my part to keep beautiful women happy.â
âWell,â she said, sitting back, âyouâve made me a happy girl. A wonderful meal, and youâve agreed to help me. I feel much better than I have in weeks.â
âThis has been going on for weeks?â
âEddie,â she said, âthis has been going on for months.â
FOUR
I made notes, specifically concerning the photographerâs name and address, and then some dates Abby gave me. After that I paid the bill and we walked out to my car. I opened the passenger-side door for her, watched as she got in with a flash of nylon-covered legs, then got behind the wheel and headed for the Sands.
âHow well do you know Joey?â she asked.
âI meet a lot of the celebrities who come to the Sands,â I said. âMostly I know them to say hello to, but Joey and I got along from the beginning. Then, a few years ago, he introduced me to Frank and Dean and the others. We became friends.â
âSounds to me like more than friends, from what Joey says.â
âReally?â
âYeah,â she said, âhe likes you a lot, says youâre a good friend and the guy to see in Vegas.â
âWell, I do what I can to help.â
âWhen I told him my problem,â she said, âhe told me not to worry, that you could fix it.â
I looked at her for a moment, then back to the road. She was staring straight ahead, and it wasnât easy to pull my gaze away from her lovely profile.
âAbby, Iâm going to do my best to help you,â I said, âbut there are no guarantees.â
âI know that, Eddie.â
âYou might want to go to the police.â
âNo!â I could feel her looking at me. âNo police. Iâll . . . Iâll just wait and see what you can do.â
âAll right,â I said.
âPlease, Eddie.â She put her hand on my arm. âDonât go to the police.â
âHey,â I said, âI have no love for the cops, believe me. Besides, that would never be my place. If the police are going to be brought in, itâll be by you. OK?â
âOK.â She dropped her hand. We pretty much rode the rest of the way in silence.
I escorted her into the lobby and watched as she walked to the elevators. Once she got on and the doors closed I went to an elevator myself.
It was well after hours; the Sandsâ office staff had gone home. The offices were locked, so when I got off on that floor I had my pick of any desk in the reception area. I commandeered one and took out my notebook.
The photographer who shot the photos of Abby was Barney Irwin. Twelve years ago he had an office on South Decatur, near Flamingo Road. I grabbed a nearby phone book. He was still there. Irwin Studios, the 3000 block of South Decatur. It was too late to call, too late to visit. I could drive by in the morning, but I had a shift starting very soon, so I had to trade in my detective hat and put on my pit boss hat.
The Sands casino floor was jumping at midnight, even though Tony Bennett was doing a midnight show in the Copa Room. When the show was over, the floor became even livelier.
The blackjack tables were teeming with regulars, tourists and celebrities. I saw Vic Damone, Jack Jones, Red Skelton, who were all playing other casinos, but gambling at the Sands.
And then I saw him, tall as a telephone pole, and wide as a freeway, coming my way.
âWhat the hellââ I said.
âHey, Mr G.,â Jerry Epstein said.
He mauled my hand with his huge paw but gave it back to me not much the worse for wear. The last time I had seen my Brooklyn buddy Jerry was the year before, when we helped Bing Crosby out of a jam that involved horse racing. I didnât usually see Jerry unless there was trouble â and it was usually me in the hot water. I wondered if the tables had turned?
âWhat are you doinâ here?â I asked.
âIâm here with
Cecilia Aubrey, Chris Almeida