Twenty years later I’m sitting in room 217 of the Lucky Sevens motel in Las Vegas, Nevada. The name is a misnomer: anyone with even a shred of luck wouldn’t be reduced to flopping in this shithole. Railcars rattle by outside my window, Sin City washouts hopping boxcars down to California, hoping their luck will turn with a change of scenery. I pity their misplaced optimism.
The telephone is ringing.
The room is a shoebox—cigarette burns in the carpet, mildew in the shitter, mattress smelling like roach powder and stale piss. Outside it’s a real skid row district, human wreckage shambling around, last retreat before they die.
The fucking phone ringing, ringing, ringing.
“What?”
“It’s Len. Getting a game together. You in?”
The oh-so-familiar lightning bolt of anticipation zigzags down my spine.
“Where at?”
“Woodlawn.”
“What—the fucking boneyard?”
“Problem?”
“It’s creepy. Playing cards in a cemetery—who does that?”
“Archie the Mongoose works there, sweeping up, polishing coffins, stealing gold fillings out of stiffs’ mouths—hell, I don’t know. Good a place as any. Real ambiance.” Len’s sun-drenched drawl mangles the word: aayym-bee-yaance.
“What are the stakes?”
“Whatever you got.”
“I’m tight.”
“You’re always tight. Regular duck’s ass.”
“Listen, I’m tight and I got outstanding markers all over town—”
“Cry me a fucking river. Listen, Pokerface: you in, or do I cross you off my list?”
“Don’t call me that.”
“What?”
“Pokerface. Don’t.”
“You’re right, I shouldn’t. You don’t deserve that name. Why don’t you hang up this phone, walk the fifty yards to the railroad, hop the next boxcar? Because you’ve crapped out, pal. Lost the eye of the tiger.”
I tell myself I won’t let him get to me, but Len is the consummate psychological acupuncturist, always knowing where to stick the needles.
“You should leave town, Pokerface. You’ve been busted.”
Prick goes the needle.
“Make tracks while you’ve still got a shred of dignity.”
Prick.
“You’re so over-the-hill you can’t even see the hill you’re over anymore.”
The guy’s such a fucking prick.
Finally I say, “What time?”
“An hour.”
“See you if I see you.”
We both know I’ll be there.
The bathroom mirror is smeared with hot-pink nail polish. I use a straight razor to shave the hairs stubbling the gouge in my skull. Once, in a fit of blind depression, I bought a softball to see if it would fit into the divot. It did. My cranial prosthetic rests on the toilet seat. It’s non-allergenic ballistic silicone (Sim-Skin™), molded to match the contours of my face. A glass eye stares from between milky folds of rubber. A five-hour operation bolted clips onto my skull which lock the prosthetic in place. I comb my hair forward, black locks descending to the tip of my nose, do my best to pass as a human being.
I’ve got one-thousand dollars in the back pocket of my Wranglers. A final grub stake. I know what I should do: walk to the bus station and catch a Greyhound to somewhere, anywhere, put as many miles between me and Paradise Valley as possible. But I won’t. Gambling is a disease, same as malaria or polio or cancer, except the symptoms manifest themselves in your mind instead of your body. I tuck my only real possession—a nickel-plated Cobray M-11—into my waistband before hitting the bricks.
I catch the bus at the corner of Phoebe Drive and Arville Street, heading uptown. The bus threads a meandering path up the Strip. A pack of teens breakdance on the corner of Oakley and Bonita, Converse high-tops beating a tattoo on a flattened cardboard box with Paul Hardcastle’s anti-Vietnam anthem “19” pounding from a boom-box: And the soldier was nineteen, nineteen; ni-ni-ni-ni-ni-ni-nineteen, nineteen…
An aging showgirl with massive tits boards at the Tropicana. Viet women don’t have big tits. Diet and racial tendencies, I guess. Never seen anything bigger than token nubs and I am reminded of a time…
…three months in-country and the unit on a two-day furlough. We spent the night in a village near Quy Nhon, a thatched hut trafficking in Mekong and seasoned whores. The women were hideous, faces like rotted bees nests, but a ground-pounder from 17th Recon named Quillen was horny enough to screw a knothole.
He took one of them out back and fucked her in a pile of drying bamboo. Quillen was so short he could’ve parachuted off a dime, and Section-8 to boot: when he came, he clamped his teeth over the whore’s nipple and chewed it off. She screamed and struggled but Quillen pinned her down and spat the nipple in her face.
“Fucking bitches!” he screamed. “We’re here to save you from your miserable existence and you cunts won’t even throw some free gash our way!”
A child, maybe eight years old, ran out and started winging punches at Quillen. The whore’s son, we figured. The kid’s mouth was stuffed with something; he opened his mouth and I saw the blasting cap wedged between his teeth. Then Quillen punched him, an uppercut to the jaw, and the kid’s head exploded, fragments of skull and teeth tearing Quillen’s face and chest to ribbons.
None of us liked Quillen, but Zippo razed the village on principle…
…I get off the bus at Owens Avenue, two blocks from Woodlawn. To the east is Harte Park, where the bullet-riddled bodies of Bugsy Siegel’s rivals are pushing daisies. To the west is Valley Hospital, its wards choked with attempted suicides, strung-out addicts, alkies. I know this city with clinical familiarity. I suspect many prisoners share a similar desire to know the exact dimensions of their cells.
Woodlawn’s quiet. I walk between rows of tombstones adorned with wilted flowers and corroded flag holders. Six feet beneath me, the dead are laid out in a matrix as organized as any urban city grid. Boneyard Metropolis, surviving population: zero.
Len greets me at the main entrance. We walk down a red-carpeted hallway, past capsule crypts stacked five-high, skyscrapers of the deceased. I scan brass nameplates for a familiar name, a celebrity or sports hero. Len opens an oak door marked PRIVATE and ushers me inside.
“You got to be shitting me.”
In the foreground, four men ring a stainless steel operating table. An Aftercare embalming machine emits a dull mechanic hiss pumping formaldehyde into the carotid artery of a shrouded cadaver. Wiry strands of dead, yellow-streaked hair spill from under the white sheet. The feet are uncovered: gnarled arthritic toes, waxy untrimmed nails. A Plano tackle box sits beside the corpse’s head, its shelves unfurled stair-like, stocked with rouge and lipstick, mascara and eyeliner pencils, blush, foundation mask.
I’m somewhat sickened to note this is not the strangest place I’ve played cards.
I scan the table. Two faces I recognize: Archie “Mongoose” Moore, permanent detox case with the loose face of a stroke victim; Ezzard-somebody-or-other, jet-black paintbrush moustache, used to play a doctor on a daytime soap. Neither can play to save their lives: Archie has so many tells his eyes may as well be mirrors reflecting the cards, while Ezzard blows those soap royalties chasing busted straights and phantom flushes.
The other two are unknowns. Sitting directly to my left is a fat-necked, crewcut bulldog. He’s wearing an olive-green cableknit sweater with rectangular shoulder patches. His face is thick, with heavy supraorbital ridges canopying small black eyes, and his grey-edged teeth are slightly bucked. The other guy is the bulldog’s mirror opposite: a blade-shouldered wisp with features sharp as the creases in a Marine sergeant’s dress utilities. The breast pocket of his spotless lab coat is crammed with combs, toothbrushes, and tweezers. His eyes are prune-pits behind thick, square glasses that might resemble ice cubes were it not for the accretion of dust and eye-grit.
“You already know Ezzard and Archi
e,” Len says, taking the seat to my right, “and this is Rocky,” nodding at the bulldog, “and George,” nod to the rake. “George is the head mortician. Dealer fee’s twenty.”
I peel a twenty off my wad, which Len palms with the deft sleight-handedness of a sideshow magician. Archie’s trembling like a three-toed lady: anticipation or the DT’s? I can’t tell. The mortician scrapes gunk from beneath his fingernails with a trocar needle.
Len shuffles a deck of Bees and runs down the game: “Straight Five Texas Stud, boys, nothing wild but the players. Bets on the Flop, Turn, and River. Ante’s twenty bucks; no max, no min. Rock and roll.”
Opening hand: my hole card’s an ace and a three, diamonds; the ace is solid if I can find it a date. The Flop is a six, also diamonds. I raise fifty, driving George and Ezzard out. Rocky raises fifty on my fifty. I call. The Turn card is the one-eyed jack of hearts. Fuck. In for one-forty, my flush busted, and unless I pair up I’ll be left ace-high and dry. Quick tabulation: three in fifty-two = a 6.98% chance of snagging an ace.
I drop a hundred, hoping to scare Rocky off. The bulldog matches and tosses another hundred. I should fold but instead call. Five-forty in the pot and me holding a handful of scattered shit!
“Down and dirty,” Len says.
The River is the ace of clubs. Fuckin A. I bet two-hundred, avoiding Rocky’s eyes, my body language screaming bluff. Rocky bites hard: two-hundred plus one-fifty, back at me. I goose the pot to twelve-forty and call.
“So what’re you packing, kid?” Rocky says.
Spin my ace onto the table.
“Fuck me Frieda,” says Rocky. “Rake it.” He doesn’t show his cards, and doesn’t need to: he caught a high face pair, kings or jacks, off the deal. Kept waiting on trips that never materialized and ended up hamstrung with the second-best hand.
I’m up big on my first hand. I should cash in and hightail it. But if I did intelligent things like that, I wouldn’t be in this position. I ante up.
Rounds pass, money changing hands only to boomerang back. I watch the other players on the Q.T. Archie’s eyes light up brighter than phosphorous flares whenever he snags a sweet holeshot, and Ezzard is plagued by betraying tics: nose scratches, moustache tugs, brow furrows. Rocky plays like a riverboat gambler, bluffing heavy to smokescreen weak cards. The mortician’s a tough read: he’s lost as many hands as he’s won, but his wins are big and he often folds on the Turn if he doesn’t get what he needs.
I catch a cold string of rags, mismatched twos and fours, busted straights waiting to happen. I’m folding off the draw, surrendering the ante. My stack’s deflating like a tire with a slow leak. I’m down to my initial grubstake when I catch the dream holeshot: red aces, diamonds and hearts.
Betting opens to me. I toss in thirty, Ezzard folds, Rocky gooses to fifty, Archie chases it to seventy-five, George calls. Flop’s the king of clubs: no help, no harm. I open with fifty, Rocky ups to seventy, Archie matches with a look that says he’s throwing good coin after bad, the mortician calls.
Six-sixty in the pot and the Turn’s the king of diamonds. Now everyone’s got a high face pair—but I’ve got two dynamite pairs. A brief scan tells me Archie’s set to fold but Rocky’s still a gamer. I bet a hundred, knowing Archie’s tapped but hoping to buffalo Rocky, and maybe George, into throwing down. Rocky, prototypical dick-swinger, chases the ante to one-fifty. Archie folds. The mortician lays his cards face-down and looks ready to follow suit but, with a sideways look at Len, matches at one-fifty.
Len says, “Down and dirty, gentlemen.”
The River is the ace of spades. I’ve caught the strongest possible full house, aces and kings. The lock. The nuts. I pour another shot of C.C.—hands shaking, stop shaking, stop—touch my thumbtips together to form a plow with my palms, and push all my chips into the pot.
“What the hell. It’s getting late.”
Rocky consults his meager stack and must admit his finances are not the equal of his bravado. “I’m out,” he says in disgust.
It’s me and the mortician. My guess is he’s holding the final ace, giving him a knockout double pair, but not enough to sink my full boat. He lifts the edges of his cards, flattened to the table under his left hand, as if expecting them to have changed since the last consultation. Then, with careful, precise movements, he stacks his chips in the pot.
“Yes,” he says, “it is getting late.”
The mortician’s stake outclasses mine by over three-hundred dollars. I fish the pistol from my waistband. “The piece is worth a thou.”
“Pokerface—” Len starts.
“Don’t call me that.”
“Fine, Neil. Brand new that gun wasn’t worth a thou.”
“It’s reliable,” I counter. “Shoots straight.”
“I don’t need a gun,” the mortician says.
“Who made it,” Rocky says, “the Krauts?”
Len says, “It’s worth three bills at this table.”
“Was it the Ko–reens? Liable to shoot your pecker off with one of those.”
“I already have a gun. A B.B.-gun. It’s a Daisy.”
“It’s settled,” Len says. “Gun’s worth three bills.”
“Fine,” I say, flipping my aces and reaching to rake the pot…
…until the mortician turns over his pocket kings.
Archie and Ezzard say “Bad beat” simultaneously. Rocky sucks air through his teeth. I can’t draw air into my lungs.
“Four kings beats a full house.” Len shrugs expansively, as though to suggest the karmic absurdity of it all. “You can’t win every day, Pokerface. Otherwise it’d be no fun when you did.”
The chips and cards shimmer out of focus, clean edges disintegrating, colors blurring. I reach for the gun. It’s suddenly very important—crucial—I hold it.
“What are you doing?” Len says.
I find myself backing out a door. Not the door I entered: this one flimsier, unvarnished pressboard rather than oak. The others follow me into a dimly-lit hallway.
“Hey,” the mortician says. “Hey.”
The hallway empties into a coffin showroom. In the muddy light I glimpse caskets resting on crushed-velvet catafalques. Pachabel’s “Canon in D” pipes in through recessed speakers. Each casket is affixed with a nametag: Sweet Hereafter, Heavenly Chariot, Eternal Bliss.
“Give the man his gun, Neil.”
Rocky says, “Nobody likes a sore loser, fella.”
I stumble and grab hold of an Everlasting Salvation to avoid horizontality. The mortician strides forward, his spindle neck cabled with veins.
“I can’t abide welshers.”
“You don’t need another gun,” I remind him.
The mortician removes his glasses. His eyes look like pressed raisins. “It’s a matter of principle.”
I am fully aware that, if it came down to it, I could kill every man in this room. The gun’s got a nine cartridge clip—two slugs for every player, tack on a buckwheat for Len. Not that I’d do it, you understand, but I could. These guys see me as a one-eyed washout eaten up by Vegas, and a poor loser to boot…and they’re right. But, time was, I ran with the best of the best. Time was, I ran with the Magnificent Seven.
I tuck the pistol into my pants and fix the undertaker with a look meant to freeze the piss in his bladder to ice-cubes. “Here it is,” I drawl. “You want it, come get it.”
“Terrible sportsmanship.” The mortician removes combs, tweezers, and toothbrushes from his pocket, then rolls up his sleeves. “Just…appalling.”
He comes to get his gun.
The little mortician dances toward me on sneaky feet and loops a tight hook into my bread basket. He feints a right hand and executes the Fitzsimmons’ shift, shoes kicking static sparks on the thick scarlet carpeting, popping a short uppercut that catches me on the chinbone. They’re not powerful shots but I don’t protect myself. I fall flat on my ass. White noise fills my skull. He grabs my shirt, hauls me to my feet, throws me against a Celestial Convey
ance. I bounce off the heavy wooden coffin and go down. My prosthesis is jarred loose and rolls under a cherrywood casket.
The mortician jumps on me swinging. I get my hands up and catch most of it on my arms and shoulders until he flags. My face, which elicits either disgust or pity in most people, doesn’t seem to faze him at all, which I find strangely comforting. I shove him off and stagger away. He finds his second wind and comes at me, lab coat billowing in wings: an albino moth. He grabs me again and drags me to a Pleasant Slumberer, pushes me in headfirst. I kick feebly, catching him in the legs and chest, but he’s wiry and relentless. He stuffs me down into the innerspring mattress; plush sateen presses against my cheek. He tries to lower the lid but I keep a foot on the edge so it can’t be closed and latched.
“Here!” I slip the pistol through the gap. “It’s yours!”
The mortician lets up immediately. “Hey, now, that’s the spirit.”
He raises the casket lid but I don’t get out. I peek over the coffin lip and watch Len and the others head back to the embalming room. Rocky says, “That was just…sad.” I cross my arms over my chest and let my head sink into the silk pillow. Well, it’s nicer than a lot of places I’ve flopped.
After awhile I get out. I retrieve my prosthesis and wander around until I find the front doors, knocking over a few urns along the way.
Two hours after entering the mortuary I’m back outside. Nothing seems to have changed—the sun’s in the same position, a disc of brimstone pinned to the sky above Bob Stupak’s Space Needle. I don’t even have bus fare. I trudge southwards.
Three hours later, I’m back in my room at the Lucky Sevens. I haven’t worn any sunscreen, and my face and arms are sunburned beet-red. I don’t feel a thing. Someone once told me the sense of touch was easily the most underrated of the five senses. But, for this brief moment, I’m grateful I can’t feel.
A knock on the door.
The Preserve Page 4