The World's Finest Mystery and Crime Stories: 5
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Synopsis
Editors Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg have scoured the world to present the biggest and most consistently entertaining collection of crime and suspense stories from across the globe. Their first-rate picks are a diverse and exciting mix of stories by big names, award winners, and fresh voices. The anthology will have the year's Edgar Award -winning stories, Silver Dagger Award-winning stories from the U.K., and spine-tingling tales from writers who might soon win those awards themselves.
This volume is a feast of more than thirty gripping tales from bestselling authors, including Doug Allyn, Jeff Abbott, Marion Arnott, Rhys Bowen, Liza Cody, Shelley Costa, Mat Coward, Judith Cutler, Catherine Dain, Carol Anne Davis, Brendan DuBois, Elizabeth Foxwell, David Edgerly Gates, Jeremiah Healy, Edward D. Hoch, Clark Howard, Robert Levinson, Dick Lochte, John Lutz, Antony Mann, Sharyn McCrumb, Joyce Carol Oates, Chris Rippen, Peter Robinson, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, and Marcia Talley. This is the anthology of choice for every fan of suspense fiction whether they love cozies, hardboiled, or any shade in between.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Release date: October 1, 2004
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates
Print pages: 464
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The World's Finest Mystery and Crime Stories: 5
Ed Gorman
Kristine Kathryn Rusch
COWBOY GRACE
Kristine Kathryn Rusch is an award-winning mystery, romance, science fiction, and fantasy writer. She has written many novels under various names, including Kristine Grayson for romance and Kris Nelscott for mystery. Her novels have made the bestseller lists--even in London--and have been published in fourteen countries and thirteen different languages. Her awards range from the Ellery Queen Readers Choice Award to the John W. Campbell Award. She is the only person in the history of the science fiction field to have won a Hugo Award for editing and a Hugo Award for fiction. Her short work has been reprinted in six Year's Best collections. Currently, she is writing a series in all four of her genres: the Retrieval Artist series in science fiction; the Smokey Dalton series in mystery (written as Kris Nelscott); the Fates series in romance (written as Kristine Grayson); and the upcoming Fantasy Life series in fantasy. We are very pleased to lead off this year's collection with "Cowboy Grace," her novella from the Silver Gryphon anthology published by Golden Gryphon Press, and which was nominated for the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award for best short fiction. How many of us have just wanted to take off, to leave our own lives behind and head out for the horizon? Grace, the quiet, understated woman in this story, does just that, with results she couldn't possibly have expected.
"Every woman tolerates misogyny," Alex said. She slid her empty beer glass across the bar, and tucked a strand of her auburn hair behind her ear. "How much depends on how old she is. The older she is the less she notices it. The more she expects it."
"Bullshit." Carole took a drag on her Virginia Slim, crossed her legs, and adjusted her skirt. "I don't tolerate misogyny."
"Maybe we should define the word," Grace said, moving to the other side of Carole. She wished her friend would realize how much the smoking irritated her. In fact, the entire night was beginning to irritate her. They were all avoiding the topic du jour: the tiny wound on Grace's left breast, stitches gone now, but the skin still raw and sore.
"Mis-ah-jenny," Carole said, as if Grace were stupid. "Hatred of women."
"From the Greek," Alex said. "Misos or hatred and gyne or women."
"Not," Carole said, waving her cigarette as if it were a baton, "misogamy, which is also from the Greek. Hatred of marriage. Hmm. Two male misos wrapped in one."
The bartender, a diminutive woman wearing a red-and-white cowgirl outfit, completewith fringe and gold buttons, snickered. She set down a napkin in front of Alex and gave her another beer.
"Compliments," she said, "of the men at the booth near the phone."
Alex looked. She always looked. She was tall, busty, and leggy, with a crooked nose thanks to an errant pitch Grace had thrown in the ninth grade, a long chin, and eyes the color of wine. Men couldn't get enough of her. When Alex rebuffed them, they slept with Carole and then talked to Grace.
The men in the booth near the phone looked like corporate types on a junket. Matching gray suits, different ties--all in a complementary shade of pink, red, or cranberry--matching haircuts (long on top, styled on the sides), and differing goofy grins.
"This is a girl bar," Alex said, shoving the glass back at the bartender. "We come here to diss men, not to meet them."
"Good call," Carole said, exhaling smoke into Grace's face. Grace agreed, not with the smoke or the rejection, but because she wanted time with her friends. Without male intervention of any kind.
"Maybe we should take a table," Grace said.
"Maybe." Carole crossed her legs again. Her mini was leather, which meant that night she felt like being on display. "Or maybe we should send drinks to the cutest men we see."
They scanned the bar. Happy Hour at the Oh Kaye Corral didn't change much from Friday to Friday. A jukebox in the corner, playing Patty Loveless. Cocktail waitresses in short skirts and ankle boots with big heels. Tin stars and Wild West art on the walls, unstained wood and checkered tablecloths adding to the effect. One day, when Grace had Alex's courage and Carole's gravelly voice, she wanted to walk in, belly up to the bar, slap her hand on its polished surface, and order whiskey straight up. She wanted someone to challenge her. She wanted to pull her six-gun and have a stare-down, then and there. Cowboy Grace, fastest gun in the West. Or at least in Racine on a rainy Friday night.
"I don't see cute," Alex said. "I see married, married, divorced, desperate, single, single, never-been-laid, and married."
Grace watched her make her assessment. Alex's expression never changed. Carole was looking at the men, apparently seeing whether or not she agreed.
Typically, she didn't.
"I dunno," she said, pulling on her cigarette. "Never-Been-Laid's kinda cute."
"So try him," Alex said. "But you'll have your own faithful puppy dog by this time next week, and a proposal of marriage within the month."
Carole grinned and slid off the stool. "Proposal of marriage in two weeks," she said. "I'm that good."
She stubbed out her cigarette, grabbed the tiny leather purse that matched the skirt, adjusted her silk blouse, and sashayed her way toward a table in the middle.
Grace finally saw Never-Been-Laid. He had soft brown eyes, and hair that needed trimming. He wore a shirt that accented his narrow shoulders, and he had a laptop open on the round table. He was alone. He had his feet tucked under the chair, crossed at the ankles. He wore dirty tennis shoes with his Gap khakis.
"Cute?" Grace said.
"Shhh," Alex said. "It's a door into the mind of Carole."
"One that should remain closed." Grace moved to Carole's stool. It was still warm.Grace shoved Carole's drink out of her way, grabbed her glass of wine, and coughed. The air still smelled of cigarette smoke.
Carole was leaning over the extra chair, giving Never-Been-Laid a view of her cleavage, and the guys at the booth by the phone a nice look at her ass, which they seemed to appreciate.
"Where the hell did that misogyny comment come from?" Grace asked.
Alex looked at her. "You want to get a booth?"
"Sure. Think Carole can find us?"
"I think Carole's going to be deflowering a computer geek and not caring what we're doing." Alex grabbed her drink, stood, and walked to a booth on the other side of the Corral. Dirty glasses from the last occupants were piled in the center, and the red-and-white checkered vinyl tablecloth was sticky.
They moved the glasses on the edge of the table and didn't touch the dollar tip, which had been pressed into a puddle of beer.
Grace set her wine down and slid onto her side. Alex did the same on the other side. Somehow they managed not to touch the tabletop at all.
"You remember my boss?" Alex asked as she adjusted the tiny fake gas lamp that hung on the wall beside the booth.
"Beanie Boy?"
She grinned. "Yeah."
"Never met him."
"Aren't you lucky."
Grace already knew that. She'd heard stories about Beanie Boy for the last year. They had started shortly after he was hired. Alex went to the company Halloween party and was startled to find her boss dressed as one of the Lollipop Kids from the Wizard of Oz, complete with striped shirt, oversized lollipop, and propeller beanie.
"Now what did he do?" Grace asked.
"Called me honey."
"Yeah?" Grace asked.
"And sweetie, and dollface, and sugar."
"Hasn't he been doing that for the last year?"
Alex glared at Grace. "It's getting worse."
"What's he doing, patting you on the butt?"
"If he did, I'd get him for harassment, and he knows it."
She had lowered her voice. Grace could barely hear her over Shania Twain.
"This morning one of our clients came in praising the last report. I wrote it."
"Didn't Beanie Boy give you credit?"
"Of course he did. He said, 'Our little Miss Rogers wrote it. Isn't she a doll?" Grace clutched her drink tighter. This didn't matter to her. Her biopsy was benign. She had called Alex and Carole and told them. They'd suggested coming here. So why weren't they offering a toast to her life? Why weren't they celebrating, really celebrating, instead of rerunning the same old conversation in the same old bar in the same old way. "What did the client do?"
"He agreed, of course."
"And?"
"And what?"
"Is that it? Didn't you speak up?"
"How could I? He was praising me, for God's sake."
Grace sighed and sipped her beer. Shania Twain's comment was that didn't impress her much. It didn't impress Grace much either, but she knew better than to say anything to Alex.
Grace looked toward the middle of the restaurant. Carole was standing behind Never-Been-Laid, her breasts pressed against his back, her ass on view to the world, her head over his shoulder peering at his computer screen.
Alex didn't follow her gaze like Grace had hoped. "If I were ten years younger, I'd tell Beanie Boy to shove it."
"If you were ten years younger, you wouldn't have a mortgage and a Mazda."
"Dignity shouldn't be cheaper than a paycheck," she said.
"So confront him."
"He doesn't think he's doing anything wrong. He treats all the women like that."
Grace sighed. They'd walked this road before. Job after job, boyfriend after boyfriend. Alex, for all her looks, was like Joe McCarthy protecting the world from the Red Menace: she saw antifemale everywhere, and most of it, she was convinced, was directed at her.
"You don't seem very sympathetic," Alex said.
She wasn't. She never had been. And with all she had been through in the last month, alone because her two best friends couldn't bear to talk about the Big C, the lock that was usually on Grace's mouth wasn't working.
"I'm not sympathetic," Grace said "I'm beginning to think you're a victim in search of a victimizer."
"That's not fair, Grace," Alex said. "We tolerate this stuff because we were raised in an antiwoman society. It's gotten better, but it's not perfect. You tell those Xers stuff like this and they shake their heads. Or the new ones. What're they calling themselves now? Generation Y? They were raised on Title IX. Hell, they pull off their shirts after winning soccer games. Imagine us doing that."
"My cousin got arrested in 1977 in Milwaukee on the day Elvis Presley died for playing volleyball," Grace said. Carole was actually rubbing herself on Never-Been-Laid. His face was the color of the red checks in the tablecloth.
"What?"
Grace turned to Alex. "My cousin. You know, Barbie? She got arrested playing volleyball."
"They didn't let girls play volleyball in Milwaukee?"
"It was ninety degrees, and she was playing with a group of guys. They pulled off their shirts because they were hot and sweating, so she did the same. She got arrested for indecent exposure."
"God," Alex said. "Did she go to jail?"
"Didn't even get her day in court."
"Everyone gets a day in court."
Grace shook her head. "The judge took one look at Barbie, who was really butch in those days, and said, 'I'm sick of you girls coming in here and arguing that you should have equal treatment for things that are clearly unequal. I do not establish Public Decency laws. You may show a bit of breast if you're feeding a child, otherwise you are in violation of--some damn code. Barbie used to quote the thing chapter and verse."
"Then what?" Alex asked.
"Then she got married, had a kid, and started wearing nail polish. She said it wasn't as much fun to show her breasts legally."
"See?" Alex said. "Misogyny."
Grace shrugged. "Society, Alex. Get used to it."
"That's the point of your story? We've been oppressed for a thousand years and you say, 'Get used to it'?"
"I say Brandi Chastain pulls off her shirt in front of millions--"
"Showing a sports bra."
"--and she doesn't get arrested. I say women head companies all the time. I say things are better now than they were when I was growing up, and I say the only ones who oppress us are ourselves."
"I say you're drunk."
Grace pointed at Carole, who was wet-kissing Never-Been-Laid, her arms wrapped around his neck and her legs wrapped around his waist. "She's drunk. I'm just speaking out."
"You never speak out."
Grace sighed. No one had picked up the glasses and she was tired of looking at that poor drowning dollar bill. There wasn't going to be any celebration. Everything was the same as it always was--at least to Alex and Carole. But Grace wanted something different.
She got up, threw a five next to the dollar, and picked up her purse.
"Tell me if Carole gets laid," Grace said, and left.
Outside, Grace stopped and took a deep breath of the humid, exhaust-filled air. She could hear the clang of glasses even in the parking lot and the rhythm of Mary Chapin Carpenter praising passionate kisses. Grace had had only one glass of wine and a lousy time, and she wondered why people said old friends were the best friends. They were supposed to raise toasts to her future, now restored. She'd even said the "b" word and Alex hadn't noticed. It was as if the cancer scare had happened to someone they didn't even know.
Grace was going to be forty years old in three weeks. Her two best friends were probably planning a version of the same party they had held for her when she turned thirty. A male stripper whose sweaty body repulsed her more than aroused her, too many black balloons, and aging jokes that hadn't been original the first time around.
Forty years old, an accountant with her own firm, no close family, no boyfriend, and a resident of the same town her whole life. The only time she left was to visit cousins out east, and for what? Obligation?
There was no joy left, if there'd ever been any joy at all.
She got into her sensible Ford Taurus, bought at a used-car lot for well under Blue Book, and drove west.
It wasn't until she reached Janesville that she started to call herself crazy, and it wasn't until she drove into Dubuque that she realized how little tied her to her hometown.
An apartment without even a cat to cozy up to, a business no more successful than a dozen others, and people who still saw her as a teenager wearing granny glasses, braces, and hair too long for her face. Grace, who was always there. Grace the steady, Grace the smart. Grace, who helped her friends out of their financial binds, who gave them a shoulder to cry on, and a degree of comfort because their lives weren't as empty as her own.
When she had told Alex and Carole that her mammogram had come back suspicious, they had looked away. When she told them that she had found a lump, they had looked frightened.
I can't imagine life without you, Gracie, Carole had whispered.
Imagine it now, Grace thought.
The dawn was breaking when she reached Cedar Rapids, and she wasn't really tired. But she was practical, had always been practical, and habits of a lifetime didn't change just because she had run away from home at the age of thirty-nine.
She got a hotel room and slept for eight hours, got up, had dinner in a nice steak place, went back to the room, and slept some more. When she woke up Sunday morning to bells from the Presbyterian Church across the street, she lay on her back and listened for a good minute before she realized they were playing "What a Friend We Have in Jesus." And she smiled then, because Jesus had been a better friend to her in recent years than Alex and Carole ever had.
At least Jesus didn't tell her his problems when she was praying about hers. If Jesus was self-absorbed he wasn't obvious about it. And he didn't seem to care that she hadn't been inside a church since August of 1978.
The room was chintz, the wallpaper and the bedspread matched, and the painting on the wall was chosen for its color not for its technique. Grace sat up and wondered what she was doing here, and thought about going home.
To nothing.
So she got in her car and followed the Interstate, through Des Moines, and Lincoln and Cheyenne, places she had only read about, places she had never seen. How could a woman live for forty years and not see the country of her birth? How could a woman do nothing except what she was supposed to from the day she was born until the day she died?
In Salt Lake City, she stared at the Mormon Tabernacle, all white against an azure sky. She sat in her car and watched a groundskeeper maintain the flowers, and remembered how it felt to take her doctor's call.
A lot of women have irregular mammograms, particularly at your age. The breast tissue is thicker, and often we get clouds.
Clouds.
There were fluffy clouds in the dry desert sky, but they were white and benign. Just like her lump had turned out to be. But for a hellish month, she had thought about that lump, feeling it when she woke out of a sound sleep, wondering if it presaged the beginning of the end. She had never felt her mortality like this before, not even when her mother, the only parent she had known, had died. Not even when she realized there was no one remaining of the generation that had once stood between her and death.
No one talked about these things. No one let her talk about them either. Not just Alex and Carole, but Michael, her second in command at work, or even her doctor, who kept assuring her that she was young and the odds were in her favor.
Young didn't matter if the cancer had spread through the lymph nodes. When she went in for the lumpectomy almost two weeks ago now, she had felt a curious kind of relief, as if the doctor had removed a tick that had burrowed under her skin. When he had called with the news that the lump was benign, she had thanked him calmly and continued with her day, filing corporate tax returns for a consulting firm.
No one had known the way she felt. Not relieved. No. It was more like she had received a reprieve.
The clouds above the Tabernacle helped calm her. She plugged in her cell phone for the first time in days and listened to the voice-mail messages, most of them from Michael, growing increasingly worried about where she was.
Have you forgotten the meeting with Boyd's? he'd asked on Monday.
Do you want me to file Charlie's extension? he'd demanded on Tuesday.
Where the hell are you? he cried on Wednesday and she knew, then, that it was okay to call him, that not even the business could bring her home.
Amazing how her training had prepared her for moments like these and she hadn't even known it. She had savings, lots of them, because she hadn't bought a house even though it had been prudent to do so. She had been waiting, apparently, for Mr. Right, or the family her mother had always wanted for her, the family that would never come. Her money was invested properly, and she could live off the interest if she so chose. She had just never chosen to before.
And if she didn't want to be found, she didn't have to be. She knew how to have the interest paid through offshore accounts so that no one could track it. She even knew a quick and almost legal way to change her name. Traceable, but she hadn't committed a crime. She didn't need to hide well, just well enough that a casual search wouldn't produce her.
Not that anyone would start a casual search. Once she sold the business, Michael would forget her, and Alex and Carole, even though they would gossip about her at Oh Kaye's every Friday night for the rest of their lives, wouldn't summon the energy to search.
She could almost hear them now: She met some guy, Carole would say. And he killed her, Alex would add, and then they would argue until last call, unless Carole found some man to entertain her, and Alex someone else to complain to. They would miss Grace only when they screwed up, when they needed a shoulder, when they couldn't stand being on their own. And even then, they probably wouldn't realize what it was they had lost.
Because it amused her, she had driven north to Boise, land of the white collar, to make her cell call to Michael. Her offer to him was simple: cash her out of the business and call it his own. She named a price, he dickered halfheartedly, she refused to negotiate. Within two days, he had wired the money to a blind money market account that she had often stored cash in for the firm.
She let the money sit there while she decided what to do with it. Then she went to Reno to change her name.
Reno had been a surprise. A beautiful city set between mountains like none she had ever seen. The air was dry, the downtown tacky, the people friendly. There were bookstores and slot machines and good restaurants. There were cheap houses and all-night casinos and lots of strange places. There was even history, of the Wild West kind.
For the first time in her life, Grace fell in love.
And to celebrate the occasion, she snuck into a quickie wedding chapel, found the marriage licenses, took one, copied down the name of the chapel, its permit number, and all the other pertinent information, and then returned to her car. There she checkedthe boxes, saying she had seen the driver's licenses and birth certificates of the people involved, including a fictitious man named Nathan Reinhart, and violà! she was married. She had a new name, a document the credit card companies would accept, and a new beginning all at the same time.
Using some of her personal savings, she bought a house with lots of windows and a view of the Sierras. In the mornings, light bathed her kitchen, and in the evenings, it caressed her living room. She had never seen light like this--clean and pure and crisp. She was beginning to understand why artists moved west to paint, why people used to exclaim about the way light changed everything.
The lack of humidity, of dense air pollution, made the air clearer. The elevation brought her closer to the sun.
She felt as if she were seeing everything for the very first time.
And hearing it, too. The house was silent, much more silent than an apartment, and the silence soothed her. She could listen to her television without worrying about the people in the apartment below, or play her stereo full blast without concern about a visit from the super.
There was a freedom to having her own space that she hadn't realized before, a freedom to living the way she wanted to live, without the rules of the past or the expectations she had grown up with.
And among those expectations was the idea that she had to be the strong one, the good one, the one on whose shoulder everyone else cried. She had no friends here, no one who needed her shoulder, and she had no one who expected her to be good.
Only herself.
Of course, in some things she was good. Habits of a lifetime died hard. She began researching the best way to invest Michael's lump-sum payment--and while she researched, she left the money alone. She kept her house clean and her lawn, such as it was in this high desert, immaculate. She got a new car and made sure it was spotless.
No one would find fault with her appearances, inside or out.
Not that she had anyone who was looking. She didn't have a boyfriend or a job or a hobby. She didn't have anything except herself.
She found herself drawn to the casinos, with their clinking slot machines, musical comeons, and bright lights. No matter how high tech the places had become, no matter how clean, how "family-oriented," they still had a shady feel.
Or perhaps that was her upbringing, in a state where gambling had been illegal until she was twenty-five, a state where her father used to play a friendly game of poker--even with his friends--with the curtains drawn.
Sin--no matter how sanitized--still had appeal in the brand-new century.
Of course, she was too sensible to gamble away her savings. The slots lost their appeal quickly, and when she sat down at the blackjack tables, she couldn't get past the feeling that she was frittering her money away for nothing.
But she liked the way the cards fell and how people concentrated--as if their very lives depended on this place--and she was good with numbers. One of the pit bosses mentioned that they were always short of poker dealers, so she took a class offered by one of the casinos. Within two months, she was snapping cards, raking pots, and wearing a uniform that made her feel like Carole on a bad night.
It only took a few weeks for her bosses to realize that Grace was a natural poker dealer. They gave her the busy shifts--Thursday through Sunday nights--and she spent her evenings playing the game of cowboys, fancy men, and whores. Finally, there was a bit of an Old West feel to her life, a bit of excitement, a sense of purpose.
When she got off at midnight, she would be too keyed-up to go home. She started bringing a change of clothes to work, and after her shift, she would go to the casino next door. It had a great bar upstairs--filled with brass, Victorian furnishings, and a real hardwood floor. She could get a sandwich and a beer. Finally, she felt like she was becoming the woman she wanted to be.
One night, a year after she had run away from home, a man sidled up next to her. He had long blond hair that curled against his shoulders. His face was tanned and lined, a bit too thin. He looked road-hardened-like a man who'd been outside too much, seen too much, worked in the sun too much. His hands were long, slender, and callused. He wore no rings, and his shirt cuffs were frayed at the edges.
He sat beside her in companionable silence for nearly an hour, while they both stared at CNN on the big screen over the bar, and then he said, "Just once I'd like to go someplace authentic."
His voice was cigarette growly, even though he didn't smoke, and he had a Southern accent that was soft as butter. She guessed Louisiana, but it might have been Tennessee or even northern Florida. She wasn't good at distinguishing Southern accents yet. She figured she would after another year or so of dealing cards.
"You should go up to Virginia City. There's a bar or two that looks real enough."
He snorted through his nose. "Tourist trap."
She shrugged. She'd thought it interesting--an entire historic city, preserved just like it had been when Mark Twain lived there. "Seems to me if you weren't a tourist there wouldn't be any other reason to go."
He shrugged and picked up a toothpick, rolling it in his fingers. She smiled to herself. A former smoker then, and a fidgeter.
"Reno's better than Vegas, at least," he said. "Casinos aren't family friendly yet."
"Except Circus Circus."
"Always been that way. But the rest. You get a sense that maybe it ain't all legal here."
She looked at him sideways. He was at least her age, his blue eyes sharp in his leathery face. "You like things that aren't legal?"
"Gambling's not something that should be made pretty, you know? It's about money, and money can either make you or destroy you."
She felt herself smile, remember what it was like to paw through receipts and tax returns, to make neat rows of figures about other people's money. "What's the saying?" she asked. "Money is like sex--"
"It doesn't matter unless you don't have any." To her surprise, he laughed. The sound was rich and warm, not at all like she had expected. The smile transformed his face into something almost handsome.
He tapped the toothpick on the polished bar, and asked, "You think that's true?"
She shrugged. "I suppose. Everyone's idea of what's enough differs, though."
"What's yours?" He turned toward her, smile gone now, eyes even sharper than they had been a moment ago. She suddenly felt as if she were on trial.
"My idea of what's enough?" she asked.
He nodded.
"I suppose enough is that I can live off the interest in the manner in which I've become accustomed. What's yours?"
A shadow crossed his eyes and he looked away from her. "Long as I've got a roof over my head, clothes on my back, and food in my mouth, I figure I'm rich enough."
"Sounds distinctly unAmerican to me," she said.
He looked at her sideways again. "I guess it does, don't it? Women figure a man should have some sort of ambition."
"Do you?"
"Have ambition?" He bent the toothpick between his fore and middle fingers. "Of course I do. It just ain't tied in with money, is all."
"I thought money and ambition went together."
"In most men's minds."
"But not yours?"
The toothpick broke. "Not anymore," he said.
Three nights later, he sat down at her table. He was wearing a denim shirt with silver snaps and jeans so faded that they looked as if they might shred around him. That, his hair, and his lean look reminded Grace of a movie gunslinger, the kind that cleaned a town up because it had to be done.
"Guess you don't make enough to live off the interest," he said to her as he sat down.
She raised her eyebrows. "Maybe I like people."
"Maybe you like games."
She smiled and dealt the cards. The table was full. She was dealing 3-6 Texas Hold 'Em and most of the players were locals. It was Monday night and they all looked pleased to have an unfamiliar face at the table.
If she had known him better she might have tipped him off. Instead she wanted to see how long his money would last.
He bought in for one hundred dollars, although she had seen at least five hundred in his wallet. He took the chips, and studied them for a moment.
He had three tells. He fidgeted with his chips when his cards were mediocre and he was thinking of bluffing. He bit his lower lip when he had nothing, and his eyes went dead flat when he had a winning hand.
He lost the first hundred in forty-five minutes, bought back in for another hundred, and managed to hold on to it until her shift ended shortly after midnight. He sat through dealer changes and the floating fortunes of his cards. When she returned from her last break, she found herself wondering if his tells were subconscious after all. They seemed deliberately calculated to let the professional poker players around him think that he was a rookie.
She said no
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