Bet.your.ass.7.-.madison.parker Direct
Five years after that, Madison Parker sold her logistics firm for $12 million.
"Bet your ass on seven," she said, pushing all her chips in.
Madison Parker was known for two things in Las Vegas: her photographic memory for poker faces, and her terrible habit of saying "Bet your ass" before making a stupid wager. Bet.Your.Ass.7.-.Madison.Parker
She lost everything—$94,000. The Bishop didn't gloat. He just said, "You didn't bet your ass, Miss Parker. You bet your arrogance. There's a difference."
Humiliated and broke, Madison borrowed a bus ticket from a dealer she'd once tipped well. She went home to Phoenix, moved into her grandmother's spare room, and took a job as an inventory clerk at a tire warehouse. Five years after that, Madison Parker sold her
Madison looked at her hole cards. A pair of sevens. Her lucky number. She grinned.
At 27, she was a professional card counter banned from every major casino on the Strip. So she moved to underground games—riskier, darker, and far more dangerous. She lost everything—$94,000
The Bishop turned over a straight flush. Madison's sevens were worthless.
One Tuesday night, she sat across from a man known only as "The Bishop." He was calm, wore a white linen suit, and pushed a stack of chips toward the center of the table. "Final hand," he said. "Seven-card stud. Your entire buy-in against mine."
For six months, she did nothing but count tires and study probability theory—not for cards, but for logistics. She realized the skills that made her a great card counter (pattern recognition, risk assessment, emotional control) could make her a great supply chain analyst.
One year later, she built a predictive algorithm that saved the warehouse $2 million in shipping costs. The owner gave her a 10% stake in the company.
