Travel plans…he knew what that was about. Last fall Jack had promised to visit his father in Florida. Here it was spring and he still hadn't made the trip. Not that he had anything against seeing Dad, it was just that he knew his father's ultimate goal was to set up Jack in business down there, 'something more stable' than the appliance repair trade he thought his younger son was involved in now.
The second message was also from his father.
'
Jack listened with a steadily sinking feeling as Dad described his itinerary: He had his reservations all set to leave his retirement development in Florida to visit Jack's sister and her two kids in Philadelphia next week, then hop over and visit Jack's brother in Trenton. Then he dropped the bomb, the dreaded words that struck pure terror into Jack's heart.
'…
Stay
Jack saved the message as a reminder. He'd call back later. Much later. Right now he had to get himself together in time to meet Gia and Vicky for lunch.
He shaved, showered, and left early, figuring a good brisk walk would clear the fuzzies from his head.
Rakoshi-mares…he hoped this wasn't the start of a trend.
On the way out he grabbed the book he'd picked up for Vicky. In the downstairs foyer he checked his mailbox and found the annual circular from the local Little League, asking for donations. That time already? He always gave them a generous anonymous donation. Which meant he'd have to start his Little League collection drive soon—the Annual Repairman Jack Park-a-thon.
Jack cut through Central Park, heading for Midtown. He ambled past a pond where two mallards and a drake were nuzzling around a floating 'I ¦ NY' bag and a latex surgical glove in search of a snack.
Cooler today; not too many people parking it. A guy sitting on one of the pond bridges breaking up a hot dog roll and splitting it between the ducks on the water below and the sparrows and pigeons on the pavement; a woman walking four tiny Italian greyhounds with fleece-lined collars; a couple of hand-holding Rollerbladers flashing by. The path wound between a procession of giant granite domes, weeds sprouting anew from their cracked surfaces; a young woman sat on her raincoat atop one of them, eyes closed, feet tucked into the lotus position, meditating.
In a few weeks the park would be fully awake and people would be sunning themselves on those rocks. The willows, oaks, and maples, along with the ubiquitous tree-sized urban weed, the ailanthus, would be in full leaf. Lovers would be walking hand in hand, guys would be tossing Frisbees, parents would be pushing baby carriages; there'd be jugglers and ice cream parts along the paths, couples making out on the benches next to old folks enjoying the shade.
Jack spotted a knot of people near the Shakespeare statue. At first he thought it might be one of the hawkers who specialized in thirty-five-dollar Louis Vuitton bags and twenty-buck Rolexes; they'd been pretty much chased off Fifth Avenue in the past few years, but they hadn't gone away. Then he spotted the two sliders on the cub, grimly eyeing the paths.
Jack smiled. A monte game. He loved to watch these.
He was still fifty feet away but one of the sliders had locked onto him as a possible incoming 'd.' The guy and his partner a dozen feet further down looked barely eighteen and sported the big-puffy-jacket, losing-my-pants, and I-forgot-how-to-tie-my-sneakers look. The nearer slide's hair was faded and his Yankee cap was facing the wrong way; his black face gave away nothing, but Jack knew his quick dark eyes were doing a laser-sharp read of his clothes, gait, his entire demeanor.
I'll be highly insulted if you think I'm a plainclothes dick, Jack thought.
He slowed his pace and put on a curious expression. If this was a typical monte set up, there'd be five guys in the team. Two 'slides,' or lookouts; a pair of 'sticks' acting as shills, and a 'shaker' working the caps and ball at the cardboard table.
If the slide thought Jack was trouble, that was the word he'd shout: 'Slide!' And then the team would fold up its boxes and melt away.
But Jack must have passed muster because no alarm was raised as he approached. He slowed to a crawl as he passed, craning his neck for a peek at the action. Then he stopped but hung back as if uncertain about whether he'd be welcome.
A tall thin black guy in a dark blue knit cap glanced at him, then started yelling at the shaker.
'Hey, I wanna turn. You lettin' this guy have all the fun. Gimme my turn now. You got forty dollah mine. Lemme get it back.' He turned to Jack. 'Hey, bro. C'mere and watch this. Gonna break the bank, yo.'
Jack glanced around with a he-isn't-talking-to-me-is-he? expression, then turned back to Knitcap. He pointed his finger at his own chest.
'Yeah, you,' Knitcap said. A large gold bulldog hung on a heavy braided gold chain around his neck. 'I want you to watch and make sure this guy ain't cheatin' me.'
Jack took a hesitant step forward, then stopped.
Another tall black, bareheaded and grinning, moved aside to make room for Jack. 'Right here, man.'
Okay. Jack knew the sticks now. And from the size and number of the gold rings on their hands, business must be good lately.
'Winnin' ain't sinnin',' said the shaker at the center of the semicircle, a black ferret in a dark blue hoodie, hunched behind the makeshift cardboard table. In his mid-twenties, he was the old man of the crew, and its leader. 'I repeat, I never cheat, I'm just the one you gotta beat.'
Jack shrugged. Might as well join the crowd. This would be a good dose of reality to help banish the rakoshi remnants from last night.
He moved into the opening, bringing the number of marks up to three. To his right stood a Hispanic couple looking about thirty; the guy had a mullet haircut and wore a diamond earring; the woman had a round face and shiny black hair pulled back into a tight bun.
'Awright!' said Knitcap with a welcoming grin. 'Keep your eyes open now, yo.'
Jack smiled, accepting the welcome. Sure, they were glad to see him: fresh meat. Knitcap didn't want him as an extra pair of eyes watching the shaker; he wanted another sucker at the table. Jack slipped Vicky's book inside his shirt and watched the action.
He figured monte had to be five thousand years old, much older than its more common cousin, three-card monte. Somebody using three walnut shells and a dried pea probably had ripped off the pharaoh's workers during breaks between hauling stone blocks to the pyramids. The modern day version substituted white plastic Evian caps and a little handmade ball of rouge, but the object was the same: find a sucker and fleece him.
The shaker leaned over a piece of cardboard supported on two cardboard boxes. He clutched a thin stack of tens and twenties in his left hand, secured by his middle, ring and little fingers, leaving his thumb and index finger free to manipulate the caps and ball. His hands flew back and forth, crisscrossing over and under as his nimble fingers lifted and dropped the caps, skedaddling the little ball back and forth, a flash of red appearing and vanishing, but not so quickly you couldn't see where it came to rest.
That was the whole point, of course. Let the marks think they had a lock on the ball's location.
Jack ignored the ball and listened to the shaker's patter. That was where the real action was. That was how he communicated with his sticks.
'Watch till you're blind, no tricks will you find. I pay forty if you put down twenny. Forty down earns a hunnert, and believe me that's plenty. The ball goes around, it hides and it shows. It goes in, it goes out, till nobody knows. Forty's come to play, now cop me the money. You cry when I win, I laugh 'cause it's funny.'
Hidden in the chatter was a set of precise instructions to Knitcap.
Jack never played monte, but out of curiosity he'd made a practice of eavesdropping on shaker patter whenever he had the chance. They all used a similar code, and by careful watching and listening he'd managed to break it.
'Cop' told the stick to win, 'blow' to lose. 'Money' signaled the cap near his left hand where the shaker held his money, although Jack had heard other shakers call it 'rich.'