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The dealer, a Hungarian named Sam, saw that he wasn't having a good night and tried to cheer him up. "Don't worry, Peter, luck will change. You will see."

He didn't think so. The shoe had a count of minus fifteen, highly favoring the house. Yet, that knowledge didn't change his play, even though any reasonable card-counter would have backed off for a while, come back in when the count climbed.

Peter was an odd duck of a counter. He counted because he could. His brain worked so fast and it was so effortless for him that having mastered the technique, he couldn't not count. High cards-ten to ace-were minus one; low cards-two through six-were plus one. A good counter only had to do two things welclass="underline" keep a running tally of the total count as the six-deck shoe was dealt out, and accurately estimate the number of undealt cards in the shoe. When the count was low, you bet the minimum or walked away. When it was high, you bet aggressively. If you knew what you were doing, you could tilt the law of averages and consistently win; that is, until you were spotted by a dealer, the pit boss, or the eye-in-the-sky and booted and banned.

Peter occasionally made a count-based decision, but since he never varied his bet, he never capitalized on his inside knowledge. He liked the Constellation, enjoyed spending three-or four-hour stretches at the tables, and was scared of getting kicked out of his favorite haunt. He was part of the furniture.

That night there were only two other gamblers at his table: a bleary-eyed anesthesiologist from Denver in for a medical convention, and a nattily dressed silver-haired exec who was the only one putting serious money into play. Peter was $600 down, pacing himself and languidly drinking a comped beer.

With a few hands to go before the shoe got reshuffled, a young rangy kid, about twenty-two, in a T-shirt and cargo pants, planted himself into one of the two empty chairs and bought in for a grand. He had shoulder-length hair and a breezy western charm. "Hey, how's everybody doing tonight? This a good table?"

"Not for me," the executive said. "You're welcome to change that."

"I'd be pleased to be of any assistance I can," the kid said. He caught the dealer's name tag. "Deal me in, Sam."

Betting the minimum, the kid turned a quiet table into a chatty one. He told them he was a student at UNLV majoring in government and, starting with the doctor, asked everyone where they were from and what they did for a living. After blathering about a problem he was having with his shoulder, he turned to Peter.

"I'm local," Peter offered. "I work with computers."

Prompting, "Cool. That's cool, dude."

The executive told the table, "I'm in the insurance business."

"You sell insurance, dude?"

"Well, yes and no. I run an insurance company."

"Awesome! High roller, baby!" the kid exclaimed.

Sam reshuffled the shoe and Peter instinctively started to count again. After five minutes they were well into the new shoe and the count was getting high. Peter puttered along, doing a little better, winning a few more hands than he lost. "See, I told you," Sam told him cheerfully after he won three hands in a row. The doctor was down two grand, but the insurance guy was out over thirty and he getting testy. The kid was betting erratically, without any apparent feel for the game, but he was only down a couple hundred. He ordered a rum and coke and fiddled with the swizzle stick until it accidentally dropped out of his mouth onto the floor. "Oops," he said quietly.

A blonde in her late twenties in tight jeans and a lemon-and-lime tube top approached the table and took the empty chair. She put her expensive Vuitton bag under her feet for safekeeping and plonked down $10,000 in four neat stacks. "Hello," she said shyly. She wasn't gorgeous but had a dynamite body and a soft, sexy voice and she stopped the conversation dead. "I hope I'm not barging in," she said, stacking her chips.

"Hell, no!" the kid said. "We need a rose among us thorns."

"I'm Melinda," and they amiably dispensed their minimalist Vegas-style introductions. She was from Virginia. She pointed to her wedding band. Hubby was at the pool.

Peter watched her play several hands. She was fast and sassy, betting $500 a hand, making border-line draws that were paying off pretty well. The kid lost three hands in a row, leaned back in his chair and said, "Man, I am hexed!"

Hexed.

Peter realized the count was plus thirteen with about forty cards left in the shoe.

Hexed.

The blonde pushed a stack of chips worth $3,500 forward. Seeing this, the insurance guy stepped up and bet the max. "You're giving me courage," he told her. Peter stuck to his $100, the same as the doc and the kid.

Sam quickly dealt and gave Peter a strong nineteen, the insurance guy fourteen, the doc seventeen, the kid twelve, and the blonde a pair of jacks-twenty. The dealer was showing a six. She's a lock, Peter thought. High count, dealer probably draws and busts, she's sitting pretty with her twenty.

"I'm going to split these, Sam," she said.

Sam blinked and nodded as she put up another $3,500.

Holy shit! Peter was dumbstruck. Who splits tens?

Unless?

Peter and the doc stood pat, the kid drew a six and stayed on eighteen. The insurance man busted out with a ten and spat out in disgust, "Son of a bitch!"

The blonde held her breath and clenched her fists until Sam dealt her a queen on one hand and a seven on the other. She clapped and exhaled simultaneously.

The dealer flipped his hole card, revealing a king, and drew a nine.

Bust.

Amidst her squeals, Sam paid out the table, shoving seven grand in chips her way.

Peter hastily excused himself and started for the men's room in turmoil. His mind was grinding. What am I thinking? he said to himself. This is none of my business! Let it go!

But he couldn't. He was overwhelmed with moral outrage-if he didn't take advantage, why should they?

He pivoted, went back toward the cluster of blackjack tables and made eye contact with the pit boss, who nodded and smiled at him. Peter sidled up and said, "Hey, how're you doing?"

"Just fine, sir. How can I help you this evening?"

"You see that kid at the table over there and the girl?"

"Yes, sir."

"They're counting."

The corner of the pit boss's mouth twitched. He'd seen a lot but he'd never seen one player turn in another. What was the angle? "You sure about this?"

"I'm positive. The kid's counting and signaling her."

"Thank you, sir. I'll handle it."

The pit boss used his two-way to call the floor manager, who in turn got security to play back the tape of the table's last couple of hands. In retrospect the blonde's stepped-up bet did look suspicious.

Peter had returned to the table just as a phalanx of uniformed security men arrived and laid hands on the kid's shoulders.

"Hey, what the fuck!" the kid shouted.

Players at other tables stopped and stared.

"You two know each other?" the pit boss asked.

"I never saw her in my life! That's the goddamn truth!" the kid wailed.

The blonde said nothing. She just picked up her pocketbook, gathered her chips, and tossed a $500 tip to Sam.

"See you, fellows," she said as she was led away.

The pit boss made a hand signal and Sam was replaced by another dealer.

The doc and the insurance guy looked at Peter with glazed astonishment. "What the hell just happened here?" the insurance man asked.

"They were counting," Peter said simply. "I turned them in."

"No you did not!" the insurance guy howled.

"Yeah, I did. It ticked me off."

The doc asked, "How'd you know?"

"I knew." He felt uncomfortable with the attention he was getting. He wanted to scram.