S.O.S. (38 page)

Read S.O.S. Online

Authors: Joseph Connolly

‘You know what, Dwight? You know why it is I think I like
breasts
so much?'

Dwight chortled. ‘On accounta they're
there?'

‘Well
yes
 – yes, there is that side of it, mm. But mainly, I'm just thinking – could it be this? Because I was bottle-fed.'

Dwight blinked into David's impassive face.

‘As a baby,' he clarified.

And then he looked down and deep into the dark and tawny swirls of his latest jigger of Jack.

‘Well,' he concluded, half suppressing a quasi-rueful bit drunk snort, ‘still
am
, I suppose, in one way. Really.'

*

Nicole was still just staring down at the green baize roulette table, her face set as if by plaster into this new and seemingly unbendable expression; it was as if a good many of
the bones there had been hurriedly set upon by a band of brigands and efficiently broken and then with coolness even more hastily reset into this stark and alien configuration: her cheeks were hoisting her lips well clear of her teeth, and it seemed as if her eyelids would never close again. It appeared as if Nicole had been strung out to dry on a clothes line, and was suspended tautly and maybe forever between the twin poles of horror and fascination. You see, what it was … was that she simply could not
understand
it – but nor could she cease attempting to
crack
this; a repulsion was heading her off, but still she ducked it and cunningly wormed her way back in: she could not let it alone.

‘Maybe enough already, Nicole. What say?'

This was Charlene – partly in the sorry light of the stack of chips that was so frequently being raked away from Nicole by a wholly bored and unsmiling croupier, but largely because she was heartily sick of just standing there and watching it happen. My Dwight – he has phases when he hits the tables: two, three days I don't see him. Then he storms back home yelling out stuff like
Hey
! What in hell sorta patsy they take me for, huh?! Yeh yeh – I don't mind too much, you know? Like, time to time, Dwight – he can afford it; Nicole I ain't so sure. Plus with Dwight, when he's in a casino he lays off the soss – says he don't wanna – get this – ‘blunt his
edge
'? Yeh right. I'm like, what – you have to be
sober
to lose a thousand bucks on the roll of a dice? This you can't pull off so good when you're
smashed
? Jeez:
guys
 – go figure. But times like that, leastways I can pre-shate the vacation he's giving to his bowels. One time I says to him Dwight, honey – come the time you're dead and gone, I mean to donate those bowels of yours to science, you hear me? He says Sweetheart – there ain't no science on the good Lord's earth is gonna wanna touch 'em. Way he's headed, he could sure have something there; what you gonna
do
with a guy like that?

‘Just one more spin,' said Nicole, distractedly – in her
new and other-worldly and really rather spectral voice. ‘Then we'll go.'

Where had Charlene heard that before? She turned now to Patty – her knuckles pale and rigid as she gripped the edge of the table, her eyes very wide and glassy as she compulsively stared at some given, fixed and distant spot.

‘How you doing, girl? Maybe you'd best go lie down?'

‘No no,' protested Patty, with a faint but gritted determination. ‘I'll see this out. Got to
conquer
it, yes? Can't let it beat me. I just can't seem to forget that we're
moving
… and I feel so utterly foolish because I seem to be the only one on the entire
ship
…'

‘Don't let it bug you. Maybe we drag away Legs Diamond, here, and go down the Black Horse? Get them to fix you up something for your stummick.'

The mention of the word stomach was maybe not great: Patty reclenched her fingers doubly hard on the table's rim, as if its jealous owner was bent on wrenching it from her.

‘I just don't
believe
it …' came the now too familiar and wistful exhalation from Nicole. ‘I mean it doesn't seem to have
heard
of the law of averages, this bloody table. I've bet on red, now – what? Five times in a row, and every single time it's come up black. I mean I just can't
believe
it …'

‘So
leave
it already! C'mon, Nicole – enough, yeh? Let's go get our men and call it a day, huh?'

‘Just one more spin,' said Nicole, quite measuredly. ‘And then we'll go.'

To the left of Nicole, a fairly harassed-looking man – his bow tie undone, shirt collar grimy – was earnestly assuring his maybe new and possibly impressionable companion (as he laid down three thick square and redly mottled chips on
22
) that he never ever, whatever the circumstances, granted an interview or sanctioned pictures.

‘Oh really? Why's that then?'

The man hissed out his frustration as the croupier raked in his three thick square and redly mottled chips from
22
.

‘Hm? Oh, well …' And suddenly he was crushed. ‘Never actually been asked to, basically.'

‘I just don't –
believe
it!' went Nicole – who had heard not one word of that, nor of anything else around her. ‘This time it's come up – did you
see
that? Red! I've been betting on red all this time and I finally change to black and now it's come up bloody red! I just don't
believe
… I just can't – !'

Charlene shook her head, and maybe not in sorrow. She was taking Nicole quite firmly by the arm, now – gently tugging her away (cos iffin I don't physically remove this momma, she gonna be here till
dawn
, you know?). The very bored croupier – who had a nearly moustache – eyed them with disinterest as he racked up great clacking banks of chips into brass-bound square boxes, and then – sidelong to his mate – he came out with this, from nowhere:

‘Funny thing is, the first thing they say, these bimbos, right? You've laughed like a drain at all their crap jokes and they're well away to sticking the best part of a bottle of vodka down their throats and they turn round and they say
Here
 – I'm not just some
bimbo
, you know! Which apart from being a right pain in the arse has just got to be a bloody
joke
, hasn't it? I mean – what's bloody
wrong
with them at all? Hey? I mean – they
are
just bimbos, aren't they? That's the whole bloody
point
. Or am I missing something subtle?'

‘Yeh …' nodded his mate. ‘Nah. Right.' And then more loudly, though with equal flatness: ‘Madam Ate May Sue-Fate Vo Jew, Silvoo Play!'

‘C'mon, Nicole. We split, yeah?'

Nicole just stared at the table. Still seemingly transfixed, she nodded slowly and with misery – but at least, thought Charlene, she was nodding, right? Now I got two dames I godda gedda holda by the arm and steer real careful on outta here – one because she's noshus to her stummick (and hoo boy – wait till this baby starts making like a roller-coaster: what's lil Patty about to do then, huh?) and the
other one, well – on account of she's just some kinda nut, I guess.

The entourage inched its way with faintly ludicrous care past a couple of women feeding these two huge and lit up clanking slot machines as fervently as a thrush with a whole can of worms might gorge to the point of satiation and beyond the limitless cravings of its nestful of fledglings. The chrome-pillared swivel stool of one of them was just about coping, while the other woman had opted for a neighbouring pair.

‘I've got thirty dollars left,' said one. ‘Then it's midnight snacks, I think.'

‘The trouble
I
think here is not the food but the
menu
. All this
pan
fried this and
oven
roasted that … I mean, how
else
are you supposed to fry things? Hm? And what do you think you're going to roast something in? A handbag?'

Charlene was checking the condition of her charges (here I go again – a full-on nurse): Patty had tottered to a halt, and her hand was flailing about her for something unyielding to grip and then hug for ever. Charlene wasn't about to release her hold on either one of them, though, for even so much as a second: Nicole would be back to that table at the speed of one greased and electric jackrabbit – and Patty, she could fall down and die on me.

‘That
word
,' continued one of the women on the slots. ‘That word ‘handbag'. It's funny, but whenever I hear it, I always think of that line in some – do you know it? Some play or other – terribly famous. When somebody drawls out that word: ‘a hand
baaaaag
?' Yes? Bernard Shaw or Shakespeare or something. I think it's supposed to be funny, but I've honestly never understood
why
…'

And as Charlene, Nicole and Patty finally made their enforcedly leisurely break for the corridor, they maybe did or didn't witness the second woman turning with some difficulty towards her companion and uttering in mystified tones:

‘I honestly haven't the faintest idea what you're
on
about …'

And gee – Charlene couldn't barely get herself around it: Nicole, she gets outta that there casino and
zingo
 – it's just like that she's Nicole again, you know?

‘And
David
,' Nicole said suddenly, and with all the old determination. ‘He'd just better not be – hey, Pat! We don't need the lift. Come on – we can walk down, yes? It's only … yes, Charlene – I'm just saying. That
husband
of mine –
if
he's seen fit to reappear at all – he'd just better for once be
sober.'

‘If he's with my Dwight – forget it, honey.'

‘Oh God – David doesn't have to
be
with anyone. You could lock him in a wine cellar and years later he'd still be perfectly happy down there just
drinking
it. No willpower, men – just can't tear themselves away. You OK, Pat? Bit OK?'

‘I think I might've been better,' faltered Pat – gripping with both hands the banister rail – ‘in the lift, actually. But yes – if I can just not look down …'

‘Your husband like mine, is he Pat?'

She smiled quite sadly. ‘Yes. I'm afraid so. Exactly the same.'

Now the three of them were hard by the mouth of the Black Horse, and Nicole was aware of a familiar discomfort: the pubby hot breath of it.

‘Well God help us all, is all I can say …' is frankly all she felt she could say.

*

Sammy was clenched by frustration at just having to
be
there – it was somewhere hard and deep within him, this balled-up resentment, like a tumour in his guts (because how could he? Well? Tell him. Go on. How could he find out for sure just what Jilly was doing if he could not leave this
place? If he had to be bloody
here
?). All the other useless bits of him, though, seemed flaccid and washed over by a barely lukewarm and humdrum misery. He stood well back from the bar (his back now causing the liqueur bottles to clink and tinkle) – as far away as he could get from the increasingly drunk and lewd and stupid bloody English bloke and that fat American guy alongside of him (their capacity for drink was little short of startling – in common, therefore, with most of my loyal and faithful band of regulars, all the soaks and lushes; well – I say
capacity
: it's not as if either of these two was
holding
it, or anything). But this far away from the pair of them means that it's impossible, now, to avoid the ramblings of yet another and this time solitary loser practically collapsed across the bar, here, just to the left of me. At least the bloody Japanese have packed up croaking out into that uproarious microphone their Fab Four medley of not just Flom Me To You and Prease Prease Me, but also half-hearted (and rich with botched-up lyrics) smatterings and then more lusty choruses of Penny Rain and Paperback Lighter (and let's not of course forget the Yerrow Submaline). So what I'll do is, I'll just continue, will I, polishing and polishing this perfectly sparkling beer glass, and try to blank out at least the most repetitious and drivelling parts of it – while not imagining, not even beginning to picture (let alone frame) just what it might be that Jilly was right this second, oh Christ –
up
to. With that person. Who tomorrow, during my break, I must track down and, well – if not actually
slay
him, then certainly break and bruise serious parts of, conceivably with a view to disfigurement. This just must be done. Obviously.

‘Telling you, Sammy …
Telling
you … you just mark my words …'

Sammy smiled, just about. The demolished loner had risen for air – air, yes, and of course a refill. He had been telling Sammy for quite some while – insisting that he mark
his words (most of which comprised the admonition to mark them, yes, and mark them well).

‘Truth is … truth is … there's a book to be written here, you know – a book, book – yes a book. And you, Sammy – are you having a drink with me, my friend? Sammy? Yes? Drink for you? No? Sure? Well OK. Sure now? Yes? OK. Yes – you mark my … uh … you mark my … uh … and
you're
the one to write it, Sammy. The things you must see and hear, hey?
Words
. You mark them well, uh – Sammy. This ship – not kidding you. Book to be written – amazing nobody's done it before. Sure I can't twist your arm? No? Sure? Well OK.'

Oh look – a bunch of women are coming over to the bar, now. Is Jilly among them? Well what do
you
think? Oh God – I'll never get away, will I, tonight. And one of the women – oh Jesus: swaying badly. The other two more or less holding her up, seems like. Marvellous. Add her to my tally of incoherents and incapables: chuck her on the heap.

Other books

Blood, Ash, and Bone by Tina Whittle
Dugout Rivals by Fred Bowen
The Haunted Storm by Philip Pullman
Chessmen of Doom by John Bellairs