• Complain

Dzhon Makdonald - Kid with the Golden Touch [story]

Here you can read online Dzhon Makdonald - Kid with the Golden Touch [story] full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: Romance novel. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Im a card cop. I can spot a sharks trick after one hand... then I ran into ordinary citizen Carl Breton. With him I had to first meet his wife.

: author's other books


Who wrote ? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

— read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

John D. MacDonald

Kid with the Golden Touch

I dont chalk up many failures. But this kid had me stopped.

There arent many of us in the business. Im on call with some of the best private agencies, which is where most of my work comes from. You take a nice club, if they suspect a member of cheating, they dont go to the local law, they get hold of a good agency. If it happens at your club, its about a 5050 chance that I will show up. I wont look like what you expect. Im fat and bald and closer to 60 than I care to admit. Back in Keith circuit days I had a magic act. Mostly card stuff. I got interested in the sharpies. I used to go on lecture tours after that, wearing a black mask. Then I worked the big passenger liners, tying a can to the sharpies until my face got too well known in the trade.

Now Ive got a little magic shop in Manhattan, and a good kid I can leave in charge when I go out on call. The calls usually dont last long.

This was a nice club, a mens club in the middle of a pleasant city in Pennsylvania. The club had been going a long time. You could smell the money. Old, dark, heavy furniture, a look of long-established security.

I checked in at a hotel and phoned the contact. He worked in a bank; his name was Tellford. He came over to the room. We had a talk. He said that only three members were in on it. I told him that I had registered under the name of John Harrison, just in case his pigeon happened to be a pro who would recognize my name. He said he would make arrangements at the desk of the club.

He gave me the background. We have a group who have been playing bridge regularly together for several years. Its a cut-in game. The stakes sound high, three cents a point, but they arent actually that high in effect, because were all about the same caliber. At the end of a year we arent many dollars apart. We get together every Tuesday night in the card room. We play from eight until about two in the morning. Last year one of the regulars died of a heart attack. A young man named Carl Breton had joined the club a few months before that. He was put up for membership by his employer. Breton works in the accounting department of a local manufacturing plant. Hes about 33, a quiet pleasant young man. We knew he played good bridge, but we didnt think he would want to play for those stakes. A year ago we asked him to join us tentatively. He accepted. It brought our roster back up to six, a good number for a cut-in game.

And ever since that, he has won consistently, I said.

Precisely. Forty, 60, 100 dollars every Tuesday. We can well afford the loss. We thought for some time that it was because he played better bridge. But our sort of a game gives you plenty to kibitz. Ive sat behind him and seen him make mistakes. I have seen him make improper bids. You, of course, understand the game.

I understand it. And its one of the tougher games to cheat in. Does he ever lose?

Very infrequently, and then its a small amount. And one night he won $300. A very exceptional evening for him. We hesitated a long time over calling in... an expert.

Why did you decide he was cheating?

He seems to know precisely where every card is before the play of the hand is begun. His finesses work too often. In the long run, without any information from the bidding, a finesse should work 50 per cent of the time. His are closer to 90. He misses once in a while. And, by the same token, his opening leads are... pretty devastating.

That sounds like he was using readers. How about the cards?

We start with two new decks every Tuesday evening.

Examined them afterward?

We thought he might be marking them somehow. We cant find any marks.

I know how to handle it. Ill discover the method. Then you and I will have a private talk with him, Mr. Tellford. Hell resign quietly. Youve arranged to get me into the game?

The two men who know who you are arent going to show up tomorrow night. Another member is out of town. So it will be just you and I, Mr. Breton, and a man named Mueller. Well cut for partners after each rubber. Ill bring you along to fill in. I thought that would give you the best chance. If you wish, one of the other men could come and then youd get a chance to sit behind Carl Breton during the...

I can learn what hes doing by playing with him, I said. I was very confident.

The next night Tellford and I arrived first. It was a pleasant place to play. Green felt table top, low-hanging shaded light, a handy button to push for a drink, smaller tables with ash trays at your elbow. Tellford, for practice, called me John and I called him Dick. Mueller arrived next. Barney Mueller, a big asthmatic man with a wheezing laugh. Carl Breton was the last, apologizing for being a few minutes late. He was a tall, nice-looking young man with a shy pleasant smile.

They played seriously. No small talk. The ripple sound of the cards, the monosyllables of the bidding. I drew Mueller first. It was competent bridge; nothing really tournament class, but nothing to be ashamed of either. I watched Bretons hands, particularly when it was his turn to shuffle, and his turn to deal. He was no mechanic. I could spot that. The fingers of the left hand didnt curl around the cards in the mechanics grip. Nothing much happened in the first rubber. Mueller and I got ourselves a 900 rubber in five hands.

Then Mueller drew Breton, and I was on Bretons left. They worked tentative bidding up to four spades. I had a legitimate double. Breton played. He needed to make three out of four finesses to fake. He made the full four for an overtrick. I knew he hadnt peeked at my hand. Nor had he had a chance to see my partners. Tellford gave me a meaningful glance across the table.

Tellford was declarer on the next bid. It looked safe. But Breton made a beautiful and unorthodox lead through my dummy strength on an unbid suit. That lead set us. I studied Carl Bretons mannerisms. He played almost woodenly, his face expressionless, lips compressed. He did not seem to glance at the backs of the cards held by the other players. He kept his eyes directed at the center of the table where the light was brightest.

I went through all the tricks I could remember. Like the man who had a cigarette lighter with a mirror surface, and dealt the cards over it, reading the spots and remembering as he dealt rapidly. The bandaged-finger trick, with a sharpened, cut down thumbtack under the bandage to mark each ace and face with a tiny, almost imperceptible, puncture code. Nothing worked. The guy read the cards and he kept on reading them, and I couldnt find out how.

Later I sat in Tellfords car outside the hotel and said, Its something new. Its a gimmick Ive never run into. Mathematically, what hes doing is impossible. Nobody guesses right that often, in spite of what they claim at Duke University. See if you can arrange a game for tomorrow night, or Thursday night.

Wed better make it Thursday.

Okay. If hes that sharp, then hes going to recognize the other forms of cheating. Ill use half the evening trying to spot what hes doing. Then Ill turn mechanic and see if we can get a yelp out of him.

Why?

If he spots it, then changes his style of game and doesnt yelp, it means hes recognizing me as one of the brethren.

The game was set up. Mueller couldnt play. A man named Howe played. He was one of the ones in on my reason for being there. By 11:30 I hadnt spotted a thing. In my next shuffle, I got a spade into every fourth slot and crimped the deck just enough so that I led Tellford, the man across from me, into the cut I wanted, and Breton into dealing me my 13 spades. I had arranged a later payback, so I used demand bidding to work my way hesitantly into the seven spade contract, happily redoubling Bretons double, which was based on a pair of aces and a couple of outside kings. His partner led and I spread the hand, watching Breton. He gasped and gaped, and I didnt know if it was honest surprise, or a good masking of suspicion. I notched the cards with my thumbnail, second dealt whenever it was my deal, stacked the deck whenever it was my shuffle. I cleaned up, of course. But Breton still went home with 12 dollars, all that was left of what he had won before I turned mechanic.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «»

Look at similar books to . We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «»

Discussion, reviews of the book and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.