“I figured he was just going for a walk. You know?”
Stride cocked an eyebrow and leaned in close to Pete’s face. “Why’d he need a ‘walk’ if he had Karyn with him?”
“Karyn left an hour before MJ did,” Pete explained. “I got a cab for her.”
“Did she look upset?” Amanda asked.
Pete shook his head. “She looked bored. She told the cabbie to take her to Ra, over at the Luxor. She was just hunting for another party.”
“Did MJ say anything when he left?” Stride asked.
“No, he looked pretty bombed. He headed straight down the sidewalk. I knew where he was going.”
“Did MJ ‘walk’ a lot?” Amanda asked.
The valet blanched. “Not very often. A guy like him, he doesn’t need to pay for it. But sometimes you want a little on the street, so you don’t have to wake up next to her, okay?”
“Tell that to your girlfriend,” Stride said. “Did anyone follow him out the door?”
Pete shrugged. “I don’t know. Cars were coming and going. I only noticed MJ because he’s a regular.”
A car horn blared noisily, and the valet waved and began dancing on both feet, anxious for his next tip. “Anything else?” Pete asked impatiently.
“Who’s head of security here?”
“Gerard Plante. Inside and straight back.”
“Thanks. We’ll send a team over to check out MJ’s car,” Stride added. “Make sure no one gets near it before we do. You included.”
“Sure.”
Stride clapped a hand like a vise on the boy’s shoulder. “If I read in Us magazine about ribbed Trojans in MJ’s glove compartment, I’m going to make sure the IRS comes knocking on your door about those fifty-buck tips. Got it?”
Pete’s eyes widened, and he licked his upper lip, trying to figure out if Stride was serious. Then he gulped and ran for the next car.
“Us magazine,” Amanda said. “Nice.”
“I thought you’d like that.”
Stride led Amanda through the revolving doors into the sea of noise and smoke inside the casino. The stale smell of cigarettes curled into his lungs like an old friend, and just like that, the craving was back. Funny how it never left. He hadn’t smoked in more than a year, but he felt himself rubbing his thumb and finger together, as if there were a lit Camel between them. He took a deep breath, sucking it in and expelling it, and wondering if Vegas had been dropped down in the desert by some sarcastic angel who wanted to test the willpower of ex-sinners.
He found himself getting aroused, too. It was autoerotica, part of a mind-control game the casinos played. He couldn’t pretend he was immune. He responded to the beating pulse in the city’s bloodstream. Not greed, like most people thought. Hunger. For money, for flesh, for food, alcohol, and smoke-naked hunger, oozing, obsessive, and overwhelming. The casinos programmed it that way. Maybe the little black half-moons in the ceiling weren’t cameras after all, spying on every finger on a slot button or flip of a card. Maybe they were all spraying some odorless drug that unleashed the mania, which lasted until your money was all gone and you slunk back home.
The Oasis was among the most explicit of the Vegas casinos in using sex to sell its machines and tables and to cultivate an image as the hip spot for rubbing shoulders with celebrities. Looking around the casino, Stride saw posters everywhere of impossibly gorgeous bikini-clad women, leering at him as they hyped slot tournaments, poker rooms, and crab leg buffets. It seemed to be working. The casino itself was relatively small, not a sprawling octopus like Caesars, but every machine was taken, and every seat at the blackjack tables was filled, with crowds pressing in to watch the action. It was a young crowd, dripping with women just as stunning as those in the posters.
Stride remembered what Serena’s partner, Cordy, said about nights in Las Vegas. The time when breasts came out to play.
He had a hard-on. It pissed him off.
“Come on,” he growled. Amanda had a look of cool wonder. The drug was working on her, too.
They weaved their way through the rows of slot machines and found the security desk at the back of the casino, an imposing oak monolith staffed by the only woman in the casino who was ugly and severe. Talking above the thump of rock music blaring from the overhead speakers, Stride asked for Gerard Plante. He held up his shield. She told him to wait.
Amanda sat down at a slot machine across from the security door and fed in a five-dollar bill from her pocket. The machine featured characters from some long-ago television show that Stride could remember watching when he was a kid in Duluth. He had an image of his bedroom window and of snow whipping past the glass.
Stride leaned against the machine and impatiently shoved his hands in his pockets. He leaned down to Amanda. “So how did you get stuck with me?”
Amanda took her eyes off the slot reels and gave him a suspicious look. “Excuse me?”
“The lieutenant thinks I should be back in Minnesota shoveling snow,” Stride said. “You must have pissed him off to get stuck with a newbie like me who’s on Sawhill’s shit list.”
Stride knew that Sawhill was just angry at the world. He used to get that way himself sometimes when he was a lieutenant, during those stretches when everything that could go wrong did. Sawhill had lost his favorite detective when the man won the Megabucks jackpot and retired instantly, eight million dollars richer. Then Serena went over Sawhill’s head to the sheriff to plug Stride, an experienced homicide investigator who just happened to be in town, available, bored, doing nothing but letting the city get on his nerves. And so Sawhill found himself with Stride crammed down his throat, and he had made it a point to make sure Stride knew that the lieutenant didn’t think he was up to the task of big-city crime.
“Oh, now I get it,” Amanda said, half to herself. “I was wondering what you did to get stuck with me. Now it makes sense. Sawhill has it in for you.”
Stride shrugged. “I like you fine. You seem smart. You’re something to look at, too. Seems like he’s doing me a favor.”
“Not hardly,” Amanda told him.
“Want to fill me in?”
Amanda took a long look at him. “You really don’t know, do you? Serena didn’t tell you?”
“I guess not.”
“You’re not just playing dumb-ass games with me?”
“I haven’t been in this city long enough to play games,” Stride said.
Amanda laughed, long and deep. “Oh, that’s good. That’s really good.”
“Are you going to let me in on the joke?”
“I’m a non-op,” Amanda said.
“What’s that?” Stride asked, genuinely confused.
“I’m a transsexual. A non-operative transsexual. I’ve had feminization surgery, and I take estrogen supplements to promote development of breasts, soft skin, the right weight balance, that kind of thing. But I decided not to undergo SRS to remove the genitalia. Got it? I used to be a guy.”
Stride felt his face turn multiple shades of crimson. “Holy shit.”
“So you see why I’m not exactly first in the rotation for potential partners.”
He couldn’t help himself. He found himself glancing at the large breasts pushing out from Amanda’s T-shirt and then at the crotch of her tight jeans, where his imagination seemed to freeze. He realized he was staring and couldn’t think of a thing to say.
“Want to see?” Amanda asked.
“No!” Stride retorted, and then realized Amanda was giggling. “I’m sorry,” he added. “This really is perfect. Sawhill is sending me a message, you know. ‘Bet you don’t have any non-ops back in Nowhere, Minnesota, hey, Stride?’ ”
“Is it going to be a problem?”
Stride thought about it. He had lived his entire life, until a couple of months ago, on the shore of Lake Superior, in a city that was liberal about labor unions and health care and conservative about religion and sex, but he considered himself strictly nonjudgmental about anything that went on behind closed doors, so long as no one got hurt. He shrugged. “Like I said, you’re smart, and you’re the prettiest guy I’ve ever seen.”