V is for Vegeance (sneak peek #2)
Binion’s
had seen better days, but Phillip’s room was nice enough. Looked clean at
any rate. He dropped his duffel, put seven of his ten-grand stake in his
pocket, and went down to the floor, where he traded the cash for chips.
He spent a few minutes circling the poker room, getting a feel for the place.
He was in no particular hurry. He was looking for a loose table, one where a
lot of money was being tossed out on each hand. He bypassed a table where
the player with all the chips in front of him wore a Rolex watch. Forget that.
The guy was either too wealthy or too good, and Phillip didn’t want to go
up against him.
He
paused at a table filled with seniors who’d been bussed in
from a retirement home. They wore matching T-shirts, red with the
silhouette of a setting sun in white. Play was passive, the betting haphazard,
and one elderly woman had trouble remembering how hands were ranked. The guy
next to her kept saying, “Alice,
for god’s sake. How many times I gotta tell you, flush beats a
straight and a full house beats a flush.” Small chip stacks at a
table like that would probably take him weeks to get unstuck.
Once he’d made the rounds,
he had the board person put his name on the list for the no-limit game on table
number 4 or 8. This was No-Limit Texas Hold’em with a five-grand
buy-in, rich stakes for his blood, but it was the only way he could think
of to recoup his losses and put himself back on top. He preferred to play at
the even-numbered tables, four being his lucky number. The first opening
was seat 8 at table number 8, which he decided to view as a good omen, both
being multiples of four. Phillip placed his chips to his right and ordered a
vodka tonic. There were six guys already in the game and he entered in late
position, which gave him a nice preview of the action. He let a couple of hands
go by, showing discipline by folding on a jack-queen and then a pair of
5’s. Small pocket pairs, which rarely hit the flop, were tempting
to bet and therefore dangerous.
Playing with borrowed money, he
felt a certain burden to perform. Ordinarily, he liked the pressure of play
because it sharpened his wits. Now he found himself tossing in hands that on
other occasions he might have pushed. He picked up a small pot on two pair, and
six hands later won fifteen hundred dollars on a wheel. He
hadn’t lost anything to speak of, four hundred dollars max, and he felt
himself grow calmer as the vodka flowed into his system. While the long,
dull stretch was unproductive, it gave him the chance to watch how the others
at the table operated.
The fat fellow in the blue shirt
too small for him affected boredom when he had a strong hand, implying it was a
bust and he could hardly wait to get it over with. There was a pinch-faced
older man in a gray sport coat, whose every gesture was contained. When he
looked at his cards, he barely lifted the corners, glanced at them once, and
then stared off in the opposite direction. Phillip kept an eye on him, watching
for involuntary tells. There was a fellow in a green flannel shirt, built
like a lumberjack, who called anytime he thought he was behind in the hand,
hoping to hit some good board cards. Phillip wasn’t worried about the
remaining three, who were either too tight or too timid to constitute a threat.
He played for an hour, pulling in five
more small pots. He hadn’t hit his rhythm, but he knew patience would pay
off. The older man left his seat and a woman sat down, a pale blonde in her
forties with a scar across her chin. She was either drunk, an amateur, or the
worst poker player he’d ever seen. He watched her out of the corner of
his eye, puzzled by her erratic play. He lost an eight-hundred-dollar pot to
her when he misread a bluff. Then he overestimated her by folding when he
should have hung in. It occurred to him she might fall into another category
altogether, that of a seasoned pro and superb actress, far tougher than she first
appeared. The signals were mixed. He red-flagged her in his mind and
focused on his cards, letting his awareness of her fade into the background.
There was a particular kind of quiet he experienced when the game started
working for him. It was like being in a sound booth. He picked up table talk,
but only from a distance and with no impact.
After two hours, he was up two
grand and just beginning to sail into the zone. He was dealt the ace of hearts
and the 4 of clubs. Ordinarily, he’d have dumped his hand at that point,
but he could feel a whisper of intuition, an uncanny feeling something might be
coming up for him. The blonde, sitting in early position, was operating largely
in the dark, with no hint of what lay ahead. With a weak hand, she could always
steal a pot by betting, but in the long run she’d lose money. In this
case, she glanced at her hole cards and made a big bet pre-flop, which
suggested pocket rockets—two aces, affectionately known as
“bullets.” Chances of getting a pair of aces in the hole were
approximately 1 in 220 hands.
The fat guy called. The guy in the
green flannel shirt pondered his options while he aligned the stacks of
chips in front of him. He called, but without conviction. Phillip had an urge
to look at his hole cards again, but he knew exactly what they were. He tested
his gut-level instincts and decided he’d call for one round and
fold the next if nothing developed. The button seat, the small blind, and the
big blind folded without putting up a fi ght.
The dealer burned the top card and
the flop came down 3 of diamonds, 5 of spades, and the 2 of spades, and
Phillip felt his heart skip. He was suddenly looking at a wheel.
Ace-2-3-4-5. He watched the betting as it went around the table, gauging the
strength of the other players’ hands. The woman checked that round, as
did the fat guy and the guy in the green flannel shirt. Phillip bet,
taking control of the hand. The betting went around again and everybody called
him. The dealer burned a card. The turn was the ace of spades. The blonde bet,
suggesting three of a kind or a flush. A set he could beat. He revised
his original assessment. With one ace in his hand, one ace on the board, and
seven players sitting at the start of the deal, the odds were she wasn’t
holding the remaining pair of aces. He flicked a look at her, but
couldn’t get a reading. She tended to play with a slight smile on her
face, as though reacting to a private joke. He had a stepsister like her,
superior, competitive, taunting. He never could get the best of her and it
galled him. Phillip set the thought aside and concentrated on the play. The fat
guy and the guy in the green flannel shirt folded. Phillip called.
When the river came down, it was
the 8 of spades, making a flush for her a distinct possibility, in which
case his straight wouldn’t mean shit. Essentially his hand hadn’t
improved since the flop came down, but what did that mean? He could still
be high man at the table. The question was whether to push, and if so, how
hard. There were only two of them left in the hand. The blonde bet. He raised
and the blonde re-raised. What kind of monster hand did she have? He tried to
keep his mind blank, but he knew a fine sheen of sweat had appeared on
his face and there was no way to disguise the tell. He counted eight grand in
the pot. If he called, it was going to cost him two grand, which meant the pot
odds were four to one. Not bad. If he won, he’d pick up four times what
the call had cost him. All eyes were on him. His hand was good, but not that
good. She had to have a flush or a set. He’d been on a winning
tear, but he knew it couldn’t last. He probably shouldn’t have gone
this far, but he hated to back away from her. For all he knew, she was laying a
trap for him and this was his last chance to dodge. Agonizingly, he pushed his
hole cards toward the center, mucking his hand. The dealer pushed the pot to
the blonde and she pulled it in, smiling her enigmatic smile.
He tried telling himself it was a
poker hand, not a pissing contest between him and the woman across the table.
It was the smirk that got to him. He stared at her. “Was that a bluff
?”
“I don’t have to tell
you,” she said.
“I know. I’m curious.
Were you holding a flush or a set?”
She raised two fingers, as
though making a peace sign. “Two cards, a jack and a six.”
He felt the blood drain from his
face. She’d outfoxed him and his rage was keen. Mentally, he shook
himself off. No point in chiding himself. What was done was done. Though it
had cost him, he’d learned a valuable lesson and he’d use it next
time he went up against her.




