Page 138 of The Vacation Mix-Up

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“Oh.” She happily stirs her drink with her straw. “This is fun!”

The ball bounces a couple of times, then slots into number seventeen.

“It’s black.” She throws her hand into the air, turns toward me, and bounces in her seat. “I win!”

I smile at her cuteness. “You did!”

“How much?”

Not wanting to burst her happy little bubble, I don’t have a choice, because she’ll no doubt accuse the dealer of cheating. “One dollar.”

“Is that all?”

“Yeah. The outside bets pay even.”

“That’s ridiculous. I should win more.” Riles sucks another large mouthful of her drink through her straw and then scratches her head. “So which numbers pay more than even?”

“If you choose a column or one of the groups of dozen, it’ll pay two to one.” Pushing one of my chips onto the table, I stop it at number twenty-five—Imogen’s birthday. “The individual numbers pay thirty-five to one.”

“Oooh, that’s good.” She slams a chip on eleven. “That’s my lucky number.”

I place a chip on fifteen: my birthday; one on three: Roni’s birthday; and one on twenty-six: Poppy’s birthday. “What day were you born?” I ask.

“The seventh.”

I place one on seventoo.

“Hey! I was going to choose that.”

“Ease up, Riles. You still can.”

“Good.” She slides a chip next to mine. “What day were you born?”

I point to fifteen.

She slides a chip on that number too.

Once again smiling at her cuteness, I ask, “Are you finished betting?”

“Yep.”

The dealer spins the wheel, and she quickly slams a chip ontotwenty-one while mischievously eyeing him over the rim of her drink.

He sweeps his hands across the table. “No more bets.”

“Mom’s birthday,” she explains.

I kiss her temple and hug her to me as the ball once again rolls around the wheel, bouncing a couple of times before landing on seven.

“We won!” she shouts, shooting out of her seat and almost choking on her cocktail.

I laugh. “We did!”

“How much?”

“Thirty-five dollars each, plus the dollar we bet.” I scan the table and do the math in my head. “But I lost four dollars on the other bets, and you lost three.”

She sits back down. “That doesn’t matter. We still won.”