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Heads Up


  HEADS UP

  A Cold Poker Gang Mystery

  DEAN WESLEY SMITH

  CONTENTS

  Author’s Note

  Part I

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Part II

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Part III

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Ring Game

  Newsletter sign-up

  Also by Dean Wesley Smith

  About the Author

  Copyright Information

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  The characters in this book are fictional and any similarity to any person, alive or dead, is purely accidental. This is a work of fiction.

  Heads Up:

  A form of poker played between only two players.

  PART ONE

  The Find

  CHAPTER ONE

  January 17th, 2019

  Las Vegas, Nevada

  The old Hotel Nevada on Main Street in downtown Las Vegas seemed to be in hiding, almost ashamed to be seen. Only its seven-story oblong tower and a walled-off portion of the old casino was left standing. All the big Nevada-shaped signs with big “N” logos that used to cover the Main Street corner were gone, as well as the huge neon “Nevada” sign that had run across the top of the building proudly telling the world the Hotel Nevada existed.

  Every entry on the ground floor had been walled in like a bad horror movie and painted a neutral light-gold color to match exactly the paint color of the entire building. Those old entrances looked as if they had always been walls.

  Large, bright-colored billboards along street level now advertised restaurants, steaks, drinks, and gambling at the nearby Golden Nugget, the current owner of the old hotel. Those signs seemed to mock the remains of Hotel Nevada like memories of its past.

  The ground floor casino area that used to front Main Street was now mostly a Golden Gate Casino parking lot, not even a bump in the pavement left of where millions were won and lost.

  Driving past on Main Street, unless you knew the empty building used to be a major downtown Las Vegas casino, you would never notice it.

  No one ever did.

  It sat lost.

  Hidden in plain sight.

  All the room windows from the second floor up still had their drapes and looked like people might actually be in those rooms or sitting on the balconies of the seven-floor building.

  No one ever was.

  Some days a few of the windows were opened to air the floors out, causing the curtains to blow like ghosts. But there was no way at all into the building besides a heavy steel security door hidden in an alley near a large parking garage.

  The Hotel Nevada sat empty.

  Alone.

  And completely ignored by everyone.

  Recently retired Detective Benson Cavanaugh had gone past the old hotel a hundred times since it had been shuttered in 2012 and never gave the place a second thought.

  At least not until tonight.

  Now he held a red cold-case file with a picture of the old hotel before it was shuttered and what the hotel had looked like a few years ago, which is what it looked like still today. Why someone had thought to take a picture of the ghost hotel was beyond him.

  Around Cavanaugh in the basement game room, fifteen or more retired detectives were talking, laughing, or staring at their cards. Two large poker tables filled the game room of retired detectives Bayard Lott and Julia Rogers. A polished wooden bar from an old hotel filled one wall, and recessed lighting over the bar and the poker tables kept the room bright and yet homey-looking.

  The room was climate controlled and even with that many old people in it, the air didn’t feel stuffy or warm. And no one smoked, so the air was breathable.

  Cavanaugh had fallen in love with the room the moment he had come down the stairs. One of those rooms you wish you had in your own home, but never could afford or find the time to put in.

  Bowls of chips and M&Ms were scattered around the room and most everyone had a drink of some sort in front of them, a lot of it soda or water. These were all old detectives. Drinking alcohol, other than a beer or two, for most of them was a thing long in their past.

  Cavanaugh felt the same way. He couldn’t remember the last time he had had a drink past a small glass of wine at a good dinner.

  Hell, he couldn’t remember the last time he had gone out for a good dinner, actually.

  The entire house had a faint smell of KFC. Cavanaugh had heard that Lott and Julia were KFC fans, but hadn’t believed it until coming through the front door. That smell was easy to identify and damned hard to ignore.

  Now he wished he would have eaten before coming. Chips just weren’t going to hold him for long.

  Cavanaugh could tell where there used to be a large-screen television on one wall, but Lott had told him it had been removed along with a couch and chair to make room for the second poker table as the Cold Poker Gang Task Force got bigger and more retired detectives wanted to actually play some poker each week.

  Cavanaugh was the newest member of the task force. In fact, tonight was his first time at this regular Tuesday night meeting after just retiring from active duty and the tons of paperwork that went along with being a modern detective.

  He had hated the paperwork. He knew of no detective who loved it, actually. But he flat loved the idea that on this special task force all they did was investigate and leave the paperwork to the active detectives when something was found.

  Detective heaven as far as Cavanaugh was concerned.

  Now, looking around at the room of retired detectives, he understood why they called this task force the Cold Poker Gang. Many of them actually played poker once a week and talked about the cold cases they were working on.

  And Cavanaugh knew from his recent days as an active detective that this group closed a lot of cold cases and was respected throughout the city. And the Chief of Police backed the group completely while at the same time making sure it stayed out of the limelight.

  Lott, the owner of this house, was sitting at one table, looking very serious at the play going on in front of him. Julia, his wife and partner, stood on the other side of the second table laughing with two other detectives. Lott and Julia had become a couple while starting this cold case task force. They and Retired Detective Andor Williams now ran it.

  Andor actually did all the work connecting the task force with the Chief of Police and getting the cold cases to hand out. If there was a problem or question, Cavanaugh was supposed to immediately contact Andor.

  Cavanaugh had been standing at the bar for a good thirty minutes, just trying to soak in everything after the wonderful welcome he had gotten when he arrived. He felt like he belonged here.

  Then, out of the blue, Andor, a short square man with wide shoulders and a bald head, had handed an official-looking red case file to Cavanaugh.

  Cavanaugh would have sworn it was an original case file if not for the large red word “copy” stenciled on the cover.

  “Glance at this file and I’ll be right back,” Andor had said, then turned away.

  Andor was the oldest of the active Cold Poker Gang at seventy-three, but you could never tell he was that old. His energy was amazing and he walked anywhere like he would plow through a person in his way. Cavanaugh had heard of Andor and Lott solving some of the city’s toughest cases back in the day when they were active partners.

  Most of the detectives in the task force were in their late fifties and early sixties. Cavanaugh had retired at sixty-two with full benefits and health care, but he doubted he would have done that without knowing he could join this task force when he did.

  Basically work was all he did in his life, all he had, and he loved it.

  Cavanaugh knew most of the detectives in the room, if not personally, then by their fantastic reputations. Even though he felt welcome, he wasn’t sure he belonged here with this caliber of detectives, but Lott and Julia and Andor had said he did, so Cavanaugh was going to give it a try.

  Besides, he had nothing else to do. If he could solve cases working as a detective and not have to do the paperwork, he figured he didn’t have much to lose.

  But the case that Andor had handed him looked damn near impossible. A simple missing person’s case of a Myra Stemple, age 23 when last seen coming out of a hotel on the Strip in 2009.

  And even stranger was that her shoes, clothes, and purse, still holding over three hundred in cash, had been found three years later hidden in the back of a closet in the Hotel Nevada when it was being shuttered.

  How the hell did that stuff get there? And how had it remained hidden for three years? Or had it just been put there a few days before? No way of knowing.

  Or knowing what had happened to Myra.

  That was clearly what Andor wanted Cavanaugh to find out.

  Cavanaugh found it amazing those clothes and personal items had even been connected to a three-year-old missing person’s case. Someone had been on the ball to manage that much.

  Clearly the detectives on the case had done as much as they could, running into blank walls all the way along.

  The case had been cold since 2012, but twice a year Myra Stemple’s brother, a local attorney, went into the main station and talked to the detectives about the progress on his sister’s case. More than likely his doing that got the case here to this task force.

  At that moment Andor came back leading another detective who had been talking to Julia earlier. Cavanaugh recognized the new detective from seeing her regularly in the Main Street Station Casino buffet. He had had no idea until tonight she was a detective.

  “Cavanaugh,” Andor said, “meet Retired Detective Bonnie State.”

  “Great meeting you,” Bonnie said, smiling.

  Cavanaugh somehow managed to say, “Nice meeting you.”

  Up close, Bonnie was one of the most attractive women he had seen in a long time. She had short brown hair, rich brown eyes, and a long face that looked like it smiled a lot. She was fairly tall, maybe only a few inches shorter than his six-two and she looked trim, like she worked out a lot, maybe even as a runner.

  She had on jeans, tennis shoes, and a white blouse under a light tan blazer. He had no idea how old she was since her face showed very few wrinkles, but she was clearly old enough to be a retired detective.

  And there seemed to be a force of energy around her. He liked that.

  He reached out his hand and she shook it, her grip firm. She looked directly at him at that moment, then said, “Have we met?”

  He laughed as he let go of her hand, even though a part of him didn’t want to. “Trust me, I would have remembered, even at this advanced age.”

  He didn’t say anything about seeing her a number of times in the buffet.

  She laughed as well and blushed slightly.

  Her laugh was wonderful, with a slight force to it that he had a hunch went with her energy and was part of her personality.

  “Since you two are the new kids on the block,” Andor said.

  “I love it when someone calls me a new kid,” Cavanaugh said, interrupting Andor.

  Bonnie laughed and said, “Yeah, me too. Makes me feel all young and tingly again.”

  Cavanaugh just nodded. “Ah, to be young and tingly. Those were the good old days.”

  “Sure do miss the young part,” Bonnie said.

  “The tingly part wasn’t bad either.”

  Andor just went on ignoring them both, “You two are now partners.”

  That statement took all the fun out of the air like a bad fart in a crowded elevator.

  “I work alone,” Cavanaugh said, suddenly feeling a little panicked.

  No, scratch that. A lot panicked.

  “So have I,” Bonnie said. “Last ten years.”

  “Not on this task force,” Andor said, smiling at both of them. “We work in teams of two or three, three being better since no telling when one of us is going to fall and break a hip. So get used to it.”

  Andor tapped the case file Cavanaugh had been looking at. “Sorry about that one right off. Someone had to take it. You two were just unlucky enough on the draw is all.”

  With that Andor turned and walked away, leaving the two of them standing there side-by-side, their mouths open.

  Cavanaugh couldn’t believe it. Twelve years as a detective working alone and now that he was retired, he ended up with a partner.

  This did not bode well at all.

  CHAPTER TWO

  January 17th, 2019

  Las Vegas, Nevada

  Retired Detective Bonnie State loved the very idea of the Cold Poker Gang task force. And the moment she took early retirement, she got in touch with Andor about joining. He and Lott and Julia were all so welcoming, she couldn’t believe it. They made her feel like she belonged as part of the group.

  So she first had taken a trip to Hawaii for two weeks to celebrate retiring, and now was back with a slight suntan ready to go on this, her first night.

  And she loved where the task force met, playing poker in what was basically a basement family game room, remodeled to hold a bar and two poker tables, but still just a family game room that she had to go through Lott and Julia’s living room to get to. Doing that kept the feel of the task force really informal and clearly fun, even though over the last few years this task force had uncovered and solved some pretty major crimes and who knew how many small ones.

  All she knew for a fact was that the Las Vegas Chief of Police was completely behind this task force and let them all wear their old badges and guns. And only active detectives had to do the paperwork on anything the task force found.

  Over the last three years before she retired, she had gotten some credit for a Cold Poker Gang solution or two, even though she had taken almost no part in the case as an active detective. The price she paid for the credit was that she got to do all the paperwork.

  Seems the task force wanted to stay out of the spotlight as much as possible. Most of the population of Las Vegas didn’t even know this existed. She really liked that attitude. Egos in here seemed to be at low ebb except when it came to hands of poker.

  She looked around at the fifteen or so retired detectives laughing, talking, and playing cards. Everyone was enjoying themselves and that felt wonderful to her.

  It felt like she had found a new home.

  She was going to look forward to these Tuesday meetings even though she seldom played poker of any type. From what she had seen so far, the retired detectives at the table were very serious about their games. She wouldn’t mind staying on the sidelines at all, at least until she got a little practice.

  And maybe a few lessons.

  Now Andor had asked her to come with him and they headed between the two tables to the bar where a tall, solid man stood staring at a file. He had a bald head and had on a seventies-style sports coat that looked slightly too large and had seen some wear. She had seen his type before. He liked to hide behind a costume and the wrinkled coat was his costume.

  But his new and expensive running shoes told her a different story, as well as his new jeans.

  When Andor introduced her to Cavanaugh, she had two emotions seemingly at the same time. First, his green eyes were wonderful, as was his face and smile. And second, she knew of him by reputation as one of the best detectives working in the valley and felt slightly overwhelmed finally getting to meet him.

  Then Andor told them they were going to be partners and walked away, even though both of them complained.

  She hadn’t worked with a partner since her former partner got shot and had to leave the force on disability ten years before. She liked setting her own pace, using a small team she had set up around her to get things done. A partner, even someone as experienced as Cavanaugh, would just get in her way.

  And clearly Cavanaugh felt the same way about her. Oh, this was going to be fun.

  Finally he sighed and turned to her. “Detective State, I am really sorry about this.”

 

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