The whole floor seemed to feel this way.
And this was what Balot and the Doctor needed in order to bring the final act to an end on the requisite bang. How would the regulars who haunted this place react toward those who had just wandered onto their turf and won a fortune, and not even a small one at that? Some would be prepared to kill the interlopers to steal their newly acquired riches. Others might try and team up with them, use them to win big for themselves. It wouldn’t just be the other customers who felt this way but many of the dealers too, no doubt. Either way, they were a veritable hornets’ nest, ready to sink their opportunistic stingers into those who won big—another hurdle for Balot and the Doctor to contend with.
The best way to subdue the angry hornets was to smoke them out and put them to sleep. To do this, Balot needed to lose big, and conspicuously. If she was seen to stumble, to trip and drop her fat purse in the gutter, to watch its gold contents irretrievably washed away by the effluvia—well, then she’d be of no more interest to the swarm that was only after one thing. Indeed, once they’d seen she’d lost, and lost everything, they’d see her as jinxed and avoid her like the plague.
Even so, Balot still had to win in her own way.
She had to bring verisimilitude to their little act. More importantly, she had a bad debt she needed to pay off.
The upcard was 5. Balot had a queen and 2.
–Stay.
Waiting for the dealer to bust.
Shell’s face showed his despair even before he turned his card over. No doubt he already knew the distribution of the cards, helped by information fed in from his earphone and the watchlike device on his wrist.
All that was left for him to do was entrust everything to luck and flip his hidden card. His face hoped, prayed, begged, for total victory—no more the basic self-control expected in even a rookie dealer.
The card was a king. He then went on to draw another card—queen. Total twenty-five. Bust.
John’s face erupted in nuclear fury as he watched Shell silently paying out to Balot. His face turned black.
Balot waited for her next move, gauging her timing perfectly.
She snapped one of the golden chips into place on the table. The sound was like a judge’s gavel when judgment was passed down. Shell and John sprang to attention.
The air was icy with tension. Balot said and did nothing, waiting silently for her next card.
It felt good to be able to stare down an opponent without having to say anything—particularly an opponent to whom Balot had nothing to say.
Shell’s blood was as thick as molten wax as he forced his hand over to the card shoe to deal. As he dealt, his fingers withdrew one of the cards and dealt the one just below it, out of turn, so that he received a card that was meant for Balot. A blatant switch.
Ashley and Bell Wing saw right through the clumsy maneuver, as did Balot.
The upcard was an ace. Balot’s cards were a king and jack.
–Stay, Balot called immediately.
Shell flipped over his hidden card with his leaden hand.
The card was a 4. Total fifteen. He went on to draw a 7. The ace in his hand was now worth only one, bringing his hand to twelve.
Then he drew a 9. He had reached his total of twenty-one. Shell had won.
02
–Never doubt. It’s the road to ruin.
Shell looked up at Balot, confused.
–The recipient of love shouldn’t have any doubts. No need to trouble yourself with questions.
Behind Shell, John chuckled to himself.
Shell collected the golden chip with hands that couldn’t quite stop quavering, then took in the cards for the discard pile.
Shell understood all too well what had just happened. The way the cards had been dealt was ace, king, 4, jack, 7, 9.
In other words, before his switch the cards had been arranged king, ace, 4, jack, 7, 9.
Had Shell not made his move, Balot would have had blackjack, and not just any old blackjack. The ace and jack of spades: a payout of 11 to 1. Her million-dollar stake at that level of payout would have been an atomic bomb, blowing the casino to pieces.
Then it hit Shell; he had worked it all out. Where exactly Balot had inserted the red marker: right below the ace that had just been dealt. She had known exactly how and where he was going to cut and based her own play around that.
Shell was completely under her thumb. She’d even planned exactly how he was going to win, forcing his hand, quite literally. He felt a deep malaise welling up inside himself. He was on the verge of screaming as his pride and confidence were ripped to shreds.
John, on the other hand, was delighted to see the golden chip return to its box, welcoming it home like it had been his own kidnapped daughter released from incarceration. Hardly surprising, considering the chip represented his own dirty money.
It wasn’t even so much the money itself that was at stake for John and Shell but the very fact of its existence. If, as a result of the transfer of large amounts of cash—a large payout, for example—they came under scrutiny from the authorities and their money-laundering scheme was discovered, it would be far more than the actual cash that John and Shell both stood to lose.
Balot’s aim now was to find the right timing to lay down the final three golden chips.
She threw around more of the ten-thousand-dollar chips for the next few rounds, waiting for her next chance. Then, just as she was getting ready to place the next million-dollar chip, an old memory came to mind.
Something she had once seen on television. Aborigines—native peoples under the protection of the Commonwealth. A funeral, a wake, but a festive occasion. The aborigines had great respect for Mother Nature and celebrated a person’s return to her bosom via the ceremonial slaughtering of a cow.
The reason she’d ended up watching such a program was simple: she had misheard the announcer and thought it was going to be a program about abortion.
Abortion, abortionist, abortive—Balot was only half paying attention to the television when she thought she heard something along those lines. She was surprised, therefore, to find out that the program was about a completely different topic.
She kept on watching, though, if for no other purpose than to try and dispel the images that her mind had conjured up. That was how she’d learned about aborigines. Where was she when she saw that program? Yes, that was it—the place she’d been at before her last brothel—the Date Club, in the waiting room.
There were a number of girls working there. The clients would phone in, having seen the details on a flyer or poster, and the man in the office—reception, really—would then send out the girl that most closely matched the client’s request. In between assignments the girls waited around in interminable stretches of tense boredom. The girls would do what they could to alleviate this with magazines, television, books, or by attending to their manicures. It helped blot out other, more unpleasant, thoughts.
Occasionally, though, these other thoughts would still seep through. Much in the same way that Balot ended up watching the program on aborigines—to try and take her mind off a more unpleasant thought.
The aborigines in the program didn’t just revere death—they also feared it. The reporter explained that this was all tied to their deep respect for the jungle. Balot understood immediately. She could relate to the animals being offered up to nature—she knew what it meant to be a sacrificial lamb. And she knew that this was a scene that played out everywhere.