Requiem for a Gambler
by J. Hayden
There had been something he'd forgotten. He couldn't quite wrap his mind
around it at the present moment, but he was sure that he'd left something
behind when they'd been forced to abandon ship. Quiet introspection was
cut
short by the monotone voice of the escape pod's computer system.
"Six hours of atmosphere remaining." It's voice was almost soothing. He
leaned back against the cushions of the couch, turning his focus and
attention towards the small screen that charted his location, and the
various locations of the stellar objects around him, a small window in the
foreground displayed his current game of blackjack. He was proud of
himself,
he was up by nearly twenty percent. A quick of check of the astrogation
program showed that the small pod was at least a hundred thousand
kilometers
from the now lifeless luxury space liner, the Luftevagen.
He chuckled to himself, recalling the ad brochures, touting the ship
line's
titanium hull that could withstand a direct hit from a one hundred kiloton
nuclear warhead. Of course, no one had considered that in space, alien
materlials in small asteroids might possibly prove to be of a denser
material than titanium, but this point was moot. It had been an
interesting
experience, watching from the escape pod as the front section of the ship
ripped away from the rest.
He wondered, mind idle, why they hadn't thought to turn on the back-up
navigational computers in another part of the ship. Redundant systems
weren't just a good idea, they were required by the law. He had thought
about this as often as he'd thought about the hand he'd been building.
Two queens, split, double-down, the dealer was showing a deuce and
there'd
been only one ace in play since a fresh deck had been started. His lips
curled into a smile as he recalled it fondly. The fat man from Old
Louisiana
had laughed and shook his head when he split on a twenty and risked losing
his entire hand. Most people would laugh if they didn't realize what had
been going on, but not him; he was no stranger to black jack.
"Five hours of atmosphere remaining."
He scowled grimly and returned to his winning hand on the computer. He
wasn't upset that he was probably going to suffocate in a few short hours;
he just wanted to remember what he'd left behind. Again, he went over the
check-list in his mind.
His luggage? Currently orbiting Tau Ceti.
His palm top computer? Somewhere in the bowels of the waste processing
facility of the Luftevagen. He cursed under his breath, still sore that
he'd
been so careless with his most prized possession.
His shaving kit? Still sitting next to the sink of his stateroom's
bathroom. The shaving gel had probably frozen solid... maybe even expanded
and destroyed the plastic casing of the laser-razor. He shrugged a silent
"oh-well" to himself. If he lived -if- then he'd just have to write it off
as an unavoidable expense and have the company reimburse him.
There was something else. Something he felt he should have remembered.
Turning from his thoughts to his hand, he licked his lips and looked
affectionately at his two of hearts and four of spades. A quick assessment
of the other players' cards -artificial intelligence controlled by the
computer- told him that a good number of the high cards had been dealt
out.
The dealer showed a five. What the hell? he mused, then hit and stood on
the
ace he'd been dealt. The dealer flipped his remaining card, a seven, hit
and
came up with a queen. He smiled, watched his virtual bank account
increase,
then leaned back to ponder his missing item again.
He wondered at his fortune -and the insomnia- that had found him in the
casino when his room, and the front portion of the ship, had been torn
apart
from each other. Had he been sleeping, like a normal person he reminded
himself, he'd be quite dead right now.
This hadn't been the first time that insomnia -and blackjack- had barely
saved him from catastrophe. There had been that time in Old Vegas when
he'd
just gone down to see the night life at the Goldstar Casino's tables. An
hour later he returned to his room for his money clip, only to discover
that
the girl he'd brought up to the room with him earlier in the night had
been
trailed by her ex-boyfriend, who had thrown her off the balcony in a
jealous
rage.
His thoughts returned, as they had the habit of doing, to the black-jack
table of the ship. He had been up for several hands, and was carrying on
in
a rather animated and interesting discussion with the fat man when- a
light
went on in his head, interrupting his recollection. Sitting bolt up-right
in
the couch, he hooted and pumped the air once with his fist. He
remembered!
"Computer!" He barked. It chimed at him, indicating it's readiness to
accept verbal commands.
"How long would it take to get back to the Luftevagen?" He drummed his
fingers on the console as he spoke.
"It would take approximately four hours, sir." It spoke, after a moment.
"But sir, might I remind you that we've abandoned ship? There's no need
for
us to re-"
"Mute!" The computer complied, silencing it's audio output, but finishing
it's sentence in text on the monitor. "Come about, one hundred and eighty
degrees, and blast towards the Luftevagen." The computer began to type
it's
protests. "No arguments! Just do it!"
With an icy silence, the ship came to a rest, then turned, and restarted
it's propulsion engines, burning just long enough to get them underway
again.
"Would it please Sir to have me correct the trajectory for any drifting
that might have occurred from our initial escape path?" The computer said,
via it's text console.
"Yes, if you would, please." He rubbed his temples. "Also, be a sport and
dock in one of the bays where the ship-to-surface vessels are held."
A little over four hours later, he was in docking bay eleven of the ship
-wearing an atmosphere suit for good measure- wondering why they'd
bothered
to abandon ship at all, when he recalled that the Captain and a goodly
portion of the Officers had been in the front portion of the ship as well,
which had left the ship essentially without a crew. He glanced at an
instrument panel that displayed the ship's atmosphere levels. Several
decks
had completely lost pressure when their main bulkheads had been ripped
away,
but the docking bay and every deck up to the Promenade deck were still
with
both atmosphere and pressure, as well as artificial gravity.
In a slow jog, he made his way from the docking bays to the ship's
casino,
in a record seventeen minutes and change. With careful consideration, he
looked about for the black jack table he'd been sitting at when the call
to
abandon ship had sounded. He removed his helmet and took a breath of
ship's
air -the pressure suit's air hadn't moved in weeks and was a tad stale-
then
removed the gloves he wore as he strolled to the table. He smiled again,
the
ghosts of the games that had come before returning to him in a rush. Eyes
closed, he stood, remembering the event.
He had two queens, had split them when he saw that the dealer only showed
a
deuce, and the rest of the table had insultingly bad hands. The fat man
from
Louisiana had laughed when he doubled down.
"You're either very smart or very, very stupid." The fat man had said. He
liked to think that he was smart. In fact, he had been.
His lips twisted into a smile as he sat at the table, and looked at the
cards that still sat, untouched by the gamblers who had been forcibly
evacuated hours earlier. His eyes drifted to his own magnificent hand;
over
each queen, silent and somber, were two aces. Double black jack, six times
the ten thousand he'd put down; the largest pot in his life. With quiet
calm, he collected his winnings, tipped his hat that didn't exist to the
dealer who was no longer there, and sauntered out of the casino to the
nearest bar. Sure, he'd die when Tau Ceti's gravitational pull finally
claimed the ship, but he'd beaten the house and that was good enough for
him.
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