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The Outpost

Page 6

by Mike Resnick


  “Then I guess I’ll tell you,” he said.

  The Night Bet-a-World O’Grady Met High Stakes Eddie

  For almost five years (said O’Grady) people had been trying to arrange a game between me and High Stakes Eddie, who was supposed to be the best gambler in the Belladonna Cluster. At one point I even had a couple of banks willing to back me in a one-on-one poker game with him, and I heard tell he had a Korbelian prince on the line to pick up his tab if he lost to me.

  Still, we almost didn’t get together at all. He spent nearly three months breaking an upstart called the Lower Volta Flash in a nightly game, and then when he was ready, I found myself embroiled in a winner-take-all game for the ownership of the Willoughby system that went on for the better part of ten weeks.

  Then one day I got a hand-delivered engraved invitation that read as follows:

  Bet-a-World O’Grady is cordially invited

  to the gaming world of Monte Carlo IV as

  the guest of High Stakes Eddie Strongbow.

  All expenses except for gambling losses

  will be paid by his host.

  “Will you be coming back with me, sir?” asked the young woman who had delivered it.

  “Yeah, why not?” I said, making up my mind on the spot. “If we’re going to decide once and for all who’s the best, I might as well let your boss pay for my transportation and drinks.”

  “He was hoping you’d feel that way, sir,” she replied.

  “By the way, where the hell is Monte Carlo IV?” I asked.

  “Out by the Lesser Magellenic Cloud,” was the answer. “Mr. Strongbow won the entire Cromwell system on a single flip of a coin last year, and officially renamed it about two months ago.” She paused. “May I help you pack?”

  I patted the pocket that held my wallet, and the one that held my lucky dice.

  “I’ve got everything I need,” I announced.

  “You might want a change of clothes,” she suggested.

  “I’ll buy some new clothes on Monte Carlo IV and charge them to your boss.”

  She shrugged and took me to her ship. The crew consisted of three other women in addition to the one who’d delivered the invite, and they called themselves the Queens of Clubs, Diamonds, Hearts and Spades, though truth to tell I never could tell which was which. I think they changed names every few hours just to keep me confused.

  It was a long flight to the Monte Carlo system, so I went into DeepSleep a few hours into the trip and had them wake me when we were about an hour from our destination. I’m always famished when I come out of DeepSleep, and that always surprises me, because as often as they explain it to me, I keep forgetting that my systems don’t actually stop, but just slow down to a crawl—and when you haven’t eaten in a few days, even with your metabolism working at one percent speed, you’re still hungry.

  By the time I finished eating, we’d touched down, and I was transported to a penthouse suite atop the biggest, glitziest hotel on the planet, which befitted a high roller like myself. There were maybe half a dozen bedrooms, and three of them came equipped with their own women, and there were eight or nine bathrooms and a bunch of fireplaces and holo screens and two well-stocked bars and a robot bartender (but not as friendly as Reggie) and even a library filled with real honest-to-goodness books rather than tapes and disks and cubes. I’d been in a few nicer suites in my time, but I had to admit that it was pretty impressive for as far outside of the Monarchy as it was.

  I’d just finished looking around and introducing myself to the three women when the Queen of Hearts (or maybe it was Diamonds) told me that my host was waiting for me downstairs. I bade the other ladies goodnight and followed her. There was a huge, elegant casino on the ground floor. It not only had the usual human and alien games, but it had real cards, real dice, and real live dealers and pit bosses—none of those computerized holographs that you see on worlds like New Vegas and Little Monaco. We walked right through the place without slowing down, and then came to a studded metal door that had guards the size of Catastrophe Baker standing on each side of it.

  “This is Mr. Strongbow’s private gaming room,” explained the Queen of Hearts as they opened the door for us. “It is reserved for himself and his personal guests.”

  High Stakes Eddie was sitting on a leather chair at the far side of a felt-covered mahogany table, a drink in front of him, a smokeless Brandeis VII cigar in his left hand. He was smaller than I’d expected, bald as a billiard ball, and wearing an outfit that couldn’t make up its mind what it wanted to be. One moment it looked like a toga, then it changed into a military uniform, then a Bendorian tuxedo (you ever see one of those things? The sons of bitches glow in the dark!), and then back to a toga.

  His outfit may have been the height of fashion, but his room was an anachronism. The chairs didn’t adjust to your body, they actually rested on the floor, and the lights were in the ceiling instead of floating over your right shoulder. Still, it was his place to decorate any way he wanted. “Bet-a-World O’Grady!” he said with a smile. “You can’t imagine how much I’ve looked forward to making your acquaintance. There were times when I truly thought we’d never meet.”

  “I always assumed that we’d get together sooner or later,” I replied, walking forward and shaking his hand. “So when I got your kind invitation, I decided it might as well be sooner.”

  “Your presence honors my poor establishment,” he said. “I trust you will join me in a game or two of chance.”

  “That’s what I’m here for,” I said.

  “Excellent!”!” he said. “A number of local dignitaries have expressed interest in watching us compete. Would you have any objection to—?”

  “Bring ’em in,” I said. “I like crowds.”

  “A gentleman as well as a gambler,” enthused High Stakes Eddie. “I really am delighted that you agreed to come.”

  He waved his hand over a small cube on the table, the door dilated, and half a dozen men and women entered the room. Eddie handled the introductions: one was a mayor, another a general, a third was the planetary governor, and I remember that one large, fat woman was the system’s greatest opera diva.

  They took their seats, and High Stakes Eddie directed them to be silent once play began or run the certain risk of being unceremoniously thrown out.

  The woman who was the Queen of Clubs that night brought in a dozen unopened decks of cards, half a dozen pairs of brand new dice, and directed a burly young man to set up a roulette wheel at the far end of the huge table.

  “What’s your choice, Bet-a-World O’Grady?” asked High Stakes Eddie.

  “I’ve always been partial to poker,” I admitted.

  “Then poker it is,” he said. “You mind playing with real cards? I hate computers.”

  “Suits me,” I answered.

  He tossed a deck to me and waited for me to open it. I inspected the cards, and satisfied myself that it was an honest deck.

  “They look good to me,” I announced. “Shall we begin?”

  “Name it.”

  “Five-card stud.”

  “Stakes?” he asked.

  “Whatever you want.”

  “How’s about a million credits to ante, and you can only bet in multiples of five million,” he said. “Sky’s the limit.”

  There was a sharp collective intake of breath among our six spectators.

  “I accept,” I said. Then I paused. “I hope my credit’s good here.”

  “Up to twenty billion,” he replied. “After that I’ll need collateral.”

  “Fair enough,” I said. “Cut?”

  He cut the cards, and I started dealing.

  I won the first hand with jacks and sixes, he won the next with three kings, and then I won four in a row with a straight, a full house, and a couple of nothings that were higher than his nothings. When the dust settled, I was up almost two hundred million credits.

  “You’re as good as they say,” said High Stakes Eddie, taking a sip of his drink
. “Shall we try a little draw now?”

  “It’s your deal,” I acquiesced.

  We split the next six hands, and pretty much split the pots as well. Then I won three in a row, and I was suddenly up half a billion.

  “Let’s make it a little more exciting,” he suggested

  “I’m open to suggestions,” I replied.

  “Let’s cut the cards for a billion.”

  I nodded, ignored another audible gasp from the guests, reached out, and cut to a nine. He smiled, flexed his fingers, reached for the remaining cards, and cut to a six.

  “How about two billion this time?” he said.

  “And then four billion, and then eight billion, and then sixteen billion, until you finally win one?” I said. “That’s not gambling,” I said. “That’s mathematical inevitability.”

  “All right,” he said, a little heatedly. “What would you rather do?”

  “Do you really want to make it more exciting?” I asked.

  He looked around the room and then nodded, as I knew he would. There was no way he was going to lose face in front of his friends.

  “How much money have you got on hand here?” I asked.

  “In this room?”

  “In the whole casino.”

  He did a quick calculation in his head. “About eighteen billion credits.”

  “And you own the Monte Carlo system, right?”

  “All fourteen planets.”

  “Including mining rights?”

  “Of course.”

  “Okay,” I said. “That’s your half of the bet. For my half, I’ll put up all the money I’ve won here, plus fifteen billion I’ve got on deposit at the Bank of Deluros, and the deed to all nine planets in the Taniguchi system. They discovered diamonds in the asteroid belt there last month.”

  “What’s the bet?” he said, eyeing me warily.

  “One hand of face-up draw, winner take all.”

  “Face-up draw?” he repeated. “I never heard of it.”

  “Nothing to it,” I said. “We turn all the cards face-up, and instead of dealing, we each choose five cards. Then we can discard up to four cards and draw four more. It’s just draw poker with everything face-up and out in the open.”

  “We’ll tie. You’ll deal yourself a royal flush and stand pat and I’ll do the same.”

  “Tell you what,” I said. “I’ll stipulate that you win all ties. My cards have to have you beat, not just tied, in order for me to win.”

  “Say that again.”

  I repeated it.

  “And there’s no suit preference like in bridge?” he persisted. “A three of clubs is as high as a three of spades?”

  “Right,” I said. “And I’ll tell you what else: I’ll go first, so you can have the advantage of seeing what I do before you commit yourself.”

  Well, he spent the better part of five minutes asking me all kinds of questions, but it was just like I told him, and finally he and I signed a document agreeing to the terms I had outlined.

  And that’s how I broke the bank at Monte Carlo.

  “Just a minute!”!” said Three-Gun Max heatedly. “What kind of fools do you take us for?”

  “The usual kind,” answered O’Grady with a smug smile.

  “There’s no way you can win that bet!”

  “Don’t take my word for it,” said O’Grady. “Who’s the brightest man in the Outpost?”

  “Einstein.”

  “Ask him.”

  “He’s blind, deaf, and mute,” said Max. “And if that ain’t enough, he’s never played poker in his life.”

  “Just a minute,” said Big Red. He turned to me. “Tomahawk, can you have Reggie transmit all the rules to the little computer Einstein always keeps in his hand?”

  “No reason why not,” I replied.

  “It’ll take him hours just to learn the rudiments of the game,” protested Max.

  “You don’t know Einstein,” said Big Red confidently.

  I gave Reggie his instructions, and he started whirring and humming, and so did Einstein’s machine, which then started tapping out some incomprehensible code on the palm of his left hand. After about twenty seconds Einstein smiled, the first time his facial expression had changed since he’d shown up a few months ago, and he tapped a message onto his computer’s sensors.

  Reggie whirred again and then spoke in his dull monotone voice. “Einstein says O’Grady can’t lose.”

  “Well, if Einstein ain’t the stupidest genius on the Frontier, I sure don’t know who’s running ahead of him!” exclaimed Max.

  “You’re absolutely certain that Einstein and I are wrong, are you?” asked O’Grady.

  “Damned right.”

  “Are you willing to bet a hundred credits on it?”

  “Real cards, just like you used on Monte Carlo?”

  “Right.”

  “Fresh deck, same rules?”

  “Fresh deck, same rules,” agreed O’Grady.

  Max pulled a hundred-credit note out of his pocket and tossed it onto his table. “You’re on.”

  O’Grady sat down opposite him, and I broke open a new deck and brought it over to them.

  “You go first,” said Max.

  “I know.”

  “And remember: I win all ties.”

  O’Grady spread the deck out, face-up, so that we could see all 52 cards. I figured he’d pull himself a royal flush, or at least four aces. Instead he started sorting through them until he had pulled out all four tens.

  Then he turned to Sahara del Rio, who was staring over his shoulder. “You pick my last card, my dear.”

  “But I don’t know the rules of the game,” she protested.

  “It doesn’t matter,” O’Grady assured her. “Just reach out and pick one.”

  She shrugged, ran her hand over the cards, and finally picked a deuce of clubs.

  “Thank you, my dear,” said O’Grady. He looked across the table at Max. “Your turn.”

  Max reached out and promptly picked up all four aces and a king.

  “Very impressive,” said O’Grady. “Four bullets.”

  “Let’s see you beat that,” said Max cockily.

  “I shall endeavor to,” promised O’Grady. “Time to discard and draw now, right?”

  “Go ahead.”

  O’Grady dumped three tens and the deuce, then pulled four cards and built himself a straight flush to the ten.

  “Your turn again, Max,” he said.

  Max stared at his hand, and then at O’Grady’s, and then at his again.

  “Shit!” he bellowed.

  “You see?” said O’Grady. “My straight flush beats your four aces, and since all the tens are gone, not only can’t you create a royal flush, but the highest straight flush you can build will be nine-high.”

  “What if I’d started with a straight flush instead of four aces?” asked Max.

  “Same result. You can’t create one that goes any higher than the nine.”

  “Just a minute,” said Hellfire Van Winkle. “Suppose he’d picked four nines. You can’t stand pat, because he can draw four aces or a straight flush to beat your four tens. What do you do then?”

  “Discard three tens and the deuce and build a royal flush,” answered O’Grady. “He can’t match it, because all the tens are gone.” He reached out, picked up the hundred-credit note, folded it in half, and slipped it into a pocket. “An inexpensive lesson, especially considering how often I’m sure each of you is going to use it once you leave the Outpost.” Suddenly he smiled. “Just don’t ever try it in the vicinity of Monte Carlo IV … they don’t have much of a sense of humor about it out that way.”

  “You got any other scams you want to tell us about?” asked Max.

  “Not for a lousy hundred credits,” said O’Grady. He looked over and saw Willie the Bard scribbling away. “Hey, you’d better not be writing all this down!”

  “That’s the Bard,” I said. “He writes everything down.”

 
“He writes everything?” repeated Catastrophe Baker.

  “Yeah,” I said. “He’s our historian. Someday he’ll make you famous.”

  “I already got a little more fame than I can handle,” protested Baker.

  “And I don’t want millions of people reading about what I did on Monte Carlo,” chimed in O’Grady. “I don’t mind telling a handful of people out here at the edge of nowhere, but I don’t want it written up in a book. I might want to use it again sometime.”

  “Not to worry,” said the Bard. “It’ll be twenty, maybe thirty years before I’m ready to publish.”

  “How long have you been working on this masterpiece?” asked Baker.

  “Since Tomahawk opened for business.”

  “And how many pages have you written?”

  “I lost count years ago. But after pruning it down, I’ve kept about four thousand.”

  “You halfway done yet?”

  “Probably not.”

  Baker smiled. “Who’s gonna publish this thing?”

  “That’s not my problem,” answered the Bard with an unconcerned shrug. “My job is to write it.”

  “I never did understand artists.”

  “Hey, we make as much sense as anyone,” put in Little Mike Picasso. “And maybe a little more than most.”

  “Hell, maybe you do,” admitted Baker. “Truth to tell, I’ve only known one real artist.”

  “A painter?” asked Little Mike.

  Baker shook his head. “An opera singer. Ever hear of Melody Duva?”

  “Can’t say that I have.”

  “The Diva Duva,” said Nicodemus Mayflower admiringly. “I’ve seen a couple of her holos. She had a gorgeous voice. Whatever happened to her?”

  “She was the victim of an unhappy collision of art and science,” answered Catastrophe Baker.

  “Sounds like a story coming up,” suggested the Reverend Billy Karma.

  “Not much to tell,” said Baker. “She was built like an opera singer, which is to say she weighed in at maybe 350 pounds. She loved low-gravity worlds, where she could move with the grace of a dancer. Last time she ever performed was on New Samarkand, in a revival of Tosca.”

  “I’ve seen the holo.”

 

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