went into the back room, and Tony said, sure, go ahead, she had to go to the room, and she would come down when she was done.
It wasn’t Vegas behind the door. No slots, for one thing. And no roulette. But there was blackjack, two tables for that, and there was three tables where people were playing poker, with the house taking their cut out of each pot, and of course craps. Two tables. Pretty well crowded.
By the time Tony came down from the room, he had made maybe two hundred, maybe a little more, making five- and ten-dollar bets against the shooter. When she showed up, he didn’t want to look like an amateur making five-dollar bets, so he started betting twenty-five, sometimes fifty, the same way, against the shooter.
When he decided it was time to quit, he had close to five thousand, over and above the thousand he had started with and was prepared to lose.
“You’re going to quit, on a roll?” Tony had asked him, and he told her that was when smart people quit, when they were on a roll, and what he needed right now was a little nap.
So they’d had a little nap, and a couple of drinks, and that was when they fooled around with the switch Tony had found on the carpet when she’d fallen off the bed, and then they’d gotten dressed again and went back downstairs and to the room in the back.
And this time the dice had turned against him. He was sure it was that, not that he was blasted or anything. Sometimes, you just have lousy luck, and with him betting C-notes, and sometimes double C-notes, letting the bet ride, it hadn’t taken long to go through the five big ones he’d won, plus the thousand he had brought with him.
That was when the pit boss told him that if he wanted, they would take his marker, that Mr. Fierello had vouched for him, said his markers were good.
So what the hell, he’d figured that as bad as his luck had been, it had to change, it was a question of probability, so he’d asked how much of a marker he could sign, and the guy said as much as he wanted, and he hadn’t wanted to look like a piker in front of Tony, so he signed a marker for six big ones, what he was out, and they gave him the money, in hundreds.
When he lost that, he knew it was time to quit, so he quit. If he had really been blasted, he would have signed another marker, because his credit was good, and that would have been stupid. The way to look at it was that he had dropped seven big ones. That was a lot of money, sure, but he’d come home from Vegas with twenty-two big ones. So he was still ahead. He was still on a roll.
He had the Caddy, and about ten thousand in cash, and, of course, Tony. If that wasn’t being on a roll, what was?
Vito focused his eyes on the mirror over the bed, and then pulled the sheet modestly over his groin.
Then he got out of bed and walked to the bathroom.
Tony was in the tub, and it was full of bubbles, a bubble bath. It was the first bubble bath Vito had ever seen, except of course in the movies.
“Jees, honey,” Tony said, “I didn’t wake you, did I? I tried to be quiet.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“How about this?” Tony said, splashing the bubbles, moving them just enough so that he could see her teats. “I found a bottle of bubble stuff on the dresser. You just pour it in, and turn on them squirter things, and—bubbles!”
“There still room in there for me?”
“Oh, I don’t know. Maybe there is, maybe there isn’t.”
Vito walked to the edge of the tub, dropped his shorts, and got in with Tony.
“You know what I would like to do later?” Tony asked.
“I know what I’d like to do later. Or for that matter, right now.”
“Behave yourself! What I would like to do is get one of them golf things. . . .”
“What golf things?”
“The buggies, or whatever.”
“You mean a golf cart,” he said.
“Yeah. Could we get one and just take a ride in it?”
He thought that over.
“Why the hell not?” he said, finally.
“You know what else I would like?”
“What?”
“Champagne.”
“Christ, before breakfast?”
“Well, I figured champagne and bubble baths go together. You can eat breakfast anytime. How many times does a