The deck played out the way he’d stacked it, with the Patels losing their shirts. They paid up without a beef, and Izzie hid a smile. Their scheme to beat Resorts was simple enough. Every night, he and his brothers scoured the casino, looking for suckers who’d won big, and convince them to come to the house. Then, they’d beat them out of their winnings, but never their stake. It was Resorts’ money they wanted. So far, it had worked like a charm.
When the Patels were gone, Seymour got the strongbox and counted their winnings. Minus expenses, they were ahead twenty thousand bucks. It was the most money they’d ever made.
“I need some fresh air,” Izzie declared.
Izzie went outside. Josh and Seymour followed their older brother into the front yard, where Izzie stood smoking a cigarette. Izzie pointed north, in Resorts’ direction. “For every sucker we bring back, we’re leaving ten inside the casino. I think we should add more games, turn this into a real show.”
“How about craps?” Seymour said.
“Craps would be a winner,” Izzie said. “So would roulette.”
“I’m game,” Seymour said.
“What about the mob?” Josh asked. “We don’t want them finding out.”
The Hirsch brothers had spotted a number of wise guys hanging around Resorts’ bar and restaurants, and had figured the mob was running a scam inside the casino. Dealing with the mob was like dealing with a mean dog; if you stayed off their turf, the mob left you alone. If you didn’t, they bit you hard.
Izzie finished his cigarette. “We have to tip-toe around the mob, make sure they don’t catch wind of us. I still think we should do it.”
“I agree,” Seymour said.
“Sounds great, except for one thing,” Josh said.
“What’s that?”
“Betty.”
“What about her?”
“You’ve been talking to her, haven’t you?”
Izzie jabbed his forefinger in Josh’s chest. “Don’t talk about Betty.”
“You’ve got to stop sneaking off, and calling her.”
“Why should I?”
“Because Betty’s bad news, that’s why.”
“Don’t talk about Betty like that. Ever.”
“Bad news Betty. It sort of rhymes.”
“I don’t even want you saying her name.”
“Betty, Betty, Betty.”
Izzie tripped Josh, then fell on top of him on the grass. Izzie never fought with his hands. He couldn’t throw a punch without risking breaking a finger, and putting them out of commission for a few months. They grappled and grunted like a pair of Greco-Roman wrestlers. Seymour went inside and got a bottle of pop from the fridge, then sat on the stoop and drank it while watching his brothers hash it out. Ten minutes later, they stopped out of sheer exhaustion. Their clothes were ruined, and Josh’s nose was a bloody mess.
“Promise you won’t say her name again,” Izzie said.
“Betty, Betty, Betty!” Josh said.
Then they started fighting again.
Chapter 15
The principal of Gerry’s high school was a smooth-talking guy named Dick Henry. Lois was active in the PTA, and knew Dick well enough to address him by his first name. It was the first time they’d been called to Dick’s office, and Lois had asked her husband to keep his mouth shut during their meeting. Valentine had reluctantly agreed.
They sat around a square table, with Dick springing for coffee from the school cafeteria. Back when Dick was an art teacher, he’d sported a goatee, worn his hair on his shoulders, and spouted a lot of counter-culture nonsense. All of that had flown out the window the day he’d made principal. Now he was clean-shaven and blow-dried his hair.
“Is Gerry here?” Dick asked.
“He’s waiting outside in the car,” Lois said.
“Good. This is a serious thing these boys have going on.”
“How serious?” Valentine asked, drawing his wife’s glare.
Dick took a brown paper bag from his desk, and placed its contents onto the table. A deck of playing cards and six dice spilled out. “Gerry and two boys in the ninth grade are running a gambling ring. The other two have a history of problems. It appears they talked your son into joining their gang.”
“Can I examine these?” Valentine asked.
“By all means,” the principal said.
Valentine removed the cards from their case. The backs had a busy design, and he held the deck in his right hand, and riffled off the edge with his thumb. Little fluttering birds appeared on the backs of the cards. Bill Higgins had taught him this trick. It was the easiest way to tell if a deck had been marked.
Next he examined the dice. His eyes had gotten used to staring at casino dice, and he could tell these were not clean. The spots on three sides — the one, three and five — were drilled extra wide and filled with metallic paint. They were loaded, and would favor certain combinations more than others when thrown. My son the cheater, he thought.
“Mind if I keep these?” he asked.
“Not at all,” Dick said.
“What about the pot,” Lois said.
“It doesn’t appear Gerry’s involved with that,” Dick said. “It was a scam.”
“A scam? What do you mean?”
Dick took a second paper bag off the desk. From it, he removed a plastic bag filled with a green leafy substance. Dick dropped it on the table dramatically, then gave the worried parents a hard, no-nonsense stare.
“It’s oregano,” he said.
Lois wrinkled her face. She had never experimented with drugs, and looked to her husband for clarification. Valentine said, “And the ninth-graders were selling it as pot.”
“Yes. Ten dollars a bag.”
“But oregano is an herb,” Lois said. “Wouldn’t the kids they sold it to be able to tell the difference?”
“This oregano smells like pot. We think the older boys mixed it with a little bit of pot, so it smells like the real stuff.”
“But it isn’t?”
“No, it’s not.”
Valentine saw the tension melt from his wife’s face. Lying in bed the night before, she’d worried incessantly over the notion that Gerry had broken the law. This new revelation was bad, but it wasn’t as bad. She could live with this, and so could he.
“Gerry will be suspended for one week, the other boys for two,” Dick said. “I want all three boys to pay restitution to the boys they cheated, and the students they sold oregano to. And, I would suggest that your family get some counseling.”
“What kind of counseling?” Lois said stiffly.
“With a psychologist. Gerry has two different faces. The one he wears at home, and the one he wears at school. You need to get to know your son better.”
Valentine nearly told Dick Henry to mind his own business. Doing stupid things was part of growing up, and didn’t mean the whole family was falling apart. Only Lois was giving him the evil eye, and he kept his mouth clamped shut.
Dick handed the distressed parents a business card. It was for a local psychologist who specialized in adolescent behavior and family problems.
“This is who the school uses,” Dick said. “He’s expensive but good.”
“Is he a relative?” Valentine asked.
Lois kicked him beneath the table. Dick consulted his watch, then blew out his cheeks like Ed Sullivan used to do before he announced a really big act.
“Looks like we’ve run out of time,” the principal said.
Dick escorted the Valentines to the door of his office and opened it. Another pair of anxious parents sat in the reception area, awaiting the sales pitch.
“I’ve got a question,” Valentine said.
“What’s that?” Dick asked.
“How’d you know it was oregano?”