Crane sat down and, after the deal, watched the other players around the table look at their cards. This would be his first hand of Poker in eleven years.
At last, having noted some mannerisms that might, as he got to know the play of these men better, prove to be valuable tells, he curled up the corners of his five cards and looked at his hand.
Doctor Leaky had managed to tie the towel around himself, but halfway to his room he halted and sniffed the night breeze wafting in off the lake through the open porthole.
"There's one," he said.
Trumbill had stood up and started toward the old man, but Leroy waved at him to stop. "Just back from the dead," said Leroy, "he might sense something. What is it, Doctor?"
"On the hook," said Doctor Leaky.
"Oh, hell, you already told us about the hook. Will you—"
"One of 'em's on the hook, just now bit it, cards in his hands, blood in the water. The jacks will smell him. But now he's on the hook, you can smell him, too. You've got to find him before they do, and you've got to put him safe in the fishbowl."
Leroy stared at the old man, who was blinking and gaping around in imbecilic fright as if he expected enemies to swim up out of the depths of the lake. As a matter of fact, there
After several seconds Leroy turned to Trumbill. "Maybe you'd better do as he says."
One of the players had asked to be left out of the hand so that he could call his wife, and he stood now at the telephone in the open kitchen, holding the receiver tightly. He could clearly hear the voices of the players around the table behind him.
After a dozen rings a man's voice answered by repeating the number he'd dialed.
"Hi, honey," the player said nervously, "I'm gonna be late, I'm playing
"Hi, sweetie," said the voice in a mock-gay tone. "Poker, eh?" There came the clicking of an electric keyboard. "Got a lot in that list. You got any cross-references? A name?"
"Hey, come on, honey, I can't get mushy; this is the only phone here; these guys can
"Got you. Give me a category or something then, unless you want to listen to about a hundred names."
"That's your dad all over," said the player with a forced laugh. "
"Fishing and poker," said the voice. "To me that sounds like that poker champ in Gardena who goes sports fishing all the time in Acapulco; matter of fact, I've heard he can't catch anything." There were several measured clicks on the keyboard. "I'll know it when I see it … here we go, the guy's name is Obstadt, Neal."
"That's it, dear, and it's worth fifty thousand dollars." He glanced toward the game room and added, "The equity in that place, you know, after I added on that guest room and all—"
"And the aluminum siding and all the goddamn painted lawn squirrels, I know." There was more clicking. "There's only one under Obstadt for that kind of money—a poker player, last seen in '80, name of Scott 'Scarecrow' Smith, son of Ozzie Smith, last seen in '69. I see Obstadt has been distributing pictures throughout L.A. and San Diego and Berdoo and Vegas since January of '87. That's your basis?"
"Not really, it's an old picture. Mainly it was the name."
"He's playing as Scarecrow Smith?"
"Right."
"That looks like a score for you, honey. Build: tall … medium …"
"Uh-huh."
"Medium build. Weight: fat … average …"
"Okay."
"I hope the clothes are distinctive. Hair: black … brown … blond … gray …"
"Yup."
"Jacket—"
"No."
"Saves us time. Shirt: plaid …"
"Right. For this weather."
"Gotcha, flannel. Jeans with that?"
"Yeah. And what you'd figure."
"Say if it ain't sneakers. Okay. Is that enough?"
The player turned toward the table and looked at the other men. "It's enough. Listen, hon, you don't have to worry about that. We're at Chick Hurzer's house, on Washington in Venice."
"Was gonna be my next question."
"Okay, he's in the book; I don't need the house address. What's your code number?"
"Four-six-double-three-two-oh."
The voice repeated it slowly, saying "zero" instead of "oh." "That's correct?"
"Yeah, that's it."
The player could hear rapid clicking now. "I got you in," the voice said. "Call the payment number a week from now. If it checks out to be the right guy, you got forty-five thousand bucks coming."