Blizzard Ball

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Authors: Dennis Kelly

Tags: #Thrillers, #Lottery, #Minnesota, #Fiction

BOOK: Blizzard Ball
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BlizzardBall

 

Dennis Kelly

 

NORTH STAR PRESS OF ST. CL OUD, INC.

Saint Cloud, Minnesota

BlizzardBall

Dennis Kelly

Published by North Star Press at Smashwords

 

Copyright © 2011 Dennis Kelly

 

ISBN: 0-87839-488-5 ISBN-13: 978-0-87839-488-3

 

All rights reserved.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

Electronic Edition, September 2011

 

Printed in the United States of America

 

Published by North Star Press of St. Cloud, Inc. P.O. Box 451 St. Cloud, Minnesota 56302

www.northstarpress.com

 

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

 

Luck

 

There was a blizzard coming. Kirchner could feel it in his back. A thorny ache from a million crystal daggers he couldn’t cast off. He had learned to manage the discomfort, but the Minnesota winter and prolonged standing aggravated the old injury to no end.

Sandwiched belly to backside between a housepainter in splattered coveralls and a student cut off from the world by wired earbuds, Kirchner sidestepped the stalled convenience store line. What’s the hold up? Ahead, lottery players traded carefully considered picks and fistfuls of cash for the pink paper drug of hope.

A sign overhead read blizzardball: Imagine What Luck Could Do. Depends what side of luck you’re on, Kirchner thought. As a cop, with twenty-seven years in the trenches he plied the backwaters of luck. There was no euphoria or winning in that flotsam, just the nightmare of the fateful “Why me?” A random shot fired into a crowd. A retiree scammed of his life savings. A driver ripped from the steering wheel by a carjacker.

The BlizzardBall Lottery jackpot had just hit $750 million. Twice-weekly drawings over the past four months had failed to produce a winner. The next scheduled drawing was in three days—Christmas day.

The world’s richest prize was the headline story and had captured the lead on national news. For many, the prospect of winning unimaginable wealth was the last great chance to make up for lost opportunity, amend wrong turns, and take flight from misfortunes. But not everyone shared in the wishful hysteria. The clergy spared no wrath in denouncing the lottery as a scourge on the flock. Gamblers Anonymous and mental health professionals called for a cap on the lottery prize as their hotlines buzzed with calls from folks afflicted by lottery fever.

Kirchner shifted his weight from foot to foot and juggled his groceries. The convenience store line now snaked all the way back to the rolling hot dog cooker. The energy seemed too on-edge for seven-thirty in the morning. A hunchback woman with tennis balls on her walker knocked a bottle of Mr. Clean to the floor. The air filled with nose-twitching ammonia. Small groups of overly caffeinated lottery players formed. A hard hat cable guy, a suit with a leather briefcase, and a dental assistant nervously laughed off the possibility of winning. A Somali taxi driver held to himself and stood on the tips of his toes, neck craned, to gauge the progress of the line.

An electric shock fired down Kirchner’s leg, inflaming his sciatic nerve. He winced and let out a tight groan. Although the accident had been seventeen years ago, the pain was a constant reminder of his good fortune. Responding to a garden-variety domestic complaint on a salty August afternoon, he had walked into a murder-suicide attempt. An enraged unshaven man, with puffy squinted eyes that looked like mini-donuts, was perched on the outside edge of the twenty-first floor balcony. Clutched to his chest was his live-in girlfriend’s squirming young child. His body swayed and pitched as if standing on a rolling ship. Sweat leaked through his work shirt with a Doo-Doo Diaper Service patch on its sleeve. Inconsolable, he ranted, “I’m going to make that chicano bitch pay, screwing the neighbor, while I take all the shit.” Kirchner was pretty certain the point about the job had been lost on the pleading girlfriend. Kirchner’s partner had her corralled in the kitchen away from sharp objects, while Kirchner eased toward the diaper-man and into a cloud of alcohol.

Kirchner didn’t much look the part of hero cop. Always a bit overweight, belly spilling over the belt, he never felt comfortable all buttoned down like some of the studs on the force. He was quiet by disposition with a soft, disarming appeal that made him approachable, easy to talk to—a valuable asset in police work.

Kirchner suggested he and the would-be jumper go down the street, get something to drink, cool off and let the kid play. Just as he started to feel the faint pulse of rapport, the crazed girlfriend broke loose and grabbed for her daughter. A skirmish ensued. The diaper-man’s grip slipped from the rail. Kirchner lurched for the child, caught her by the shirt, and lost his footing. Diaper-man, child, and cop tumbled over the side of the building. With the kid cradled in his arms like a football, Kirchner crashed through an umbrella and a glass patio table. He thought he’d always remember the terror in the little girl’s eyes. They ended up falling only one floor, fifteen feet, to the balcony just below. The child was bruised and scratched, but nothing life-threatening. Kirchner walked away wearing a permanent glass shirt. The diaper-man wasn’t so lucky. He hit his head on a metal railing and died instantly.

“Lottery ticket?” the clerk asked, as Kirchner set a frozen pizza, a quart of orange juice, and a bag of hard peppermint starlight candy on the counter.

“Why not?” Cheap entertainment, he reasoned. “Quick Pick.”

Kirchner made a mental note of his numbers as he tucked the ticket into his wallet. Some held luck out to random chance or the confluence of events. Others assigned it to positive thinking, predestination, divine intervention, or the magical realm. But he couldn’t quite get his mind around it.

Kirchner fought his way past the lottery customers into the parking lot. Sleet slashed in diagonally from the northeast, turning to snow. An old man, his head bent into the wind, coat clutched around his throat, brushed by Kirchner on his way to buy a lottery ticket. Kirchner would bet the geezer had a rabbit’s foot in his pocket. He was equally certain that an up-for-grabs $750 million would attract all manner of thieves, big brains, and schemers bent on steering luck their way. Kirchner dug a fist into his aching back. “Blizzard’s coming.”

 

 

BlizzardBall

 

The BlizzardBall Lottery director sat in his office and popped two Maalox tablets into his mouth, washing them down with cold coffee.

“You wanted to see me, Boss?”

“Jesus,” Morty Frish said. “Slow down before you blow a gasket.” Morty pointed Jake Wilson, his public relations manager, to a chair in front of his desk.

“Goddamn media circus out there,” Jake said, patting his sweaty forehead with his tie. Jake was a young man, but his fleshy, sallow face was ready for old age.

“I know the pressure’s on, but let’s just get through this next drawing.” Morty, already exhausted by Jake, pinched the bridge of his nose.

“TV crews are flying in from as far away as Japan to be a witness to the drawing, and get this, some guy at CNN called and wants to make sure we have kosher on hand. Must think we’re running a deli. There’s no way the TV studio is big enough to handle this event.” Jake stopped, suddenly aware he was rambling, and watched Morty write something on a sticky note.

“I’ve made alternate arrangements for the drawing.” Morty handed the note to Jake. “Make sure the independent auditors are notified.”

“I can only imagine the frenzy when a winner steps forward,” Jake said as he stuck the note to his tie.

Morty walked over to a large state wall map with colored pins indicating the location of past BlizzardBall winners. He tapped his finger on a northern Minnesota town. “I don’t want another Biwabik fiasco.”

“What do you want me to do, hand pick ’em?” Jake’s left eye was exhibiting the chronic twitch that made everything he said seem as if there was a hidden joke in it.

“I expect you,” Morty, lacking in patience, pointed at Jake, “to interview any potential jackpot claimant, verify their ticket, clean them up, and get my approval before any public appearance. I don’t want another Dirk Schweitzer.”

“What? There’s a problem with a guy living the American Dream?”

Dirk Schweitzer had shown up to collect his $25 million lottery jackpot check too drunk to stand. Leaning on a hooker in a halter top and black net stockings, the keys to a new pickup in hand, he announced, unbeknownst to his wife, that he was getting a divorce.

“Just no more Dirks, okay?” Morty said, waving Jake off. “Send Bonnie in here.”

Jake retreated from Morty’s office, his singing bouncing off the hallway walls. “My Bonnie lies over the ocean, my Bonnie lies over the sea, my Bonnie lies all over St. Paul, will my Bonnie lie over me?”

Morty looked out the window for a mental escape, but the overhead fluorescent light bounced back his reflection. He had bushy hooded eyebrows that arched over a flat pug nose—the result of sticking his face in others peoples business. “Damn psych ward,” he said to himself as he tried to rub out a deep furrow from his brow.

Bonnie Hannover, the Lottery database security manager, slammed her folder on Morty’s desk and blew back feathery bangs hanging over her large framed glasses. “I’ve had it with that slob Wilson,” she said. “Why do you keep that potty-mouth around? I came this close to putting a letter opener in his voice box.”

“Bonnie, calm down,” Morty said, wincing. Her perfume, like overripe melons, choked off the air in the room.

“You look terrible. Stick your face out.” Bonnie pulled a tissue from her pocket and wiped the Maalox chalk from the corner of Morty’s mouth.

“I don’t know how I’d manage without you.” Morty slid his hand over Bonnie’s substantial hip. She thwacked him, patted down her skirt, and retreated to a chair across from his desk.

Morty cleared his throat. “What’s the updated count?”

Bonnie drew the data report from her folder. “Take a look at the duplicate summary.” She pointed to some highlighted numbers.

“Jesus!” Morty twisted a pencil through his fingers like a miniature baton. Over thirty-five thousand tickets had been purchased for the same number combination. “What’s going on?”

“They’re the number picks from an astrologer featured in one of those grocery store tabloids.” Bonnie rolled her eyes. “I wouldn’t be too concerned—the stargazer’s other predictions include Hillary Clinton quitting politics to become a woman wrestler and marijuana replacing petroleum as the nation’s chief energy source.”

Morty threw the pencil in the air. The point caught in the acoustical ceiling tile and stuck. It hung like a stalactite along with a dozen other #2 pencils. “What else?”

“Some neuroscientist out of Johns Hopkins has been scanning the brains of healthy lottery players. He’s determined that the anticipation of winning activates the same brain circuits as the ones responsible for addictive behavior among strung-out drug users.”

“So what’s he suggesting? That we dispense methadone with each ticket?” Morty throttled the Maalox bottle.

“Save the heartburn for the Cash and Dash.” Bonnie pried the bottle out of Morty’s hand. “Our servers can hardly keep up with that hole-in-the-wall convenience store.”

“Vancouver?” Morty asked.

“It’s like Whac-A-Mole. Shut the outstate scalpers down here, they pop up over there. They must have an army out there hawking BlizzardBall tickets. Our authorized vendor tracking shows the Cash and Dash is the top ticket-selling outlet in the state.” Bonnie’s face pinched up as she warned, “That’s certainly not going to go unnoticed.”

“Low priority.” Morty flicked his wrist as if chasing off a fly. “By the time the Cash and Dash convenience store anomaly surfaces, there’ll be a winner, and those Canadian jackals will have moved on to some other big jackpot lottery. Chances are the Cash and Dash will eventually disappear too.”

“Look, Mr. Lottery, between the scalpers and the run-up, we’re courting trouble. I’ll squeal like a stuck pig if things get screwed up. You understand me?”

Morty wondered whether the pig comment was self-referential. He personally considered her big-boned full figure attractive, no matter what others said. He got the point, however, and prudently left it alone.

“Bonnie, honey, we’re doing the right thing here,” Morty said, his voice almost plaintive, as he reached out and stroked her forearm. He pandered to her interest in pets and oiled the relationship as needed in return for favors. “The run-up strategy has dumped millions of dollars into the state lottery fund. And need I remind you,” he said. “Three cents of every dollar we bring in goes toward animal protection.”

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