Hope Springs Eternal

 

            .I’m not sure of the genre of this paper, but for want of a more precise characterization I call it creative non-fiction. That is the incidents in the story happened as far as my aging memory can vouch, but the names of some characters are fictitious, so as to protect the identity of the guilty.

 

This is a story about how I became involved in the machinations of my friend, Harry Hardy. It starts in 1965 when I was a graduate student in English at Loyola. My wife, Carolyn, and I lived in an apartment with our four daughters on the South Side of Chicago. Harry and his wife, Ann, lived in an apartment about a mile away. I had graduated from high school with Harry fifteen years earlier, but we had not had much contact since I was offer a job in Oklahoma City seven years earlier. There I married Carolyn, and we had our first daughter ten months later. A year after that we moved to California, where I had a grant to finish a Master’s degree at Stanford. But I had to work part time to supplement my stipend to support our growing family. After three years at Stanford I received a National Defense fellowship to pursue my PhD at Loyola. The irony of receiving a grant from the Defense Department for studies in English did not register on me, and I accepted the money without a qualm, proud to do my part for our national defense. In those days, at the height of the cold war and the Cuban missile crises, the only federal agency that had money to spend on liberal arts education was the Defense Department. That was because a liberal congressman from Texas, of all places, added an amendment to an appropriation bill that allowed granting fellowships for disciplines other than engineering and defense related subjects.

 

It was good for me to be back in Chicago, but not so good for Carolyn. She had to leave our first home in salubrious Palo Alto, California to spend the next three winters in an apartment in Chicago with four toddlers.

 

Harry Hardy was personable, articulate, and honest, but he had an impediment that blocked his path to steady employment. He was an addicted horseplayer and spent most of his time reading racing forms and frequenting racetracks. After college, he came back to work in Chicago for his father selling live cattle at the Chicago stockyards, but that job evaporated when the stockyards closed.

 

After trying other jobs ill suited to his talents, he lucked into a position that suited his background, particularly his gambling habit. Joe Bornholt, an old friend, offered him a job as a runner at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. But he couldn’t support his wife and three children on a runner's wage. Since he knew many people associated with harness racing and spent much time at the track, he landed a part-time job as assistant to Leo Huff, the Director of Special Events at Sportsman’s Park. Harry helped Leo arrange parties for various groups, such as the Knights of Columbus, B'nai B'rith, the Elks and the Moose. He worked two jobs, not because he was an ambitious workaholic but because he owed money to a lot of bookmakers.

 

 

 Shortly after our return to Chicago, I had a heart-to-heart talk with Harry about his gambling. One afternoon at Joe Breslin’s saloon we were grousing in our beer about our poverty. He complained about how much money he could have won if he had had a few lucky breaks. After a few beers I interrupted him.  “You’re addicted,” I said. “No matter how much money you make, you’ll give it all to the juice men.”

 

Harry resisted my argument but finally admitted he had a problem and agreed to go with me to a Gamblers Anonymous meeting at the YMCA at 8th and Wabash.  I was sobered by the stories I heard at that meeting and impressed by the sincerity of the reformed gamblers who spoke. Harry too was moved.  He vowed to knock the monkey off his back. He attended several meetings, and the group therapy had a temporary salutary effect, but it lasted only long enough for Harry to pay off a few of his most insistent book-makers. His brief involvement with Gamblers Anonymous, however, provided an enduring fringe benefit. He met there several congenial gamblers, a few of whom remain his friends to this day.

 

Harry's night job at Sportsman’s Park brought him into contact with a number of high rollers in the VIP lounge, a redoubt set high above the grandstands at the finish wire. His affable presence among the regulars in the lounge attracted the attention of Vic Stockman, a wealthy entrepreneur. As a Republican committeeman in Glenco, Vic’s connections gave him clout and status. He, even more so than Harry, was grievously addicted to horse playing.

 

Harry liked Vic because he made friends easily, especially high-rolling horseplayers. Vic respected Harry's horse knowledge, if not his horse sense, but rarely followed his advice. Vic had been developing his own handicapping system for over 35 years and considered himself superior to the perennial losers who frequented the track.

 

            Vic's system was anything if not complicated; he had to play every day, or the elaborate structure would break down. A missed sure-fire winner would seriously impair the averages. Vic saw in Harry a conduit to a stream of money. Since Harry attended the track every night and had access to the phone in the VIP lounge, Vic could bet on every race every night. In the days before off-track betting, a man in Vic's position could not risk calling a bookmaker from home with such regularity. Except for the track business office, only the VIP lounge had phone contact with the outside world.

 

            Not long after their initial contact, Vic made an irresistible proposition. He would pay Harry $20 per night for simply betting his horses at the pari-mutuel window, whether the horses won or lost. Harry readily agreed to the proposition. Discretely out of sight of other regulars in the lounge, Vic handed Harry a wad of bills amounting to a couple thousand dollars.  With a gentlemanly handshake, Harry agreed to be ready at the phone every night.

 

But soon Harry realized that Vic’s funds would not last at the extrapolated rate of loss. He divined that he could listen to Vic's selections without placing his bets. With Harry's superior handicapping, he would decide on every race whether Vic's horse had a chance of winning. Only on rare occasions he would go to bet at the window with the cash. 

 

After each race, Harry would call Vic and artfully describe his invariable losses, and even with more gusto, his occasional wins. Harry's vivid description of each race gave Vic a vicarious rush. He recreated the excitement of the races in a lucid narrative style. But greed inevitably infects all compulsive gamblers. Not content to take his $20 in addition to his profits from booking Vic's bets, Harry gave back his winnings to the track. He would pick his own losers and put his own money through the window.  But Vic's consistent losses sustained Harry's own inept handicapping. The first summer of their partnership, Vic lost about $5,000, and Harry contributed a like amount to Sportsman’s Park.

 

            When the racing schedule moved to Washington Park, then located in a far south suburb of Chicago, Harry realized he could not continue his grueling schedule working at the Mercantile Exchange from 8 A.M. until 2 P.M. and at the track from 4 P.M. until midnight. He came up with an imaginative idea. He offered to cut me in on the deal. He explained that we could take turns going to the track every other night, “twenty bucks a night will buy shoes for your kids and pay for your booze for the winter.” The offer tempted, but I worried increasingly about Harry's gambling addiction. The reform initiated from his few sessions at Gamblers' Anonymous obviously had been illusory. 

 

            We again had a heart-to-heart discussion. I insisted that we could both save money by acting as Vic's couriers without booking his bets. I preached with Jesuitical intensity. “Harry, if I am to be your partner, we must agree to put all Vic’s plays through the window.”  After an anguished discussion, he reluctantly acquiesced to my self-righteous and sanctimonious conditions.

 

Vic, of course, would have to approve my being cut in on the deal. Harry arranged for us to meet Vic in the bar of a nondescript Holiday Inn, a safe distance from Vic's home in Glenco. Vic arrived, conspicuous by his designer sunglasses and a loud Hawaiian sport shirt. Over drinks we discussed the unlimited opportunities to make money once Vic perfected his system. He then pulled a wad of bills from his pocket and handed them to Harry. “I expect this to be the last time I’ll have to feed the kitty,” he said.

 

I was excited to have passed muster with Vic and expressed my appreciation. Vic kept in regular contact with us by phone and occasionally by letter. I vowed to help him lift his metaphorical boat, because with his boat sailing high in the water, our boats too would surely rise. Vic understood Reagan’s economic theory, even before it became politically fashionable.

 

When on duty, every other night, I would patiently wait for his phone call for the night's action. He would usually bet on three or four races. With precise instructions, he would give alternative plays should there be a change in the program. He would, for example, tell me to bet $50 on High Stepper in the third race only if it were a fast track. But a substitution of Hylkema, the understudy, for O'Brien, the scheduled driver, would nix the action.

 

Vic had no patience with those who claimed that the races were fixed; he favored no government regulations interfering with the racing industry. “Free markets for free men,” was his mantra. He revealed the quality of his mind and his devotion to the sport in his correspondence.  These were long discursive letters explaining his rationale for his choices with specific instructions. Here is an example:

 

“Some final notes out of my systems. Note reference to last rule at bottom of the page to  change of drivers. Within one week, I ran across two solid plays which were created by O'Brien but which were switched to his training driver.  While this is an unusual situation, we want to be alert to these conditions. Therefore, any switch from O'Brien to Hylkema, would automatically kill any action.

 

I am not interested in how many plays we can make but how many winners we can get, and the last 2 weeks have brought me closer to my ultimate accomplishment.

 

By September 1st, I should have things pretty well under control, and my final phase of testing should be well along. Your cooperation will be appreciated.

 

Sincerely yours,

 

Vic”

 

As the letter reveals, Vic took racing seriously, a business with infinite possibilities. He would call every night from wherever he happened to be. One weekend he made a trip to New York and found time from his other appointments to make a few plays at Yonkers Raceway. By calling me earlier than usual, he did not miss a chance to be in action at both Yonkers and Maywood on the same night.

 

He relied on various sources of information for his research, especially the Racing Form. But he was not pleased with the editing of the paper and made his views known to the General Manager. Here is an excerpt from one of his letters:

 

For thirty-five years now I have been a reader of the Daily Racing Form. Being in the publishing business I am well aware of what it takes to put a publication together, particularly one that is put out daily and carries as much information of importance as the Daily Racing Form.

 

Being a busy businessman I am prone to look over the evening program more frequently than the daily programs and therefore the harness races in Chicago are of special interest to me. I find this true with a great many other people and it is indeed disappointing to buy the racing form and find only six races simply to save one half column of the paper. 

 

It is important to your consistent readers that they do not lose out on the opportunities that are few and far between. I was obliged in too many cases to check back into my past files in order to be able to pick up the additional two or three races in many of the entries in order to determine and evaluate them properly.

 

I hope that you and your staff will realize that this is not a crank letter and will continue your best efforts to provide your readers with all the essential information that is possible in order to promote this sport properly, interestingly and to some profitably.

 

Very truly yours,

 

PROGRESSIVE RESEARCH INSTITUTE

 

Vic Stockman, President

 

I read the caveat in his letter that "this is not a crank letter," with a grain of salt. On the phone when I talked to him his convoluted explanation of his system seemed mad, but it had a bit of method in it. To be brought to perfection his system had to be followed with the precision of a mission plan for a space trip. 

 

I reasoned that going to the races every other night was good therapy for me, a graduate student with four small daughters. Since Vic would customarily bet on only three or four races stretched out over a three or four-hour period, I had a lot of time to spare between races. I would not succumb to Harry's habit of making my own bets with my $20 earnings. Generally I would have a beer and read for my classes. One night before a race in which Vic had instructed me to bet on a horse named Rocky Hanover, I became engrossed in the luminous insights of Aristotle's Ethics. I particularly liked what the old Greek’s said about aiming at the golden mean—to avoid excess in all things.

 

The final warning buzzer alerted me to place $50 across the board. Too late. When the starting bell rang, I stood second in the line shuffling my feet nervously. My imagination carried me ahead to the finish line with the vision of Rocky Hanover charging to the wire as a $10.00 winner. I roughly calculated a $600 loss. I couldn’t bear to watch the race, but I could not shut out the public address announcer.  In the next agonizing two minutes my palms sweat, my heart pounded and my mind flashed ahead to my inevitable confrontation with Carolyn. How would I explain to her that the kids would have to go without snowsuits and boots for the winter? In addition my conscience intruded the image of Gianni Schicchi howling in pain in the 8th circle of Dante’s Inferno for his sin of fraud.

 

I listened with dreadful anxiety as the favorite, Proper Stallion, pulled ahead out of the number one postposition to take the early lead. Steady Eddie ensconced himself in second position, and three other horses vied for the third slot as the horses completed the first half-mile. Rocky Hanover stayed close enough to the pack to keep my anxiety level at a pitch, but Vic’s 10-1 shot did not seem to be a serious contender.

 

But then the track announcer’s cadence quickened. He relayed the unwelcome news that Rocky Hanover had pulled out of the pack and was streaking ahead to challenge Proper Stallion. As they crossed the finish line, the announcer boomed over the loud speaker, “A photo finish! A photo finish: It appears to be Rocky Hanover by a nose. Please hold all pari-mutuel tickets.”

 

“Why had I not been paying attention?” I thought. “Why did Aristotle seduce me?” I tucked the book under my arm and slouched to the bar. “A shot of Old Fitzgerald and a bottle of Blatz,” I mumbled to the bartender. I hurled down the shot and gulped a chaser of beer and cursed Lady Fortuna.

 

While waiting for the results of the photo, I calculated my worst/best scenarios. If Rocky Hanover won, I would have to add $600 to Vic’s account and about $350 if he placed second. Considering that my graduate school stipend paid $3000 a year, I would have a lot to explain to Carolyn. As the shot and beer began to lend me a charge of false courage, the announcer came over the speaker with an announcement. “Attention, ladies and gentlemen. The officials have posted the inquiry sign. Hold all pari-mutuel tickets.”

 

Now the news could not be worse than my worse case imagining. I waited with firm hope for a reprieve from my careless inattention. After an interminable delay, the sober voice in a serious modulated tone announced the incredible news that Proper Stallion was the winner, and that Rocky Hanover was placed fourth.

 

I could hardly believe my good fortune. I ebulliently shouted at the bartender. “Give me a double shot of Old Fitz and a Blatz.” The bourbon and beer now curbed my usual reticence. “Why did they disqualify Rocky Hanover?” I asked a gloomy player standing next to me at the bar.

 

“That jerk, Hylkema, bumped three horses coming out of the far turn,” he said with the bitter disgust of a loser. “Let me tell ya. Whenever Hylkema substitutes for O’Brien, bet any other horse.”

 

I couldn’t believe my reversal of fortune and vowed to pay more attention to my responsibilities. I not only got shut out at the window, but I also failed to pay attention to the change of driver. Had I bet the $50 across the board with Hylkema as driver, I would have broken one of Vic’s iron clad rules. I would have lost $150 or would have had to explain to Vic that I hadn’t noticed the change in drivers.  

 

            I learned more than one lesson that night. Perhaps, I thought, it was my bad angel that caused my lapsed attention.  The $150 saved by my stupid oversight prompted me to reconsider Harry's original scam of booking Vic’s bets.  After going through the first $1000 of the $3000 Vic had given us in the Holiday Inn, I had an epiphany.  I came to see the irrefutable logic, if not the ethical probity, of Harry's original risk management plan.  I admitted to myself that my previous admonitions to Harry not to fade Vic’s bets were financially unsound and a bit puritanical. I worried about the legal ramifications of our scam but easily dismissed this concern as inconsequential and cowardly.

 

            The ethical considerations were a bit more complicated. Aristotle did not provide much help with a practical question of this kind. As a graduate student at a Jesuit University, I reasoned my way to a solution. It seemed only just that my children would have snowsuits for the coming winter, even if it meant the money would come from the racetrack's unearned income.

 

            Harry and I sailed through our first year of the racing schedule, pretending to bet Vic's selections. In addition, during the off-season Harry landed us another part-time job. Leo Huff had a plan to promote good will for the track. Numerous organizations regularly held parties at Sportsman’s Park. Leo offered their chairpersons a scheme that raised thousands of dollars for their organizations.

 

He ingeniously arranged for Harry and me to attend fundraisers for the Knights of Columbus, B'nai B'rith, and the like, as well as Democratic and Republican ward organizations. Good charity, politics and good PR for Sportsman’s Park. Harry and I attended the meetings as benevolent consultants, which meant we carried a movie projector, a screen and films of the races that had been taken at Sportsman’s Park the previous summer. We alternated almost every night of the week for which we received $25 for showing the racing movies and running an ersatz pari-mutuel window.

 

With plenty of beer and spirits flowing, the members and patrons in attendance would buy tickets and bet on the races as they did at the track. The sponsoring organization took all the proceeds except for the pay off to the winning tickets. We knew in advance who had won each race, as did a few of the regular horse players in the crowd, but it did not seem to dampen the enthusiasm for most of those in attendance.

 

Even though the movie reruns tided us over the winter months, working for Vic was more lucrative.  It was also less labor intensive and boring than watching the same races every night. No reading Aristotle’s Ethics for me between races at a Knights of Columbus bash.  We welcomed the regular racing season and fell into our familiar schedule. Vic hardly ever had a winning week, which is to say we hardly ever had a losing week. It could have been precarious if he had hit on a big winner, but that was unlikely, because he almost always bet the favorites. Whenever the odds became a bit chancy, we agreed to put the bet through the window.

 

Harry kept a strict accounting of the money in Norm's account. And Norm usually had a good idea of his balance, but sometimes he would become distracted by his other business affairs. Toward the end of the Sportsman’s Park season, the account was almost depleted, and Harry had to remind him to make a deposit. He no longer felt it necessary to meet for clandestine appointments to replenish the money supply. He would send a check in the mail, laundered as a business expense:

 

from the desk of

 

Vic Stockman

 

September 26, 1967

 

Mr. Harry Hardy

7603 Coles Ave.

Chicago, Illinois

 

Dear Mr. Hardy:

 

Following up our telephone conversation, enclosed you will find our check in the amount of $1,000. 00, as advance fee covering the research services. Once I get a better picture of how we are having a meeting of the minds, I'll be able to go into the matter with you further.

 

Thank you very much for your cooperation.

 

Kindest personal regards.

 

Sincerely yours,

 

READER'S CLUB, INC.

 

           

Victor Stockman, Pres.

Enc. Check for $1, 000.00

 

Vic had come to trust us, and we liked him. After a year of running his bets to the track, his name became familiar in our household. He was like a mysterious benefactor in a Dickens novel. One evening Vic was late calling with his selections for the night's card. Preparing the children for bed, Carolyn noticed that they were more restive than usual. Our oldest daughter, then about six years old, voiced the fears of her younger sisters: "Mommy, why hasn't Vic called with the action?" Carolyn gave her reassurance: “Sweetheart, don’t you worry about Vic. He is a busy man and will call when he has time.”

             

            Vic and I had become friendly from our frequent telephone conversations. He took great pains to explain the rationale for his nightly plays, but I couldn’t follow the logic of his system. On my way home from the track after the races, I would pull my 1951 Buick tank off the freeway to a telephone booth to call with the unvarying bad results. Because I lacked Harry's narrative talent, I could sense Vic’s disappointment with my recaps of the races. But he was always upbeat and would sign off with the hopeful bromide: "We'll get em tomorrow." Despite my obvious deficiencies as a horseplayer, Vic liked me. I think it gave him a feeling of class to have a graduate student run his bets to the track.

 

            From the beginning of our relationship, Vic had been promising to explain his system in detail when the time was ripe. One day I called him for the action a little earlier than usual, about 5 P.M. He answered the phone with his usual upbeat response,  “I haven’t studied the card yet, but I like the morning line; a couple of standouts in the later races.”

 

            “Well, I’ll call you back a little later,” I answered.

 

            “No need to do that. This might be a good opportunity for you to come out here and become familiar with the system. If we have time, I’ll go with you to the track.”

 

            This news hit me like a punch to the solar plexus. It had been our practice to split the cash in Vic's account as soon as he sent it to Harry. I nervously called for instructions. “Harry. We got a big problem. Vic wants me to come out to his house to show me how the system works.”

 

“That’s all right,” he answered. “Means he wants to give us more responsibility and more action.”

 

“But he also says he might go out to Maywood with me,” I emphasized.

 

“That would be a problem,” Harry responded with some concern.

”According to my reckoning, he has $350 in the account”.

 

“That sounds right,” I answered, “but I only have $20 in my pocket”

 

This gave Harry pause, for he only had $30 in the house, far short of being enough to cover Vic’s plays for the night's action.

 

“Let’s not worry about it now. By the time you drive to Glenco, and go over the race card with him, there will be no time to go to Maywood.”

 

I was not reassured. Driving with deliberation to Glenco I had time to imagine some fearsome scenarios. Arriving at his palatial home I trembled in anticipation. I felt ludicrous driving my rusty Buick up the manicured driveway to his Gatsby-like mansion surrounded by several acres of woods. As the valet took my car, the knot in my stomach tightened. A condescending servant escorted me into Vic’s office.

 

            The spacious suite dwarfed the kitchen and dining rooms combined in our apartment on the South Side. I had never seen such a peculiarly appointed office. Racing forms and programs going back several decades filled every bookshelf. No books about anything other than horses and racing. But I was too nervous to pay strict attention. Vic had been going over the program when I arrived. He signaled me to pull up a chair to the huge, executive style desk.  He reviewed his Byzantine spreadsheets and immediately settled on three plays for the night. None of his cabalistic explanations made sense to me, but I feigned an interest in the beautiful simplicity and profundity of his reasoning. I wanted to engage him in conversation that might distract him from his inclination to go to the track. “I can’t get over the research and the incredible depth of your understanding of horses and odds. You remind me of Cardano.”

 

Norm looked puzzled. “Who’s he?”

 

“Giralamo Cardano. He was an Italian genius, who lived around the time of Michelangelo and Leonardo. Like those guys, he dabbled in a lot of arts and science. He was the first mathematician and philosopher who really took gambling seriously. He wrote a book on gambling in the 16th century called Book on Game of Chance,” I said.

 

“That’s interesting, Norm said. “Like to have that book. Can you buy me a copy?” Norm said.

 

“No,” I said. “Cardano wrote in Latin. It has never been translated into English. If you could find a first edition in Latin, though, it would cost you several thousand dollars.”

 

Norm seemed intrigued by Cardano. But I could not distract him for long from the immediate subject. My flattery apparently inspired him. “Now that you have an inkling of how the system works, I’m going to show you some of the finer points. Let’s go to the track together, and we can continue our discussion in some depth.” He called his wife in the other room, “I’m going to the track with Gus. I’ll need $1000.” He then turned to me and said, "According to my records, you should have $350. Is that right?"

 

            Vic was inspired by my flattery. “Now that you see how the system works, I’m going to show you some of the finer points. I’ll go with you to the track, and we can continue our discussion.” He called his wife in the other room, “Lucille, we’re going to the track.  Gimme a $1000.” He then turned to me and said, "According to my records, you should have $350. Is that right?"

 

I gulped and lied agreement, fingering nervously the three fives and five singles in my pocket.

 

“I’ve picked out three horses who look like sure winners, especially Easy Duper in the 7th. Bet $50 across the board on him.”

 

“Is that the only race you want me to bet?”

 

“Yes,” said Vic, “I’ll make my own bets on the others. You follow me. I want to get to Maywood by the 3rd race. It should go off about eight-forty. We’ll have to hurry.”

 

The valet pull Vic’s gold 1967 Cadillac around to the front of the mansion while I got in my Buick and waited in the driveway. Stepping behind the wheel, Vic motioned me to follow and smoothly accelerated out of the driveway. Dazed by the swift turn of events, I reflexively gunned the motor. The old tank lurched forward, belching oil fumes, tailing the Cadillac. After a breakneck scamper down the expressway, Vic pulled into the parking lot at the track at 8:30 with me dutifully behind him. We emerged from our cars in agitated conditions, Vic anxious to catch the 3rd race, and me distraught about how to bet $150 on Easy Duper with only $20 in my pocket. I had approximately two hours to figure out how to come up with $150, or concoct a big lie that would convince Vic that my lack of funds was not due to chicanery or incompetence.

 

            The parking lot was about two blocks from the entrance to the track. To my momentary relief I spied a telephone booth at the exit. There were no phones inside the track; this would be my last chance to make a call. I begged off Vic's insistence that we hurry to make the 3rd race and promised to meet him inside the clubhouse. I frantically dialed Harry's number. My hand trembling uncontrollably, I could hardly steady my finger to insert it in the slot of the dialer.

 

            “Hello,” answered Harry in a surly voice. I guessed from his unusual gruff tone that I had aroused him from the sack, an unaccustomed place for him to be at 8:30. I particularly regretted disturbing him, because I surmised that he had been enjoying one of the infrequent opportunities to have pleasure with his patient and beauteous wife, Ann.

 

“We got big trouble,” I blurted in the phone. “I’m at the track with Vic. He wants me to make a bet, and I’m short by $130.”

 

Harry started to pump for the facts, “Where’s Vic now? Where you calling from?

 

“I’m in a booth in the parking lot. I have to meet him in the clubhouse,” I said.

 

Harry continued his interrogation: “What are the names of the horses and number of the races?”

 

“He wants me to bet $50 across the board on Easy Duper in the 7th. “

 

Harry paused for a moment, “Well, I think I can make it out there by the 7th. It will go off about 10:40 , but I only have about $50 in the house.”

 

My heart sank. “Oh! My God,” I said. “What should I tell Vic?”

 

“Don’t say anything. I’ll be there for the 7th race. You meet me at the bottom of the escalator from the clubhouse to the main floor in front of the $50 window. I’ll be there by ten minutes before post time.”

 

“How you going to do that?” I asked.

 

“Let me worry about that. Just don’t let Vic make a bet in one of the earlier races.”

 

While Harry planned his strategy Ann advised him that all would be well because I was a graduate student who could outsmart Vic. Her sweet naiveté did not reassure Harry.

 

            I exited the phone booth with some hope, but with the added fear that Vic might want me to bet a horse in an earlier race. I met Vic at our prearranged location in the clubhouse after the 4th race. As we sat down with our drinks and racing cards, Vic queried, “Where you been?” I fretted at the question but came up with a plausible lie. “Had to call my wife. She didn’t know I was going to the track. We had a few words about it.” I then feigned interest in Vic’s betting strategy for the night’s card. “How did your do in the 3rd?”

 

Vic cleared his throat. “I knew Tiny Alice was all the best. She led all the way into the back stretch, but then she broke stride and finished out of the money.”

 

“I’m sorry about that, Vic.”

 

“Don’t worry about it. The perfect is the enemy of the good.” I didn’t see the immediate relevance to this response, but I let it pass. He explained, “my big plays will come in the 5th and the 7th races.” Trying to act interested in Vic’s arcane theories of handicapping, I could not sit quietly. But he continued his monologue. He wanted to talk about how profitable the night would turn out. He waxed eloquent about the future opportunities for Harry and me. It was only a matter of time before he would pass on to us the mysteries of the system that had taken him 35 years to perfect.

 

            My distracted responses disappointed Vic, but he gave no negative signals. He talked about horses and the past killings he had made at the track, how easy it would be for him if he could devote all his time to studying past performances and attending the track every night. Because of my agitated and barely coherent responses, he no doubt wondered about me, out of my depth in the art and science of handicapping. I could barely concentrate on the names of the horses, much less Vic’s convoluted explanation of which horse would win and why.

 

            After the 6th race Vic became noticeably more attentive and animated. He rehearsed again all the reasons for his selection of Easy Duper and why it was surely the best bet of the night. Seeing the regal stallion saunter onto the track for a couple of easy scores around the circuit, Vic became ecstatic. “Look at his gait; smooth as a Swiss watch.”  About ten minutes to post time, he arose from his seat and announced, “Let’s make our bets.”

 

The dreaded moment had arrived. I reminded myself of a fall guy in a B movie. The escalator downstairs to the $50 window loomed in my imagination as the last mile to the electric chair at Statesville Pen. Walking to the escalator, I thought, “Only the Governor could commute my sentence”. As I alighted off the last step and turned the corner to the $50 window, not the Governor, but Happy Harry Hardy appeared in the appointed place, smiling like a Washington lobbyist. Still wearing the pajamas he forgot to take off under his coat in his hasty exit from bed, Harry clutched in his fist the three win, place and show tickets on Easy Duper. I seized them as a drowning man grasps for a straw.

 

With only a few minutes remaining until post time, Harry briefly described his frantic ride to Tony Casto’s saloon to put the bite on the proprietor. Tony was Harry's most reliable bookmaker. He could always be counted on in a pinch, even though Harry had strained his credit rating many times over the years. But the grim, cigar-chomping Tony came forward with $200 on the barrelhead. This was a considerable act of generosity and/or a remarkable feat of diplomacy by Harry. Tony wasn't a guy to be easily bamboozled by lowlife hoods. He could be relied upon never to let down a friend and good customer. And Harry qualified in both categories, even though he had at the time a sizable debt in Tony's mental ledger book.

 

            Grasping Harry to my bosom I was reminded of my Irish mother's most adulatory compliment in gratitude for a genuine act of charity. "Harry, old buddy, you're working in the shadow of the cross." I then raced up the escalator to the clubhouse and flashed the tickets at Vic. Sitting down next to him, I said with a broad grin. “Now, let’s watch Easy Duper run over those nags and make our night. Too bad the odds have dropped to even money!”

 

Vic marveled at my changed, relaxed, and ebullient demeanor. “Don’t worry about the odds falling. It only means that the $2 betters are following the smart money.”

 

I responded, “I appreciate your taking the time to explain the system. I learned a lot tonight.”

 

Vic felt proud that he had made such an impression. “I like your enthusiasm. That’s the attitude that will make you a winner.”

 

The bell sounded, and the horses were off. Easy Duper pulled out of the nine hole and was parked on the outside for most of the race. Trailing the field turning into the stretch, he made a valiant run for the money, but he didn’t have the speed. He placed fourth in a 10-horse field. I tried to bolster Vic’s spirits. “I know you had a lot of confidence in Easy Duper. You got to give him credit for the grit he showed at the finish.”

 

Vic took the results with the same positive attitude I had known him to have on the phone. “He was by far the best in the race. Would have won by four lengths if Banks hadn’t parked him on the outside. If the race had been a quarter mile longer, he would be in the winner’s circle now.”

 

“I admire your attitude,” I replied.

 

“You got to take one race at a time,” answered Vic. “Next time he runs, the odds will be right, and we’ll get it all back with interest.”

 

After the race Vic got up to leave. “Good night. A pleasure showing you a bit about handicapping. I’ll call you on Thursday.”

 

We shook hands and parted. I went to the bar on the lower level where Harry was waiting. We replayed the whole drama and conjured up the dark imaginings of what could have happened to our respective futures. Harry had saved his job as well as his reputation among the regulars in the VIP lounge. I continued to use my part-time income from Vic to continue my graduate studies. With relief and gratitude I raised my glass of Blatz beer and intoned a toast: “Here’s to Vic Stockman, truly a philanthropic handicapper!”

 

My partnership with Harry and our courier service for Vic continued for another year until we left Chicago to take my teaching position at Ohio University. Vic must have been pleased with our professional services, for he had no objection to my brother taking up my partnership with Harry.

 

            Now almost forty years later I recall Vic's largess with fond affection. Kate, our pediatrician daughter, reminded me of him just recently. She noticed that the gigantic wing of the Lutheran Hospital in Niles is named Stockman, which I like to presume was funded by Vic. Besides having helped finance my graduate education, he was a benefactor to a wide array of charitable causes, truly a philanthropic horse player. More than any philosopher, Vic reaffirmed my faith that “hope springs eternal” in the soul of man.

 

 

 

Paper read to a joint meeting of the Chicago Literary Club and the Cliff Dwellers, April 17, 2006

 

Ed Quattrocchi

Evanston, Ill