The Strip was a mob scene, the traffic bumper-to-bumper. It was that way most of the time, yet Billy didn’t care. He drove the Strip whenever he had time to kill, the garish billboards and outrageous people lining the sidewalks making him feel more alive than any place he’d ever been. There was nothing pretty about it, nor did it hold any subtle charms. It was all about the action, and the Strip had more of it than the rest of the cities in the world combined. He got a call from Grimes, his partner in crime.
“Hey boss,” he said by way of greeting.
“You are the definition of a problem,” Grimes said.
“I’ll take that as a compliment.”
“Go home and pack yourself a suitcase. You’re taking a trip.”
“I am?”
“The FBI tipped us off that a hired killer from Hong Kong illegally entered the country last night through LAX and is heading to Vegas. There’s a contract out on your life.”
“Broken Tooth?”
“That would be a logical guess. He doesn’t want you testifying against him. I’ll pick you up in front of your place in forty-five minutes.”
“Exactly where am I going?”
“That’s up to you.”
“Should I be scared?”
“I would be.”
He wasn’t afraid of dying, just not today. He departed the Strip at the next intersection and took the back roads home with one eye on his mirror.
He was waiting by the curb in front of his building with a packed suitcase when Grimes pulled up in a Jeep Cherokee with tinted windows. The desert sun was brutal on paint jobs, and the hood was flaking away in large chips. Maybe when Grimes got his promotion he’d lose this piece of junk and get himself a sexy new ride.
Grimes refused to make eye contact as he drove. “You owe me.”
“No kidding,” he said.
“I mean that. We need to come to an understanding.”
“What’s that?”
“You told me the Rebels’ defense said no to fixing the Super Bowl. Then these same players try to rip off the casinos with you in charge. That tells me you’ve corrupted them. I don’t know what your arrangement with them is, and I don’t care. Just keep your nose clean until we bring the case against Broken Tooth and don’t scam any casinos. Because, so help me God, if you get busted, I’ll fuck you.”
There were poker rooms and casinos in every state in the union. If his trip took him to a place where one of these fine establishments existed, and he saw an opportunity to make some money, he wasn’t about to turn his back and walk away.
“Fuck me how?” he asked.
“I’ll put the screws to Maggie. You wouldn’t want that happening, would you?”
“Mags has nothing to do with this,” he said.
“Bullshit. I have more videos of her cheating than I do of my kids growing up. I compared them to the video of the bag lady marking the cards. Same technique. It’s her.”
Billy stared at the white lines in the highway. He liked to think he could weasel his way out of just about any jam. But Mags was not so lucky in that regard, and another encounter with the gaming board would do her in. A plane roared overhead as they neared the airport.
“I won’t scam any casinos until this is over,” he said.
“Glad to hear it. Pick a terminal, and I’ll drop you off,” Grimes said.
He chose Terminal A. Maybe he’d go somewhere warm where there were golf courses so he could hustle some old geezers for pocket change.
“Do you know what this hired assassin looks like?”
Grimes pulled up a photo on his cell phone that showed a thick-faced Chinese male with a unibrow and a snarl as mean as a junkyard dog. He texted it to Billy as he drove.
“Send it to your crew. Just in case,” the special agent said.
“I told you—”
“I know, I know, you don’t have a crew. Do it anyway. This hit man is a member of a secret society based in Hong Kong called the Chinese Assassins Corps. They’ve been murdering people for more than a hundred years and are real pros.”
“Thanks for the warning.”
The Jeep’s front tire kissed the curb. Billy had a thought and said, “Why did MGM decide not to press charges against the football players? They caught them red-handed.”
“MGM got a call that told them to let them go.”
“A call from whom?”
“You don’t know?”
“No, should I?”
Grimes gave him a smug look. “You’re not as smart as you think you are.”
Grimes was the second person to tell him that. Billy hated to be kept in the dark and decided to press the special agent for an answer. A TSA officer’s whistle cut him short.
“Get out before this asshole tickets me,” Grimes said.
He opened the passenger door and put a foot on the curb. Hoping to bring Grimes’s guard down, he waited a beat before turning around. “Night Train knew he wasn’t going to jail. He even bet me a hundred bucks. How could he know that?”
“You’ll figure it out someday,” Grimes said. “Have a nice trip.”
Fifty-Eight
Saturday, eight days before the Super Bowl
Billy went to Scottsdale to work on his golf game and decided to stay at the Phoenician. The luxury property sat on two hundred and fifty manicured acres and had security guards roaming the grounds. Broken Tooth’s hired killer would have a hard time locating him here.
Saturday morning found him playing in a foursome on the resort’s championship course. His playing partners were ophthalmologists attending a convention who boasted how they were able to write off their stays if they attended a single one-hour-long seminar. Everybody had an angle they were working; for the eye doctors, it was ripping off Uncle Sam.
The golf over, he retired to his residence and ordered room service. Soon he was eating a club sandwich and watching ESPN’s SportsCenter. Next Sunday’s Super Bowl was the hot topic, and nearly every story was devoted to a player profile or an analysis of how the teams stacked up.
If the pundits were to be believed, the Rebels were in trouble. A video of Sammy passed out at Luxor had surfaced along with a story about the defense’s wild partying. This news had created a negative spin, and the bookies had made the Rebels a ten-point underdog.
Finished, he pushed aside his plate. There were no stories about Night Train punching the drunks or cheating the Mirage. It was like it had never happened. Then the announcer said a story about Night Train was coming after the commercial break. Here we go, he thought.
The commercial ended and the story began. In a somber tone, the announcer stated that Night Train had suffered an injury and was doubtful for the Super Bowl. A video played of Night Train in practice wearing a bulky knee brace. It switched to a female sportscaster interviewing the famous football player on the sidelines.
“I’m here with Night Train McClain, captain of the Rebels’ defense,” the female sportscaster said. “Night Train, can you tell us what’s wrong with your knee?”
“I hyperextended it in the first round of the playoffs, and it flared up a few days ago,” Night Train said.
“How does it affect your play?”
“My lateral movement’s not a hundred percent.”
Billy was stunned. He’d been around Night Train plenty and hadn’t seen evidence of any physical problems. The guy was in incredible shape.