Travis was the only member of the crew that had worked in a casino, and was what people in the industry called a gamer. If anyone knew the significance of three days, it was him. Travis took the call from his wife, then came back on the line.
“Is this a big casino or a little casino we’re talking about?” Travis asked.
“Does it matter?” Billy said.
“In a big casino, nothing happens after three days. The smaller joints are different. Every three days they erase the surveillance tapes, and use them over. It saves a ton of money.”
“How about the Four Queens? Would they erase their tapes after three days?”
“Sure. All the joints on Fremont Street do.”
Billy walked into the living room with the cordless phone pressed to his ear. His crew had ripped off the Four Queens on a Wednesday. By Saturday night, the surveillance tapes of their misdeeds would be erased, and the evidence would disappear. The same was true of the gaffed-chip scam he’d pulled at Slots A Fun. By Saturday night, the tape would be blank. All he needed to do was last until Saturday night, and he and his crew would be home free.
“Did we slip up last night?” Travis asked, sounding worried.
“Last night ran perfectly,” he said.
“Come on, Billy, I wasn’t born yesterday. First some asshole answers your phone. Now you ask me if I thought the tapes from last night will be erased. What the hell’s going on?”
Billy cursed himself. He hadn’t phrased his questions right, and now Travis was suspicious, as he should have been.
“I don’t want to discuss this right now. We’ll talk about it later, okay?”
“Are we going down?” Travis asked, not hearing him.
“Who said anything about going down?”
“Are we?”
“No.”
“Are we at risk of going down?”
“I don’t want to talk about this right now.”
“Fuck it, Billy, give me a straight answer, will you, man?”
There was a click on the line. Travis said, “There’s Karen again,” and stuck him on hold. Billy sat on the couch, feeling his world starting to implode. He hadn’t come clean with Travis, and the big man knew it. If Travis didn’t trust him, he’d go work for someone else. The rest of the crew would find out, and they’d leave as well. Hustling was all about trust, and right now, his was wearing thin. Travis came back on.
“Karen’s fit to be tied. I’ve got to go. I’ll call you later.”
“Okay. Good luck.”
“Tell me everything’s cool, man. My heart’s racing a hundred miles an hour.”
“Everything’s under control.”
“You’re not lying to me, are you? Because it sure sounds that way.”
An invisible knife stabbed Billy in the chest. He’d discovered Travis switching dice at a sawdust joint called Palace Station, using moves he’d learned from an amateur’s book on hustling he’d picked up at the Gambler’s Book Club, yet still robbing the place blind. Travis was a natural, and Billy had recruited the big man on the spot. Now it was all going into the toilet because he hadn’t played straight with Travis. Without truth, there was nothing.
“I screwed up,” Billy said.
“Jesus Christ. You?”
“Yeah, me. Big time. I’m sorry I didn’t come clean with you.”
“Fucking A, what happened?”
“The scam at Galaxy I told you about was a trap, and I walked right into it. Another hustler set me up. He’s working for the casino, and wants me to stop a family of cheaters from robbing them. He’s got my cell phone, and knows about the Four Queens scam. He threatened to turn us over to the police if I don’t play ball with him.”
“Is that why you asked me about the tapes being erased in three days?”
“Yeah. If I can hold him off until Saturday night, the crew’s safe.”
“Jesus Christ-you’re going to help him?”
“I don’t have a choice.”
“Do I need to lawyer up? Just in case?”
“You’re not going to get arrested, and neither is anyone else in the crew. Your world is safe. Now go take care of your son.”
“What about you? Are you safe?”
That was a good question. And Billy was pretty sure he knew the answer. If he didn’t stop the Gypsies, his sorry ass would get dragged to an unfinished floor of Galaxy’s hotel, and he’d get snuffed for his failure. All he could hope for was that they’d get it over quickly and wouldn’t make him suffer.
“I’ll be fine,” he said.
“There’s Karen. I’ll call you later.”
A dial tone filled his ear. He went into the kitchen and hung up the phone. He had let Travis down, and realized that he was dreading having to break the bad news to the other members of his crew. It was going to be painful, but it had to be done.
SIXTEEN
Billy pulled into Gabe’s driveway a few minutes before one. Gabe’s Mercedes was missing, and he found himself getting pissed. They were supposed to be going to a Gamblers Anonymous meeting to help Gabe get the monkey off his back, so where the hell was he?
Soon Billy’s hand was sore from banging on Gabe’s front door. Not having his cell phone was proving to be a royal pain in the ass, and he drove out of the subdivision to a Fresh and Easy and called Gabe from a pay phone.
“Hey, Billy, what’s shaking?” Gabe answered, his voice high-pitched.
“We were supposed to meet up this afternoon, remember? Where you hiding?”
“I don’t want to go to Gamblers Anonymous. That shit bothers me. All those strangers pouring their guts out, talking about their problems. No thanks, man.”
“You don’t have to go.”
“I don’t?”
“Not today. But we do need to talk. Something bad went down last night. What’s that loud music in the background? You in a bar or something?”
“I’m at Misty and Pepper’s place. We’re having a little party to celebrate our newfound fortune. Cory and Morris are here, too. You’re welcome to join us, isn’t he, ladies?”
The girls’ voices floated merrily in the background, inviting Billy to come over and get stoned. Billy brought his hand to his face. There was no newfound fortune, no pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Breaking the bad news had just gotten a lot tougher.
“I’ll be right over,” he said.
Misty and Pepper had been sharing an efficiency apartment with their pound mutts when Billy first hooked up with them. They’d come to Vegas to be cocktail waitresses, thinking it would lead to better things. When they got tired of having their asses pinched, they’d started making porn, and discovered it was another bum deal. The actresses got paid a flat fee, with no royalties or health benefits to cover disease or injury.
They’d been at a crossroads when Billy met them. They still had their looks and could snap a man’s head just by walking by. They were willing to use their charms to make a buck but didn’t want to take their clothes off anymore, or go down on strangers.
Billy had come to their apartment with Chinese takeout and a DVD. While eating pork-fried rice in the cramped living room, they watched a dopey sitcom called Sweet Nothings that starred everyone’s favorite comedic actress, Lydia Fallon. Fallon was a fixture on network TV, her giggling laugh known to millions. Misty and Pepper professed to be big fans.
When the show ended, Billy told Misty and Pepper a story. Once upon a time, Lydia Fallon had lived in Las Vegas and worked with a crew of cheaters that past-posted at roulette. Placing a wager after the little white ball had fallen was no small feat, and Fallon used her persuasive charms to distract the croupier while her partners did the dirty work.
One night Fallon was scamming a fancy Strip casino when a big-shot Hollywood producer sitting at the table spotted her and was blown away. Instead of alerting security, he whisked her away to la-la land and turned her into a household name.