Stories | Vice
Dino had traced the car’s plates to a dockyard in Red Hook. I drove down through streets slick with rain, the kind that doesn’t wash anything clean, just makes the grime shinier. The warehouse was unmarked, but I knew the type. A floating game—illegal, unlicensed, the kind where the house took your watch and your dignity in equal measure.
He nodded, turned his collar up against the rain, and walked inside. vice stories
The wife met us on the stoop. She didn’t scream or slam the door. She just took her son inside and looked at Leo once—not with hate, but with a sadness so heavy I felt it in my own chest. Dino had traced the car’s plates to a dockyard in Red Hook
The address was a limestone townhouse, the kind with a brass door knocker shaped like a lion’s head. The wife met me in a silk robe, her knuckles white around a cup of tea that had long gone cold. A floating game—illegal, unlicensed, the kind where the
Leo lingered on the sidewalk. “What happens now?” he asked.
Inside, the air was thick with sweat and bourbon. Felt tables glowed green under bare bulbs. Men in overcoats stared at their cards like the answers to their ruined lives were printed on the backs. And there, in the corner, was Leo—the husband. He was down to his shirtsleeves, face pale as lard, a stack of crumpled IOUs in front of him.
“Now,” I said, lighting a cigarette, “you decide whether this is the bottom or just another floor on the way down. I can give you numbers. Rehab, gamblers’ anonymous, a shrink who won’t judge. But I can’t make you call them.”