Dirty Debt: A Bad Boy Mafia Romance

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Dirty Debt: A Bad Boy Mafia Romance Page 9

by Teagan Kade


  I’ve never gambled before. My mother isn’t the type to buy lottery tickets or even enter competitions. I’d beg her whenever we’d pass the supermarket stand, but she’d always reply, “It’s for fools, Dawn. Remember that.”

  Fools, like Rick.

  Once again my thoughts turn to the man who’s taken everything from me—my freedom, my life. I’ve been gone for days now. Poor Noel must be having a heart attack.

  Again, I realize I’m alone. There is nothing stopping me walking out those front doors.

  But I don’t want to, not after that.

  I notice the cameras on the roof downstairs, hundreds of them like inverted beetles. Bobby’s got eyes on me alright. I doubt I could run anywhere in this town he couldn’t find me. People get lost in Vegas all the time. People disappear.

  I take a seat at the first table I find. A man wearing a ten-gallon hat and the bushiest moustache I’ve ever seen looks my way. The dealer, a young man, looks down at me. “Joining, miss?”

  I hold out the chips. “It’s my first time.”

  The Texan smiles. “How about that? It’s good luck to have a virgin at the table.”

  The dealer doesn’t seem convinced. He checks his watch, probably counting down the minutes until he gets off.

  Getting off. You’d know all about that now, wouldn’t you? I smile to myself.

  Yes, ma’am. There’s nothing ‘virginal’ about what I just did with Max, not forgetting the promise of what’s to come.

  Still smiling, I sit and look down at the table. “So, what do I do?”

  The game’s called blackjack, and it turns out I’m a natural.

  In the space of an hour I’ve doubled my chips. The Texan, so amused by my naivety at the start, seems sufficiently interested now.

  The amount of players at the table has grown, as has the audience around us.

  “Hit,” I announce. “I think.”

  The dealer turns over the cards, as stunned as I am. “The lady’s a winner, folks.”

  I look for a clock but can’t seem to find one on the walls. I ask the Texan.

  “Quarter past four,” he grins.

  That’s almost two hours now. Two hours that feel like five minutes.

  The more I play, the more the crowd around us cheers and grows, the more I feel myself being swept up in the excitement.

  This is what it’s like. This is how it started with Rick.

  Card games. At first Rick said he was just playing poker with friends, a ‘boys night,’ but I soon discovered he was travelling across town to off-the-book games, the stakes getting higher and higher until it was out of control. Every time I’d try to bring it up, he’d shut me down. “Babe,” he’d say. “It’s just a game. I’m in control.”

  But he wasn’t. The loans grew. The debt grew, and I turned a blind eye to it all, hoping he’d snap out of it, but he never did. In that sense, I’m as culpable as he is.

  Not true, hon.

  I look down at my winnings, the collection of chips before me. I turn to the Texan. He seems to know what he’s doing. “Should I stop?”

  He chuckles, holding the sides of his sports jacket. “You can do whatever you like, little lady, but you want my advice? Go with a classic and quit while you’re ahead.” He adds a wink… and an indecent proposal. I politely decline and gather up the chips.

  Those behind me yawn in disappointment as I stand. “What do I do with these?” I ask the dealer.

  He points to the corner of the casino. “You can cash them in over there.”

  I stagger over to the counter. A woman who looks like she’d be having more fun watching paint dry lights up when she sees my haul.

  “Wow. Good one, honey. I guess it’s your lucky day.”

  I smile, oddly pleased with myself, or maybe it’s just the afterglow of a good roll in the hay. “I guess it is. How, uh, much is there?”

  The chips run through a machine in rapid fire. “Five-five, hon.”

  I’m lost. “Five-hundred?”

  “Five-thousand, five-hundred. Would you like cash or credit?”

  A small voice in my head is telling me to go for the credit. Double your winnings, it says. Come on. It wasn’t even your money to begin with. Five grand’s a lot of money, but ten, well…

  But I’m not Rick. I’m smarter than that. I take the cash, stuffing rolls of it into the zip-up pocket on the side of my dress, surprised at how little the stack is. Still, it’s more cash than I’ve held in my life.

  I take a crumpled ten-dollar note from my other pocket and buy a drink, a mojito. Living large, whoop, whoop.

  I sip on it as I walk around the casino.

  I come to the betting longue, screens showing everything from harness racing to MMA. I watch the fighting and suddenly I’m struck by an idea.

  It wasn’t even your money to begin with, my head repeats.

  I head to the desk, met by another disinterested employee, though his eyes lift when he sees I’m not his usual clientele. Read: A middle-aged man with receding hair and corduroy pants. “Hi,” he says.

  “Hi,” I reply. “I heard there was a fight tomorrow.”

  He laughs. “There are a lot of fights tomorrow, miss. You got any more to go on?”

  I close my eyes to remember the other fighter’s name. “O’Neil someone?”

  “Kurt O’Neil?”

  I nod. “Yes. That’s the one.”

  He stoops down closer to the window, lowering his voice. “Right. Midday tomorrow. O’Neil’s taking on someone from the house, some New Yorker no one’s heard of. Technically, it’s off the books, but…” he drifts off.

  I nod with enthusiasm. “Yes, that’s the one. Can I bet on that?”

  He laughs again. “Miss, this is Vegas. You could bet on what the buffet’s going to serve tonight if you want.”

  “Really?”

  “No, but if it’s sports and you can bet on it, we’ll take your money, legal or not. So, you want to put down a wager on the fight?”

  I nod, nervous. “Yes, sir.”

  He reaches under the desk and pulls out a laptop, opening it up and tapping at the keys. “For O’Neil?”

  “The other guy, actually.”

  He stops tapping. “The wild card? You sure? The house boy’s four to one. It could be a short fight.”

  “I’m sure.”

  He puffs his cheeks up and blows out. The Plexiglas between us starts to fog. “Your money.” More tapping. “How much?”

  I fish in my pockets for the rolls, thumbing out five-hundred for myself before sliding the rest into the tray. “Five-thousand dollars, please.”

  And his eyes pop anew.

  Chapter 13

  Max

  “How’s it hanging, Pops?”

  Dad doesn’t answer. The wind picks up momentarily, sweeping newspaper pages across the cemetery, but I don’t read anything into it. I’ve never been superstitious. Mom had more than enough superstition for all of us.

  I look around. I’m the only one here. The flowers that have been left on the other graves are dry and brittle.

  I crouch, running my fingers through the dust. New casino developments are closing in. Soon this place won’t see any sunlight at all. Hell, it will probably become part of the casino, a kind of morbid attraction of its own. Nothing is sacred in Vegas, least of all death. “Sorry we couldn’t find you a better place to spend eternity.”

  Only the wind sounds, whistling through the stone.

  I take out a bottle of Wild Turkey, Dad’s favorite. I unscrew the top and pour a finger into the dirt. It turns a dark, umber brown, the smell of alcohol strong. I take a swig, enjoying the burn of it down the back of my throat before placing it on the ground between my legs. It’s shit whiskey, but it tastes better out here.

  There’s a lot I want to say, but the words won’t come. It feels fucking stupid to be talking to dust. I know I should, but now I’m here I can’t.

  It’s not like we parted on the best of terms. We�
��d come close to blows the night before his death, the kind of grand fight us Davises are famous for. Boy, was I angry. I was living in Jersey, training. I wanted to enter the world of professional boxing, like him. He wanted me to stay the fuck away, get “an honest job,” whatever the fuck that meant. He’d be turning in his grave if he knew what I’ve become, the lowlife I had to turn into.

  I finally speak. “I’m sorry, Pops.”

  I stand and pick up the Turkey, adding another finger to the last, pouring it out in some strange gangster gesture of reconciliation. I know it’s for my benefit more than his. I take another sip. It’s enough.

  I screw the top back on and leave the bottle there on top of the tombstone. Let the bums fight over it.

  I’m brushing myself off when I hear noises.

  I know when I’m being watched. It’s a sixth sense.

  I remain facing the tombstone. “You better come out if you don’t want a beating,” I announce.

  “Is that any way to talk to an old friend?” comes the voice.

  I spin. “Sam?”

  An elderly man approaches. He’s old, but he stands straight. “The one and only. How you been, Max?”

  “How’d you know I was here?”

  He laughs. It turns into a hack halfway through, forcing him to pull out a handkerchief. “It’s my lungs. They’re turning to shit.”

  “You smoked three packets a day. What did you expect?”

  He comes forward until he’s only a few feet away. The years have not been kind. “We didn’t know back then, Max. Your father wasn’t much better.”

  I smile at that. It’s true. I probably smoked a pack a day myself just in second-hand smoke when I was a kid. “That’s why he spent so much time in the gym. Mom never liked him smoking at home.”

  Sam smiles, big and wide. He claps a hand on my shoulder. I’m surprised how firm his grip still is, but then again Sam was always strong.

  “So, you going to tell me how you knew I was here or what?” I ask.

  He taps his ears. “You know me, Max. I’ve still got eyes and ears around this town. You think you could come back home and no one would notice?”

  “That’s what I was hoping for.” I swipe the bottle of Turkey off the top of the tombstone, handing it over.

  Sam takes it, looking at the label. “Your father always liked the cheap stuff.”

  “Ain’t that the truth.”

  “You know what Raymond Chandler used to say.”

  I do. “There is no bad whiskey. There are only some whiskeys that aren’t as good as others.”

  Sam takes a swig, coughing. “Terrible. Fucking terrible.”

  I take the bottle and throw it back. He’s right. It is fucking terrible. If there’s anything Saul has taught me, it’s an appreciation for fine whiskey. All I buy these days is single-malt, but something about the taste of Turkey makes memories of Dad clearer, more vivid. It’s like he’s standing here with us berating me for not getting back into the gym. ‘The bags aren’t going to tenderize themselves, are they?’ he’d say.

  Sam licks his lips, hands on his hips. His breathing is heavy and labored, far from the boxing legend I remember. “You’re not here for the slots and pretty women, are you?”

  “Pretty women?” I laugh. “You have lived in Vegas too long.”

  He pans his hand around. “It’s the only game I know. Business then, and what’s it to you?”

  I kick at the dirt. “The usual.”

  “I heard you were working for Saul Barnes.”

  “You heard right.”

  Sam shakes his head. “You enjoy working for a fucking animal like that?”

  I shrug. “As you said, it’s the only game in town. NYC’s not exactly brimming with job opportunities for ex-cons.”

  Sam chews on it. “You here alone?”

  “There’s a girl. I’m helping her out.”

  Sam punches me in the gut. “You dog. You always were a sucker for a fine woman, and she is fine, isn’t she?”

  I think of Dawn, of her long legs and tight ass, the way her smile turns my dick hard, some semblance of life runs through my veins again. She’s the very antithesis of who I have become, nothing but hope and joy and vitality. “Yeah,” I say. “She is.”

  Sam jerks his head. “Twenty questions was never my style. You got time for a stroll down memory lane?”

  I check my watch, Pop’s old Chopard. I’m probably the only person left in Vegas who still wears one. ‘But a good watch is more than a timepiece, Max. It’s a statement.’ Pops knew that much even if he did dress like a hobo most days. “I got time,” I reply.

  We’re silent as we walk around the block. The neighborhood hasn’t changed much in the last ten years, but Vegas has.

  Sam points at the high rises looming over us, the city slowly swallowing this neighborhood whole. “Fucking casinos cast a big shadow. Soon there will be no sunlight at all down here.”

  He stops outside a derelict building I know all too well. “Here she is.”

  The sign is still in place. It still reads ‘Davis’s Gym.’

  Sam laughs, hacking halfway through. “Not exactly an original title, was it?”

  I smile. “Originality wasn’t Pop’s style.”

  Sam takes out a set of keys. “Sure as hell wasn’t. Come on.”

  He unlocks the door and uses his shoulder to push it open. A wave of dust rolls out as we enter, cutting through the beams of sunlight channeling from the pock-marked ceiling above. It’s abandoned, falling apart, but it’s the gym Pops and I bought fifty-fifty all those years ago, our mutual dream.

  I walk over to the ring and run my finger along the ropes. It comes away black. Still, there’s a muted beauty about it in this state. I can still smell the sweat.

  Sam leans against a wall, fishing for a cigarette. He lights it, breathing it in deep before puffing out a series of wraithlike rings. “It’s a shame it never saw any real action, right?”

  I walk around the ring, picturing what we’d planned to do with the place. We got as far as the sign outside before Pop passed. After that, everything went to shit. All the renovation plans we had were shelved. It decayed and never came to life. “It is.”

  “You’re just like him, you know.”

  “Impossibly handsome?”

  “A man of few words,” replies Sam. “Though I don’t recall you ever cracking jokes. Maybe this lady friend of yours is more than you’re making out.”

  I hang on the ropes. “Maybe.”

  “So what? You’re going to fight for her or let her slip through your fingers?”

  I’ve only known her days, but already I’m certain I’d go to hell and back to make Dawn mine, especially after what happened earlier. That was sex like I’ve never known. “I’ve got a fight tomorrow. O’Neil.”

  Sam pushes off the wall, approaching me with a limp, flicking his cigarette into the corner. “I know. He’s a tough prick. You going to be right?”

  It’s been since years since I was in a proper fight, and even then it was off the books, the kind of hillbilly sideshow you’re paid for in grubby bills and free booze. “I’ll be fine.”

  Sam takes hold of my arm, squeezing. “Too much of the good stuff, if you ask me.”

  “Says the man smoking his way to the grave,” I smile.

  “Smart ass.”

  “Old bastard.”

  Sam gives me another jab in the gut. “It’s good to see you, Max, really.”

  “And you.” I look around. “Who owns the joint now?”

  Sam rattles his pocket, the keys jangling. “You think I keep these for kicks? I do, you prick.”

  “You were the anonymous bidder?”

  “I couldn’t let anyone else have it, you know?”

  “But you’re…”

  “Poor?” he finishes. “Broke? Son, I might look like I don’t have two dimes to rub together, but I did okay in a previous life. I’ve got enough.”

  “But you can’t hold onto this
place forever, right?”

  Sam nods. “The city’s closing in, yeah. I get a developer a week trying to get me to sell this place. We all do around here, and it’s big money. Most of the folks in these parts, folks you knew before you pissed off to Jersey, have already gone, but I can’t let this place go, even if it’s the last fucking gym standing in Vegas.”

  But I know how these things go. “They’ll make you. If you don’t sell, they’ll just send in—”

  “The heavies?” laughs Sam. “I can handle myself.”

  I look him over. “You sure about that?”

  He waves it off. “Let them come. I’ve still got friends around here, friends who know a left from a right. Hell, we could use a bit of action, but fuck that, all of it. I brought you here for another reason.”

  I thumb the ropes. “You want a fight? See if you’ve still got it? Because I’ll lay you flat, cripple or not.”

  “Like I said, you’re a smartass, but no, call it a business proposition.”

  “A proposition?”

  He looks me dead in the eyes. “You win the fight tomorrow, you can have the gym. It’s yours.”

  It takes me a second to process what he’s saying. “Why?”

  He throws his arms wide. “I’ve got maybe three, four months tops. What the fuck am I going to do with this place?”

  “Okay. Fair enough, but what’s the catch?”

  He raps on the side of his head with a closed fist. “You always had brains, Max, whether you wanted to believe it or not. The catch? The catch is that you can’t sell this place. You have to promise me that.”

  “I promise.” And I mean it. Things are coming full circle. I’m looking at a dust-ridden gym but I’m seeing possibility, a way out from Saul’s iron grasp. I see kids sparring and people working. I see bags waiting to be beaten, a water table, a framed picture of Pops smiling over it all. I see what we always wanted before my ego got too big for this neighborhood and I left. Biggest fucking mistake of my life.

  Sam takes my shoulder again. “Thank you, Max, but a word of advice: you know what’s sexier to a woman than a bad boy?”

 

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