. Squire Jeff, still holding his palm out, turned to Minty Fresh.
"What am I supposed to do with this?"
"You could snort it."
Squire Jeff sniffed at the powder, then wrinkled his nose and brushed the powder from his hand. "Fucking Indian. You work inside, right?"
Minty nodded.
Squire Jeff looked Minty up and down. "You play any ball?"
"One year, UNLV."
"Injury?"
"Attitude," Minty said. He walked back into the casino.
CHAPTER 25
Wheels, Deals, and the Persistance of Visions
Las Vegas
Calliope sat in her car shivering and watching. She was parked up the street from a Vegas Harley-Davidson shop where she had once gone with Lonnie on a delivery for the Guild. The street was deserted, and dark except for the odd glow of neon in the window of a closed pawnshop. Litter danced in dust devils of desert wind that had grown cold through the night. Calliope curled up in the driver's seat and tried to cover herself with one of Grubb's blankets. The smell that came off the blanket, a mix of sour milk and sweet baby, made her sad, and even though she had stopped breastfeeding months ago, her breasts ached for her son.
She caught some motion out of the corner of her eye: two figures coming out of an alley onto the sidewalk: men. They were walking toward the car. Calliope slid down in the driver's seat. The mother instinct, the feeling of righteous invincibility that had filled her when she had come here, was leaking away. Right now she was not protecting her child; she was afraid for herself.
As the men approached she saw that they were young toughs, swaggering with their own willingness to violence, even as they staggered from the effect of some drink or drug. She slid farther down in the seat, and when their shadows fell across the car's hood she twisted down and covered herself with Grubb's blanket. She heard their footsteps scrape and stop at the car, heard their voices above her.
"Check out this motherfucker."
"Some tall dollars here — there's a grand in tires on this thing."
"Pop the hood."
Calliope heard someone trying to open the door.
"Locked."
"Hang on a minute, I saw a brick back a ways."
Footsteps away. The car rocked with the continued yanking at the door handle. Calliope could hear the keys swinging in the ignition. The second man was coming back. Her breath caught. She waited for the crash. Sweat trickled down her forehead and dripped onto the gearshift knob.
"No man, not the windshield. You can't drive it with a broken windshield."
"Oh, right."
Calliope braced herself for the impact of the brick, then something in her mind screamed NO! Her feet were still on the pedals. She pushed the clutch and gas to the floor, reached out from under the blanket, and turned the key.