The Damnation Game (2 page)

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Authors: Clive Barker

Tags: #Horror

BOOK: The Damnation Game
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A boys’ brothel had been opened in the Zoliborz District. Here, in an underground salon hung with salvaged paintings, one could choose from chicks of six or seven up, all fetchingly slimmed by malnutrition and tight as any connoisseur could wish. It was very popular with the officer class, but too expensive, the thief had heard it muttered, for the noncommissioned ranks. Lenin’s tenets of equal choice for all did not stretch, it seemed, to pederasty.

Sport, of a kind, was more cheaply available. Dogfights were a particularly popular attraction that season. Homeless curs, returning to the city to pick at the meat of their masters, were trapped, fed to fighting strength and then pitted against each other to the death. It was an appalling spectacle, but a love of betting took the thief to the fights again and again. He’d made a tidy profit one night by putting his money on a runty but cunning terrier who’d bested a dog three times its size by chewing off its opponent’s testicles.

And if, after a time, your taste for dogs or boys or women palled, there were more esoteric entertainments available.

In a crude amphitheater dug from the debris of the Bastion of Holy Mary, the thief had seen an anonymous actor single-handedly perform Goethe’s
Faust
, Parts One and Two. Though the thief’s German was far from perfect, the performance had made a lasting impression. The story was familiar enough for him to follow the action—the pact with Mephisto, the debates, the conjuring tricks, and then, as the promised damnation approached, despair and terrors. Much of the argument was indecipherable, but the actor’s possession by his twin roles—one moment Tempter, the next Tempted—was so impressive the thief left with his belly churning.

Two days later he had gone back to see the play again, or at least to speak to the actor. But there were to be no encores. The performer’s enthusiasm for Goethe had been interpreted as pro-Nazi propaganda; the thief found him hanging, joy decayed, from a telegraph pole. He was naked.

His bare feet had been eaten at and his eyes taken out by birds; his torso was riddled with bullet holes. The sight pacified the thief. He saw it as proof that the confused feelings the actor had aroused were iniquitous; if this was the state to which his art had brought him the man had clearly been a scoundrel and a sham. His mouth gaped, but the birds had taken his tongue as well as his eyes. No loss.

Besides, there were far more rewarding diversions. The women the thief could take or leave, and the boys were not to his taste, but the gambling he loved, and always had. So it was back to the dogfights to chance his fortunes on a mongrel. If not there, then to some barrack-room dice game, or—in desperation—betting with a bored sentry on the speed of a passing cloud. The method and the circumstance scarcely concerned him: he cared only to gamble. Since his adolescence it had been his one true vice; it was the indulgence he had become a thief to fund. Before the war he’d played in casinos across Europe; chemin de fer was his game, though he was not averse to roulette. Now he looked back at those years through the veil war had drawn across them, and remembered the contests as he remembered dreams on waking: as something irretrievable, and slipping further away with every breath.

That sense of loss changed, however, when he heard about the card player—Mamoulian, they called him—who, it was said, never lost a game, and who came and went in this deceitful city like a creature who was not, perhaps, even real.

But then, after Mamoulian, everything changed.

 

Chapter 2

 

S
o much was rumor; and so much of that rumor not even rooted in truth.

Simply lies told by bored soldiers. The military mind, the thief had discovered, was capable of inventions more baroque than a poet’s, and more lethal. So when he heard tell of a master cardsharp who appeared out of nowhere, and challenged every would-be gambler to a game and unfailingly won, he suspected the story to be just that: a story. But something about the way this apocryphal tale lingered confounded expectation. It didn’t fade away to be replaced by some yet more ludicrous romance. It appeared repeatedly-in the conversation of the men at the dogfights; in gossip, in graffiti. What was more, though the names changed the salient facts were the same from one account to the next. The thief began to suspect there was truth in the story after all. Perhaps there was a brilliant gambler operating somewhere in the city. Not perfectly invulnerable, of course; no one was that. But the man, if he existed, was certainly something special.

Talk of him was always conducted with a caution that was like reverence; soldiers who claimed to have seen him play spoke of his elegance, his almost hypnotic calm. When they talked of Mamoulian they were peasants speaking of nobility, and the thief-never one to concede the superiority of any man-added a zeal to unseat this king to his reasons for seeking the card-player out.

But beyond the general picture he garnered from the grapevine, there were few specifics. He knew that he would have to find and interrogate a man who had actually faced this paragon across a gaming table before he could really begin to separate truth from speculation.

It took two weeks to find such a man. His name was Konstantin Vasiliev, a second lieutenant, who, it was said, had lost everything he had playing against Mamoulian. The Russian was broad as a bull; the thief felt dwarfed by him. But while some big men nurture spirits expansive enough to fill their anatomies, Vasiliev seemed almost empty. If he had ever possessed such virility, it was now gone. Left in the husk was a frail and fidgety child.

It took an hour of coaxing, the best part of a bottle of black-market vodka and half a pack of cigarettes to get Vasiliev to answer with more than a monosyllable, but when the disclosures came they came gushingly, the confessions of a man on the verge of total breakdown. There was self-pity in his talk, and anger too; but mostly there was the stench of dread. Vasiliev was a man in mortal terror. The thief was mightily impressed: not by the tears or the desperation, but by the fact that Mamoulian, this faceless card-player, had broken the giant sitting across the floor from him. Under the guise of consolation and friendly advice he proceeded to pump the Russian for every sliver of information he could provide, looking all the time for some significant detail to make flesh and blood of the chimera he was investigating.

“You say he wins without fail?”

“Always.”

“So what’s his method? How does he cheat?”

Vasiliev looked up from his contemplation of the bare boards of the floor.

“Cheat?” he said, incredulously. “He doesn’t cheat. I’ve played cards all my life, with the best and the worst. I’ve seen every trick a man can pull. And I tell you now, he was clean.”

“The luckiest player gets defeated once in a while. The laws of chance—”

A look of innocent amusement crossed Vasiliev’s face, and for a moment the thief glimpsed the man who’d occupied this fortress before his fall from sanity.

“The laws of chance are nothing to him. Don’t you see? He isn’t like you or me. How could a man always win without having some power over the cards?”

“You believe that?”

Vasiliev shrugged, and slumped again. “To him,” he said, almost contemplative in his utter dismay, “winning is beauty. It is like life itself.”

The vacant eyes returned to tracing the rough grain of the floorboards as the thief somersaulted the words over in his head:
“Winning is beauty. It is like life itself.”
It was strange talk, and made him uneasy. Before he could work his way into its meaning, however, Vasiliev was leaning closer to him, his breath fearful, his vast hand catching hold of the thief’s sleeve as he spoke.

“I’ve put in for a transfer, did they tell you that? I’ll be away from here in a few days, and nobody’ll be any the wiser. I’m getting medals when I get home. That’s why they’re transferring me: because I’m a hero, and heroes get what they ask for. Then I’ll be gone, and he’ll never find me.”

“Why would he want to?”

The hand on the sleeve fisted; Vasiliev pulled the thief in toward him. “I owe him the shirt off my back,” he said. “If I stay, he’ll have me killed. He’s killed others, him and his comrades.”

“He’s not alone?” said the thief. He had pictured the card-player as being a man without associates; made him, in fact, in his own image.

Vasiliev blew his nose into his hand, and leaned back in the chair. It creaked under his bulk.

“Who knows what’s true or false in this place, eh?” he said, eyes swimming. “I mean, if I told you he had dead men with him, would you believe me?” He answered his own question with a shake of his head. “No. You’d think I was mad …”

Once, the thief thought, this man had been capable of certainty; of action; perhaps even of heroism. Now all that noble stuff had been siphoned off: the champion was reduced to a sniveling rag, blabbering nonsense. He inwardly applauded the brilliance of Mamoulian’s victory. He had always hated heroes.

“One last question—” he began.

“You want to know where you can find him.”

“Yes.”

The Russian stared at the ball of his thumb, sighing deeply. This was all so wearisome.

“What do you gain if you play him?” he asked, and again returned his own answer. “Only humiliation. Perhaps death.”

The thief stood up. “Then you don’t know where he is?” he said, making to pocket the half-empty packet of cigarettes that lay on the table between them.

“Wait.” Vasiliev reached for the pack before it slid out of sight. “Wait.”

The thief placed the cigarettes back on the table, and Vasiliev covered them with one proprietorial hand. He looked up at his interrogator as he spoke.

“The last time I heard, he was north of here. Up by Muranowski Square. You know it?”

The thief nodded. It was not a region he relished visiting, but he knew it. “And how do I find him, once I get there?” he asked.

The Russian looked perplexed by the question.

“I don’t even know what he looks like,” the thief said, trying to make Vasiliev understand.

“You won’t need to find him,” Vasiliev replied, understanding all too well. “If he wants you to play, he’ll find you.”

 

Chapter 3

 

T
he next night, the first of many such nights, the thief had gone looking for the card-player. Though it was by now April, the weather was still bitter that year. He’d come back to his room in the partially demolished hotel he occupied numb with cold, frustration and—though he scarcely admitted it even to himself—fear. The region around Muranowski Square was a hell within a hell. Many of the bomb craters here let on to the sewers; the stench out of them was unmistakable. Others, used as fire pits to cremate executed citizens, still flared intermittently when a flame found a belly swollen with gas, or a pool of human fat. Every step taken in this newfound land was an adventure, even to the thief. Death, its forms multitudinous, waited everywhere. Sitting on the edge of a crater, warming its feet in the flames; standing, lunatic, amongst the refuse; at laughing play in a garden of bone and shrapnel.

Fear notwithstanding, he’d returned to the district on several occasions; but the card-player eluded him. And with every failed attempt, with every journey that ended in defeat, the thief became more preoccupied with the pursuit. In his mind this faceless gambler began to take on something of the force of legend. Just to see the man in the flesh, to verify his physical existence in the same world that he, the thief, occupied, became an article of faith. A means, God help him, by which he could ratify his own existence

After a week and a half of fruitless searching, he went back to find Vasiliev. The Russian was dead. His body, throat slit from ear to ear, had been found the previous day, floating face-down in one of the sewers the Army was clearing in Wola. He was not alone. There had been three other bodies with him, all slaughtered in a similar fashion, all set alight and burning like fire ships as they drifted down the tunnel on a river of excrement. One of the soldiers who had been in the sewer when the flotilla appeared told the thief that the bodies had seemed to float in the darkness. For a breathless moment it had been like the steady approach of angels.

Then, of course, the horror. Extinguishing the burning corpses, their hair, their backs; then turning them over, and the face of Vasiliev, caught in the beam of a flashlight, carrying a look of wonder, like a child in awe of some lethal conjuror.

His transfer papers had arrived that same afternoon.

In fact the papers seemed to have been the cause of an administrative error that had closed Vasiliev’s tragedy on a comic note. The bodies, once identified, had been buried in Warsaw, except for Second Lieutenant Vasiliev, whose war record demanded less cursory treatment. Plans were afoot to transport the body back to Mother Russia, where he would be buried with state honors in his hometown. But somebody, alighting upon the transfer papers, had taken them to apply to Vasiliev dead, not Vasiliev living. Mysteriously, the body disappeared. Nobody would admit responsibility: the corpse had simply been shipped out to some new posting.

Vasiliev’s death merely served to intensify the thief’s curiosity. Mamoulian’s arrogance fascinated him. Here was a scavenger, a man who made a living off the weakness of others, who had yet grown so insolent with success that he dared to murder—or have murdered on his behalf—those who crossed him. The thief became jittery with anticipation. In his dreams, when he was able to sleep, he wandered in Muranowski Square. It was filled with a fog like a living thing, which promised at any moment to divide and reveal the card-player. He was like a man in love.

 

Chapter 4

 

T
onight, the ceiling of squalid cloud above Europe had broken: blue, albeit pale, had spread over his head, wider and wider. Now, toward evening, the sky was absolutely clear above him. In the southwest vast cumulus, their cauliflower heads tinted ocher and gold, were fattening with thunder, but the thought of their anger only excited him. Tonight, the air was electric, and he would find the card-player, he was sure. He had been sure since he woke that morning.

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