Authors: Daniel Mason
I instruct him on how best to make a noose from a bedsheet.
Â
I read it and said, âNot as catchy as the first one. Doesn't
grab
me.'
He said, âOkay. Okay, yeah.'
He flipped through his book some more, showing me tiny illustrations of mushrooms and people trapped in bubbles. Most of his characters looked as if they desperately wanted to escape the pages. I ashed my cigarette onto an open page of his book.
There was one page in his book that caught me. It showed Death in a flowing black robe, not wielding a scythe but holding a six-shooter like a cowboy, and I knew without being able to see, that there was only one bullet in that gun.
At the bottom of the page, in the shadow of Death, were scrawled the words:
Â
I wake in the night
And I don't know what to do
I lay in my bed
And I'm sick with the thought of you.
Â
A week later I was at the roulette as a player. I came home with blood and brains on my shirt and told Phoebe that a bird had crashed through the window of the taxi I'd been riding in. She'd been out shopping that morning when I found the cardboard box in a cupboard in the spare
room. It contained two pistols, six-shooters. I had no idea where Hayes had obtained the weapons. Their serial numbers had been filed down and neither seemed more identifiable than the next.
Just like faces in a roulette match.
When I took the second and last of my weapons to the next roulette match, the Aussie said to me, âDo you know how hard it is to get your hands on a weapon in this country?'
I could sympathise with him on the task. Since players were required to bring their own weapons, week after week we were struggling to find a six-shooter. I'd have been unable to play a game that night if I hadn't found the box with the guns.
He said, âWhat do you reckon they do with all of these guns after the night?'
I said, âGet rid of them, I'd imagine.' Hayes had told me that the weapons were bundled in a sack and tossed off bridges into swamps or rivers. A different place every time, just like disposing of bodies. I wondered how functional a gun might be after it had been sitting in the mud at the bottom of a river for several months. The firing pin wouldn't work.
Across the room from us a gunshot rang out and a man hit the floor. I cursed the Aussie for distracting me. They were already dragging the body away and leaving a wet red trail.
I cracked my knuckles and fished a cigarette from the packet in my pocket.
The Aussie was still musing. âWe should find out what they do with all of these guns.'
âFollow them,' I said, lighting my cigarette.
âWhat?'
âFollow the weapons. After the night is over. Watch where they go.' It seemed pretty obvious to me. I inhaled a lungful of smoke. âThese guys are going to get rid of the weapons as soon as the night is over. They probably drive out somewhere and throw them into a lake before they go home to their wives and their beds.' I exhaled smoke into his face.
He said, âDo you have a car?'
I thought about it, and realised, as a matter of fact, I did. I'd been driving Hayes' car, using his licence. I licked my lips, ashed onto the table, gave him a smile. âI do.'
That night I won my match with only one pull of the trigger from me. I lost the toss and the bullet was in the second chamber. It was like that coin was more pivotal to your survival than the empty chambers themselves. When my opponent died I felt that warm rush as his blood tapped my face and hands. His leg twitched on the floor as he lay dead.
The Aussie played a game down to the fifth chamber. Later, sitting in the dark car outside the warehouse, he said to me, âMan, that one was wild.' He was animated, riding the high. âThat's a rush, man. Unbelievable.' He slapped the dashboard.
I sat low in my seat and watched the exits. There were two cars parked outside the warehouse, and we were sitting further along the street away from the lights. It was nearing two in the morning. If we had coffee and doughnuts this would have been just like a stakeout.
There was a splash of light as the double doors opened and three men came out carrying boxes and bags. One stayed behind to lock the doors and the other two crossed
the parking lot to the cars. The bodies had already been taken for disposal.
The Aussie said, âWhich car do we follow?'
âFlip a coin,' I told him. In the darkness it was impossible to tell what the men were loading into each car.
âHeads for the one on the left.'
âTails.'
We followed the car on the right, keeping our distance in an attempt to remain inconspicuous. The taillights burned into my mind.
The car slowed on a bridge under bright streetlights. There was only one occupant. He idled there, perhaps waiting for us to pass. The Aussie said to me, âRam him. Let's ram him.'
I shrugged and jammed my foot on the accelerator like a racecar driver.
We came speeding in alongside the idling car and I thrust the wheel hard toward it. The sound of rending metal and shattering glass filled my ears. The hood of our car crumpled toward us in a series of small waves. Steam rose from the engine. I stared through the window at the man next to us, fumbling with his seatbelt, his car jammed up against the bridge railing. The nose of our car pushed the frame of his own inward, pinning him in place. He was struggling to climb out through the open window.
âWhat if he has a gun?' the Aussie was asking me.
âShut up,' I said. I pulled our car around and pushed open the door, leaving the engine running, listening to the car hiss and squeal. âLet's get this over with,' I said.
The Aussie was busy inspecting the damage to our car when I pulled the Vietnamese man through the window. He was babbling incoherently and I was unable to deter
mine whether he was expressing fear or anger. I slapped him and said, âWe just want the guns. Where are they?' I looked over his shoulder into the car and saw nothing. Shoving him roughly aside I pulled his keys from the ignition and went to the trunk of the car. Inside there was a canvas sack containing around a dozen weapons. I slung it over my shoulder.
The Vietnamese man was cowering where I had dumped him.
The Aussie was coming up behind me, saying, âWhat do we do with him?'
I shrugged.
The Aussie said, âShould we kill him? Knock him out?'
âThrow him off the bridge,' I said.
âWhat?'
âThrow him off the bridge. Hurry it up.'
The Aussie looked at me, bewildered, and he said, âUh, I don't think I'll be strong enough.'
I said, âFor fuck's sake. Hold this.' I gave him the sack and leaned in close to the Vietnamese man, who began to babble again and struggle against my grip. I said to the Aussie, âYou're always strong enough when the rush comes on this hard.'
I gripped the man under the armpit and by the collar, and heaved him against the bridge railing. The water twenty-five feet below gave a dull reflection of the streetlight above us. The man was kicking my shins and I slapped him again, then heaved. He clutched at my shirt and there was the sound of tearing fabric as his weight jerked me forward and he fell out into open space.
He plunged, half of my shirt waving in his hand, as
he receded from my vision and then splashed.
âBastard,' I muttered.
I hurried back to the car with the sack of weapons bouncing against my shoulder.
Â
The sound of bone crunching, being shattered and grinding against other bone fragments. That's something that sticks in my mind. I remember his hands when they were done: the disproportionate knuckles, fingers twisted at inhuman angles twitching.
Brutality is not a man blowing his brains out the side of his head. Brutality is what they do to you when you refuse to play the game. When you sign for a game, it's a contract. Hayes forged my signature for my first game, but I didn't know that. Even if I had gone with my first instincts to back out of that game, they wouldn't have let me. I was bound to it.
It didn't matter now that I was signing into my games under Hayes' name. The names on the ledger didn't really belong to anybody in particular, anyway. One night I played a game with James Dean, and another with Donald Duck. You weren't your name. I was signing Hayes, and the Aussie was Aussie. All you were was a finger on a trigger, a brain about to explode.
Addiction is when you go out of your way to obtain what you need for your fix, and nothing else matters. I was in a room full of men addicted to the game. Long-term players, veterans. Survivors. They came back for their own reasons, the money or the thrill.
The Aussie had an addiction to the game, but I could see it was wearing him down.
He said to me, âI'm sick of the effort it takes me to get a gun in this country.'
I told him, âYou should have some spares, surely.'
He said, âWhat? Do you think I can get my hands on more than one at a time?' He laughed.
I said, âWell, we grabbed a few the other night, remember? Don't tell me you've gone through them all already?'
He said, âWhat? What are you talking about?'
I couldn't tell if he was playing dumb. I said, âThe other night, on the bridge.'
âI don't know what you're talking about,' the Aussie told me.
âYou were there.'
âYou must be thinking of somebody else,' he said, turning away.
I shrugged. Maybe I
was
thinking of somebody else.
The Aussie said that he had a bad feeling about his next match and wasn't going to go through with it. He was a man who believed strongly in âfeelings'. He was smoking a cigarette and there was sweat at his temples in clustered beads. His hair was tied back with a piece of twine. He had shaved that morning and the skin at the curve of his jaw was reddened with dry irritation. He said, âNot this game, it doesn't feel right. I'm out. I don't wanna do this.'
I crunched ice from my empty glass between my teeth. I'd never seen anybody bail out of a match so far. It seemed cowardly. I told him, âThere's nothing to worry about. Don't back away from death, it's such a part of you.'
âNah,' he said, pushing away from the table. âI'm gonna speak with someone about this.'
These nights are run by nameless officials who work for an also unnamed criminal organisation. They take care of the books, the betting, the tabs, the bullets.
The Aussie had a quiet word to one of the officials who sat at the desk. I watched frantic hand movements and frowns on faces. The official was pointing to an open book on the desk and the Aussie was shaking his head, saying no. The official gave a shrug and the Aussie turned away, swearing. I could make out the words by the movement of his lips.
Tonight the roulette was taking place in the basement of a restaurant in Binh Thanh.
I could still smell fried onions and there were traces of flour covering the floor. Most of the floor space in the basement here had been cleared. There were barrels and sacks stacked beside an industrial freezer at the far end of the room.
The Aussie returned to the table and slammed his drink down hard. Ice rattled against the glass. He exhaled over his upper lip and a loose strand of hair floated briefly upward, then settled again against his forehead and clung there to the sweat.
He said, âStupid fucking gook.'
I leaned closer toward him. âAre you in, or are you out?'
âI'm out, I'm not doing this.'
âDid they agree with that?' I asked, nodding toward the registration desk, where three of the officials had gathered and were talking furiously.
âNo,' he replied quietly, and if I hadn't known what he was going to say before he said it, I'd have had to ask him to repeat himself over the din surrounding us. Full house
tonight, a lot of people packed into a small room. A lot of body heat and sweat and blood and brains ready to take a bullet. He said, âI'm so tired.'
âHow long have you been playing this game for?' I asked him.
He shrugged. âCouple of weeks. Not long. My visa runs out soon.'
âHave you ever seen anybody back out of a game?'
âNo. You?'
âNope.' There had been a cigarette sitting behind my ear and I removed it and placed the filtered end against my lips. There can be upwards of thirty-seven thousand different chemicals in a single cigarette. Smoking when pregnant may harm your unborn child. Smoking when pregnant may enhance your surging tumour.
The Aussie said, âSo you don't know what these guys do if you decide to back out?'
Across the room another player was already seated for the impending match. Walking toward us were two officials, looking a little more than slightly pissed off. They might have been twins wearing the same suits and expressions.
I said, âI have a feeling we're about to find out. Just a hunch.'
They pointed to the Aussie and they said, âYou.'
The Aussie looked up at them with a frown, as if they were interrupting an important conversation, and he said, âI told you I'm not playing this one.' He reminded me of a sulking child, arms folded protectively around his drink.
âYou play,' the officials said. Their faces might have been carved from wood.
The Aussie shook his head firmly and did not look
them in the eye. One of the men turned and he waved to somebody near the entrance, a quick flick of the wrist. The Aussie didn't seem to notice this swift exchange. I tugged uncomfortably at the collar of Hayes' tattered jacket that I had taken to wearing.
Casually, I said, âIt's getting hot in here.'
One of the officials turned his stony gaze toward me. I nodded and smiled and puffed on my cigarette. He turned away.
Two large men appeared beside the officials as they repeated, âYou play.'
The Aussie looked over the two cumbersome newcomers and shook his head. âNo.'