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The Casino Switcheroo

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by Michael P. King




  The Casino Switcheroo

  The Travelers Book Seven

  Michael P. King

  Contents

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  1. The Old Man

  2. Solomon Island

  3. The Countdown

  4. The Last Sleight of Hand

  5. The Heist

  6. The Cops

  7. Wheeling and Dealing

  8. The Exchange

  9. Tit for Tat

  10. One Last Play

  11. Running and Gunning

  12. Loose Ends

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  A Note from the Author

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  For a limited time

  The Double Cross

  The Double Cross is a novella-length, hard-hitting crime thriller that tells the story of how the Travelers met. If you like fast moving action, unpredictable plot twists, and criminal chicanery, you’ll love this prequel to the Travelers series.

  Get a free copy of The Double Cross when you sign up to join my Travelers Readers Group mailing list. Click here to get started: Free Book

  Trust him at your peril…

  When Koenig, the Traveling Man’s original mentor, shows up touting a casino heist—a once-in-a-lifetime, high-stakes robbery—all the Traveling Man can think about is stealing the score.

  His wife thinks he’s crazy.

  Koenig is a puppet master—a master manipulator who compartmentalizes the parts of a job so that only he knows all the details. What are they really going to steal? Who’s going to carry it out? How are they going to escape? And who’s going to be discarded to the opposition or the law?

  The Travelers will have their hands full staying alive and staying free, and outthinking the other players, if they hope to steal Koenig’s loot right from under his nose.

  The Casino Switcheroo is a full-throttle, no-holds-barred page turner. If you like can’t-figure-them-out plot twists, fast-paced action, and criminal mischief, you’ll love the seventh book in the Travelers series.

  The Travelers

  The Double Cross: A Travelers Prequel

  The Traveling Man: Book One

  The Computer Heist: Book Two

  The Blackmail Photos: Book Three

  The Freeport Robbery: Book Four

  The Kidnap Victim: Book Five

  The Murder Run: Book Six

  The Casino Switcheroo: Book Seven

  Blurred Lines Press

  The Casino Switcheroo

  Michael P. King

  ISBN 978-0-9993648-6-4

  Copyright © 2019 by Michael P. King

  All rights reserved

  Cover design by Paramita Bhattacharjee at creativeparamita.com

  The Casino Switcheroo is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons or places is entirely coincidental.

  For Sarah, my only one

  1

  The Old Man

  The Traveling Man, a con man going by the name Paul Longmont, parked his Cadillac Escalade about twenty feet away from the blue BMW facing Lake Dunville, a small lake on a county park outside Madisonville. Paul was six feet, medium build, his gray-streaked hair cut short around the sides. He had a face that was hard to remember and a manner that said he knew what he was talking about. He took a Smith &Wesson .38 out of his suit coat pocket and lay it in the passenger’s seat before he got out of his SUV. The clouds were darkening, and the waves were pitching up angry on the water. On the far side of the lake, a fishing boat was trolling back to the dock. Paul hoped to be back in his Cadillac before the storm broke. As he crossed the deserted parking lot to the BMW, a bodyguard, a big man in a dark suit who moved like a professional soldier, got out of the front seat passenger’s side and gestured for Paul to stop. Paul raised his arms. The bodyguard frisked him and then opened the back seat door. Paul climbed in.

  His wife, going by the name Jessie Taggert, was sitting on the other side of the mark, Hugo Lansing. She was effortlessly beautiful. Tight clothes, athletic build, long dark hair—guessing her age would be an exercise in miscalculation. Paul hadn’t seen her in the two months she’d been worming her way into Lansing’s life. God, he’d missed her. She gave him the neutral look reserved for someone she’d never seen before.

  Lansing, the stock image of a CEO with his perfect haircut and his tailored suit, flashed a smile. “How’s your day so far?”

  “No complaints,” Paul replied.

  “I understand we have a mutual friend?”

  “Vicki Brassos.”

  “She still out in the Caymans?”

  “Lawyers sorted that out. Last month she was in LA. I don’t know where she is today, so if she still owes you money, you’re out of luck.”

  “Who said she owed me money?”

  “Come on, she owes everybody money.”

  “You, too, huh?”

  Paul shrugged. “Not to be rude, but are you ready to get down to business?”

  Lansing nodded. “I’m listening.”

  “We going to have this conversation with her sitting in here?”

  Jessie put her hand on the door handle. “I can wait outside with Tony.”

  Lansing patted her knee. “It’s not a problem.”

  “It’s your party,” Paul replied. “Can you get me the bearer bonds?”

  “Five hundred thousand in untraceable bonds. That’s going to cost you six hundred thousand.”

  “One hundred thousand for the service? That’s kind of steep.”

  “That’s the way it is. With all the new banking regulations, moving cash around is expensive. And bearer bonds are harder and harder to find.”

  “How about five hundred fifty?”

  “Six hundred thousand. Look around. If you can do better, you won’t hurt my feelings.”

  “Okay,” Paul said. “I guess I’ll have to eat it. How do you want to go about this?”

  “I’ve got a place I like to meet in an office park. You bring the cash; I’ll have the bonds. We’ll run the money through a counter while you verify the bonds, then we all go our merry ways.”

  “How do I know you won’t try to jack me?”

  “You know who I am. You think that’s how I make a living?”

  “How soon can you get the bonds?”

  “How soon can you get the money?”

  “The day after tomorrow.”

  “I’ll call with the details on the day of.”

  Paul got out of the BMW. Rain was starting to fall, fat drops bouncing off the pavement. He jogged back to his Cadillac. Everything was going to plan. Jessie was doing her job to perfection. She was obviously the trusted girlfriend. He started his SUV, turned on the wipers, and waited for the BMW to leave.

  Tony got back into the front seat passenger’s side. Lansing tapped the back of the driver’s seat. “Let’s go, Sam.” The BMW drove out of the parking lot and back through the woods to the county highway.

  “So what do you think?” Lansing asked.

  “I don’t trust that guy,” Jessie said.

  “Of course not. He’s a criminal. But he’s not going to screw me.”

  “How can you be so sure?”

  “Self-interest. He needs to get rid of a pile of cash, make it portable, get to a place where he can safely store it. He can’t do that himself. So he’s got to play straight with me.”

  “But where do the bonds come from?”

  “I’ve got another client who wants to get rid of them. He needs the cash. So I get paid for doing the exchange. That’s how I make a living. Adding value.”

  She leaned against him and rested her hand on his thigh. “I don’t know how you do it.”


  He kissed her. “I’ve been at this a long time.”

  Thunder boomed in the distance, and rain pounded the roof of the car.

  Meanwhile, halfway across the country, Alexander Koenig, an old, bald man with a bushy white mustache, dressed in a seersucker suit, sat at a green picnic table at a freeway rest stop next to Raymond, his lieutenant, a tall, skinny man with slicked-back blond hair. Across from them sat Carlos Hernandez, a barrel-chested Latino wearing expensive casual clothes.

  Hernandez took a toothpick out of his mouth. “So you want eleven guys—eight plus three.”

  “Including you,” Koenig said. “You’ll lead seven. Raymond will lead three.”

  Hernandez continued. “All shooters, one demolition expert?”

  “That’s right. And I’m talking about serious men—the kind of men who don’t blink or run.”

  “For how long?”

  “Three weeks. We’ll make sure everyone is comfortable with everyone else, finalize the details, and then we’ll do the job.”

  “How much money?”

  “For the guys? Ten thousand apiece. For you, twice that.”

  “I can get all the men you want for ten thousand each, but my cut needs to be twenty-five thousand.”

  Koenig smiled. “For you, Carlos, I won’t even argue. Twenty-five thousand it is.”

  Koenig and Hernandez shook hands over the table. Then Raymond handed Koenig a cell phone. Koenig passed it to Hernandez. “There’s one number in the speed dial. We meet in Bathsheba City in a week. You get your people together, make a call, and Raymond will arrange transportation and lodging.”

  “So who are we killing, and what are we blowing up?” Hernandez asked.

  “You know how I work. You’ll know when it’s time. That’s why the cops are never on one of my jobs.”

  Hernandez pushed himself up from the picnic table. Koenig and Raymond watched him cross the parking lot to a Ford F-150 pickup truck. “You think he’s reliable?” Raymond asked.

  “Completely reliable. I’ve used him four times. He’s never let me down. And if he lives, he’ll be worth every penny.”

  “I heard from Lulu and JB. Between the two of them, they have the run of the casino-hotel. JB was babbling about a codebook that was going to be in a room safe. I guessed it was something you told him,” Raymond said.

  “An extra incentive to focus his attention.”

  “So we’re all set?”

  “For the job, yes. For the sleight of hand, no. Have you been keeping track of that couple I told you to watch?” Koenig asked.

  “Yeah. They’ve got a scam going on with the money launderer Lansing. It’s tough staying off their radar.”

  “Just keep an eye out for when they pull the trigger. Then we’ll see if we can rope them into our scheme.”

  The next day, Jessie, wrapped in a towel, stood out on the swimming pool patio behind Lansing’s mansion, a Greek Revival in the old-money part of town. She had a cigarette in one hand and her phone in the other.

  “Is everything as advertised?” Paul asked.

  “Yeah. Hold on.” She walked to the far side of the pool. “It took long enough, but I finally got all the way in. Acting so clueless all the time was getting tedious.”

  “Any suspicions about your cover? Any questions at all?”

  “No, I’m just a three-time divorcee with few scruples and a taste for excitement. My second husband—what a whiny little bitch. We’re lucky Lansing prefers age-appropriate women.”

  “Baby, you’re every middle-aged man’s wet dream. He couldn’t possibly resist you. It just takes time. Now we’re finally there. Only one more day.”

  “He’s going to pick up the bonds tomorrow morning, then call you, so our window is tight.”

  “I’ll press to meet in the late afternoon. That will give you the time to work your magic.”

  That evening, Lansing sat at the cherrywood desk in his home office, talking on his smartphone. The room had been staged by an interior designer to impress visitors. A bookcase of unread books stood against the inside wall, tasteful impressionistic paintings hung on the other walls, and the window curtains assured privacy while framing a view of the back patio and swimming pool. “That’s right, Saul, this is the best opportunity you’re going to have to get rid of the bonds.”

  “But four hundred and fifty thousand dollars?”

  “I know that seems low, but no one will give you face value. If someone would, you’d have traded them already. That’s just the way it is.”

  The line was quiet for a moment. “Okay, if it’s the best you can do,” Saul said.

  “It is. I’ll be by to pick them up at nine a.m.” He ended the call. He’d make $150,000 tomorrow. Easy money. Unless Paul Longmont planned to cheat him.

  Sam, loose suit and the bent nose of an ex-boxer, came into the office. “I ran that trace for you.”

  “What did you find?”

  “That phone Jessie’s been calling? It moves around town, but it spends a lot of time at an apartment on South Elm.”

  “South Elm? Send Tony around there to have a look.”

  “You got it.” Sam shifted his weight from one foot to the other, his hands clasped behind his back.

  “What?”

  “If you don’t trust her, maybe she shouldn’t be living in the house.”

  “I trust her. I just—I’m just worried, okay?”

  “Then why don’t you just ask her who she’s calling?”

  “Check out that apartment.”

  Tony climbed out of an old Ford Bronco and walked across the street to the Crest View Apartments on South Elm Street. He was dressed casually—jeans, gym shoes. A black windbreaker covered the pistol he wore in a shoulder rig. The apartment building had seen better days. The front door was scratched and dented, and the lock was broken. He stepped into the entry and read off the names on the mailboxes. Nothing stood out. Three apartments on each floor. Three floors. He walked down the hallway, listening at each door. TV, family noises, just what you would expect after supper in a normal apartment. He walked up to the second floor. Only one resident seemed to be home. Then he walked up to the third floor. Two home for sure. He went back downstairs and out to the Bronco. Three residents still out. Second-shift worker? Somebody gone out to the movies? Jessie’s sick old mom? Didn’t have to be her secret lover. He lowered the Bronco’s window. Mr. Lansing would expect him to wait awhile, so that’s what he was going to do.

  Paul was parked down the street in a Corolla he’d stolen that morning. He’d gone out to dinner and had come back just in time to see Tony go into the building. Luck was a great gift. And he was always lucky when it came to closing a deal. But why was Tony here? Jessie had never been near this place. And there was nothing to connect Jessie with him. The only time they’d been together in the last two months was yesterday in Lansing’s car. He let his mind roll through the variables. The phone. Jessie had done her job too well. Lansing must be jealous. Must have someone tracking her calls. But Paul needed to be sure. He texted her. Your data plan is at five percent. Immediately, she texted back, OK. So she was safe. No need to abort. Everything was ready. As soon as Tony left, he’d get his gear out of the apartment and go to a motel for the night.

  The next day at three o’clock in the afternoon, Paul sat at the window of a third-floor apartment looking through the scope of his sniper rifle at Lansing’s mansion across the street. Jessie was certainly taking her time. Afternoon delight. She was thorough, that’s for sure. But there was nothing to worry about. She had Lansing wrapped around her finger. Paul scanned the front of the mansion. Still, he wished she’d hurry up. The longer she took, the more opportunity there was for something to go wrong.

  Jessie, her dark hair cascading down her back, tiptoed out the dim bedroom with her clothes bundled under one arm and a briefcase in her other hand. Lansing snored softly from his side of the king-size bed. She smiled. He was a good-looking guy, not too selfish in bed, and he fell asleep
afterward as if on cue. If only they were all like that. On the landing at the top of the stairs, she set the briefcase on a side table and put on her panties and bra. She glanced over her shoulder at the bedroom door and then down the stairs. Silence. She pulled her dress on over her head, picked up her high heels and the briefcase and crept quietly down the stairs. Where were Tony and Sam?

  On the front porch of the mansion, she leaned against a pillar to slip on her shoes. The cars weren’t in the driveway, and there was no one in sight. Her phone buzzed in her pocket. She answered it as she started down the brick walkway. “Hey, honey.”

  “All done?” Paul asked.

  “I’ve got the bearer bonds.”

  “Good girl.”

  “I don’t know. It was just too easy.”

  “Sometimes they are.”

  “Not like this.”

  “But you’re sure the bonds are real?”

  “Absolutely. I watched him check them over before he put them in the case.”

  “And he’s not on to you?”

  “Please.”

  “Then what are you worried about?”

  She came through the gate in the wrought-iron fence at the bottom of the driveway. “Where are the bodyguards? Have they both gone for a piss? And where are the cars? They usually leave them out during the day.” She glanced down the street. “Where are you?”

  “I’m up in an apartment across the street. I’m watching you through my rifle scope. There’s a red Audi parked at the corner. Keys behind the driver’s side front wheel.”

 

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