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Page 2 of The Picasso Heist

“FIVE, RED,” I whisper just loud enough so Skip can hear me over the cheering crowd.

Five as in five hundred dollars. Red as in the Russian. I never bet during the first few games of a match when the two players are feeling each other out. But once they settle into the first set, I pounce.

Red’s opponent is Green, a Brazilian. Flag colors are faster than names.

Lucas, snug in his umpire chair, maneuvers his long arm like a crane and taps his touch screen right as I relay the bet, but I’ve beat him by a breath. As he announces the score I hear back from Skip. “In,” says my brother. He got the bet in before the odds changed.

We’ve got five hundred bucks on Red, the Russian player, to win the game. He’s now ahead, 40–30, but our payoff reflects the longer odds of 30–30. Just like that, we’ve got a better chance of winning with a bigger payout.

Is it guaranteed? No. Green could win the next point, taking it to deuce, then win two more points in a row after that to take the game.

But the chances of that happening are not nearly as good as the chances of Red prevailing.

Gambling is about one thing and one thing only: Leverage. You have it or you don’t.

We have it. Red wins the game and our account gets credited $1,060—$500 back for the initial wager, plus $560 profit. And now it’s on to the next game and the next bet. That is, until I hear the voice to my right.

“Good match so far,” the man says, leaning slightly toward me. “Very entertaining, no?” He’s got a thick Eastern European accent. His breath reeks of cigarettes, two packs a day.

I know he wasn’t sitting there a minute ago. Now he is. That’s what I get for being so focused on placing my bet in time.

“Yeah. It’s pretty good tennis,” I answer, staring straight ahead. I don’t look at him.

“Who are you rooting for?” he asks.

It’s a harmless question but I know this guy’s anything but harmless. He’s not trying to be menacing. He doesn’t have to try. It clearly comes naturally. Keep it together now, Halston. Breathe in, breathe out…

“I don’t know who I’m rooting for,” I say. “I guess I don’t really care who wins.”

I can feel and smell him leaning in even closer. “Yeah, but if you had to bet,” he whispers, “who would you bet on?”

For the first time, I turn to him. He’s got greasy dark hair combed across his forehead in a guillotine-like slant.

He’s smiling. He’s also big. No, thick is a better word.

His forearms, folded tight against his chest, look to be the size of ham hocks.

I’m guessing they’re covered in tattoos, but I can’t see them because he’s wearing a tragically ugly teal windbreaker.

Never mind there’s not a cloud in the sky, we’re in late August, and it’s pushing ninety degrees.

“What do you want?” I ask.

What he wants first is to show me the gun he’s got tucked in his waistband underneath the windbreaker. The second thing he wants is my earpiece. He sticks out his palm. “Hand it over,” he says. “Along with your phone.”

The next game in the match has just gone to deuce on Green’s serve. I would’ve been placing another bet after the following point. How much of this are you hearing, Skip?

I glance down again at the gun the guy’s got tucked into his waistband and then back up at his eyes.

I’m wearing sunglasses; he’s not. He wants me to be able to see his eyes.

I could play stupid and ask, What earpiece?

But stupid won’t get me anywhere. Coy is a different story, though. Coy buys me a little time.

“We both know you’re not about to shoot me in front of all these people, and you’re not going to throw me over your shoulder or drag me out of here kicking and screaming,” I say.

“So what’s to stop me from standing up and heading for the first cop I see?

There’s lots of them around here, in case you haven’t noticed. ”

He laughs. “Such a clever girl, huh? But we also both know you’re not going to do that.”

“Why not?”

“Because we found you, that’s why. Now we’ll always be able to find you, Halston.” He really enjoys saying my name, showing me that he knows it. “Come with me now and we won’t hurt you,” he says. “But if you don’t come with me now? We’ll definitely hurt you.”

I think it over for a few seconds, or at least I act as if that’s what I’m doing.

My mind’s been made up since the very second this guy sat down.

Meanwhile, Red wins the next point with an overhead slam, the ball careening into the stands.

I look up at Lucas, crammed in his umpire chair, as he methodically inputs the score change.

Damn; I could’ve placed ten bets in the time that took.

But my courtsiding days are over for now. I’ve officially been caught.

I take out my earpiece and hand it and my phone over to my new friend in the ugly teal windbreaker.

“Okay, you win,” I say. “Let’s go.”