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Riverboat Wrangler (The Complete Trip in One Easy Bite)
By Mr_E_Writer
07 June 2008

Perhaps not an ‘Easy Bite’ because it’s 10K, but it has been slightly reworked and given a good trawling for spelling and grammar issues (apart from the deliberate mistakes!).

There might even be a few people who didn’t catch it first time around. Just a few!




.




Thick black smoke billowed into the cool blue afternoon air as the paddle steamer 'Wilton Weaver' eased slowly away from the old wooden jetty at Broadloom Weft.
   At the gaming table, Rogue Tuft threw his carpet bag on the floor and slid onto a Chesterfield. “Double down on a blackjack and face-up the red queen to an ace on deuces.”
   “I’ll cover that bet,” said Desiree Desire, self-proclaimed Madam of the riverboat queens. She inclined her head, eyes smiling with arrogance.
   Rogue looked up with contempt. “I don’t need no rent lady bailing for me. If my mung’s not good enough I’ll wager my bet at another table.”
   “Cool your ’tude,” said the dealer, passing Rogue three new cards and a cube of best chewing hemp. “My table’s open to any who can pay their distance.”
   Rogue’s unflinching steel-blue eyes studied the cards in his hand; his rugged features perfectly concealing the exhilaration he felt at holding a bouncing black flush with red jacks on the side. It was a win-win hand that would pay his way to the end of the river. He followed the dealer's advice and played it cool. “I’ll raise a thirty and pass to the left.”
   Berber Bob raised an eyebrow. “Sunlike you t’ fol’ on a wager s’weasy, Rogue. Y’am trine t’ be bluffen me? Should’n ever bluff de bluffer.”
   “And never talk with your cards open,” sneered Rogue and reached for his Williamson.
   “Easy, boys,” suggested the barkeep, waving a splattergun towards the green baize. “I wouldn’t want to send none of you fellas for no crocodile bath iffen you’s fulla holes.”
   Rogue reached for the wedge pile at the centre of the table. “Then I believe I’ll just take my winnings and take my leave, gentlemen.”
   “Not so fast,” said Desiree Desire and clubbed him across the back of the head with a leather slogger.

   When Rogue awoke he found himself manacled and chained to an old wrought iron four-poster bedstead surrounded by unshaven rent runners in matching pink dresses. He knew instinctively that his pockets were empty and his holsters bare. With no guns (and no mung with which to pay for his release), Rogue was at the mercy of the riverboat’s lady-boys. The game had been a double bluff and now it was his cards on the table. He knew he would have to think on his feet; no easy task when anchored to a queen-size bedstead.
   “Okay, laydeez. Keep your pistols in your pockets and we’ll talk business. Will you take an IOU?”
   Andy-Mandy stepped forward (at 6'2" he was the tallest rent runner that Rogue had come across). “Sorry honeybunch, but we don’t do IOU’s. Besides, your biro’s red and your pencil out of lead.”
   “How about a cheque?” enquired Rogue hopefully, but deep down he knew he was clutching at straws and drawing shorts.
   “We’ll take a cheek, maybe two. No hard feelings.”
   “That’s easy for you to say,” replied Rogue and wriggled against his bonds. The noise of frilly lace underwear hitting the floor was deafening.

   Several days had passed before Rogue found the strength to crawl from his bed; and a further week before he was able to walk upright in a straight line. By day he searched the now deserted paddle wheeler determined to find the rent runner who had shattered his ankles, while by night he sat on the main deck listening to the sound of the river being churned by the steamboat’s enormous blades. Yet the further up river the old boat took him the more slowly days seemed to pass. He wondered if time might be catching up on itself.
   One evening at sunset, as Rogue stood on the portside walkway looking out across the vast expanse of crystal clear blue water, a blanket of thick fog descended unexpectedly to envelop the old steamer. So dense was the fog that Rogue could barely see, yet still the boat chugged along, moving steadily upriver. And then, from out of the fog, he heard a cry.
   “Ahoy there.”
   Rogue looked long and hard at an image of sorrow that appeared in a patch of clear air to port. Seven men, a woman and a young girl, huddled together in a battered lifeboat barely big enough to hold them. Yet as he studied the forlorn castaways, Rogue realised they were merely shadows in the shape of men.
   “Ahoy there. We are adrift without direction, can you aid us?”
   “How came you here?” asked Rogue.
   “I’m Captain Edward John Smith and this is my Chief Officer, Henry Wilde. Our liner was in collision with an iceberg. She sank. It was her maiden voyage.” Captain Smith smiled wanly, and then indicated another of the dejected seafarers. “This is Captain Benjamin Briggs, his wife and their young daughter. They were forced to abandon their ship during bad weather. As for the rest… all that we know is that they are submariners. Germans and Russians, we gather. However, as not one of them can speak English we have been unable to ascertain what became of their vessels.”
   One of the submariners stood up and saluted. "Comrade Vladimir Bagriantsev," he said stiffly, and then, as one, the castaways began to sigh and groan.
   Rogue looked on as the tiny lifeboat disappeared back into the fog. And then he heard a shout.
   “Ahoy there. We are adrift without direction, can you aid us?” It was the same voice; the voice of a tiny lifeboat full of phantoms, and Rogue wondered who else they could have stumbled upon out there in the fog.
   A sudden whoosh of steam was accompanied by the sound of grinding metal as, without warning, the steamboat ran aground. Rogue jumped into the shallows and began to wade ashore.
   And then, as abruptly as it had descended, the veil of fog lifted.
   Rogue looked out across the expanse of parched earth; the sun was high with no breeze to cool the air and, save for a green-painted door that stood in an old oak frame, the landscape appeared barren.
Rogue reached for the brass handle and turned it anticlockwise. The door creaked open on ancient rusted hinges.
   With increasing trepidation, he stepped through.

   “Ah, Mr Tuft, how very good of you to join us,” purred the exquisitely dressed buxom bottle-blonde who sat at the head of the baize-covered table. “My name is Abilene Zylon, Mistress of The Casino. Please do take a seat and I’ll introduce you to your fellow players.”
   Warily, Rogue eased himself onto a saddle chair and scanned slowly around the room.
   “To your immediate left,” continued Mistress Zylon, drawing Rogue’s attention back to the gaming table, “is Bogart Humphrey, the Queen of Africa.”
   “Nice dress,” said Rogue and offered Mr Humphrey a friendly smile.
   Bogart’s expression was one of ire. He uttered an outraged grunt. “The cheaper the crook, the gaudier the patter,” he replied and took a sip from his glass of raw eggs and Worcester sauce.
   Abilene Zylon made an airy gesture. “Oh don’t mind Mr Humphrey, he’s just upset that Sam won’t play his favourite song. I’ve told him that the Pianola is out of tune but he’s having none of it.”
   “It played for you, it could play for me! . . . If you can stand it, I can! Play it!”
   “Oh please, Bogart, stop being so petulant,” said Miss Zylon sternly and fixed him with a censorious eye. “And anyway, Sam’s off playing backgammon and you know how he so hates to be disturbed.”
   Bogart Humphrey coughed and lowered his gaze.
   “You mentioned a game,” said Rogue.
   “There’ll be plenty of time for that later, Mister Tuft. Now, to your right is Woody Alan. Unfortunately the mists of time have had rather a curious affect on poor Mister Alan’s biological makeup. Haven’t they, sweetie.”
   “I’m not a puppet; I’m a real three-time Academy Award-winning American film director, writer, actor, jazz musician, comedian and playwright.”
   “Yes, and I’m certain that you will be again, dear,” said Abilene Zylon and patted Woody’s hand reassuringly.
   “Are you going to come up and see me, later,” asked the one time satirical comic actor.
   “No, my Love. Once was enough. I still have the splinters, you know!”
   “The game?” insisted Rogue.
   “There remains one more player I have yet to introduce,” declared Miss Zylon sternly. She paused for effect.
   Rogue knew that the hostess expected him to react to her authoritarian manner but he remained silent, determined not to satisfy her.
   Abilene Zylon shrugged elegantly. “To your far left is Dean Martini, the lil’ ol’ whining drinker.”
   “It wasn’t me, Abi, it was you. Remember? That night you came down to my dressing room and said: ‘Kid, this ain’t your night’. You remember that?” whined Martini. “And what did I get? A one way ticket to Palookaville.”
   “I was assured by the travel agent that Palookaville was quite nice at that time of the year,” replied Abilene Zylon smoothly. She let out a mordant chuckle. “What’s the matter, Martini; you still feeling hard done by? I had some bets down for ya. You saw some money.”
   “You don’t understand,” continued Martini emphatically. “I could have had a glass; I could have been a bartender!”
   “I’ve heard quite enough of this childish nonsense,” scolded the Mistress of The Game and turned to face Rogue. “Do you play craps, Mister Tuft?”
   “I’ve had a few off days, I’ll admit, but on the whole I’m a dab hand at sharking.”
   “Then roll the dice, Mr Tuft. Let us see if Mademoiselle Luck is smiling on you.”
   “I bet he shoots snakes eyes,” whined Martini.
   “Play it,” groaned Bogart Humphrey and handed Rogue two dice. “You know how to blow, don’t you?”
   Rogue scooped up the cubes and made a fist. He kissed his knuckles then pursed his lips and blew. “I’m hustling for a pull numan,” he said and threw the purple dice across the baize.
   “I’m not a puppet, I’m a real -”
   There were two loud bangs and Woody Alan slumped headfirst onto the gaming table with a hole between his gloss-painted eyes. The dice had been loaded!
   Abilene Zylon smiled. “Very impressive, Mister Tuft - mere moments at the table and you’ve already eliminated an opponent. You have the makings of a quite formidable player.”
   A disgusted shudder ran through Rogue’s frame. “But I… it was an accident, I didn’t -”
   The hostess gathered up the pair of smoking dice and passed them to Bogart Humphrey. “Don’t fret over poor Woody, Mister Tuft. In his current condition he’s quite resilient, you know. Why, only last week he lost a whole leg in a loan shark incident. We had to have him fitted with a prosthetic! Not that he noticed, of course. One wooden leg is much the same as another. Although it has left him with a bit of a limp, the poor love. No, you mark my words, Mister Tuft, a touch of wood filler and a lick of paint and Mister Alan will be as good as new.”
   Placing her parasol under her left arm, Abilene Zylon lit a long yellow cigarette. “Tell me, Mister Tuft, how is it that you came to arrive here?”
   “Where, exactly, is here?”
   “Some call it the void, others the abyss. Some even refer to this place as… limbo. We could be at the end of time or the very beginning; I’m not certain that I can give you the answer you deserve, Mister Tuft.”
   “Then who can?”
   “The House Captain; he runs the whole shebang,” replied Abilene Zylon and made an expansive gesture.
   Rogue stared at her without faltering. “And how do I get to meet this Captain?”
   “Isn’t it obvious, Mister Tuft? You play the tables. You play them as if your very life depended upon it.”
   “And does it?” asked Rogue, fixing her with an intense, quizzical stare.
   Abilene Zylon averted her eyes. “You still haven’t told me how you came to arrive here, Mister Tuft.”
   “It’s a long story, one I’m not certain you’d believe.”
   “Try me, Mister Tuft. You’ll find me very receptive.”
   “I’m from East Napahoma, a wrangling cardsharp by trade. I was on a gaming boat, a paddle steamer, trying to win my passage to the end of the line. From there I hoped to -”
   “Tell me, Mister Tuft, was the Captain a mouse with an annoying tendency to whistle inane tunes?”
   “Yes! But how could you know that?” asked Rogue suspiciously.
   “Trust me, Mister Tuft; it all fits in with the great scheme of things. Willy’s steamboat has brung a fair few hustlers to my tables. Now, if you’d care to follow me I’ll give you a tour of the establishment. You might care to sample a few hands.”
   “I’d like nothing better, but I’m all out of mung.”
   “Mung?” enquired Abilene Zylon raising an eyebrow.
   “Moolah, Foldaroll… Spondooliks.”
   “Don’t be silly, Mister Tuft. By eliminating Woody you inherited his stash. His cash, too.”
   “I’m not a man who’s prone to acts of violence, Miss Abilene. I prefer to win my money fair and square-pants,” replied Rogue and turned his back on the table to gaze in awe around the gaming hall. A substantial and exquisitely decorated room lit by incandescent gas mantels, the hall measured in excess of ninety feet in both length and breadth, its walls clad in reclaimed timber that still bore the scars of a long since eradicated woodworm infestation. The four corners were occupied by enormous oak figureheads carved into Minotaur heads, while cut into the walls were wide archways through which Rogue could see yet more baize-covered tables crowded by eclectic groups of elegantly dressed players. In the high fan-vaulted ceilings, mammoth four-bladed fans rotated slowly behind mesh frames, lending a cool breeze to the charged atmosphere of the gaming hall. Rogue pondered the maze of rooms, trying to form a mental image as to the size and shape of the casino.
   “Our tables offer the best action a wager can exploit,” said Abilene Zylon. “Cambodian Poker, Stud Cribbage, Two-handed Octopi, Happy Families - have you a preference, Mister Tuft? We even have a room set aside for fifty-two card pickup should you wish to indulge in the intricacies of that particular game.”
   “I can turn my pot to most things, Miss Zylon, but when push comes down I’m partial to a game of Brag.”
   “Oh dear! You boys. You just never seem happy with what you’re born with! I expect that being a wrangler you’ll no doubt feel the need to partake in a stimulating game of Buckaroo Banzai?”
   “No, not really. In all honesty I find it a tad fiddly. However, I play a mean game of Italian rules Kerplunk.”
   “Ah, and so we return to Brag!”
   “You’ve got me all wrong, Miss Abilene. I’m an honourable man, I just speak as I find.”
   “Then I can only hope that you may soon find yourself a romantic novel, Mister Tuft. I’m a Southern belle. Where I come from a lady needs a-wooing not a-shoeing!”
   As Rogue raised his palms in a placatory gesture and made to apologise, from one of the adjoining rooms came a cry of exultation followed moments later by guttural curses. All the indications were that another player had gambled a moody.
   “Ah, here we are, the backgammon table,” said Abilene Zylon. “Do you play, Mister Tuft?”
   “Backgammon? No! I prefer Ouija.”
   “WEEGIE! De ah hair yi coll us a WEEGIE?”
   Abilene Zylon ran her fingers through the receding hairline of a smartly dressed Scot. “Mister Tuft said Ouija, dear.”
   “Ah sees tae im, nivva stir ma drink. Et’s sheken, mon… sheken! But e dusnae lissen dus ’e, so’s… och, tha’s awe a need! Ah kin smell gas! Ken yi smell gas?”
   “You’ll have to excuse Mister Canary, he’s not playing with a full deck,” said Abilene Zylon.
   “Who’s he talking to?” asked Rogue.
   “Letters of the alphabet, Mister Tuft. However, you must pay him no heed. He’s quite harmless.”
   “Pay m’ nae heid ez et? Well lemmy tell yi, yi ken pay attention, blonde. Like R telt im, straight doon, yi dinna ivir stir ma drenk. Nivva!”
   “It’s bottle-blonde, Mister Canary, and then only to my friends,” said Abilene Zylon and gestured towards a chair. “Take a seat, Mister Tuft. It will pay you dividends if you get to know some of your fellow players.”
   Canary grunted suddenly and held out a hand to Rogue “Aye, tek a seat. Iss a gran wee pairty, eh buddy. But if yi dinnae ken the score, yi’ll nivir mek it. Wass yi’r nem pal?”
   “The names Tuft, Rogue Tuft.”
   “Huv a drenk pal, eh? Ah’m Shorn, bah th’ wae… Shorn Canary.”
   Throwing a handful of dull bronze coins onto the hammered-nickel salver of a passing waitress, Rogue helped himself to a fluted crystal glass full of yellow liquid. Gingerly, he placed the glass on the baize in front of him then cupped his hands around its slender body as caressing some eager young virgin lover.
   Canary’s backgammon opponent licked his lips. “May I try some of your tasty beverage?”
   “Hell no!” exclaimed Rogue, noticing extraordinary eagerness in the man’s expression. “You’re holdin’ foldin’ - go get your own eggnog.”
   With her ample bronzed bosom threatening to spill from the front of her red satin bodice, Abilene Zylon leaned forward to whisper in Rogue’s ear. “You’ll have to excuse Mister Jackson; he just likes trying to break people’s concentration.”
    “But I’m not playing.”
    “I don’t believe that Mister Jackson gives a pony!”
   “There’s such a lot of guns around, but so few brains!” muttered Sam Jackson.
   “What's the matter? You sound like a man who’s not seen a gun before?” sneered Rogue. He noticed that the toggle on Sam Jackson’s bootlace tie was a solid platinum Minter double-plus. Mysterious!
   Sam Jackson sneered back. “Hah! Somebody's always giving me guns.”
   “Then I suggest that you save them for the tables, Mister Jackson,” said Abilene Zylon with a mocking tone to her voice. “Come along, Mister Tuft, it’s time we took our leave of this particular game.”
   Rogue swallowed a mouthful of his drink and slid the glass in the direction of Jackson. He stood up. “There you go, Sammy. Have a couple of units on me.”
   Abilene Zylon placed a gentle hand upon Rogue’s left arm. “Onwards to the roulette tables, Mister Tuft, where your gambling will begin in earnest.”
   Rogue could still hear the raised voices of Jackson and Canary as the hostess led him across the marble floor of the gaming hall.
   “No bad, no bad. Another fifty in ma pocket and I’m away hame tae ma scratch.”
   “I dare you to say ‘what’ to me, Daddyshagger.”
   “Another wydo, eh? But see, if ye gets too wide it’ll be ma law ahm tell’n yi. Ah’ll split yir hied open. R yi listenin tae ays?”
   “I double dare you to say ‘what’ to me, Brotherlover.”
   Passing through a wide archway into an adjoining room, Rogue paused to reconnoitre. The new gaming room contained four roulette tables and a stage decked out in the style of a Leiber-Strasse vaudeville show; complete with missing wheels and authentic Indian arrows. From the colour of the feathers, Rogue surmised they were either Cheyenne or Madrasi in origin; it wasn’t that easy to tell them apart and Rogue was no expert.
   Abilene Zylon placed her hand in the crook of Rogue’s left arm and led him to the table nearest the stage. “Let me introduce you to your fellow players, Mister Tuft. This is Mister Harrison Fjord, son of Harrison Fjordson the renowned Dutch tomb raider.”
   “Howdy,” said the unshaven leather-clad explorer. His silver-grey hair hung lank about his rounded shoulders, eyes deep sunk and dark.
   “Fjordson! Isn’t that an Icelandic name?” asked Rogue suspiciously.
   “Not in Tahomaville, it ain’t.”
   “Oh, I’m -”
   “Don’t trouble yourself, bub. It’s an easy mistake to make,” suggested Fjord.
   “At the far end of the table we have Robin Sherwood,” said Abilene Zylon, gesturing towards a bearded middle-aged gentleman who was in the process of stealing markers from Harrison Fjord's stack; the Dutchman being momentarily distracted from his chips while shaking Rogue’s hand.
   “Good day to you, fine sir,” said Sherwood. “Mum’s the word, aye.”
   “Over here is Emperor P-Penguin,” continued the hostess, smiling politely as she indicated a gaunt looking individual with a monocle placed to his right eye and an impossibly long cigarette holder protruding from the corner of his thin lips.
   Rogue studied the bony almost bird-like features of a man whose clothes were worn so thin as to be almost invisible. “Nice tails,” he said, by way of polite conversation. Yet the man remained silent, taking care to reveal nothing of his emotions through facial expressions and thus damage his chance to bluff on a loser.
   Seemingly indifferent to the cold shoulder offered by the taciturn Emperor P-Penguin, Abilene Zylon moved swiftly around the table and came to rest behind a ruggedly hansom olive-skinned gentlemen. She placed her hands upon his broad shoulders. “Let me formally introduce you to our friend from the Middle East. This is mister Michel Demitri Calhoun Omaha Sheriff.”
   Rogue nodded a hello. “That’s a mighty long name you’ve got there, Mister Sheriff.”
   “I am renowned for my length,” replied the Gyptian and feigned a smile. “My close associates call me The Tin Man; on account of I wear this badge with my title engraved upon it.”
   Rogue stared hard at the badge, a frown furrowing his brow. “Your tin star says you’re a Marshal, Mister Sheriff.”
   “Well now, how do you like that!” exclaimed Omaha Sheriff. He shifted uneasily in his seat. “It appears that I have received a promotion and yet no one has taken the trouble to inform me.”
   Abilene Zylon lifted her right hand from the shoulder of Sheriff and gestured towards another player. “And finally this is Mister Sinatra, a former Mafiosi with the infamous Rat-packs of Holly Wood.”
   Immaculately attired in a white tux and glittering silver bowtie, Mister Sinatra looked up at Rogue and smiled a cool smile. “My name is Nancy, how do you do?”
   “How do I do what?” questioned Rogue.
   “You’d better not let Sam Jackson hear you say that.”
   “Say what?”
   “Precisely,” replied Sinatra. “Pull up a pew, pard.”
   Nonplussed by his short exchange with Sinatra, Rogue pulled back a chair and made to sit down.
   “Careful there pard, you almost sat on Tom!”
   “Tom?”
   “Tom Thumb Mapother the Fifth. Although fare’s fair, he’s easily missed,” said Nancy Sinatra.
   “Show me the money,” squealed a young player who sat no more than two-feet tall.
   “It’s on the table in front of you, Mister Mapother,” said Abilene Zylon with a tone of voice that hinted at irritation.
   “I can’t see it, I can’t see it! Show me the money, show me the money.”
   “If you’ll just display a little patience I’ll have someone bring you a cushion to sit on. Would that help you?” asked the hostess.
   “Show me the money.”
   “Oh, for heaven’s sake! Please, take a seat, Mister Tuft. I’ll just go and organise a highchair for Mister Mapother.”
   Sinatra extended his right arm across the table to shake hands with Rogue. “Ciao, pard. My friends call me Frank.”
   “And are you?”
   “Darned straight,” replied Sinatra passionately. “In fact, let me tell ya somethin’ I ain’t never not told no man, livin’ nor dead. When my dear old pappy was lyin’ a-dyin’ on his death bed he done says to me: ‘Son, this world is rough an’ if a man's gonna make it he's gotta be tough. But I won’t be there to help ya along the ways on account of I’m gonna be dead, so’s I went an’ give ya a sissy name because I knew you'd have to get tough or die. It's a name that’ll help to make you strong, Nancy boy’.”
   Sinatra paused and downed two fingers of redeye to rein in his runaway emotions. “Now this might sound mighty strange, Mister Tuft, but as I looked down at my pappy I felt a tear slide down my cheek. I cried at the words my pappy done spoke. Then I done shot the no good lousy son of a bitch between the eyes.”
   “Rough justice!” suggested Rogue.
   “Rough justice indeed, my friend. But ho, ho, ho, I got the last laugh! My dear ol’ pappy use t’ say that it’s a mighty rough road that we all must walk. Course, ’e ain’t walkin’ it no more. Tell me, Mister Tuft, are your boots made for walking, Mister Tuft? Because either you do it my way or it’s the highway.”
   Abruptly, the monotone voice of a compère erupted from large brass trumpets that hung at regularly spaced intervals across the ceiling. “Ladeeez and Gen-tle-men, please offer up a show of enthusiasm for the star of tonight’s show… the very wonderful, the very beautiful, the very hermaphroditical… Charles Monroe.”
   A somewhat lacklustre round of applause was promptly followed by fervent catcalls as a stunningly attractive brunette appeared from behind the red velvet drape to the left of the stage. The coach driver commenced the ceremonial whipping of the four stuffed horses and the young starlet clambered onto the flat roof of the diligence; accepting the microphone proffered to her by the shotgun messenger. As the four piece string ensemble played a jaunty Hispanic reel, Miss Monroe’s dulcet baritone voice filled the gaming room.

   ‘I had a little monkey, sent him to the country, fed him on gingerbread.
   Along came a choo-choo, knocked my monkey cuckoo, now monkey is dead, boo-boop-boo-hoo.
   I wanna be loved by you, here’s your present, Mister President, happy birthday to you, boo-boop-e-do.’ 

   In the absence of the domineering Miss Zylon, Robin Sherwood had turned distinctly hostile towards his fellow players. Openly stealing a handful of Nancy Sinatra’s markers he turned to Rogue and fixed him with a menacing stare. “You look like a man of dubious lineage. A bad blood. Perhaps even a miscreant of the lowest order.”
   “I’m happy to confess that I have committed numerous petty crimes and that I have a tendency to baulk at authority, yet I fear you hold me in too high esteem. Although I am, of course, flattered by your kind words.”
   “Listen here, tumbleweed - d’you think you can just come waltzin’ in here with some fancy clothes stuffed up yer goddam sphincter? Well let me tell you this much, buddy - nobody likes a smart arse.”
   Once again nonplussed, Rogue remained purposefully tight-lipped.
   “Show me the money,” squeaked Tom Mapother.

   Having finished her set for the evening, Charles Monroe sauntered over to Rogue’s table with a slow and seductive gait. Pouting her soft crimson lips she gazed lustfully at Rogue. “Would you care to show a gal a good time?” she purred and fluttered her long mascaraed eyelashes.
   Glancing up with a look of disdain, Rogue stared into her permanently dilated green pupils. “Go shag yourself,” he replied.
   “For one such as I, that is not as difficult as it might sound. But a jig is so much more fun when it’s a pas de deux. I have a bicycle built for two, pretty boy. Do you ride side-saddle?”
   “Stand there any longer and I’ll ride you out of town in a pine box.”
   “Your loss.” Charles Monroe sighed and sashayed away towards the leering roughnecks seated at a nearby table that offered unconditional wagers on blind double-bluff roulette.
   Presently, Abilene Zylon returned with a highchair, whereupon Nancy Sinatra helped her lift Tom Mapother onto the seat and strap him in.
   Almost immediately, Tom Mapother began playing with the brightly coloured building blocks. “A, b, d, e, c, f, g, h, i -”
   “Now that Mister Mapother is settled we can commence with our game,” said Abilene Zylon. “For tonight’s session the house will only accept wagers of silver bungs. Change is available at the tables or from teller booths. As always, house rules must be adhered to strictly and I would remind all players that kissing is an optional extra. Now, Mister Tuft, if you’d be so kind as to spin the first bottle.”
   “Place your bets,” bellowed the croupier.
   Rogue span the magnum and, with carefree abandon, threw a nifty on the table.
   Abilene Zylon’s face displayed astonishment. “You’re wagering high, Mister Tuft.”
   “No perspiration, it ain’t my mung.”
   “Ah! You’re figuring that Woody won’t miss four-fifty.”
   “I ain’t lost, yet. Why don’t we just wait and see where the neck points,” replied Rogue nonchalantly.
   “Black, twenty-seven,” bellowed the croupier.
   “BINGO!” shouted Tom Mepathor.
   “Mister Mapother, may I remind you that you cannot possibly have a winning card after only one number has been called,” declared Abilene Zylon, looking reproachfully at the stunted gambler. “You need a line, Tom, a full line. Vertical, horizontal… in your case I’ll even accept diagonal. But it has to be a complete line. And can I remind all players that Bingo is no longer an acceptable shout.” She turned her head from left to right, addressing everyone at the table. “The house will only accept calls of House, Condominium, Bed-sit or Botticelli. Now, spin again, if you will, Mister Tuft.”
   Rogue tossed another silver bung on the table and looked on intently as the bottle’s rotation wound down.
   As the magnum came to rest, Abilene Zylon raised an eyebrow. She looked into Rogue’s eyes and smiled. “Double zero. Congratulations, Mister Tuft, you’ve won for yourself a shiny silver bullet. Chamber it, Mister Tuft, load up. Will you spin for glory now or hold fire to see if Mademoiselle Luck can win you a few more rounds?”
   “Spin for glory?” replied Rogue, a puzzled expression etched upon his features.
   “Yes, spin for glory. This is Russian roulette, Mister Tuft. The more rounds there are in your chambers the higher the rewards.”
   “And the higher the risk!”
   “Yes indeed, but it’s where the big bucks are, Mister Tuft. The big balls, too!”
   Abilene Zylon raised another eyebrow and Rogue decided to fold.
“If it’s all the same to you, Miss Zylon, I’d like to save this here bullet for a rainy day,” he said, placing the dum-dum in the breast pocket of his ivory lycan-skin waistcoat.
   “As you wish, Mister Tuft. But remember, the bullet still has your game on it.”
   “It’s a game for another time, perhaps another place. Now, if it’s at all possible I’d like to spend some time wandering about this joint on my own. I want to get a feel for the place, Mistress Zylon, an unconstrained feel.”
   “Why of course, Mister Tuft, I shall leave you to your wanderings,” replied the hostess. “Just don’t go harbouring any romantic notions of escape.”
   Scooping up a handful of Robin Sherwood’s chips, Abilene Zylon handed them to Harrison Fjord and sauntered off towards another of the roulette tables; the gold-pleated train of her lace gown trailing behind her long slender legs and peach-perfect derriere like a Cattlewinder in hot pursuit of a Ghoombat.
   With a squint of his right eye, Nancy Sinatra peered across the table at Rogue. “Tell me, pard, have you devised a system for beating the system?”
   “Not so far, but systems are made to be broken.”
   Robin Sherwood laughed heartily and ran the tips of his fingers across the baize. “The tabletops are so sweetly green, don’t you think? One might even be tempted to call them seductive, just sitting there, covered ever so tightly in emerald. Yet some, I fear, look upon them as being somewhat jaded.”
   “You have a thing about green, don’t you, Sherwood.” suggested Rogue.
   Nancy Sinatra sniggered. “He used to have a thing for Scarlet, but that’s another story.”
   “So tell me about the casino,” said Rogue, glancing around the gaming room. “I see plenty of doors, but no windows. Are we held some place underground? Where can I find the main exit?”
   Nancy Sinatra leaned forward; speaking in hushed tones so as not to be overheard by the croupier. “No one gets out of the casino, pard. Least ways not alive. So play on, Mister Tuft, for gambling is everything. Place your bets and rack up your debts. There are no winners, and losers are just another product of the game.”
   “I’ve gotten outta tighter holes than this,” said Rogue, displaying an air of manly confidence.
   “That may very well be the case, my friend. But no one gets out of this casino unless they cash in their chips. So tell me, pard, are you big enough a man to step up to the table when the chips are down? I’m not a betting man, but I wouldn’t mind betting you’ve got a chip on your shoulder. Tell me, Mister Tuft, have you ever placed your chips on a dream only to find yourself lying drunk at fortunes well?”
   “It’s chips with everything where you’re concerned, isn’t it,” offered Rogue.
   “Let me ask you a question, pard? Are you the ace or just another joker in our pack? Do you have your eye on the jackpot or are you just a simple crackpot? Will you cut the cards or will the cards cut you?”
   Rogue expelled a grunt. “Well I’d just love to sit here and chat but -”
   Nancy Sinatra reached over and grabbed Rogue’s hand. “Here’s a word of advice for you, pard. Free advice, with no side bets. If you make it as far as the hall of slots, beware of the one-armed bandits. Because you can’t arm-wrestle the odds, my friend. No-one wrestles the odds.”
   “Yeah, thanks for that,” said Rogue and pushed back his chair; only to be hit just above the right eye by a pink building block engraved with the letter P.
   “I’s heard you done met with The Preacher,” said Tom Mapother.
   “Preacher?”
   “The Reverend Sam Ewell Jackson, the casino’s holy man. Reverend Jackson is the supreme symbol of honesty and righteousness in this here Casino. He prides himself upon being the absolute epitome of an unyielding wielder of divine justice. I wonder, did he ask to sample your beverage?”
   “Well as a matter of fact he did, the lowlife scrounging son of a -”
   “And did you respond with the sacred words?”
   “Sacred words?”
   “Yes, the sacred words; My Teddy only drinks Darjeeling. Here, take this pretty yellow building block with the letter U engraved on four of its sides and add it to the one I just threw at you, the rather appealing pink block that dealt you a glancing blow upon the temple.”
   Rogue retrieved the building block from where it had fallen beneath the table, and then placed it on the baize next to the yellow one that had been handed to him by Tom Mapother. “P, U,” he mumbled.
   Mapother uttered a tut of disapproval. “Up, Mister Tuft. UP. Now go see the preacher.”
   “Thanks,” said Rogue and turned to walk away.
   “Show me the money, Mister Tuft. Show me the money,” called out Tom Mapother.
   “Oh I fully intend to,” replied Rogue and wandered off towards the archway that would take him back to the backgammon room; keenly aware of the ever increasing number of gamers whose bloodshot eyes seemed to follow his every move. Weaving his way through the tables, Rogue arrived in time to witness Jackson and Canary’s game of Cinchilla backgammon draw to a conclusion.
   “Tek a seat, pal. Ah’ve juss minted. Ah’ll huv tae go up fur ma money, eh. Yi kin come wi ays if yi want. R cannae see Jackson dain a runner. Yi kin nivir tell though. I’ll keep ma eye on yous, Jackson.”
   A look of contempt spread across Sam Jackson’s face. “So help me God! Let brimstone and fire be rained down upon my wretched soul should I so much as contemplate the holy sin of deceiving one of my fellow players…deceiving or defrauding a fellow player…. The two holy sins of deceiving and defrauding or behaving in a disloyal manner towards…. The three holy sins of deceiving and defrauding or behaving in a disloyal or duplicitous manner towards -”
   “Yi’ll af’tae excuse th’ wee mun,” said Shorn Canary grinning broadly at Rogue. “E’s getting auld an’ e’s no well. E’s med zero th’ night. Though ’e dusnae like t’ talk aboot et.”
   “Get the away from me, Satan,” exclaimed Jackson, becoming more irate by the second.
   “Awright, awright. Ah’ll dae as ah’m telt! Sorry, Mister Tuft, but ah’ll haftae leave yi wi’ this mudmun. But ah’m tellin’ yi fir nuttin, e’s mudder.”
   “I’ll take my chances,” said Rogue and sat down in the chair vacated by Canary.
   Throwing several markers onto the polished silver salver of a passing waitress, Rogue helped himself to a tumbler of mushroom-coloured liquid. Gingerly, he placed the glass on the baize in front of him.
   Sam Jackson licked his lips. “May I try some of your tasty beverage?”
   “My Teddy only drinks Darjeeling,” muttered Rogue. Abruptly, he felt a hand fall upon his leg and turned his head to stare wide-eyed with incredulity at the freshly enamelled features of Woody Alan.
   “M-m-m-may I j-join you?” asked Alan.
   “Pull up a seat,” replied Sam Jackson gruffly. “You may be able to help me indoctrinate our newest disciple. So… how can I be of assistance to you, Mister Rogue Tuft? May I call you Rogue? Of course I may.”
   “Tell me about this casino. Where is it, what is it… how do I get out?”
   Sam Jackson drew a long hard breath that rattled through his wooden teeth like a prairie wind in a barrel of chowpackers. “This casino might seem like just another gambling joint, but it isn't. It’s different in many ways, and so are those who do the gambling. In Wiscourri, the average age of a player is forty-six, in this casino it’s twenty-nine, Mister Tuft.”
   “In-in-in-in this c-casino it’s twenty-nine. T-t-t-t-twenty-nine,” parroted Woody Alan.
   “That’s a bad stutter you’ve got yourself going there, Woody!”
   “W-w-w-what do you expect? You b-b-b-blew half my b-b-b-b-brains out.”
   Sam Jackson crossed himself and continued with his dialogue. “In Sarwacoochi, the gambler typically plays a twelve hour session and is exposed to hostile opponents almost every day. According to a Gambler's Administration study, half of our Casino’s veterans suffer from what psychiatrists call ‘Post-Traumatic-Stress-Disorder’ and it concluded that the greater a vet’s exposure to wagers the more likely it is to affect his chances of being arrested or convicted. Many vets complain of alienation, rage, or guilt. Some succumb to suicidal thoughts. This is just one legacy of our Casino.”
   “W-w-w-w-wagers and d-d-d-d-d-d-disorder,” stuttered Woody Alan in agreement.
   “I’m really not sure what’s going on,” said Rogue and an expression of bemusement swept across his face.
   “Don’t forget what you’ve seen, Mister Tuft; the destruction of men in their prime, whose average age is twenty-nine.”
   “D-d-d-d-d-destruction.”
   Rogue slammed his fist on the table. “Woody! Do me a favour and stop repeating everything that Sam says. In fact, do everyone a favour and stop repeating everything that you say, okay?”
   “Ah-ah-ah-okay, Mister T-t-t-t-t-t-t-tuft.”
   “There's gotta be something wrong somewhere?” Rogue suggested.
   “We do what we have to do, Mister Tuft. Yet people want us to be ashamed of what the Casino has made us.”
   “A-a-a-all we w-want to d-do is g-g-g-go home.”
   “What do we do it for?” asked Rogue.
   “Is it worth it?” replied Sam Jackson.
   “Black n-n-n-n-nineteen,” bellowed the croupier.
   “Well that’s me all wagered out,” sighed Sam Jackson. “Of all the cards in all the decks, he had to draw the nineteen of clubs! There’ll be no playing again for Sam, not tonight. Unless… Mister Tuft, I wonder if you would care to cover the cost of my next hand?”
   “What’s in it for me?”
   Jackson fished in the pockets of his purple greatcoat. “I’m guessing that the contents of your purse might just about be sufficient to buy you this here key.”
   Rogue studied the key with interest. Designed for use with a warded lock, it was of a simple yet intriguingly ornate design with a cylindrical shaft of polished pewter and a single flat rectangular tooth of bronze. “And why would I want to buy some old rusty key?”
   “I’m guessing that you want out of this rummy gin joint. Am I right? This here is the key to cubicle ‘S’.”
   “And what, exactly, is cubicle S?”
   “The executive John.”
   “And who, exactly, is executive John?”
   “Not who, what, my dear Rogue. It’s where the big boys go when they want to spend a guinea.
   “And what, exactly, is spending a guinea?”
   “Mister Tuft… Rogue… would you kindly refrain from the repeated use of the word exactly. I loathe the word almost as much as I loathe the word what, which, may I point out, you have just used twice in the space of three questions.”
   “Sorry.”
   “Your apology is noted. Now, to answer your question, to spend a guinea is to visit the khazee.”
   “Khazee?”
   “The krappa, Mister Tuft. The dhunni. Popping round for tea at W/C fields.”
   “Ah! You mean the expediency, the convenience, the washroom, the -”
   “Yes, I believe we’re now speaking the same language, Mister Tuft. This is the key to the executive washroom. But, more importantly, it is the key to the doorway that will lead you to sanctuary.”
   Rogue leaned back in his chair and fingered his goatee. “So, all I gotta do is unlock a door? Mm, if it’s as easy as that, how come no-one’s tried it before?”
   “There’s just one slight problem,” replied Jackson, throwing the key in front of Rogue. “There’s a Bog Troll.”
   “A Bog Troll?”
   “Yes, my dear Rogue, a Bog Troll. Do you have a gun?”
   “No. I’ve got a bullet. Do you have a gun?”
   “But of course I do, didn’t I tell you that people keep giving me guns.”
   Jackson opened his greatcoat to display an impressive collection of handguns. “So, Mister Tuft, are you ready to part with your purse, I wonder?”
   “Well now, just give me a few moments to think things through. It’s an awful lot of mung to be handing over for a key and a six-gun.”
   “Tell me, Mister Tuft - are you faithful to the pack? Do you believe in the sanctity of the deck?”
   “Of course; doesn’t everyone?”
   “No, my friend - no they do not. Indeed there are those who would have us believe that to shuffle is to sin. Yet for me, a deck of cards serves as a bible. You see, Rogue, when I look at the Ace it reminds me that there is but one God. And the deuce reminds me that the bible is divided into two parts: the Old and New Testaments. When I see the trey I think of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. And when I see the four -”
   “Okay, okay, you can have my purse. Take my money, take it all. Just tell me how I can get out of this place.”

   Armed with the key and a Colt45 ‘Lovejoy’ loaded with a solitary dum-dum round with his game on it, Rogue made his way out of the backgammon room and along the hallway that Sam Jackson had assured him would lead to the gentlemen’s washroom. Lighting in the hallway was supplied by fluorescent ceiling panels and the walls were decorated in Regency blue-stripe wallpaper that incorporated a silver fleur-de-lys.
   Every 10mtrs Rogue came upon a green door. The doors were all locked and, with the exception of the information displayed on the nickel plated plaque screwed to their middle rail, they were identical in every way. Rogue had been making a mental note of the wording on the plagues in the hope that a pattern would develop, yet none had. DO NOT ENTER - JANITOR - STORE ROOM - HEADMASTER - ROOM 101 - STAFF ONLY - BROOM CUPBOARD; to Rogue it made absolutely no sense whatsoever.
   An hour had already come and gone when Rogue discovered an old prospector sitting on a wooden bench. Both the bench and the prospector were covered in dust and silver cobwebs.
   Rogue stopped and looked down at the ancient gold digger, coughing gently to get his attention. “Howdy, old-timer. I’m new to these parts and I was wondering if you could direct me to the gentleman’s washroom?”
   Distant eyes peered up from a cracked, weather-beaten face that lay partially hidden behind the ravages of time. “The gentleman’s what?”
   “Washroom,” replied Rogue. “The krappa, the loo, water closet, the expediency, the -”
   “Ah, you must be lookin’ fir the log cabin? It’s straight on down this here hallway. About fifty paces or so. It’ll come creeping up at you on your left side… or perhaps it’ll be your blind side. Still, you can’t miss it. Big ugly sucker, it is. But listen up, cowhorn, and listen up good. If you’re going to see a man about a dog you’d best beware of the Pet Shop Boys.”
   “Mighty kind of you, old timer,” said Rogue. He gave a two-fingered salute and continued on down the hallway.
   Sometime later, Rogue stopped off at a watering hole and checked his timepiece. Two hours had passed since his encounter with the prospector and he’d still not managed to discover the whereabouts of the washroom. Believing he’d somehow missed a signpost, Rogue was about to turn back when he noticed a rustler at the far end of the bar buying bottles of mineral water for a pair of thirsty-looking cows.
   With a leisurely gait, Rogue sidled up to the musty cowpoke. He doffed his twelve-litre hat, proffered a kid-gloved hand, and offered a pussycat smile.
   “Howdy beefburgler, I’m looking fir directions to the gentlemen’s bathroom.”
   “The gentleman’s what?”
   “The bathroom,” replied Rogue. “The khazee, the convenience, the log cabin, the -”
   “Oh, you must mean the porcelain palace! It’s just down at the end of the bar, fella. You see those two doors? Well the one on the left’s got a picture of a hussy on it. My guess is you’ll be wanting the door on the right. But you listen here, curdwangler, and listen good. If you’re intending to bleed the snake you’d best beware of trouser-rattlers.”

   Tentatively, Rogue pushed open the lavatory door and stepped inside.
   “Heated towel and scented soap, sir?” asked a massively muscled man of few words who stood at the far end of the room dressed in an immaculately tailored monkey suit.
   “Are you the Bog Troll?” Rogue asked.
   “That’s convenience hygiene consultant, if you don’t mind,” replied the colossus testily. “Brush the dandruff from your jacket, sir?”
   Rogue pulled out his gun. “Listen, buddy, I don’t want to have to shoot you so -”
   “Well if that’s the case,” interjected the attendant, “wouldn’t it be better for all parties concerned if you used the key that’s hanging from your belt to unlock this door?” He gestured towards a nearby cubicle.
   Rogue could see that a branding iron had been used to burn the letter S onto the surface of its oak door. He lifted the key from his belt.
   “Adjust the way you’re hanging, sir?” asked the CHC.
   “No thanks,” replied Rogue and pushed the bronze and pewter key into the warded lock. “By the way, where’d you get the monkey suit?”
   “Off a chimpanzee, sir.”

   “Welcome to The Hall of Forgotten Games!” exclaimed an overzealous red-faced bartender who bore a remarkable resemblance to a Toby jug. He licked his lips salaciously and pulled a pint.
   “Ah, Mister Tuft, how nice of you to join us,” barked a silver-grey Scottish terrier who sat at the foot of an enormous card table. “My name is Scotty,” continued the cast iron canine. It stood up and came lolloping across the room to rub itself against Rogue’s left leg.
   “I trust you’re not thinking of -”
   “Heaven forbid, Mister Tuft! I’m just pleased to finally meet you. We’ve been expecting you, you know?” replied the enlivened hound.
   “Great, you’ve been expecting me and now I’m here. So what happens next?”
   “Up, Mister Tuft, you need to go UP.”
   Rogue peered towards the ceiling and sucked in a breath. The furniture towered above him. “And how, exactly, do I get up,” he asked, beginning to feel like a termite in a Barbie house.
   Scotty struggled to contain his enthusiasm. “You’ll find some ladders over in the far corner, Mister Tuft.”
   Rogue gazed in the direction the terrier had indicated. His jaw dropped. “Snakes! I hate snakes!”
   “But you need a ladder in order to climb up to the card table,” replied Scotty. “And anyway, the snakes don’t bite. They’re all constrictors. Perhaps a hug, an affectionate squeeze, but no more.”
  
   When Rogue returned with the ladder, Scotty gave him a friendly growl and handed over a fistful of brightly coloured banknotes. “Here, take this. You’ll need some wedge with which to bribe the Queen of Hearts.”
   “She’s the leader of the pack, Vroom - Vroom,” intoned Toby Jug.
   “She runs the whole shebang,” said Scotty with a sweep of his paw.
   Rogue held up a hand. “I’m a gambler, not a Bob-sponge. I’ve always maintained that I like to win my money, fair and square.”
   “We could toss a coin if it would make you feel better. Heads you win and tails I lose. Look, I’ve just sold a rather prestigious property in the fashionable West End district of Mayfair to Rich Uncle Pennybags and his daughter Money, so believe me, there’s plenty more where this came from. Please, take the cash, Mister Tuft.”
   With a smile of gratitude, Rogue pocketed the notes and placed a tentative foot on the first rung of the ladder.
   Scotty placed a paw on his arm and gestured towards a tatty cardboard box. “A hero you are. Lead the way for others, you will. Take only those items that you need and leave the rest behind, for there may come a day when others may choose to tread this path.”
   Rogue glanced inside the box. It contained several items that could be used as weapons; a length of rope (fashioned into a hangman’s noose), a wrench, a piece of lead piping, a candlestick.
   “I’ll pass, thanks,” said Rogue, placing a hand on his holster to indicate that he was already carrying.
   “Fair thee well, gentle Tuft,” called out Scotty as Rogue began the long ascent to the card table.

   Rogue eased himself over the lip and strode purposefully across the table to where several members of the pack were busy entertaining the Queen of Hearts with bawdy anecdotes. The Queen remained silent, her dispassionate eyes gazing about her unflinchingly.
   Rogue placed a fist to his mouth and coughed gently. “Good afternoon, I was hoping -”
   The Queen snorted contemptuously. “This will simply not do! A peasant! Addressing one’s Royal personage! ORF WIF E’S ’EAD!”
   “He might be a pheasant, oh beauteous one,” suggested Jack Diamond; a snivelling toady of the highest degree. “Maybe even a grouse! Game birds is well known for their lack of decorum.”
   “Desist with your idle drivel,” screamed the Queen of Hearts. “ORF WIF E’S ’EAD THIS INSTANT.”
   Rogue suppressed a flush of irritation and, regarding the Queen stonily, spoke with icy politeness while casually reaching into the cavernous pocket of his greatcoat. “Please forgive me your most Regal Highness, but I was erroneously advised that you had your price.”
   Upon setting eyes on Rogue’s roll of colourful banknotes, the pack began chattering in excited, greedy tones.
   “Perhaps one may have misjudged you,” said the Queen in her husky yet clear voice. “How might one be of assistance?”
   “I need to get across to the billiard table.”
   “Then one and one’s pack shall begin a rousing game of contract bridge,” replied the Queen.
   The pack set about forming hands and Rogue took the opportunity to get in forty winks. When he awoke he discovered that the winks had tiddled on the carpet and that North had declared war on the South following an allegation by the West that the East was a dummy.
   Rogue left the cards to argue amongst themselves and made his way gingerly across the bridge.
   Upon arriving at the billiard table, Rogue mustered every last ounce of strength in his diminutive frame and rolled the spot-white cue ball across the table. It kissed the red and white for a direct cannon. He placed his hands on his ears but the noise of the artillery-piece was still deafening.
   When at length the dust settled, Rogue noticed that a hole had been blown in the far wall. Cautiously, he stepped through the breach; gently easing aside pieces of fallen plaster and rubble with the toe of his grimalkin-skin boot. The tunnel was murky within, lit only by the faint glow of intermittently spaced torches that flickered spasmodically from a draught that jumped diagonally through the breach. Miniature waterfalls of a turquoise-coloured luminous liquid poured from hairline fissures in the granite walls, and orange mist swirled at ground level. Rogue took a few tentative steps into the gloom.
   Within, the tunnel was haunted by the distant churning of gargantuan machinery. Steam hissed above his head, scenting the air with a damp, musty smell. Rogue took a deep breath, catching just a hint of Tabasco’s subtle aroma. He placed a hand against the moist stone wall to steady himself and, with carefully measured steps, began to make his way towards the predictably dull light at the end of the tunnel.

   Rogue had been stumbling through the semi-darkness for several hours when, abruptly and inexplicably, the dim trace of natural light grew stronger. The tunnel had come to a sudden end, opening out to display a huge obsidian and basalt amphitheatre beyond which extended an intricately woven catacomb of amber and gold. The floor was littered with tumbleweed and the ashen bones of some long-dead mammoth critter; its maw filled with row upon row of cracked and broken teeth that resembled the tombstones on Shoe Hill.
   Rogue eased open a fluid tangerine door only to discover that it led into a small passage not much larger than a skank-hole. Kneeling down, he looked along the passage into the loveliest garden he’d ever seen.
   “Petunia pancakes,” said Rogue anxiously to himself and then, placing a hand on the top of his head to prevent it toppling from his shoulders, he scrabbled through the tunnel that led to the outside world.
   Rogue emerged into glorious sunshine. “This is so much better than whitewashing,” he mumbled to himself and set off for a walk in the garden.
   When at last he grew tired, Rogue sat down by a river to rest. He’d never seen a river before and was fascinated by the way the water gurgled and gleamed. Craning his head forward to see his reflection, Rogue could hardly believe his eyes. He was a beautiful white swan.
   “I don’t want to eat you,” laughed a nearby fox. “Jump onto my tail and I’ll carry you across the river.”
   “Hello, Rogue,” called a water rat. “Would you like to come across?”
   “How?” replied Rogue.
   The rat said nothing, but pulled out a tiny steamboat fashioned from old off cuts of carpet.
   “I’ve never been on a boat,” said Rogue.
   “What?” cried the rat. “There’s nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about on the river.”

   So Rogue Tuft found himself afloat on a tiny boat made from pieces of broadloom. It rocked and swayed as it made its way along the river, but Rogue never stopped standing to attention; even when the steamboat ran aground on a bank at the edge of a meadow.
   Rogue shielded his eyes, blinked. The field was bathed in a blue-white radiance; a blinding effulgence that emanated from a small glass plate that sat atop a stone dais. Striding purposefully to the light, Rogue discovered the plate heaped high with shiny coins of the realm. Beside the plate was a tiny handwritten notice; scribbled with carefree abandon by a hand akin to that of a small child. The notice read: Librae Solidi Denarii. SPEND ME!
   “LSD,” mumbled Rogue and averted his eyes before temptation could get the better of him. Then his gaze fell upon a collection of jars that sat in a niche in the side of an enormous tree from which the money had been picked.
   “Scrumping sterling!” exclaimed Rogue and reached up to take down a jar; attached to which was a label that read: Lysergic Acid Diethylamide Saturated Sugar Cubes - Property of MK-ULTRA - by Appointment to Her Extremely Royal Majesty the Queen Victoria of Hertfordshire. EAT ME. Go On, You Know You Want To!’
   As Rogue unscrewed the cap his olfactory system was assailed by the subtle aroma of cinnamon. The smell was intoxicating. He removed a sugar cube and took a bite. The taste was quite exquisite.
   A maniacal clenched-jaw grin settled onto his features.
   The next two hours slipped by quickly. Rogue writhed naked on a lawn, giggling and crying, laughing insanely and defecating. His thoughts were comprised of the odd combination of obscure languages, involuntary optical stimuli and experiential sound. He thought of a rainbow yet saw a pineapple riding on a penny-farthing bicycle, repeatedly hearing the word dirigible being chanted in a high-pitched voice by a small pink azalea bush. The experience left him in a perpetual state of euphoria.
   The following sixty minutes slid by rapidly, yet even so, Rogue began to get extremely tired of sitting on the grass, as the cool moon made him feel very lethargic and dim-witted. He was busy contemplating whether the pleasure of making a daisy-chain would be worth the effort of chasing the daisies, when quite without warning a white rabbit appeared from behind the golden-brown dunes of a beach tree. It removed a solid gold hunter’s watch from the pocket of its red tartan waistcoat and peered inquisitively at the face through the cracked lenses of a pair of bifocals.
   “It would appear that I am destined to be unfashionably tardy for an extremely significant engagement,” exclaimed the bespectacled white Leporidae. He tut-tutted and turned to hop away across the lawn; a look of anxiety sweeping his hirsute visage.
   Rogue peeked at about five hours - at which point he started to his feet and, burning with curiosity, ran across the field in pursuit of the rabbit; just in time to see it pop down a hole under a privet hedge.
   At precisely 9:30, Rogue started to read a book he’d discovered lying under a gooseberry bush alongside a newborn baby girl of miniscule proportions. The tomes remarkable yet sometimes incoherent transcript illustrated a phantasmagoria of fear, terror, grief, exaltation and finally breakdown. It grooved. However, at precisely 9:34, Rogue met himself coming down an up-staircase and the encounter had a crushing effect on him.
   Standing on one leg with his left foot in his right hand, Rogue came across a monster who was sleeping by a tree. He looked and frowned, for the monster was he. For a brief period of time he conversed with himself, but soon tired of trying to second-guess what he was thinking and instead opted to sit quietly and alone on an unpolished wooden floor; visible only by the dim light that shone through a bathroom window. He sobbed, and his joy turned to fear. And then the paintings on the walls began to drip, to melt, each droplet a different hue that tickled down the walls and onto the floor. Rogue could smell colour, could taste it; red pepper, mandarin orange, pea green, brown sauce, blue stilton. The cornucopia of multi-coloured comestibles was a veritable banquet.
   The next three hours oozed by dreamily.
   When Rogue awoke he found himself lying on an old wrought iron four-poster bedstead surrounded by unshaven rent runners in matching pink dresses. He writhed, naked on a horsehair mattress; fornicating and masicating, paper-folding and brail-reading. Finally he threw caution to the wind and leapt headfirst through a hole in his shoe that was letting in water.
   “Double-down reds an’ face-up th’ blackjack on deuces,” said the straw man. “Heck, I’ve almost won enough gold t’ buy m’self a new brain!”
   “I’ll cover that bet,” said Rogue Tuft, self-proclaimed Wiz of Ardoz.
   Thick black smoke billowed into the cool blue afternoon air as the paddle steamer 'Wilton Weaver' eased away from the old wooden jetty at Broadloom Weft.


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