: Chapter 26
Promise Me
The most dangerous of all indulgences is trust.
Beth Cardallâs Diary Sunday morning was gray, the sky streaked with dark, spidery clouds. I got up early and went out looking againâstill wearing the same clothes from the day before. Nothing. It was around five in the afternoon that I faced the inevitable. He was gone. My money was gone. My house was gone. He had probably skipped town, gone back to Italy or wherever it was he really came from. I pulled into a Kmart parking lot and called Roxanne from a pay phone.
âAny luck?â she asked.
âNo,â I said crying. âHeâs vanished.â
âI was hoping youâd call. Iâve got news.â
âWhat?â
âThis morning I told Ray about what had happened, and he said that he saw Matthew yesterday afternoon at the Chevron station. I asked him how he knew who Matthew was and he said he didnât, that Matthew had just walked up to him and asked if he was my husband.â
âHow he know that?â
âI have no idea. Anyway, Ray didnât know he had stolen your money, so they were just slinging spit, you know, talking man stuff. Ray asked if he was going to watch the Mike Tyson fight, and Matthew said he was headed to Wendover to put a little down on it.â
âOh, no,â I said.
Wendover is a small gambling town about an hour and a half from Salt Lake City just over the Nevada borderâa cultural by-product of Utahâs antigambling laws.
âIâve got to go out there,â I said. âIâm going to get my money back.â
âHoney, let me and Ray go with you.â
âNo. Iâm going to do this. I have to do this.â
âHoney, you be careful. Thereâs no telling what he might be capable of.â
I ran back out to my car. So that was it. He was a gambler. A thief, a liar and a gambler, and he was about to lose Charlotteâs and my future.
The drive to Wendover is 120 miles west on I-80, passing the Great Salt Lake and the Bonneville Salt Flats, one of the flattest places on the planetâso flat that you can see the curvature of the earth. The flats are the grounds where dozens of world land speed records were claimed, from Ab Jenkinsâs 1935 Duesenberg âMormon Meteorâ to Craig Breedloveâs âSpirit of America,â the first car to reach 600 mph.
For me it was a hundred miles of nothing to seeânothing to distract me from the cauldron of panic that boiled in my chest. I wondered how many other women Matthew (I could barely think his name without feeling sick) had scammed in this way.
On a practical basis there were other things to worry about. What would happen when I got there? Would I find him? Was he violent? Would the casino help me? What if he had already lost all my money?
First Marc and now Matthew. I wondered why I was so adept at attracting broken men. Maybe they were all broken.
I reached the neon glow of Wendover around eight-thirty and drove past a sixty-four-foot-tall sheet-metal cowboy pointing down at the stripe across the road that separates Utah from Nevada. I stopped at the first casino I reached, the Rainbow Casino, a brightly lit trap in the desert landscape. I parked my car in the crowded parking lot and ran inside, fueled equally by adrenaline and emotion.
The casino interior was cavernous and crowded, echoing with the clinking, whirring sounds of slot machines and the electric song of illuminated wheels of fortune. I ran up to a tall, uniform-wearing man standing at the concierge desk.
âMay I help you?â he asked.
âWhere do they gamble on boxing?â
âThe Tyson-Douglas fight,â he said. He pointed past a large, illuminated field of slot machines. âOver past the lobby at the Race Book. But youâre too late to get anything down, the fightâs started.â
âAm I too late to get my money back?â
He looked at me dully. âOnce the fight starts, no money changes hands.â
I stepped away from him, speechless. I was too late. I walked over to the part of the casino where the man had pointed. There was a large neon sign that read RACE AND SPORTSBOOK. Beneath the sign was a large bank of televisionsâan entire wall of screensâthe majority of them tuned to the boxing match. The Tyson-Douglas fight was clearly the main event, and a large, excited crowd of mostly men were talking and drinking and shouting out as the two fighters danced around the ring exchanging blows.
Then I saw him. Unlike the rest of the crowd, Matthew seemed detached from the event, sitting alone at a small round table. He held a drink in one hand. The sight of him made me feel sick and scared and angry in equal parts. âMatthew!â I shouted. He didnât respond. I shouted louder. âMatthew!â
He looked around, then over at me, clearly surprised to see me. He stood as I approached. âBeth. What are you doing here?â
âI want my money back.â
He said calmly, âYouâll get it. And a lot more.â
âI want it now.â Several of the other patrons looked over at us. âHand it over,â I shouted. âNow!â
He looked around, embarrassed by the attention Iâd drawn. âI canât do that. I donât have it anymore.â
âWho has it?â
âThe casino.â
âHow much of it did you gamble?â
He looked at me warily. âListenââ
âHow much?!â
âAll of it.â
I slapped him. âYou crook. That was everything we had.â I began to hyperventilate. âThat was Charlotteâs schooling. Thatâs what keeps us off the street. I canât believe I trusted you.â
More people were now watching us than the monitors.
âBeth, you have to trust me. I would never do anything to hurt you.â
I was crying. âAre you insane? Youâve hurt me more than anyone Iâve ever known. Youâve hurt me more than Marc.â
âBeth, you donât understand.â He reached out to me and I screamed.
âDonât you dare touch me! Donât you ever touch me again. I donât ever want to see you again.â I began backing away from him. I was hysterical. âYou stay away from me and my daughter. If I ever see you again, Iâll call the police. Stay away from me!â I turned and ran out of the casino.
I sobbed almost the entire way home. I wanted to throw up. I wanted to drive my car across the divider into every semi I passed, and if it werenât for Charlotte, I might have. About thirty minutes from Salt Lake, just west of Tooele, I got pulled over by the highway patrol. I almost couldnât stop crying long enough to give the police officer my information.
The officer didnât give me a ticket. When I was finally able to tell him what Matthew had done, he was sympathetic. âAre you sure you can make it home?â
âYes.â
âI know youâre upset, but slow down and drive carefully. We donât want to add an accident to this.â
âThank you, officer.â
âYouâre welcome, maâam.â He handed me back my license. âYou say it was the Tyson fight?â
I nodded. âYes.â
âWell, letâs hope he bet on the long shot, because Tyson just got knocked out.â
I got home around midnight. Charlotte was still at Roxanneâs, leaving the place as dark and empty as I felt inside. It had snowed off and on all day and my home was covered with nearly a foot of new snow. My home? It wasnât mine anymore. How could I have so casually lost it? How could I be so gullible? When he asked to be a cosignatory, his accessing my entire account had never even crossed my mind.
I think I cried all night. I cried less about the money than the confirmed reality that my deepest suspicions were rightâhe never wanted me. I was nothing to him but a dope. I was unlovable.
The next day I was still lying in bed at one in the afternoon when Jan brought Charlotte home.
âMrs. C?â she shouted. âWeâre back.â
I didnât want Jan or Charlotte to see me as I was, unshowered, undressed, my face puffy and tear-streaked. âThank you, Jan,â I said gruffly from behind the door. âCan I pay you tomorrow?â
âNo problem, Mrs. C., Charlotte, Molly and I had a great time, didnât we, girl?â
âYep.â
âIâll see you later,â I heard Jan say. âGive me skin.â
A moment later my door opened. My bedroom was a cave, the blinds drawn and the light off. âHi, Mom,â Charlotte said. Through the darkness I could see she was holding her Molly doll and wearing an oversized raccoon-tail hat.
My voice was strained and weak, but I tried to sound normal. âDid you have a good time, honey?â
âYep. Can I turn on the light?â
âLetâs just leave it off.â
âAre you sick?â
âI have a headache,â I said.
She walked to my side, close enough to see that I had been crying. âWhatâs wrong, Mom?â
âNothing.â Charlotte just stared at me. She knew better. âNothing I can talk about.â
âIs it Mr. Matthew?â
I burst into tears. How could a six-year-old be so astute? Charlotte climbed into bed and snuggled up with me. âYou can hold Molly.â
âThank you. Iâd rather hold you.â
âMr. Matthew said he wouldnât make you cry.â
I ran my hands back over her cheeks, pulling back her long, blond hair. âHeâs not who we thought he was.â
âHeâs not Mr. Matthew?â
âI donât know.â
âIs he someone bad?â
âYes, honey. He is.â
âHe didnât seem bad.â
âPeople arenât always what they seem to be.â
I didnât climb out of bed until five. I felt like Iâd been run over by a motorcycle gang. Charlotte was at the kitchen table drawing pictures with crayon. I went to the kitchen to make her some dinner. I had just put some water on to boil when the doorbell rang. I wasnât expecting anybody and I didnât want to see anybody. âCharlotte, will you get that?â
âSure, Mom.â She put down her crayons and ran to the door.
I heard the door open, then after a moment I heard Charlotte say, âSheâs crying.â
A minute later she walked back into the kitchen. âMr. Matthewâs here.â
I looked at her in disbelief. âMatthew?â
She nodded.
I took the pan off the burner and turned off the stove. My heart filled with rage. It was something I had become good atâconcealing heartbreak with anger.
Charlotte had left the front door open and as I walked into the foyer I saw him. He stood there, a few feet from the door wearing only a hooded sweatshirt, his arms wrapped around himself from the cold. He looked at me anxiously. I noticed he held something in his hand. An envelope.
âI told you I never wanted to see you again,â I said fiercely.
âHereâs your money back,â he said, holding out the envelope. âItâs all there with your winnings.â
In spite of my anger I felt a tremendous flood of relief. I started to cry.
He said, âIâm sorry that you think I was trying to take advantage of you. I wasnât. I just didnât want you to lose your home.â
I stood there glaring at him. âI donât want your winnings. I donât gamble.â
âNeither do I.â
âThen what do you call it?â
âItâs not gambling if you already know how it ends.â He pushed the envelope forward. âTake it.â
I took the envelope without looking at it. âThis doesnât change anything.â
âYou should open it.â
The envelope wasnât sealed. I reached in and extracted a check from the envelope. It took a moment for the amount to register. I had never seen that many zeros on a check. I raised my hand to my face.
âMike Tyson was a forty-two-to-one favorite,â he said.
I couldnât speak.
âBeth, you have to trust me that I wouldnât do anything to hurt you. Ever. I went to Wendover for you. I only had your best interest in mind.â He put his hands in his pockets.
âI never want to see you again,â I said.
He looked stricken but not surprised. âIf thatâs what you want.â He pulled his hood up and turned and walked out to his car. I watched him drive away. He never looked back.
Charlotte walked up as I shut the door. âIs he still bad?â
Still clutching the check I crouched down and hugged her. âI donât know what he is.â