Thursday, July 28, 2005

Seven: For No Tomorrow

Yeah. Here's an incomplete page seven. There most likely will not be a page eight tomorrow unless I managed to somehow pull it off. We'll see.

****

After the fire that spontaneity had instigated burned out, a new burning began on the long walk back to the casino. It was the burning of the dream, of being tossed by the queen into the depths of an embracing hell. He walked in silence next to pretty Mary K. They did not hold hands. Damien looked intently on the ground, watching the grass and dirt that had betrayed him. He felt dizzy, and hot, and charge-less. Ionized into neutrality. He could not look at her, and he knew that she would not look at him. The term that he so loathed, the feminine term that rang of purity could no longer be applied to him, a product of reproductive loss. He decided that all there was left to do was play poker.

Thus, after poking her, he played poker. After holding her, he played Hold ‘em. He saw no away around it—Darius had forwarded the buy-in of $10,000 (business was very very good he seemed to say with a wink from across the table), and he could stand to win $250,000. He played Hold ‘em often, often enough to pick up the ins and outs of the game, how to read the amateurs, when to fold.

He liked the game. The outcome was hard to anticipate and somehow predictable, it was individual and communal, it was easy and yet complex. He could not explain the joy he got from winning a hand when it was just dumb luck, nor could he explain the feeling of loss when someone else had dumb luck. Damien considered himself good at the game. It required more skill and know-how than betting on sports, but it was more of a gamble. Maybe Darius was right.

There were a majority of amateurs at tonight’s tournament, pretentious and pretending that they knew what they were doing. The dealer often had to tell one of the players at the table, laughing at some abstruse joke about the David Hume’s death being the birth of our nation, that he was in the big blind. The player would then put in the wrong amount of chips, and when the dealer corrected the error—"sorry, sorry. I thought we were further along in the game." Damien, annoyed at the poor affect of this player, decided to take him out as soon as possible. A spade flush dug him his grave. Damien knew that this old, rich man would not see it coming. Damien relished in his dumb luck.

Darius was a good poker player as well. He was on the conservative side, but when he had it, one could never tell. Darius was sitting next to his "client," so Damien assumed, and Darius would occasionally whisper to the man on his right and laugh. Darius’s client, a youngish man of about thirty, was not much of a poker player, but he continually got lucky, knocking out various players with straights and sets and flushes. Darius semi-bluffed on a pair of twos and took a big pot, nonchalantly showing his cards afterward to get the guy sitting next to the dealer on tilt.
"I had a pair of kings!"
"You shoulda called." Darius smiled. Darius always smiled. Even when he lost a big hand to this twenty-one year old kid (most likely a son of a member) three seats down, a set of twos falling to a full house (nines full of twos), Darius smiled. Darius doubled up when the kid did not see a four card straight on the table. Darius was like that, smiling, but vengeful.