It seems the world of the people who work in casinos must be quite different from the one most of us inhabit. Inside, with no natural sunlight, there's no difference between day and night—just the never-changing environment of artificial light and sounds. And, as a world built on the promise of quick and easy wealth, it's easy to see how those inside could lose their way, or at the very least be following a different set of guideposts. Playwright Jon Steinhagen sets up this milieu convincingly in his world premiere play Aces, which is concerned with the lives of some Las Vegas casino employees in 1975 who, after running a small-time scam at their blackjack tables for several years, have to decide whether or not to keep it going when one of their accomplices dies unexpectedly. The scheme required four dealers plus the pit boss and the floor manager to be in the scam and the remaining conspirators must decide whether or not the new dealer—a woman, no less—can be trusted to join with them in it.