Slim Chance - A Las Vegas Adventure (c)
Chapters 2 and 3 (see yesterday's blog entry on 'Burt-Day' for the first chapter)....
(c) Slim Chance - A Las Vegas Adventure... By Burt Peretsky
I'm continuing to post chapters of my novel Slim Chance - A Las Vegas Adventure. Watch this space, as I'll be posting every chapter over the next few days/weeks. If you like what you see, please pass it along or recommend it to friends. By the way, I think the book would make a great movie. If you agree, please pass it along to your Hollywood friends, especially if their names are Spielberg or Scorsese.
Here goes -- Slim Chance - A Las Vegas Adventure ... Chapters 2 and 3...
I'm continuing to post chapters of my novel Slim Chance - A Las Vegas Adventure. Watch this space, as I'll be posting every chapter over the next few days/weeks. If you like what you see, please pass it along or recommend it to friends. By the way, I think the book would make a great movie. If you agree, please pass it along to your Hollywood friends, especially if their names are Spielberg or Scorsese.
Here goes -- Slim Chance - A Las Vegas Adventure ... Chapters 2 and 3...
==================
Chapter 2
Default is in our Stars!
==================
Good morning, Las Vegas. It's 101
degrees, and it'll be another scorcher in the Valley today. Temperatures are
expected to climb to 115 by midday. We'll have the complete weather in a
minute, but first today's top news stories... "
Inside Miss Nomer, it was so cold
you could see your breath. The air conditioner was on 'maximum,' the fan on
high. I liked it that way. I could never get used to the Las Vegas weather,
especially the summer. When I first arrived in town from Boston in June of '76,
the first three months went by without a drop of rain falling. Days and even
nights when the temperature failed to dip below 100 degrees were common that
summer. What am I saying? They've been common every summer since. And this
summer was no exception. It was the first week of July, and the summer heat had
set in on Southern Nevada with a vengeance, and even at this early hour, 5:20
AM on the digital clock the Chrysler Corporation had so generously provided my
Reliant, you could look out over the desert flatlands and see heat shimmering
up into a cloudless sky just beginning to emerge from darkness.
I headed southeast on Boulder
Highway, away from the Strip, away from Las Vegas, away from everything. As usual, I had awakened early. Actually, I
barely sleep nights. And as usual, I was killing time, putting my thoughts in
order for the day, mindlessly driving wherever the car would take me.
Driving alone early in the morning
before any other car was on the road does me wonders.
Today, I was headed toward Boulder
City, home of Boulder Dam or Hoover Dam, as it was alternately called. My plan was to turn around there and head to
work. I’d still be early, but with Lefty’s funeral yesterday and his death only
a week ago, the work piling up for my office was overwhelming. Some extra time
at the office would help in clearing away some of the paper that was now
obscuring my ‘in’ basket. Normally, I took these early morning drives in
complete silence, without the radio. But for the past week, the Vegas Castle
had been in the news nearly every day. What with the investigation into Lefty’s
murder going nowhere, the precarious financial position in which he left the
hotel, a new investigation into the matter by the Gaming Control Board to see
if his murder had been related to any casino-related shenanigans, and with
rumors on everyone’s lips regarding the hotel’s future, I kept my car radio
tuned to the all-news station.
This morning, as usual, the local
news on the station was a mere paraphrasing of the early editions of the Las
Vegas papers, which I had already seen over coffee at my house. By now, I was
beginning to hear items repeated.
"We'll have a story of a
Henderson man reunited with his sister after 60 years right after this ...”
Turning off the radio, I squinted
into the rising sun and drove again in silence. I happened to be in Henderson,
still on Boulder, and was in no mood to be reunited with the reunited sibling’s
story.
Boulder Highway always struck me as
a road that couldn't make up its mind as to what it wanted to be, a mix between
an interstate, a commercially studded junior Main Street, and a lonely country
highway. The Las Vegas part of it was a would-be second "Strip,"
anchored on one end by the Showboat hotel-casino, a 1950s-era high-rise with a
honky-tonk downtown Las Vegas atmosphere. On the other hand, Sam's Town,
further east on Boulder, almost into Henderson, was more like a Strip hotel. It
was big, garish, and noisy. Sam's Town was developing a rather hefty clientele
from out of town as well, especially folks from Arizona.
The Vegas Castle on the Strip and
the Showboat and Sam's Town on Boulder all shared popularity with Vegas
townies, because all three hotels had bowling alleys.
Bowling junkies – they abound in Vegas,
if junkies can abound anywhere – patronized the three hotels more often because
of the bowling alleys they sport.
Unfortunately, of the three joints, the two on Boulder Highway, probably
because they were off the Strip and insulated from most of the tourists, did
better with the locals than did the Castle.
Boulder Highway was the logical way
into Las Vegas from Nevada towns to the east and from the Interstate that
dumped cars near the Arizona side of Boulder Dam. Sam’s Town was the first
major resort on this particular ride, and so it drew hundreds of the faithful
from the Grand Canyon State, added to its pretty fair representation of
townies. Sam Boyd, the proprietor of Sam’s Town, knew how to run a pretty good
shop, offering, for instance, better payoffs on slots, lower minimums on table
games, loud country music 24 hours a day in the casino, and good, cheap food
for the masses.
Sam had found the combination of
factors to ensure success at his place. Lefty Needham had not. That was the
reason that the Vegas Castle was on such shaky ground.
As I drove, I looked to the East
where the sun was rising over one set of the mountains that created the Las
Vegas Valley. The mountains were undistinguished enough. In fact, they probably
couldn’t be classified as true mountains, but they were all the mountains Las
Vegas had. On both sides of the valley they rose, brown bare slopes reaching
from a brownish-red floor to a brilliant, even in the morning light, royal blue
sky. Colors in the desert were either the color of the rock on the mountains,
or they were blue, the omnipresent color of the sky and the color of swimming
pools and Lake Mead.
On drives like this, I missed the
green of my native New England, the trees and grass, the bush and brush that
landscape both sides of country roads, and the green hills that poke their
rounded tops above the pastures. I didn’t miss the congestion of New England,
though, not yet anyway. After nearly 15 years, if I again had to choose, I’d
still take the broad, flat valleys of the Southwest, the mountains that created
them, and the expanse of sky that covers them, I'd take them over the
congestion, the cars, and the concrete of my native Boston.
Still another reason for my
choosing Vegas over Boston was Boston blueblood Georgia Susan Alcott Chance. In
fact, Georgia was the main reason I was living in Las Vegas. The former Mrs.
James Chance, my lovely ex-wife, or should I say my ex-lovely wife, drove me
west. Well, first she drove me out of my mind, then out of our cozy little suburban
Cape in Wayland, near Boston. I wasn't good enough for her, I got the feeling.
You’d get the feeling too, if someone you lived with was constantly saying
things like "You'll never amount to anything. You're a no-good
failure!"
Cute, huh? Georgia sung a different
tune in the divorce proceedings, claiming to the judge, a woman judge by the
way, that not only did I have a high-paying job writing a column for the Boston
Gazette, but that my free-lancing was good for another $10,000 to $15,000 a
year, and that she should be entitled to half of that in alimony.
The judge wouldn’t believe me that
free-lancing was an iffy proposition, and that in some years I couldn’t earn
much of anything pitching stories to a diminishing number of magazines. She
wouldn’t listen to my lawyer’s arguments that Georgia’s family money – which I
never saw – was more than adequate to support her in regal style. No, I was
ordered to pay Georgia an alimony of $200 a week, plus $1000 a month in child
support for little Anthony, the kid that she had with her first husband, the
kid that I had adopted only out of the goodness of my heart after we got
married.
Thanks to that judge, and more
specifically, thanks to Georgia and little Anthony, I decided to look around
for a PR job. Newspapers in Boston and around the country were dying, and the
Gazette was no different. It only had a few years left, and that meant that, if
I wanted to support Georgia and little Anthony, and if I wanted to eat three
squares myself each day, I had to get another job.
At first, I looked for a PR job in
Boston, but I was coming up empty-handed everywhere I went. Then, when I was in
Vegas on a gambling junket, a pastime that also contributed both to my early
marital woes as well as to my lack of money, I heard that the legendary PR guy
at the Vegas Castle, Duke O’Callaghan, had left the hotel to start his own PR
firm.
What the hell! Since I was in town anyway, I made an
appointment with the hotel owner, one Lefty Needham, and I applied for the
position. I was, much to my complete
amazement, hired the same day. And
within a month, I was in Vegas working for the Castle and for Lefty. The pay
wasn’t much better than I was earning in Boston for the paper, but the few
extra dollars I made, the free meals I could have at the hotel (that’s how I
maintain my fabulous, girlish figure!), the lower cost of living in Vegas, and
the change I needed at that point in my life made all the difference in the
world to me. I was able to squeak by on the alimony and child support payments
just with my new Vegas Castle salary, and once in a while, I even put together
enough money to stake myself in a friendly craps game. When the dice were
rolling right, which wasn’t all that often, I even had enough money to splurge.
One fabulously successful night at the tables allowed me to plunk down enough
money at the finance company to pay off Miss Nomer. And although I haven’t
since been able to duplicate that feat at the tables, I haven’t yet lost my ass
or Miss Nomer at craps.
The Vegas Castle conference room
filled promptly at 9AM with hotel department heads. By that time, I had put in
a couple of hours of work, I had breakfasted at the hotel’s Little King Coffee
Shop, and had smoked a half pack of Merit Ultra Lights, two of which had been
inhaled in the conference room waiting for 9AM.
I couldn’t remember the last staff
meeting that everyone had attended, much less the last staff meeting to which
everyone had been on time. In front of most of those seated at the huge
mahogany table stood a Styrofoam coffee cup, some still I bearing their plastic
covers from the employee cafeteria, others sending a gentle wisp of steam into
the air to mix with the cigarette smoke already stagnating above the group.
About half of the attendees were smoking. A package of Pall Mall lay on the
table in front of Chief Casey.
I told you it was only one day
after Lefty’s bizarre funeral. Arlene had had the boss’s remains cremated, or
at least what remained of the remains after the explosion.
The funeral, however, featured an
ornate empty coffin, pallbearers – mostly hotel department heads, including me
– and a band that played "Nearer My God to Thee." In the eulogy,
spoken by the funeral director rather than a clergyman, it was explained that
Lefty had seen "A Night to Remember," on television some time ago,
and when he heard the Titanic orchestra playing that song for the movie
audience, as the glorious ship sunk not so gloriously beneath the icy Arctic,
he told his wife that he too wanted to go out with that music. And so he did. A stranger was sitting at the table next to George Purdy, who
opened the meeting.
"Ladies and gentlemen, thank
you for coming here this morning. In a moment, I’ll introduce our guest."
Purdy gestured to the stranger. "But please feel free to conduct
yourselves with the same directness and openness that normally prevails at
these meetings."
Right. Lefty Needham’s staff
meetings usually consisted of everyone telling the boss what great decisions he
was making and then meekly sitting there as he barked out orders to them. In
the collective memory of the assembled multitude, directness and openness were
the last thoughts associated with staff meetings.
Purdy, normally in charge of
carrying out Lefty’s whims, was now ex-officio boss of the Vegas Castle...
“As this is our first meeting since
that terrible day, I want to start with some introductory remarks. First, I
know you all share my grief over the untimely demise of our president and
general manager, Lefty Needham ... "Turning his nearly bald head toward
Arlene Needham, Purdy continued, "We all want, once again, to express our
condolences to Arlene. We all know what a loss this was to her."
Arlene was seated at our staff
meeting by virtue – and I use the word advisedly in her case – by virtue of her
position as the hotel’s entertainment director. At George’s remarks, she didn’t
say a word, and her features were immobile. An attractive enough woman, she was
also a plain-looking type. She was thin, had an average build, and she wore very
little makeup on a rectangular face framed by slightly curly brown hair which
she wore nearly shoulder length.
I, for one, was surprised to see
her at work this soon after her husband’s funeral.
Purdy, turning again to another
department head: "Chief Casey, perhaps you can outline for all of us how
the police investigation is going?"
"There’s not so much to
report," Casey began. The Chief of the Vegas Castle security department
exuded a retired Marine look, and his brusqueness added to a Semper Fi character.
In fact, despite his brawny features, square head, and crew cut gray hair,
Casey had never served in the Marines; he had never been in the service, except
the service for 23 years of the Los Angeles Police Department. Why he had left
the force was a mystery to everyone, but I had heard that Casey had been shot
at, and the fright of being a target, reportedly for the first time in his
career, had been enough to send Al Casey into retirement. And like many of his
police detective colleagues before him, he "retired" into a cushy job
as head of security of a Las Vegas hotel, in his case the venerable Vegas
Castle.
“... not much to report at
all. Metro Police are still
investigating who had the means, the motive, and the opportunity to kill Left
... er, Mr. Needham."
Real clever, Chief. Either Casey was watching a lot of detective
shows on TV, or he was trying to impress us. Or maybe both! Cops wouldn't be cops if they didn't
investigate 'three things ... means, motive, and opportunity.' Real clever, Chief.
"One thing that everyone in
this room should be made aware of," he continued, "is that none of us
has been ruled out as a suspect. Well, I've been ruled out." He laughed
nervously. "But, that's not to say that any of you are active suspects,
either. On the other hand, you may be."
Eyes darted about the conference
room like in a B-grade movie. The guilty, or those who had their suspicions of
guilt, looked at one another furtively. I suddenly felt like a character in a
Charlie Chan movie or an Agatha Christie novel. Several of the assemblage had
the right means, motive, and opportunity to knock off Lefty, if not personally,
then by arranging to have someone do it for them.
Lefty was not the best-loved person
at the Vegas Castle. And the Spanish
Inquisitor wasn't Jewish.
Casey went on ... "Several
points have been established, and several questions remain. First of all, Mr.
Needham was killed by a dynamite charge attached to the ignition of his car.
When he started the car, the bomb was set to explode. Second, the police have established to their
satisfaction that Mr. Needham was in financial trouble. I’m sorry to say,
Arlene, but it’s no secret to anyone in this room that the Vegas Castle has
been losing serious money for the past few years, and Mr. Needham has had to
refinance this place to its limit. And a few months ago, as Mr. Purdy knows,
when a mortgage payment came due and it couldn’t be paid, Mr. Needham suddenly
came up with the dough from somewhere. The police are trying to find out where the
somewhere was. They think it might have something to do with his murder."
When she didn’t say anything at
this juncture, which must have been embarrassing to her, I began to watch
Arlene Needham. Throughout Casey’s report, his soliloquy, as it were, I watched
her closely. She barely moved a muscle, no matter what was being said. She
stared straight at the Chief, focusing the entire time, I thought, on his lips
as they moved in their normally precise manner. Except for an occasional blink,
Arlene’s eyes looked straight ahead, except when Casey repeated that the police
had not ruled out anyone in the room. As everyone else’s eyes looked around,
Arlene’s eyes looked down at the table momentarily, just like people do, I
thought, when they suddenly want to be invisible.
To say I never warmed up to Arlene
would be an understatement. On the other hand, nobody ever warmed up to
her. My reporter’s instinct long ago had
caused me to dislike Arlene. She was cold and remote, and she exhibited a mean
streak for which she was given a wide berth by people in her path. When all was
said and done, and probably before all the saying and doing, Arlene Needham was
my Suspect Number One in the murder of Lefty Needham. No, she didn’t do it, but
she sure as hell had something to do with the murder, and she probably
engineered it. Talk about means ... Arlene, despite having an alibi of being at
the hairdresser when the deed was done, knew all the same Mobsters that Lefty
knew, and any one of them was for hire or knew of someone for hire.
As for motive, take your choice.
Arlene wanted Lefty’s personal fortune. Arlene made no secret of thinking she
could run the hotel better than he, and that she should be running it. And
Arlene pretty much knew of Lefty’s affairs with women.
And opportunity ... Arlene knew her
husband’s daily routine; she knew he’d be eating that day at Carla’s, that he’d
be there at just the time that he actually was there. She also knew just when
she would need an alibi, while some hired hand connected the wires from the
starter under Lefty’s hood to the five sticks of dynamite under Lefty’s seat.
Not much more of substance was
contained in the Chief’s report. After Casey finished, George Purdy announced
he would introduce “our guest” after brief reports from the department heads.
In order, Casino Manager Vic "The Stick" Milton, Hotel Operations
Manager Herb Schwartz, Sales Director Ed Griffin, Food and Beverage Manager
Rosa Laurence, and Housekeeping Director Anna Leo ticked off the sort of
statistics you’d expect at a half-occupied, half-assed hotel-casino.
As each of them gave their reports,
I pondered means, motive, and opportunity in each case. Let’s take motive, for
instance. The Stick and Lefty argued nearly every day about casino receipts.
Having come out of the Mob, Lefty knew all about the various skimming routines.
And he knew that for a successful skim, an insider in the casino itself was
necessary. The Stick knew what Lefty suspected, and he either resented the
implications, or he argued with Lefty to cover his tracks. Every once in a
while, Lefty would threaten to fire Vic, and while I suspected Lefty was just
making noise, I wondered if Vic took the threats seriously.
Sales Director Ed Griffin was an
able manager, but he and his small staff were fighting a losing battle in
selling hotel rooms to tourists and convention groups. Huge pleasure palaces
were rising on every side of the Vegas Castle, and our joint had long ago lost
its luster. The chic palaces were everywhere else, places like Caesars, the DI,
the Riviera, the Trop, the two Hiltons, and now the Mirage. The Vegas Castle
was yesterday’s joint, and Ed Griffin, or the best sales director in the world,
couldn’t turn this particular sow’s ear into a silk sales purse.
But, try and explain that to Lefty,
when he was on the rag. I heard him yelling plenty of times at Griffin, whose
office was next to mine on the second floor of the hotel. Yeh, Ed Griffin
certainly had reason enough to want to see Lefty dead, I thought.
Hotel Operations Manager Herb
Schwartz had a different reason, but I thought just as valid, for wanting to
kill Lefty. Schwartz had toiled at his thankless front office job for ten
years, and for ten years, Lefty repeatedly passed over him for promotion to the
key number two job that George Purdy was finally given.
And what of Rosa Laurence, our food
and beverage manager? Rosa wanted something that Lefty refused to give her, and
for that matter, refused everyone - respect. She’d do her damndest on parties
for the boss, preparing buffet tables the likes of which even Vegas doesn’t
often see, and what would she get for her troubles? Not even a thank-you from
Lefty, barely a nod. I remember one night, after one of her fabulous spreads
was ignored by the boss, I happened by her office and heard her sobs from the
darkness inside.
And finally, there was Anna Leo,
the housekeeping director. Lefty had an affair with her a few years ago. It
went on for about six months, and then it suddenly was over. Only a few of us
knew what was going on, and none of us knew why it ended. Did the boss pay for
spurning Anna? Did he pay the ultimate price?
This particular day, the suspects,
perhaps one of them more than a suspect, gave their reports of a hotel in deep
trouble. Business was poor at the Vegas Castle, and business had been poor for
years. The crowds that came to Las Vegas visited the Mirage, Excalibur,
Caesars, the Hiltons, the Riviera, the Sahara, or the Holiday Casino. They
walked past the Vegas Castle on their way to Circus-Circus, the Frontier, the
Dunes, or the Stardust.
Thirty-five years ago, the story
was different.
Thirty-five years ago, they
couldn’t crowd into the Vegas Castle fast enough or in big enough numbers.
Those were the days when Pat Andrea played the spanking new hotel. Pat Andrea
was then the hottest crooner in America, and wherever Pat Andrea sang his
ballads and love songs was the place to be.
He was the guy who built Las Vegas, who attracted the first crowds to
this growing oasis in the desert. His soothing, caressing voice and pleasing
Mediterranean hominess were like magnets that drew into the Vegas Castle
coffers the coinage of a generation of kids on their honeymoons, wise guys
wasting time, and middle class Californians on vacation from workaday workdays.
He was the biggest of the Fifties idols. He and the hotel he made were referred
to by last names only. It was "Andrea;" it was “The Castle.”
The bubble burst in 1975, shortly
after Lefty Needham took over the Castle. Something was said between Lefty and
Pat Andrea, something happened with their relationship nobody knows what – and
Andrea never stepped foot into the hotel again. I asked Lefty about it once,
and his answer was puzzling. "He thinks he’s a better American than I
am," Lefty said of Andrea. "I don’t want to hear his name
again!” That was that!
"Slim, would you give us both
your report and Arlene's? I know you've
been covering the entertainment situation for her this past week."
Purdy’s request brought me out of
my reverie, and in a transition worthy of a PR man, I'm proud to say, and one
that even brought a slight smile to my face, I began, "This hotel could
profit by having Pat Andrea playing its showroom again." I thought I might
be taking a chance, mentioning the singer's name in front of Lefty's widow, but
if I was, Arlene's stonefaced stare didn't reveal anything.
“Our review "Cozy At The
Castle" continues in our showroom,” I continued, “and Tommy Lake is still
breaking them up in the Moat." I
was being somewhat facetious with the business about Tommy. “As far as how well
we’re doing, I think the question is better asked how badly we're doing. Since
the decision was made to go from a star policy in our showroom to a musical
revue, it's no secret that business has fallen off. On the other hand, as Arlene
correctly has pointed out ... " I
nodded to the dowager ... "a $30,000 per week revue is a lot easier for
this hotel to handle than a $150,000-a-week big name."
"As far as PR goes, needless
to say, the fact that Lefty was killed in such an ugly manner has scared people
away from the hotel. It’s tough to overcome the bad publicity this quickly.
Perhaps when the cops catch the murderers, then people can be convinced that
the hotel is not going to have some other grisly killing, perhaps even on our
property. In the meantime, there will be less and less of the murder in the
local papers as time wears on. More importantly, there hasn’t been anything In
the LA papers since the weekend. When they catch the killers, then we expect
there’ll be a lot more in print, and that’s the kind of print we should all be
looking forward to."
I paused and winced. I had ended my
sentence with a preposition.
Purdy was pleased with whatever way
I had ended my sentence and my report. He obviously wanted to get on with the
meeting. The "go-around," as the staff called department head
reports, was always tedious, and the last person in the circle invariably was
cut short.
"Thank you, Slim. It’s now my
pleasure to introduce our guest who’s been at the Vegas Castle for three
days. You may have seen him at the
funeral yesterday, and since his arrival, he’s been taking a close look at our
operation. Mr. Francis Weatherbee is Vice President of Customer Relations at
the State Bank of Illinois, the bank that holds the mortgage on the Vegas
Castle. He nodded to Weatherbee, who nodded back.
Weatherbee, a rather large man, was
attired in a gray three-piece suit, a white shirt, and blue tie with thin red
stripes. Central Casting, with the cooperation of Wardrobe, couldn’t have sent
a more typical banker, dressed more typically. He looked like the Weatherbee
that was the principal in the “Archie” comic strip. He wore half-glasses,
halfway down on his nose. He was bald at the top of his head, and his graying
hair formed a wrap atop his ears and in back. Short sideburns topped a
clean-shaven, pudgy red face.
“Thank you, George. And thank you,
ladies and gentlemen for the hospitality you’ve shown me these past few days. I
can honestly say that the Vegas Castle Hotel is still the hospitality leader of
Las Vegas. I don’t know when I’ve been treated so graciously."
Right, Francis! Sure!
The room was absolutely still,
except for Weatherbee’s crisp, solid voice.
"But, these last few days have
been troublesome as well. With all due respect, madam," he said, nodding
to Arlene, “the State Bank of Illinois has lost a fine customer with the loss
of Mr. Needham. And the Vegas Castle Hotel has lost a devoted owner. The
circumstance of Mr. Needham’s untimely demise has required that I undertake the
unenviable task of looking at the finances of the Vegas Castle Hotel, and those
finances are not good. As we are the bank that holds the mortgage on the hotel,
and since the hotel has frequently over the past few months been in arrears in
paying that mortgage, I have been sent to Las Vegas to assess the situation.
“First, let me say that Mr.
Needham, during his years as hotel president, had continuously found ways to
overcome the financial pinches into which the hotel had strayed. He has
rearranged this facility’s debt, he had borrowed from other sources, and he had
worked out payment plans with his creditors. There is, however, a limit to the
borrowing, the rearranging of debt, and the stretching out of payment plans.
Mr. Needham, in fact, was reaching the financial danger point at the time of
his passing. That danger point, ladies and gentlemen, is now upon this hotel.
The situation is critical.”
And then, Weatherbee really got to
the point: “Unless significant, imaginative steps are taken, and taken now,
this hotel will default on its mortgage. The State Bank of Illinois would then
be forced, in carrying out its fiduciary responsibility to its own investors
and depositors, to assume ownership of this property. And given the likelihood that the Vegas
Castle would not be able to recover from default, we would be forced to put the
hotel up for sale. And finally, given the likelihood that no buyer would step
forward that would be able to give us a fair price for the hotel and still pay
off its outstanding debts, we would be forced to close the hotel. In accordance
with our own policies, it would remain closed and be sold at auction.
"Frankly, ladies and
gentlemen, even in an auction situation, I don’t think anyone would want to buy
the Vegas Castle and be saddled with these operating costs and debts. In short,
I am forced to give the Vegas Castle 30 days to come up with a viable plan for
survival, a plan that would generate enough revenue to avoid default. In the
absence of any such plan, the State Bank of Illinois will close the Vegas
Castle permanently, and, I’m afraid, you will all be out of jobs.
"George has all the figures
and the details. I’m sorry I could not be more encouraging, but I hope you
understand that I’m merely the messenger of the bad news. I cannot change the
facts."
==================
Chapter 3
A “Little Tax Matter”
==================
"Honey, you know I still love
you…" Some man was calling me
"honey" and telling me he still loved me.
"Who is this?" I asked.
"Who’s this? Where’s
Pinky?"
"Look, pal, I’m Pinky’s
boss. Hold on a minute, willya?"
I pressed the hold button on Pinky
Dawson’s latest and hit the only other lighted line.
" ... It’s not a question of
my not loving you, Sweetie. It’s that
awful thing you did to me in bed ... " This time, I recognized the voice.
"Pinky, this is Slim. Is this
call for me?"
Another voice answered, another
woman’s voice: “Slim, this is Sandra
Emerson. What the hell is going on there?
Who is that person, and why is she talking to me like that?"
"Oh, hi, Sandra. Pinky, take
your call on line two. This one’s
mine." Pinky didn’t answer. She was probably embarrassed. I heard her hang up and watched the blinking
hold light on the second line go solid.
“Sorry about that, Sandra, a little
mix-up with phone lines, obviously. What
were you two talking about, anyway, and did Pinky realize she had the FBI on
the phone?"
“Very funny, Slim. I didn't know what was going on, but I was
trying to recall which of the many interstate communications laws this woman
was breaking. Do you happen to know why
I was being propositioned and critiqued sexually in the same conversation,
woman to woman at that?”
If nothing else, and she was plenty
else – like sexy – Sandra Emerson was clever.
You don't have to be clever to be an FBI agent, but I suppose it
helps! I remember, not long ago, hearing
in the news about an FBI agent accused of being duped by a female Soviet agent
- a Mata Hari, of sorts. This guy was
hardly clever and hardly a credit to J. Edgar's Bureau! He also had pretty poor taste in women,
considering that his Mata Hari looked like she could barely fit into a size-46
borscht belt.
But if that Russian was typical of
Soviet womanhood in the latter part of the Twentieth Century, Sandra was what
the script calls for an American woman to be.
She was direct from Central
Casting, answering the call for a Ms. Magazine woman – confident, beautiful,
always in command of herself and the situation, the kind of woman who routinely
wraps men around her little finger.
“Sorry, Sandra. My secretary has
problems with things mechanical. But never mind that. To what do I owe the pleasure of your call
... business?" Pretty good line,
Slim, considering it was off the top of your head.
To my surprise, Sandra replied,
"You're right, Slim. This is Bureau
business. How did you know?"
"It is? You are?
I mean, this IS Bureau business?"
Suddenly, Fred Astaire had become
Don Knotts. I was hardly expecting that
she really was calling on business.
After all, the business she was in was ... well, you know!
Then I said it: "Wow!"
My "wow" must have really
impressed Sandra. For several moments,
she didn't say anything. Neither did I, and the silence was deafening.
Finally, she spoke. "You did say 'wow,' didn't you?"
“Sorry, Sandra! I sound like a kid. It's just that I don't often get calls from
FBI agents, especially business calls from beautiful female agents."
Once again, she paused before
answering, and I realized I was getting in deeper. What the hell possesses me? I'm a goddamn PR man! Words are my business!
"Well, thank you, Slim. I'm not sure I deserve that, but I thank you,
nevertheless." My God, she was
every bit as cool as I was moronic!
Then she got down to business, and
it was business, as she had said. "I'm
calling on a Federal tax matter which may involve you. Now, don't get worried, Slim, you don't owe
the government thousands of dollars, but it is important for the Bureau to talk
with you. I've been elected, because, as
I told my boss, you and I are next-door neighbors.”
Now it was my turn to pause. “Uh, don’t get worried, Sandra? The FBI calls me to talk about a "little
tax matter," and you say, "Don’t get worried? Geez,” – yeh, I really
said Geez – “What should I do if not get worried? What’s my crime? What little tax matter?”
“For starters, Slim, I’d be happy
to explain to you in person. You can let
me buy you lunch.”
“Huh?” I was obviously at my articulate best in this
conversation!
“That’s right, Slim. How about meeting me downtown for lunch
today, say at the Mint?”
“We can eat here, at the Castle,” I
offered.
“No.” Sandra was quick to say the word. “Let’s eat downtown, at the Mint coffee
shop!”
Never one to turn down a lunch with
a pretty lady – and hardly ever one to be offered lunch by one – I was out of
my office, downstairs, and in a thrice, headed downtown to the Mint. Well, in Miss Nomer, if not a thrice!
I was eager and at the same time
reluctant to see Sandra. I’ll admit I
was smitten with her. In fact, during
the first few months after she moved into my building, I asked her out about
once a week, but each time she turned me down, claiming Bureau work was keeping
her too busy, or that she had to go out of town. Sandra claimed she frequently traveled for
the Bureau. She said she traveled a lot to Reno, which, she explained, was part
of the FBI Las Vegas Bureau territory.
She also occasionally used LA, Phoenix, or even Washington as travel
alibis. But, after a few of those
excuses, I figured the truth was simply that she wasn’t interested.
The relationship between us, what
little there was, developed into a polite, neighborly one. We’d exchange how-hot-the-weather-is
chit-chat in the elevator as we brought up our respective grocery bags, or
would talk detergent and fabric softener down on the first floor, at the
washing machines. Then, I’d go into my
apartment and fantasize into the night about how it could have been between us.
This business about "a little
tax matter" had me more than a little nervous. This had already been a murderous week for
me, no pun intended. Lefty’s death and
the hotel’s imminent demise were plenty to deal with. Now, “a little tax matter" with the FBI
was just terrific! As I drove into
town, I tried to remember what H&R Block had done for me. I wondered if my ex had anything to do with
this, whether she had claimed that I wasn’t paying her alimony or child
support, and whether the Feds were questioning my deductions in that regard. No, that couldn’t have been it! I’ve claimed those deductions for years!
I tried to reconstruct in my mind
what I had told the kid at H&R Block, the one who was doing my taxes. I remember he was a part-timer; he told me
his full-time job was on the graveyard shift in the Riviera casino cage. What did I tell him? What deductions did I list that now might be
called into question? I wondered briefly if my claim of $500 in cash donations
to church collection trays might have been discovered as phony, especially
considering I was, and still am, an atheist and hadn’t been in a church,
temple, or mosque in ages.
And then, it occurred to me, as I
waited for the light at Sahara, why would the FBI, and not the IRS, be calling
me about a “tax matter?" What was
going on?
I’d find out soon enough, and in
the meantime, I tried to put it out of my mind.
I’d think about Sandra. Seeing
her was always a treat, and to have lunch with her – our first date – that, I
expected, would be special! I was right;
it was special!
To get to the Mint, in Las Vegas’
honky-tonk downtown section, I had to drive right past the FBI office, which is
located just off the Strip halfway downtown on West Charleston. Sandra could have driven to the Vegas Castle
from her office a lot more easily than to the Mint, and I remember musing, as I
drove, as to why she insisted on both of us having to go out of our way.
I pulled up to the valet parking
lane at the Mint, grabbed my claim ticket from the attendant, and pushed
through the glass doors leading into the air-conditioned casino, leaving the 109-degree
noontime heat behind me. It was
possible, what with air-conditioned cars, valet parking, and air-conditioned
buildings, to live nearly one’s entire life in Las Vegas without being seared
by the intolerable summer heat. But to
do so, one becomes a prisoner of the indoors; you can’t take a lunchtime walk
to clear the cobwebs; you can’t open your car windows to enjoy the breeze. The air-conditioning was essential, but it
contributed to the artificiality of Las Vegas.
The downtown hotels, however,
displayed less of the phoniness apparent on the Strip. To me, downtown was reminiscent of New York’s
Times Square or Boston’s Combat Zone – crowded, less tidy, noisier than it
should be. It had a
get-rich-quick-for-less attitude that didn’t seem to be present at the huge
Strip hotels. On the Strip, palaces and
castles housed the nobility. Downtown,
nickels and pennies were the coin of the realm.
Del Webb’s Mint Hotel, as it was
still called some 20 years after Webb had died, is one of my favorite casinos
downtown. Webb once owned the Sahara
hotels; he even once owned the New York Yankees. He was a real estate mogul, the founder of
Phoenix’s “Sun City” housing complex for the elderly. He was a unique character for Las Vegas. He wasn’t Mob, as far as anyone knew. He just had a lot of money and spent much of
it in Vegas, Reno, and Tahoe buying up some of the state's best casino
properties. When he died, the Del E.
Webb Company owned the Sahara Hotels in those three gambling Mecca’s. The company also owned the Mint, a
hotel-casino property in the then-tiny Colorado River boomtown of Laughlin, and
several hotels in Arizona, California, and Hawaii. But, when Webb died, the company also began
its long but steady slide downhill.
Based in Phoenix near much of its non-casino real estate holdings, the
Webb Company became caught in the web of late 1970's high inflation and higher
interest rates.
After borrowing huge amounts of
money to upgrade its long-neglected casino properties, Webb executives and shareholders
watched the rates rise on their loans and costs increase on their construction
projects, until what Wall Streeters would call the company's "debt to
equity ratio" was perilously close to sending Webb into bankruptcy. The cash generated by its casinos just wasn't
sufficient to deal with loans that floated with increasingly higher interest
rates, and a sale of assets was the only medicine to be prescribed. And the
only saleable assets the company had were its hotels.
Within a few months of each other,
the Sahara’s were sold, and in Las Vegas all that was left in Webb's dell by
the early 1980s was the Mint. By the end
of the decade, even the Mint had been sold.
I crossed the busy and noisy casino
and headed for the coffee shop and my meeting with FBI agent Sandra
Emerson. She was already sitting in a
corner booth near the back of the room and waved to get my attention as I
approached. She looked magnificent. Who would have believed it? This woman was a Fed, an FBI agent. And who, least of all me, would have believed
it – she was asking me out to lunch.
Granted, it was Bureau business, this "little tax matter," she
said, but it was still lunch, just the two of us for a quiet bite to eat in a
corner of a coffee shop amidst the anonymity of downtown Las Vegas.
"Hi!" Good starter, Slim. You wordsmiths sure know the right things to
say!
"Hi, yourself!" Great!
Now, she was making fun of me, Baccalling my Bogart. For a moment, I considered leaning over to
her and placing a kiss on her cheek, like one would normally do on seeing an
old friend of the opposite sex. But,
this was "Bureau business," about that "little tax matter,"
and kissing, even the polite, on-the-cheek variety, seemed out of place. So, I sat down at the table, obediently placed
my napkin on my lap, and automatically opened the menu at my place setting.
We, or to be exact, I, got right to
business. "I’m intrigued, and I
confess" – did I say, “confess?” – worried by your invitation," I
began.
Sandra, up close, was pretty. She wasn’t glamorous, not a Las Vegas chorus
line type, nor movie star beautiful.
But, that day at the Mint, she was very pretty. Her short black hair framed a petite face. Her brown eyes and small, ski-jump nose and
demure mouth seemed just the right size for her. A thin, athletic woman, she was dressed in a
green print blouse, a black skirt, and a solid green jacket. A bit overdressed to be a tourist, she was
obviously a professional woman at work, but not a "working" woman of
the type that proliferated downtown.
I figured her jacket was necessary
even in the heat of the summer to hide her .38 revolver, or whatever piece the
FBI carried now. I momentarily thought
of that cheap joke about the broad with two .38s and a pistol. And then a brief picture of an FBI agent
flashed through my mind, an agent pulling an Uzi submachine gun from under a
jacket. Do FBI agents carry Uzis, or is
that the Secret Service? But, it didn’t
matter, because then I remembered that female FBI agents in the movies carry their
pieces in their purses.
“Slim, let’s order." Sandra brought me out of my reverie. "We’ve got a lot to talk about."
Over my hamburger and French fries
and her taco salad, she told me that “the little tax matter" didn’t
exist. It was just a ruse to get me
downtown and out of the hotel for a private chat with her. I didn’t press the matter, but the indication
was that she was worried that my phone was possibly being bugged. Why else play that "little tax
matter" game in our earlier conversation?
Sandra told me that the FBI wanted
me to help with a project, a secret project.
It was so secret, in fact, that the FBI couldn’t even let me in on the
whole story.
Is this a joke, Sandra?" I
asked, assuming at the same time that it couldn’t be.
"No joke, Slim. All I can say, at least until you agree to
hear a bit more of what we want you to do, is that you are in a perfect
position, given your job and all, to help out the FBI and your country. I should add, however, that some danger to
you would be involved, if you were to do what we’re asking. I can’t say any more, unless you wish to go
on with this conversation." She
paused, and when I said nothing: “So, do you want to go to the next step, to
hear what we’re asking?"
I thought for a moment, and I looked
into her dark brown eyes. "Does
this have anything to do with the murder of Lefty Needham last week?" I
asked, speaking my mind, perhaps too abruptly.
Before she could answer, I continued, "I, for one, know he wasn’t
Mob, and I think the FBI and Metro are wrong if they think he was a
gangster."
“Maybe, Slim, Mr. Needham wasn’t
Mob," she said, putting her emphasis on the ‘wasn’t,’ "but I really
can’t say whether the investigation I’d like to talk to you about has anything
to do with his murder. It possibly
could."
Her answer struck me as being way
too vague. I had the impression that
Sandra knew more about Lefty’s murder than she was telling me.
"We think Mr. Needham was
killed by someone in organized crime,” Sandra continued, “someone who may not have
known him as well as you say you did.
And even if he wasn’t Mob, himself, not all Mob killings result in Mob
deaths, you know.”
She had me there, although it
sounded a bit like twisted logic. I
digested what she said, and went on, spurred by curiosity. “So, Sandra, what do you want me to do?”
“Are you saying you’re interested
in helping us, Slim, knowing that there might be some danger?”
I told her I was. If I could help in the investigation of
Lefty’s murder and also help myself to becoming closer to Sandra, then I could
be brave. What the hell!
We suspended our conversation while
the waitress cleared our table and asked for our dessert order. Neither of us ordered any, but both of us
wanted another cup of coffee, if for no other reason than to be allowed to
continue our meeting at the table. After
the waitress finally left us in a sipping position, Sandra got to the heart of
the matter.
“We’d like you to keep an eye out
for someone at the Vegas Castle," she told me, “someone who we believe to
be an occasional guest there. When you
see him, all you have to do is to notify the Bureau, to notify me. Then, while he’s in the hotel, watch him as
best you can without being noticed – and let us know, or describe to us who he
meets with, who he talks to, and things like that. If you are willing to do this, tell me now,
Slim, and we’ll go on to the next step."
"What’s the next step?" I
asked.
"I’ll show you his
picture."
I figured I couldn’t lose by
pressing a little. I was curious, after
all. “Is this guy a suspect in Lefty’s
murder?” I asked Sandra.
“We’re not sure,” she answered,
"but now you’re asking me to talk about more than I can talk about. Slim, you’ll have to trust me a little on
this one. You’re one of the few people
at the hotel any of us at the Bureau know personally, and we need an insider to
continue our investigation."
Now Sandra was telling me something
else. "Hold it, Sandy.” I realized
I was calling her ‘Sandy’ rather than ‘Sandra’ for the first time. "What do you mean to ‘continue’ your
investigation? Are you saying that
someone else at the Castle was helping you, and that now that someone else
isn’t there to help any more? Someone
like Lefty? Is that it, Sandy? Was Lefty working with the Feds? And is that why he …”
"Whoa! Slow down,
Slim!" Sandra was smiling, but the
smile seemed a bit ingenuous to me at the time.
"Don’t let your imagination get away from you. I told you that Mr. Needham was probably
killed by someone in organized crime. I
know how you felt about him, but please don’t confuse things."
What was she saying now? Was this guy she wanted me to spy on, was he
a Mobster, or was she eliminating him from suspicion of being a Mobster?
She was not smiling now. “My request is based on nothing more complicated
than the FBI needing a person who’s somewhere we can’t be to do something we
can’t do. I wouldn’t be asking you to
do anything dangerous. I assure you. All we want, Slim, is for you to keep your
eyes open for a man whose picture I’ll show you if you agree to help us. Just
watch for him and any strangers acting suspiciously around him, and just let us
know. Let me know. I, for one, would sincerely enjoy working
with you. You know I always liked you,
and I really regret not having been able to go out with you all those times you
asked. Really, Slim!"
That was the clincher! Case closed!
The woman would sincerely enjoy working with me, really regrets not
having dated me...
"Okay, Sandra. I’ll help you out. But, keeping my eyes open for any strangers
acting suspiciously is useless. This is
Las Vegas, after all. We get 15 million
strangers a year visiting this city. And
the Vegas Castle is a hotel. We urge
strangers to come in and stay overnight with us. And as for acting suspiciously, do
you know how many husbands are in this town without their wives’ knowledge, or
wives without hubbie’s OK? I would guess
that on an average day, we’ve got 10,000 strangers in town acting suspiciously! I’ll help you, but don’t expect
miracles!"
“Thank you, Slim. I won’t expect
miracles. I promise you. Now, I’d like to show you the suspect’s
picture." That was the first time
she used the word suspect. "I can’t
tell you his name though. You understand
that, don’t you?"
As she talked, Sandra pulled a picture
out of her handbag and held it up for me to see. "Remember this face. We want to know when he’s at the hotel and
with whom he’s talking. That’s all. We don’t want you to approach him. We don’t want him to know you’re even looking
at him. Please, Slim, do just what we’re
asking and no more!"
I took the picture in my hands for
a closer look. It looked like something
off a driver’s license, a straight-on head-and-shoulders color shot. The man was average-looking, blond,
clean-shaven, wearing a solid red tie and navy jacket. About the only distinguishing feature he had,
as the cops would say, was a mole under his right eye, like
"John-Boy" on ‘The Waltons.’
"Can I have this
picture?" I asked.
"No, I can't let you have
it. You're going to have to remember
what he looks like, Slim. You're an
ex-reporter; you should be good with details."
I didn't remember ever telling
Sandra that I was an ex-reporter. Not
many people in Vegas knew that, aside from a few reporters on the Sun and
Review-Journal and my buddy with the AP.
It's just not the type of subject that comes up in everyday
conversation. But, I might have been
mistaken. Perhaps I did mention it to
her once upon a time, maybe when I was asking her out those first few months,
trying to impress her.
Or, maybe the Bureau had run a
check on me. Maybe I was a suspect in
the murder of Lefty Needham, and all this was a trick by Sandra, or agent
Emerson to be exact, to get me to say something.
"Are you being honest with me,
Sandra? I mean, tell me, because now
you're asking me to get involved in something I know very little about,
something that, if you're involved in it, may be dangerous. I am a devout coward, you know."
"Really, Slim, all we're
asking you is to keep your eyes open on your job, and let us know if you see
this guy and who he's talking to. That's
all. We're not asking you to carry a gun
or to round up a ring of spies, er ... or Mobsters, singlehandedly. You needn't, and shouldn't, approach this
guy, and everything will be fine. We
would prefer to keep in the background.
That’s why I must ask you to keep our arrangement a complete
secret. Please don’t tell anyone at the
hotel what you’re doing, not even your security people. In this way, we can stay out of the hotel
ourselves and still have someone inside at the same time. I wish I could say more, but that will have
to wait until some time in the future.
For now, that’s all I can say.
End of story.”
I considered in silence what she
said. I sipped some coffee. She did too.
I think what tipped the scale in her favor was the smile she gave me,
just when she noticed me staring at her.
“OK, I’ll do it, Sandra, I’ll watch for John-Boy, here. And if I see him talking to anyone, I’ll tell
you.”
“And Slim, the Bureau prefers that
we do all of our future talking at the apartment house. Let’s try to avoid being seen together
anywhere else, at least until after our investigation is over. Okay with you?”
I had plenty of questions, but I
could see that Sandra wasn't going to give me any more answers. Not now, anyway. “Okay, Sandy, from now on, it’s your place,
or mine!” I smiled.
And, for the second time in our
meeting, she also smiled.
End of Chapter 3...
No comments:
Post a Comment