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Penniless Souls

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Blurb

Twenty years after Penny’s Hawaiian adventure, she and her husband are moving to Las Vegas, Nevada.

But when they run out of gas in the Mojave Desert, the couple is rescued by a famous painter. The eccentric artist hires Penny to redecorate his property, while her husband finds work on a skyscraper on the Strip.

Things are looking up, until Penny hears rumors about human trafficking. When her daughter goes missing, Penny’s mothering instinct goes into high gear. But will a mother’s love make a difference, or does God hold all the cards?

Forty-eight hours is all Penny's got to rescue Lani, and the clock is ticking.

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Prologue
PrologueEver since modern casinos replaced coins with little slips of paper, the fake sound of cha-ching fills the smoke-filled air in surrealistic dreams, where few win, most lose, but almost everyone pretends they're having fun. Players wear lucky hats and keep a good luck charm or a fortune from a cookie in their wallets. They strike a poker face and study the odds, thinking life's a crapshoot anyway. All members of the human race, pawns on a giant chessboard, knocked around by destiny. Outside of a gaming house, on legal documents, these are referred to as uncontrollable Acts of God. They include hurricanes, fires, earthquakes, floods, disease and violence. Which begs to ask the philosophical or rhetorical question: how do happy, healthy people manage to evade depression and loss? How is it, their child is spared from autism? Why did their house remain standing during a wildfire? Why did the bullet ricochet off the building, hitting someone else? There must be a trick, akin to counting cards. A practical guide to parenting based on the mathematical theories of probability. An answer every mother of a teenage daughter wants to know, regarding control and the perfect timing for letting go. * * * Early one Tuesday morning, Penny Murray found herself on the Las Vegas Strip inside a behemoth casino, where John, her husband of 21 years, needed to pick up a check. His last and final paycheck for a February spent in the seedy opposite of the luxury surrounding her. While waiting, she thought about the check. It reminded her of the little slips of paper the slot machines spat out after someone won a jackpot. Faux coin sounds mingled with tinny, clinky chimes, rattled around in her head. She thought about their upcoming move back to California, and how their time in Sin city didn't prove to be fun at all. Especially, after the nerve-wracking incident at the local airport that had made her blood-pressure orbit. She thought about what all of it had meant. Everything, it seemed had a reason. Predetermined by fate or merely random, she wondered, thinking of the last few weeks and the unexpected joys and dark lessons that clung to her like desert sand. Cha-ching—the repetitive sound surrounded her, driving her mad with anticipation. They had to get out of Vegas, she thought, swinging short, shapely legs onto a bar stool and wondering why picking up a check took so long. Her eyes focused in on a middle-aged, heavy set woman playing a five-dollar slot machine. The woman wore a hot pink, polyester sweat-suit with worn sneakers. Maybe those clothes had fit her once. A tight bra accentuated her unpleasant back fat. Every few minutes, a cherry symbol gave the woman three dollars, and one time she even had a big ten-dollar win. Poor lady, Penny thought, wondering why the woman kept feeding money into the stupid machine. 'I'm going home lady,' Penny whispered to herself, turning away in disgust. 'And I suggest you do the same thing.' Something kept that woman glued to that cushioned stool. Her motives had to reach well beyond the obvious desire to win. What made one person lucky and why did others lose? Penny began to judge and analyze the situation. Perhaps the monotonous motion, consisting of pushing the same button, comforted that lady in an odd sort of way. Maybe she needed blinking lights, Day-Glo neon and the maddening sound of phony coins. Perhaps her cat-filled, dilapidated home begged for a tractor to make a path to her bed-bug infested mattress. Or worse, her husband had left with some floozy he met one night at a club, and her deadbeat children lived in another state. Penny figured, the loud chimes and casino noises drowned the woman's pain, replacing her solitary and bored life with not-so-cheap thrills, thereby placating her soul. Cynical and sad about the recession, a bankruptcy and a year full of nothing but trouble, Penny didn't enjoy watching people lose their money. She doubted her instincts were far from the truth. Life in Vegas had taught her many strange and unusual things. Anyway, you sliced it, she hated to think it, but that woman in hot pink looked like a born loser. A scream filled the air. The woman playing the slot machine shouted and bounced up and down on her stool. It sounded like a knife had plunged into her buffet-filled intestines. The reason became apparent rather fast. There, on the monitor, lined up and flashing, ringing violently with ear splitting sirens and notifying everyone within a mile, this underdog looking woman had won a jackpot. Glowing ruby sevens–pulsated almost sexually–as a crowd gathered. She turned around beaming, revealing a row of coffee-stained, crooked teeth. The slot attendant came over and paid her twenty thousand dollars faster than a winning horse pulls into the lead at the Kentucky Derby. Minutes later, the woman called two or three people on her cell phone. Maybe, Penny thought, the woman didn't have a problem with hoarding after all. Maybe she had family members who loved her, and they were coming to get her right now. Hopefully, they'd take her to the dentist on the way home before stopping at a hair salon to have a root touch up. Penny had to admit, watching the entertaining commotion felt like suspended animation. The harder she stared, the more her heart pulled her back into the blissful scene. Oddly, Penny's viewpoint changed. It didn't happen fast, but when her cheeks blazed, it seemed obvious she felt ashamed for her preconceived notions. While staring at the cheering crowd, something deep inside began to twist around, creating a certain kindness towards the plump woman in pink. The more Penny watched, the more she realized the woman must have lived a hard life, earning wrinkles and age spots, one miserable day at a time. Time seemed to stand still. The contagious smiles bouncing from one face to another in the casino, gave Penny hope. Where was John? He needed to see this. Twenty thousand would really help them right about now. An hour later, John still hadn't returned with his check and the winner had left with two security guards. Though she thought about going to the parking structure to see if he was at the car, she remembered his words, “Penny, wait here or I'll never find you.” So, she waited, and thought about the events that uprooted them, bringing them to this gambling mecca in the middle of nowhere.

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