electromagnets. Matthew, my boy, you are sated, that is why. Or maybe because you have changed your criteria for magnificent breasts. After tonight, you will always define magnificent breasts as rather small, pink-tipped, and astonishingly firm.
“Time’s up,” Matt said to Penny. “Daddy has to go into the office early tomorrow.”
“Okay,” Penny said, without argument. She slid two quarter chips across the table to the dealer, and then scooped up the rest. There were so many she could barely hold them.
“He would have cashed those in for you.”
“I wanted to carry them,” Penny said. “To savor my triumph.”
The Mafioso Used Car Salesman was leaning over the cashier’s marble counter.
He’s signing a—what do you call it?—an IOU? He needs more chips. He’s been losing.
That bulge under his arm is a gun. In a shoulder holster. He is a Mafioso. Only Mafiosos and cops carry guns.
Christ, he’s a cop! That’s what’s wrong with him!
The Mafioso/Cop slid the IOU, or whatever it was properly called, under the cashier’s grill, and she slid a plastic tray full of quarter chips back out to him.
There were eight stacks of chips, each of ten chips, each chip worth twenty-five dollars. Matt did the math quickly in his head.
That tray is worth two thousand dollars! Cops can’t afford that kind of gambling money. Bingo!
Vito Lanza turned from the cashier’s window. The guy who looked familiar was standing behind him in line.
With the blonde who also looks familiar. And she’s been doing a lot better than I have. Well, hell, maybe with her going, my luck will change, Vito thought.
“Don’t I know you from somewhere, pal?” Vito asked the young guy.
“I don’t think so.”
“You look kind of familiar, you know?”
“I was thinking the same thing.”
“You come here a lot?”
“Second time.”
“Well . . . Vegas! You ever go to Vegas?”
“Yeah, sure.”
“And you was there last week, right?” Vito asked triumphantly.
“Right.”
“At the Flamingo, right?”
“Right again.”
“And you flew back to Philadelphia on American, right? The both of you. In first class?”
“Right,” Matt said. “So that’s where it was. I knew I’d seen you somewhere.”
“Well, how about that!” Vito said.
“How about that,” Matt parroted.
“Small world, right?” Vito said. He handed the tray of chips to Tony, and put out his hand. “Vito Lanza. This is Tony.”
“Matt Payne, this is Penny.”
“Pleased to meet you,” Tony said.
“Hi!” Penny said.
“How’s your luck, Vito?” Matt asked.
“Aw, you know how it goes. Win a little, lose a little. The night’s young.”
“That’s what I keep telling him,” Penny said, and walked between Vito and Tony to the cashier’s window and dumped her chips on the cashier’s counter.
“Well, see you around,” Vito said.
“See you around.”
In the Mercedes, Penny leaned over and stuffed bills into Matt’s jacket pocket.
“You didn’t have to do that,” he said.
“Yes, I did. If you’re going to buy me off, it’s going to take a lot more than a lousy six hundred dollars. Besides, I’ve got twenty-two hundred more.”
“My God, that much?”
“That much,” she said. “Tonight, in more ways than one, has been my lucky night.”
“I think we had better proceed very, very slowly,” Matt said.
“I thought you would say something like that once you’d had your wicked way with me,” Penny said. “That was him, wasn’t it? Who you were looking for all the time?”
He looked at her in surprise, then nodded.
“You going to tell me about it?”
“No.”
“Well, I’m glad I was able to be helpful,” she said. She caught his hand, and moved it to her mouth, and kissed it.
The large, illuminated clock mounted on the Strawbridge & Clothier Department Store in Jenkintown showed quarter to five when Matt looked up at it from Penny’s Mercedes.
That meant he would be at her place at five, or a few minutes after. He looked over at her, expecting to find her still curled up asleep.
She was not asleep. She was awake and had apparently been reading his mind again.
“I think we could make this little deception of ours more credible if I arrived home at, say, seven,” she said. “We having left GiGi’s at, say, five. What time do you have to be at work?”
“Eight.”
“We could find an all-night diner, I suppose,” Penny said. “Or we could go to your apartment. I’ve never been to your apartment.”
“I’ve got to change clothes,” Matt said. “And reclaim my car.”
“Or we could go to your apartment,” Penny repeated.
Where we are likely to find Evelyn circling the block, looking for her missing lover. That does not rank as one of the good ideas of all time.
“Is that an indecent proposal?”
“More like