He rolled them across his desk. The fact that they were normal didn’t mean that crooked dice weren’t being used. The cheater, or cheaters, might be switching crooked dice in and out of the game, without anyone being the wiser.
“So call him up,” Mabel said when he returned to the kitchen.
He sat at the kitchen table. “I don’t want to.”
She split the last of the coffee between two mugs and sat down.
“But he’s desperate.”
“They usually are when they’re losing money.”
“Tony . . .”
He sipped his coffee. “The guy’s such a jerk.”
“How do you know him?”
“He ran one of Trump’s joints in Atlantic City for about sixty minutes. Everybody hated his guts.”
“Would you like me to call him?”
Mabel was great at finding solutions. It would be fun to let Jacques think that he didn’t rate an audience with the boss. “Sure,” he said.
Jacques’s phone number was in the letter. Mabel dialed it and awoke him from a deep sleep. She stuck her hand over the mouthpiece. “He’s cursing in French.”
“Tell him French wine tastes like urine and hang up.”
She waved him off. To Jacques she said, “We just received your Federal Express package. Tony examined the dice—”
“Zee dice,” Valentine corrected.
“—and found nothing wrong with them. He believes the cheater must have switched out the crooked dice for clean ones.” Mabel listened for a minute, then stuck her hand over the mouthpiece. “Jacques says that the casino searches its employees before their shift starts and after it’s over. That way, the dealers can’t bring crooked dice in or take them out.”
“Ask Jacques where the craps dealers go on their break.”
She asked. “To the employee lounge.”
“Are there lockers where they change into their uniforms?”
She asked. “Jacques said yes.”
“Tell Jacques one of his dealers is taking normal dice to the lounge and altering them. He needs to search the dealers’ lockers and be on the lookout for the following items. Ready?”
“Ready.”
“A file, a drill, a vise, a burr for hollowing, celluloid rope, fast-drying cement, ink, a bottle of mercury, some kind of polishing compound, and sandpaper. If any of those items turn up, that’s their man.”
Mabel relayed it all to Jacques. When she hung up, she was smiling. She wasn’t a beautiful woman, but when she found reason to smile, Valentine didn’t think there was a prettier face on the planet. “Jacques says you are a genius,” she said.
“He’s still a pain in the ass,” Valentine replied.
He spent the morning sifting through his mail. Over a dozen casino surveillance videotapes of suspected cheaters sat on his desk. Beside them was a stack of mail-order catalogues that had come addressed to U. R. Dead, and he guessed someone he’d put in prison had decided to get creative.
For a while he pushed papers around his desk. Three times the business line on his phone lit up. Mabel was still in the kitchen, and he heard her answer each call. Yesterday he’d been on top of the world. Now, he felt like he’d stepped off a cliff and was falling through space. Going to the kitchen, he found her working on the St. Petersburg Times crossword puzzle and pulled up a chair.
“I’m stumped,” she said. “The clue reads ‘Floored Ali.’ The answer is six letters. I was going to write Foreman, only it doesn’t fit. George Foreman floored Ali, didn’t he?”
“No. Ali floored Foreman.”
“Frazier. Joe Frazier floored Ali.”
“He sure did. But his name’s got seven letters.”
Mabel frowned. “Then who is it?”
“Wepner,” Valentine said.
“I beg your pardon?”
“A strapping can of Ragu named Chuck Wepner. One of the worst fighters to ever grace the heavyweight ranks. He floored Ali.”
“Where, in a bar?”
“No, in the ring. Chuck was from Bayonne. Ali fought him because he thought Chuck was a patsy. Chuck was lousy, but he was nobody’s water boy. In one of the later rounds, Chuck stepped on Ali’s foot. Ali was going backwards and lost his balance. Chuck popped him, and Ali went down. Ali got up and tortured Chuck, opened a million cuts on his face.”
“A Jersey boy,” Mabel said.
“A Jersey hero,” he corrected.
She put the paper aside, then read from a message pad beside the phone. “Your son called from Puerto Rico to say he and Yolanda are loving every minute of their honeymoon. He asked if you were still mad at him, and I said I thought you’d gotten over having to pay for his wedding and his honeymoon.”
Valentine bristled. “He hit me up for five grand on his wedding night. He knows damn well—”
Mabel touched his wrist. “Tony, stop obsessing over it. You have more money than you know what to do with. Your boy’s trying to get his life straightened out.”
“That’s right. He’s trying.”
“You make that sound like an ugly word.”
“He’s thirty-five years old. When’s he going to start doing?”
Mabel had two grown children and had accepted long ago that she couldn’t control their lives. She glanced down at her pad. “The second message was from Bill Higgins of the Nevada Gaming Control Board. He said he needed your help on a case.”
“I’m not going to Nevada.”
“You are in one foul mood, young man.”
“Every time a casino gets scammed, I get a distress call. You think these morons would consider having me check their joints out before they get ripped off? Fat chance.”
“I thought Bill was a friend.”
“I’m not going to run every time he calls, friend or not.”
There were days when she couldn’t win with him. Her eyes returned to her pad. “The third message was from Harry Smooth Stone at the Micanopy Indian reservation casino. He called yesterday, as well. He sounds desperate.”
“Too bad,” Valentine said.
A person could take just so much abuse. Mabel said good-bye, and Valentine walked her to the sidewalk in front of his house.
“You are such a bear,” she said.
“I’m sorry. I don’t mean to take it out on you.”
“Are you going to sit around, waiting for her to call?”
It sounded pitiful, and he said, “What are you suggesting?”
“Go help Bill Higgins, or Harry Smooth Stone. Take your mind off your problems for a few days.”
He didn’t want to go to Vegas. Too much time coming and going. The Micanopy reservation casino was in south Florida, and a leisurely four-hour drive. Down today, back tomorrow. Maybe Mabel was right. A change of scenery would do him good.
“I’ll think about it,” he said.
3
On paper, it had seemed like a great idea.
The town of Davie sat fifteen miles due west of Fort Lauderdale. A carnival had arrived the day before, and sat in the middle of an empty cow pasture, the Ferris wheel and brightly colored tents visible for miles.
Rico’s idea was this: Candy would talk Nigel Moon into taking her to the carnival. Then she’d get Moon to play a few games, like throw the balls in the milk can, and cover the spot. Rico knew these games were rigged and could be juiced to let the players win or lose. All he had to do was bribe the carnival owner, and the Moon’s “lucky” streak would be alive and well.
Only Rico hadn’t counted on the carnival owner’s stubbornness. He was a Cajun named Ray Hicks, and he wore suspenders and a porkpie hat. Rico cornered him outside Hicks’s trailer, a beat-up rig with patched tires and a wheezing air conditioner, and stuck a C note in the old flattie’s face. Hicks looked at the money, then scoffed.