sitting at a cluster of 21 tables.
I introduced myself and got quickly into it. I gave them the basic lecture on the whiz mob and solicited a trio of volunteers to stick around after, so we could work up for tomorrow some examples of typical two-handed, three-handed and four-handed stall and tool routines. (The stall sets up the mark for the tool, who works the mark.) By the time my session with the whole group was over, and training the volunteers was accomplished, it was early evening.
I thanked the three men, who faded away, and went over to Quinn, who’d been watching me work with them.
“You know your stuff, boy,” he said, pretending to be impressed, a stogie in the corner of his mouth.
“Yes I do,” I said, “but I could use some advice.”
“Glad to be of help.”
“This pilferage problem you mentioned…”
He shrugged expansively. “Well, I suppose a little of that’s natural in a undertaking this size.”
“I suppose so. But Mr. Siegel has asked me to help him curtail that little problem. Now, there’s several ways I could go about that. I could stick around at night and wait and see if trucks come back and pick up things they’ve already delivered one day, to deliver again another. I could treat some of the delivered goods with a slow-drying dye, or a dry dye, to stain the hands of thieves. Or I might use your so-called non-apparent dye, the kind that doesn’t show up to the naked eye, where you need ultraviolet light? That technique works even after the hands are washed.”
Quinn’s eyes were narrowed to slits. His stogie hung like a limp dick.
“It’s possible I’ve even already marked some of the goods delivered today,” I said. “By one of those methods, or some other one.”
His mouth twitched a humorless smile. “Your point being?”
“My point is this. Going to all that trouble-surveillance, dyes, ultraviolet light-it’s such a bother. We’re here in the sun. This beautiful weather. Swimming pools, pretty girls. We should enjoy life.”
Quinn was smiling knowingly, cheeks fat and taut. “You mean, you figure there’s enough gravy to go around.”
“No. I tell you what I figure. I figure if anymore pilferage goes on, any at all, I figure to tell Siegel you’re responsible.”
His mouth dropped open and he lost his stogie. “What proof do you have…”
“None. But I know that this couldn’t be going on without your benign neglect, which is a commodity you’ll gladly sell for a price. It’s on the same shelf as your integrity, right above your self-respect. So, anyway-I’m putting you in charge of putting a stop to the theft.”
“And if I don’t?”
“I’ll turn you in to Siegel. I don’t need any proof, though I’m sure I’ll have some. But I got a hunch he’ll take my word for it. And then you’ll be fertilizing some rose garden out by that pool you love so dearly.”
“Listen to me, you little son of a bitch…”
“No. You listen to me. I’m going to check up on these various shipments of materials and supplies. At random. If I come across one missing towel, one missing dish, one missing spoon, you’re history, asshole. You’ll take the rap for all the stealing that’s been going on. And you’ll answer to Siegel.”
He looked hurt. “What have you got against me, anyway?”
“Fred Rubinski thinks you killed his partner.”
And now he laughed. A snort of a laugh. “Maybe I did. They say it was hit-and-run, but maybe I was drivin’. Maybe you shouldn’t oughta fuck with the likes of me.”
I poked him in his fat chest. “Maybe you shouldn’t oughta fuck with the likes of Bugsy Siegel.”
He swallowed thickly and finally nodded.
“I’ll take care of the situation,” he said.
“I know you will.”
And I walked outside, through the front doors of the Flamingo, out into a night lit up by blinding floodlights. The landscaping crew was still at it-they would work through the cool night, under the hot lights, dumping the truckloads of rich soil, terracing it, laying acres of lawn, planting entire gardens of exotic flowers and shrubs. Caterpillar tractors were pushing earth around; gravel trucks were spreading topsoil; trees, their roots bagged in burlap, were being eased down planks from the backs of flatbeds. Just before me, a small palm tree in a wheelbarrow was being guided past me by a young man in dungarees.
Ben Siegel showed him where to plant it.
I shook my head and smiled and, stepping over a tangle of electrical wiring, found my way to my Buick in the parking lot.
On the day after Christmas-a Thursday-Ben Siegel unwrapped his gift to the people and himself, flinging open the doors of the fabulous Flamingo to an apparently eager public. Even the colors of this glittering night suggested the Flamingo was Bugsy’s great big Christmas present to the world: forty acres of desert transformed into vivid, terraced green, imported shrubbery and trees back-lit by red and blue lights. Meanwhile, klieg lights stroked the sky, Hollywood-opening style, creating a veil of light that made the Flamingo, its Grand Opening banners fluttering, visible for miles. Lines of automobiles coming from both directions converged and jammed, while a couple of off- duty Las Vegas traffic cops (who just that afternoon had been moving along a prospector on a burro holding up the downtown flow) somehow coped, though obviously stunned by the size of the throng storming this castle on the sand.
The only opportunity Siegel had missed to further light up his big night was leaving the fountain, out front, dark. The imposing structure was designed to keep water tumbling twenty-four hours, with spotlights throwing color onto its waterfall.
I had been with Siegel that afternoon when he went to watch the fountain’s inaugural moments. But the grounds-keeper was down within the bowl of the thing on his knees, looking inside the rock-plaster-and-lumber affair.
“What the hell’s the deal?” Siegel asked him. “Are you ready to turn this baby on or not?”
“All set, except…”
“Except what?”
“Well, Mr. Siegel, we’re gonna have to flush out that damn cat first.”
“Cat?” Siegel stepped back. “Where in hell?”
“In the sump. Cat crawled in there last night and had kittens. We’ll just have to flood ’em outa there.”
“Listen,” Siegel said, pointing a finger like a gun, “you drown those cats and you’re out a job.”
“You’re the boss, Mr. Siegel,” the groundskeeper shrugged, “but you won’t have a fountain at the opening tonight.”
“Fuck the fountain. It can wait.”
As we walked away, I said, “You don’t look like the animal-lover type.”
“I hate cats. They make my skin crawl. But it’s bad luck for a gambler to touch a cat.”
I presumed this didn’t apply to “Tabby”-although I had a hunch he would’ve been better off if it had.
Despite the dry, dark fountain, Ben Siegel’s fabulous Flamingo was having a bang-up opening night-even if Jimmy Durante was heard to say, on his way to perform in the red velvet-draped showroom, “Da place looks like a cemetery wid slot machines!”
The Schnozola was referring to arrangements of fresh flowers littering the lobby and main casino, tributes from the movie industry and the underworld. Representatives of the former were due in for Saturday night’s “big gala Hollywood premiere”-posters around the Flamingo promised the presence of Veronica Lake, Ava Gardner, William Holden, Lucille Ball and a dozen others.
The only representative of the underworld, that I knew of, was a small dark man in his mid-forties, registered at the Last Frontier Hotel as George Lieberman.
“You know who that is?” Moey Sedway, bedecked in a tux, asked me smugly.
“Your brother?” I asked. Both men were tiny Jews with close-set eyes and prominent noses, though this other man had an air of quiet authority that Sedway could only hope for.