(The prompt was "hands" and Zee had a table with pictures of hands. The one that caught my eye was an image of a hand wearing a gold and blue ring. It looked antique, and I thought of heirlooms. What is earned, and what is gained through love and familial connection? I thought of a boy that would not gamble his family heirloom, and the idea of gambling came to mind. I combined both in this tale. I spent about 40ish minutes writing this, so it's unpolished to say the least. I did not edit it in transcribing it.)
At a Table in Tom’s
Corner Tavern
It’s Friday
again, but it’s a December Friday, and in a busy old town like Dodger’s Cove,
no one person stays for long. All these new faces – mostly young, some a little
older – roam the antique shops and taverns. I’m still here, though. I swing
open the tavern doors, and a chorus of already-drunken men cheer. Most don’t
know who they’re so happy to see.
Tom, an old
friend with a beard as wild as his new drinks, offered me a cold beer and
caught me up with the week’s news. Dr. Parker got married and left. James is
off to the Navy soon. Jane might go back with David. I nod my head and quench
my thirst. Same news, but with different names.
My interest
instead is the poker table. Three new faces and one familiar sit around the
hobble-legged, half-chewed relic. I take my seat at the end on the three-legged
stool no one likes, but I like it; nothing keeps you quite so aware as a
wobbling stool on its last splinter.
The first
fellow on my left is a young lad, sixteen at oldest, wearing a grey jacket he’s
already grown out of. He doesn’t meet my eyes, but he’s a lively kid – can’t
even sit still.
The second
is a heart-breaker: Blond, fair, silk white shirt, cologne too fancy for a
night of gambling. He centers his grey eyes and greets me. His names is Peter,
he says. He offers his hand and feeds me a tale taller than Tom about how he
ended up in Dodger’s Cove.
Beside
Peter the Liar is a familiar man. He’s quiet and frowns. His name is James if
my memory serves me correctly. James the Reverent nods a greeting and finishes
the last game.
The last
player is a bulky man built like a bear – square build, hulking chest, dark
hair all over his sweating body. He greets me as Jeremy, but he’s took
bear-like for such a small name. No, he shall be Bear.
The game is
Texas hold-em, and the starting lot is $50. I’m too broke for these stakes for
now. I sit out for the first round and work my magic. See, my father was in the
War, and he learned this trick from the Gypsies. A man’s fortune is in his
hand, they said, and because my father was handsomer and a better liar than
Peter, they taught him this trick.
The Kid is
playing the round. His soft hands are tender silk still, and his short square
fingers tell me he’s brash, unpredictable. He probably has a good hand, and
it’s a good thing I didn’t waste $50. So eager to win and such an honest lad.
He doesn’t stand a chance.
Peter is
dangerous. His fingers are long, and his ring finger is even longer. He’s a man
that thinks of everything, can read every detail, can see a move ten steps
ahead. He is waiting to trounce the Kid.
The
Reverent is sitting this out. His cards are on the table still. He has burned
hands with a long forefinger and a narrow wrist. He has led others to happiness
or death, and they trusted him.
The Bear is
drinking as he looks down at the kid. He has square hands with thick tanned
knuckles and blisters. He’s a practical man. He’ll lose the first three games
he sees through, but when he gets momentum, this beast will take more home than
any of us.
The Kid
loses, and Peter the Liar takes his parents’ money. A new round begins, and I
play.
The first
rounds is promising, and I have a pair of 8’s. I trust 8 – infinity on its side
– and I play. The Kid is out, distraught after losing three big ones to the
Liar. So are the Bear and the Reverent.
The Liar is
hard to see through. His thoughts mask any hesitation or hope. I see him
through a raise, and another. I win and take 50 of the Kid’s dollars.
Round three
begins, and by the stars, I have a pair of Kings already. The Reverent plays,
too, and I know he wouldn’t play if he didn’t have something. The Kid has
gained some courage and plays, too. The Liar, too, is in, as the Bear waits.
The first
cards are down – 2, 6 -. I hold my ground, and 5 appears. The Kid is not
worried. His hands are quaking. The Liar folds his fingers neatly, and the
Reverent crosses his arms. The cards burn and unravel. A queen appears, and
then, with no one settling, a king follows as well.
Everyone
stays in. They raise, one by one, and the pot is heavy. I am all in, and I
watch my rent money sink into the bottom of this treasure chest. $600 each, and
they’re all still in.
The Liar
reveals two queens. The Reverent had thought his 10’s would carry him through.
Then, with a jovial burst of energy, the Kid reveals a full house. He’s won, by
house rules, and takes all of the money.
A lesson is
to be learned, I decide, walking sober and broke home. Brains will get us far,
but Lady Luck has tender affection for kids in ill-fitting jackets.
So nice to read something you wrote again. Oh, and nice write! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Michelle! I'm going to be posting all my Tuesday writings and maybe more. It's a new healthy habit :)
ReplyDelete