Aces &
Eights
...continued
"Hell," Twohig said with his
Midwestern drawl, "if I didn't have a deck of cards
to fondle, you know I'd be bare ass. You wanna cut low
card for a buck?" If it was not the sun lighting up
his eyes, it was the thought of a gamble, of odds being
folded up in someone's camp and might as well be his.
Biggs read him clearly. "No siree!" he said.
"Not for three cuts to your one. I owe you up to my
ass now and I ain't getting in any deeper." Always
he'd worried about making some outward sign of the
cowardice lodged within his thin frame. It made his voice
soft and entreating as he said, "Twig, couldn't we
get torpedoed out here? Christ, but we're moving slow,
ain't we? Couldn't they up and stick a fish right in
us?"
"Torpedoes is for boats, not for these little
lake-crossing barges. What you really got to worry about
is getting strafed by some Heinkel or Junkers or a Stuka,
or maybe getting dive-bombed when you ain't got your life
belt on." Twohig loved to pull the string that tied
Biggs' guts together. "Cut!" He held the deck
out. The blue bicycles of the top card caught the sun.
Biggs, aware of Twohig's constant taunts, had spent much
of the night dwelling on the idea of swimming in the
cauldron of the Red Sea. He hated fish and he hated blood
and he didn't know how to swim in the first place.
"I ain't cutting, Twig! Not three to one I ain't
cutting." The deep green of his eyes had retreated
to a thin, watery green and he moved his wrist to mop
away sweat lingering at the edges of his eyes. "I
don't care how hot it gets, I ain't getting nowhere out
of this belt. All's I can do is keep my head from going
under if we was to get thrown in the drink."
Twohig moved one shoulder away from the bulkhead and a
wisp of air was sucked in behind his back. "Life
belts are no good against sharks, Tally. They're the real
butchers of the sea. They tell me sharks can amputate a
leg quicker'n a doctor can with an electric saw.
Cut!" The blue bicycles again.
"Ain't no sharks in these waters! Nothing lives in
these waters, nothing at all!"
"Don't be stupid, Biggs. I suppose you never heard
of the balance of power. You must be pretty dumb not to
know about that."
"What the hell's that got to do with sharks? That's
only about countries lining up against each other in
bunches to keep out of war. And I ain't cutting!"
Slowly he shook his head at Twohig and smiled a
treacherously deceptive smile.
"Yuh, and it's all about little ones getting eaten
by big ones. It keeps order in things like they don't
need traffic cops or anything. They just go on and
anything small in the way of big ones gets eaten up.
Maybe they do have traffic cops here. I'd guess that's
what you'd call sharks. They eat up their share of
smaller fish and anything foreign that gets in the water,
and you know what, Biggs?"
"What?"
"If you was to fall in the water when we got dive
bombed, you'd be foreign. Cut!" The bicycles were
rolling.
The deck of cards was there in front of him, the rolling
stock. "Trey of spades!" Sweat ran over Biggs'
face but he smiled that thin despicable smile of a
caricatured rat.
"Deuce. You owe!" Upward in Twohig's sweaty
hand the two of hearts lay and a thin blotch of pink was
evident on the white of the card.
Angrily, Biggs said, "You're a lousy gambler,
sergeant. I'm the only guy in the whole outfit you can
beat." Great desire to punch the sergeant rushed on
him, but he knew he'd probably get thrown over the side
if he hit him. "Someday I'll beat your ass, but
good," and he could see his fists smashing away at
Twohig's face the way Henry Armstrong could, or the way
Harry Greb used to throw them in the barrooms in New
Orleans when he was training for fights. His father
always said Harry Greb was a real, real tiger, standing
in the middle of a bar and yelling out, "I'm Harry
Greb and I can kick the crap out of any man in
here," and going ahead and doing it, his training
routine.
Twohig tired of Biggs and wanted to move on to new
entertainment. In front of him Captain Redmond's big ears
were fire red and sweat was a shadow that covered his
whole shirt. Beneath the captain's arms it seemed darker
still, dark like patches on tire tubes. Twohig was
willing to bet the captain was wearing a tie. With the
deck clutched in his hand he moved his left shoulder and
saw steam come up from behind his back. With his left
foot he nudged the fruit crate Redmond was sitting on.
Redmond turned around and looked at him. The knot on his
tie was still tied under the oversized larynx, his eyes
were bulging as though the sockets had loosened their
properties and the oversized lower lip was more a piece
of extra flesh than an integral part of his mouth. Twohig
did not like the captain, not from the outset; he was
ugly and a phony to boot. Why didn't the man wear his
glasses outside the orderly room? If he only knew how
much they improved his appearance.
"Sorry, Captain. Guess I need to stretch a
bit." Twohig loved to play games with him as much as
with Tally Biggs. Biggs' money he liked, but the captain
was more fun and he relished the idea of toying with an
officer. The idea of the India/Burma assignment caused
him some minor dread, and it was lucky, he thought, that
the captain was going on to China with the first two
platoons.
Twohig the gambler knew what the captain would say, knew
him like a book he did. Would he never get tired of
mouthing the same pet phrases?
"That's quite all right, sergeant. We all of us need
some stretching, but the road ahead is a long one and we
must make the best of it."
It was Redmond clear as a phony bell. Just another echo.
Christ, if that ain't just like him, thought Twohig. He
can't talk without any of them damn sickening words...we
all of us, as if he really belonged; the road
ahead...make the best of it. Just another broken record
from officer country.
A licorice sensation ran through Charlie Twohig, and a
fluttering joy swam in his head. It was game time:
"What is the road ahead, sir? We all of us heard
some scuttlebutt back there," he said, pointing over
his shoulder back to the African horizon now a low cloud
on the rim of the sea, "but I'm sure we could do
with some reviewing." It was not a successful
attempt, though he had chosen his words carefully. The
homely bastard had hardly blinked his eyes.
When the sergeant had kicked his box, Captain Redmond had
been in deep thought about his gambling non-com. Inside
his shirt pocket, probably now soaked from the sweat, was
a letter from Twohig's wife. There would be no need of
reading it again for he had memorized its contents. It
was evident she was a more intelligent person than
Twohig, though hardly as devious, and he had read between
the lines the love she had for the mad gambler. As for
himself, he had never had, owned or partaken of a woman
for any extended period of time, though he knew how deep
the hooks of a good, true love went. The thought that he
might help this woman had built a new spirit in him, but
he was destined to go to China after the split-up in
Ceylon. A deep desire prompted him to do what he could.
It would make him feel good inside, this call beyond
duty.
"We break at Ceylon, Sergeant. First and second
platoons go with me to China. Third and fourth go with
Lieutenants Tozzi and Milano to Diamond Harbor at
Calcutta."
The Guinea Brigade, thought Twohig. If we could ever get
to Rome or Naples, they might get something done for us.
What the hell use are two damn Guineas out in India? They
might as well be on the moon.
"What's our course after Calcutta, sir?" Twohig
was irritated. What the hell made Redmond think he was so
damn smart. Anybody who ever read anything knows about
Diamond Harbor. Damn the sweat! It was making him blink
as it ran into his eyes and he'd be damned if he ever
wanted an officer to think he was forced to blink when
stared down.
Redmond, though he sweat profusely, did not mind the
heat. For a long time he had conditioned himself to do
without comfort and had forced himself into extreme
exposures, both of the body and of the mind. For eighteen
months he had been without a woman and he was still able
to think of them with great sensitivity and imagination.
Even among the married men of his command, no other could
say the same. When his time came (he felt the slight
rocking of the craft as a warning of a growing need), he
would really enjoy his fling. Searching for a woman would
be an adventure. Of course, his looks would hold off some
women, but they would be arrogant and unworthy. A man had
more to offer than looks. When he looked at Twohig he
wondered what his wife looked like. Somehow he had formed
a picture of her; big of bust and hip, blonde hair, blue
eyes, skin like buttermilk, and tremendously good in bed.
That she was intelligent was unquestioned. That had been
divined from her letter. Her use of negatives was clue
enough, and the way she slid into comfortable
alliterations made him think of her reading poetry on a
morning porch by the sea or a wide lake, by herself.
The dark, brooding eyes of Twohig were focused on him.
Realizing the contempt behind them, Redmond exerted his
station. It would never do to let Twohig know he was
either aware of his intentions or that he was reacting to
an enlisted man's barbs. "From Calcutta, the Black
Hole, you'll go to Dacca, Tripura, Silchar, bypass the
Khasi Hills, to Sylhet and on to the far corner of Assam,
ending up at Ledo. His eyes were locked onto Twohig's
eyes.
Smart-ass! I read Kipling, too. Does he think no one but
him ever read? "Do we go near Cooch-Behar,
sir?" That ought to stir his almighty ass.
"I don't believe so, Sergeant. From my recollection
of the map I think Cooch-Behar is in the western part of
Assam." Maybe the interrogating sergeant would take
the hint and not push it any more. He'd be able to spell
correctly more Indian names than Twohig could think of:
Dibrugarh, Sadiya, Tinsukia, Sibsagar, Mahiganj, and he'd
even throw in Saikoa-ghat for a plum. The map of Assam
and Burma burned in his mind just as clearly as the
letter from Twohig's wife. At the moment he had the
incredible feeling of being unable to separate them.
"Begging your pardon, sir." Twohig said, as he
felt an irking sensation swim through his body, "but
I'm willing to bet that Cooch-Behar is..."
Redmond cut him off. "I'm not a betting man,
Sergeant, as we all must know by this time." His
hand waved in the air as if brushing the whole episode
away. "It really isn't too all important." The
letter was important and he wanted to get his mind back
to it. Introducing Tozzi and Milano to its contents was a
thought that had not previously entered his mind. As the
craft rocked the little wings of memory started to
flutter in his groin, and he was aware of a slight sense
of hopelessness for the whole situation. Neither Tozzi
nor Milano, both seemingly good young officers though as
yet untried, could hardly begin to understand the woman
who had written the letter. She loved with a deep and
abiding love. Well, maybe they could see that, but the
rest would be a mystery to them and the fact that she
could be good in bed would never enter their indecent
young minds. It would only be time and chance that would
force him to reveal the letter, to enlist their aid, but
that bore on the unthinkable. Besides, it would deprive
him of aiding her all by himself. She had written to him,
the company commander. It was strictly his
responsibility.
The train of squat craft were now riding easily over a
sea of slow, even swells and the sexual impact of their
motion made Redmond think about finding a girl among the
Ceylonese before he headed off to China. Ceylon seemed
much more romantic than China. He pictured a mysterious
dark-eyed beauty standing above him. Her subtle
undulations would match the motion of the sea.
Except for the oppressive heat and an occasional alarm
when an aircraft came into sight over the flat, hot sea,
the trip to Ceylon was routine. Neither submarine nor
surface craft threatened them and Twohig managed to bite
into Tally Biggs' bankroll for thirty-two dollars.
Captain Redmond fidgeted and sweat the whole way, as did
his command, but he was frustrated in devising a plan to
aid Sara Twohig. The woman was well worth assisting and
he couldn't help but think that her bed, in the privacy
of darkness, was lonely and pathetic, and certainly bore
amends.
The big excitement at the harbor on the northern tip of
Ceylon was neither a big blackjack game for Twohig, nor
Redmond's seduction of a beautiful and young Ceylonese
secretary on the second night. The excitement was Captain
John Tracker who met them when they landed. He, and not
Redmond, was to go on to China because headquarters found
out that he had lived there for five years when a boy.
Redmond could not have been more pleased. Even while he
was making love to the olive secretary with hair as black
as midnight and a scent about her that moved soft wings
in his nostrils, he was thinking about Sara Twohig in
that lonely bed in Ohio.
On the last day of June, with the monsoons in season, the
-nth Graves Registration Company split into two sections
of two platoons each, and the section headed for Ledo in
Assam, with Redmond in command, left Ceylon at twilight
and moved out into the Bay of Bengal. This side of Africa
they had buried their first dead, one of their own,
Corporal Eddie Akins, who had followed a girl away from
the compound on the fourth day. The next day his body was
discovered by a patrol, stripped, slashed, and impaled on
a crude bamboo rack tied to a tree. Thousands of burials,
and many of them much dirtier than Akins', lay ahead of
them, they knew to a man. Redmond struck Akins' name from
the company roster.
At dark the bright constant stars shone as fragmentary
neon in the sky and occasionally a piece of that same
substance shot across that black overhead in the
slightest of arcs. Water slapped quietly at the craft,
the tide rolled easily under them, and the whole night
took on the pallor of mystery and injustice. Twohig
thought about his big blackjack game, Biggs shivered in
the heat as he remembered Akins hung up on the bamboo
rack, and Redmond entertained pictures of Twohig's wife
alone in her bed, thinking of her not wasting any more
time. The rest, Tozzi and Milano included, tried to
envision a quiet retreat high in the mountains near Ledo
where nobody died and nobody cared.
Diamond Harbor revealed little of eastern romance and
Redmond thought it particularly dirty and mismanaged.
Every conceivable size, shape and description of
sea-going vessel was clustered in and around the harbor
in immense confusion. Commercial and enterprising
Calcutta was full of hunger and he had no idea how human
bones with no flesh on them were able to stand together.
The one night his command spent in Calcutta, and the one
night Redmond dared not approach a woman for fear of
disease, he stood under the arches of Chowringee. The
abominable pageant before his eyes turned his stomach.
Starvation was all around him; destitution, ulcerous and
malodorous, was everywhere in every eye he saw. It was a
slice from an unbelievable movie come for the taking. The
war, somehow, seemed cleaner and more just, and he found
himself anxious to get to it, to its fragmentation and
incendiaries, to its riotously free blood and its depths
of concussion, to its burial plots and impermanent
markers.
The long trip from Newport News to North Africa, across
the Mediterranean, down the Canal, across the Red Sea
(bypassing Bombay where originally they were to have
debarked but which had been changed by some big shot
sitting at a desk) to Ceylon, up the Bay of Bengal and
into Calcutta, had taken two months. For a long time it
had seemed as if he did not have a command. Anxiety to
get to Ledo and set up his post worked on him and he was
excited and grateful when they left Calcutta after such a
brief stay.
By wide gauge and narrow gauge railway they traveled
inland. The country was rugged, and moving out of Bengal
and into Assam it became more rugged as were the people
of Khasi, Naga and Lushai Hills, looking as if they could
wage a war on their own. At any minute, the dark eyes,
the dark faces, the ready scabbards!
Box-boarded and nearly vacuumed of breathable air the
rickety trains moved on, perhaps to stay a day and a half
in one place while repairs were being made, or stocking
materials in another. It was a long journey and it
brought them to the lap of the war with each unsure mile
of travel. Biggs shivered. Twohig gambled. Redmond kept
at a distant seduction, the blonde hair and flared hips
and the white thighs at conjunction with his peripheral
vision, the voice making itself heard in the deepest
night beside the lake, the moon more than promise.
Twohig's luck had suddenly and dramatically changed with
the big blackjack game in Ceylon. He could not lose. And
to those to whom he had previously lost much of his money
could not keep themselves from playing. Only Biggs sat
the games out, irritated by Twohig's luck, hoping it
would end suddenly in one cut for the whole pie. Little
did he realize that Twohig, when he was taunting him and
taking his money, was the only one in the whole command
who paid any attention to him. The bastard, he hoped,
would die or go broke. In one hand dead of cards. It
would be worth the sight.
The intolerable heat of July in northern India sat in the
cars of the old train like a curse and some of the troops
slowly realized that the Red Sea really had not been too
bad. What they did not know, of course, was that a march
was in front of them, A long, back-breaking march when
the tracks disappeared at the foot of a hill, an omen of
the end of civilization.
Redmond spent his time talking to Tozzi and Milano,
instructing them about Hindus and Moslems and the hill
tribesmen they would be posted among. He wanted his
command to work without incident among the native
populace. Slowly blossoming in him was an inveterate fear
of the wild and unspoiled hill tribesmen, some of whom he
might have to exert authority over. That in such a
diverse command of nearly one hundred men two people
should have the same basic fear was not implausible.
Biggs hated Negroes, Indians, foreigners, immigrants,
mulattos, Catholics and Jews. He hated them and he feared
them, and in the eyes of the natives along their route of
travel he suspected, with some cause, a smoldering hatred
of himself. Even against the most decrepit looking
amongst them, Biggs feared he might not be able to
protect himself.
The -nth Graves Registration Company, cut in half, walked
the last sixty-two miles to Ledo, the beginning of the
Burma Road. During the long, agonizing march, Twohig
continued to bet and continued to win. He flipped coins,
he bet on the most ludicrous things that only chance
governed, and he won. A provincial legend was growing in
the ranks. He was becoming as big as the war.
All the while Redmond wanted to read Sara Twohig's letter
again and again but he was afraid to take it from his
pocket, afraid it might fall into the gambler's hands.
The return address on the top of the letter was burned
into his brain: 8017 River Drive, Conneaut, Ohio. For a
moment he could not recall if the address was really on
the face of the envelope. That thought upset him. Surely
the mail clerk would have noticed it. Redmond suddenly
realized he knew Sara Twohig as well as any man and she
could never be so stupid. So elated was he with this
declaration that he was tempted sorely to pull out the
letter and read it. But caution again denied him the
opportunity. And Charlie Twohig continued to move among
the ranks looking for something to gamble on, letting the
legend grow.
From the time they left the train, Ledo proved to be four
days away. They pitched camp at the first call of dusk
each day and many of them fell exhausted to their sleep.
Most slept, but Twohig dwelled in the luxury of his
changed luck, Biggs thought about dying and getting stuck
like Akins was, and Redmond went through a ritual of
promising Sara Twohig all the help she needed. When he
did sleep, the ugly, toadish-looking commander dreamed
often about Ohio, a little town against the side of the
lake, a voice smoldering in the darkness.
The nights were wide and black without any light on the
horizon and legions of stars moved majestically overhead.
No less than the insensitive Biggs, who twice volunteered
for interior guard duty because he was afraid of getting
stabbed in his sleep, moaned under the imperial beauty.
It was in the midst of the tall darkness of the third
night, when the company was pitched in the foothills of
the Naga Hills, that Redmond found his answer for Sara's
letter. It would take some doing on his part to set it up
and it would also take, as the main ingredient of his
scheme, a particular type of individual he had no doubt
was on the roster of every outfit in this man's army. The
next move was to find that man. Surely, without telling
Tozzi and Milano any details, he could enlist them in
this pursuit. Strangely, as if he had succeeded already,
a surge of joy swam in his blood and he leaned back
against a tree on the side of a hill and lit a cigarette.
The night, with ease, he found particularly beautiful. It
was high and wide and quiet, and he was alone. A
fragrance of Ceylon twisted in his nostrils. The girl who
had cried Tai! Tai! in his ear had been well worth the
wait. Against the tree he slept without dreaming about
Ohio.
They arrived at the bamboo city of Ledo near dusk on the
fourth day of hiking. Twohig was seven hundred and twenty
dollars richer than when they had hit Ceylon. Biggs was
near complete exhaustion. His changeable green eyes were
red and burning and he was thankful the sun had
disappeared behind a hill. Tozzi and Milano, both whose
feet were raw and blistered and who listened with odd
attention to the captain's strange request, had special
missions to perform. Redmond could hardly wait to have
his command post set up. He hadn't worn his glasses since
the company had left North Africa, except to sneak secret
looks at Sara's letter.
Business as usual, he thought, was at hand.
That business was burials. Several times a day formality
would be the key word, a touch of the civilized world
that was otherwise non-existent about them. Formality
meant full dress uniforms, bearers, firing squads and
Taps. It was the saddest part of war, the departure, but,
like the fighting and the dying, Redmond knew it would
become routine. Familiarity, he thought, bred
callousness, not contempt. Anyway, you hardly knew the
man you had to bury.
At Ledo the accommodations were just as Redmond
envisioned. They were assigned to a small compound of
bamboo huts; one for the orderly room, one for officer's
quarters, three for the men, and one for himself. Though
there was no tap water and no air conditioning, he had
read enough about India and the northern heat to have
installed on his hut the thick mesh screens that were
called khus-khus tattie. Woven from the fragrant
khus-khus grass the screens were placed over both door
and window and kept moist by having water thrown over
them. When the wind blew through the mesh, it would carry
moisture into the room and sometimes reduce the
temperature inside by as much as ten degrees. To perform
the wetting-down operation Redmond hired a small native
boy, Azard Phanitar, who looked strangely Mongolian and
not unlike some American Indians he had seen. Azard was a
scrawny but faithful twelve-year old who performed
similar duties for other officers. He liked the
particularly ugly officer who had approached him and did
not look as American as the others.
Lt. Peter Milano returned an hour after their arrival in
Ledo. The man the captain wanted was in a nearby outfit.
No contact had been made by Milano, but of the man's
qualification there was no dispute. All along Redmond had
known that Milano would find his man sooner than Tozzi.
Hadn't Milano taken nine years to get his college degree?
It was one of the reasons that Redmond liked Milano the
better of the two. He was a plodder, not a flash in the
pan as was Tozzi, and not a ninety-day wonder at that.
Redmond knew he could trust him without question.
Redmond had his glasses on. He looked different and
talked differently. "You're sure, aren't you,
Pete?" It was the first time he had ever called the
lieutenant Pete.
"No question about it, captain. He's the kind of guy
you're looking for. I could have checked him out more,
sir, if I knew what you had in mind."
"Now, now, Pete, time enough for that. How about
having a drink with me. I have a bottle right here. The
office looks quite proper, doesn't it? It's about time we
had a sense of uniformity around us. Kind of nice to get
back to work, wouldn't you say?" His smile came over
the full lips. The bottle was Ballantine Scotch.
While they talked the rest of the company was getting
situated. Twohig, having dumped his gear in the farthest
corner of a hut most distant from the orderly room, and
escaping Biggs by doing so, set out to increase his
capital. Lady Luck sat on his shoulder and he wanted her
there for the long ride, trying not to let her change her
fickle mind. Biggs, having lost his chance to bunk near
the only man in the outfit who paid him any mind, sought
out the newest man, Private Kranske, and bunked beside
him. Kranske only nodded when Biggs said,
"Mind?" when he dropped his gear. Kranske only
nodded. Biggs had no talent at all in wearing his
corporal stripes. The outfit, down to the last man, often
wondered in what kind of outfit Biggs' stripes had been
earned.
Dawn kicked open the door of a furnace, but Twohig, as
soon as he had set his section in motion, sat down to his
first blackjack game since Ceylon. He won and he won big.
No one could touch him. The aces fell on kings and
queens, on tens and jacks; treys fell on nines paired.
Invincible he felt and took great risks. But he continued
to win. Even when his eyes became blurry and he was not
sure sometimes what cards lay face down in front of him,
he could not lose. Pain, the sole intruder, came like
slivers or small arrows in the back of his neck. He
thought it was anxiety and believed it to be a sign of
the big streak. Fate or Lady Luck had kissed him a big
French kiss and he dare not put it aside.
"Hit me again." A five to make it three of a
kind. "Kick it once more." There couldn't be a
face card in the whole deck. Trey for eighteen.
"Again." The big one for nineteen. Not enough.
"Kick." Big deuce. "All mine, man. All
mine."
On and on he went for a whole week and walked like a
banker from one game to the next. Redmond had tabs on him
the whole time and even had an idea that Twohig's
winnings were as astronomical as reputed to be. But
Redmond, with incredible foresight and the great deal of
knowledge gleaned from Sara's letter, sat and waited.
The one thing he did not know was Charlie Twohig was
seriously ill. But not even Charlie Twohig knew that.
Luck and hot blood, Twohig believed, went together like
two fat people dancing, uncomfortable but together.
When at the end of the brutal days, Twohig lay soaking in
his bunk and strange formations were working in his
blood, Captain Redmond thought about Sara Twohig and how
her mail would soon improve. Those first nights, when the
demon of heat struck at him in wholesale measure, Redmond
dreamed he stood over Sara Twohig and smiled down at her.
There was no end to the good that a man could do for a
woman.
Business came. The dead and the dying, like lost legions
in a forest of night, called with frightening rapidity.
The range of the -nth Graves Registration Company was far
and wide and it was not uncommon to see one of their
number climb into a jeep with a rubber bag, a shovel and
a record book and set off for a long trip. At times it
was a fighter pilot that had flown his craft into the
side of a mountain. Other times it was the pilot and
co-pilot of a larger craft that had crashed with a
planeload of coolies when the engines failed over the hot
Indian hills. The company dressed and undressed daily,
served as bearers, marked records in triplicate, played
Taps, lowered chilled bodies into permanent and
semi-permanent graves, and otherwise found their roles in
the global war that raged wildly around them.
But Charlie Twohig goldbricked.
"Captain," Lt. Tozzi said, his voice hardly
masking his hatred of Twohig, "it's a friggin' shame
if we let Twohig continue the way he is. Hasn't done a
day's work since we hit this place. Everybody thinks he's
got it made and we're a bunch of dummies."
Redmond sat back in his chair, heard the splash of water
on the khus-khus tattie, waved his hand as if he were
brushing off flies. "He's all mine, Lieutenant.
Twohig's all mine! He's one problem in this company that
I'll deal with in my own way." The mysterious grin
was again on the ugly face and Tozzi thought he looked
more like a sneak thief each day. Redmond was hiding
something from him and it was not right. He was, after
all, his right hand man, as he considered himself.
Redmond saw the hurt-puppy look on Tozzi's face.
"Rest easy, Lieutenant, Twohig's in the best
possible hands," and his sly grin further agitated
the young officer. All the young lieutenant needed was a
parting word.
"Luck, Lieutenant, is not what makes the world go
round. You remember that. Luck is for the birds, as they
say." His large over-exposed eyes stared into his
empty glass and a malicious joy swam in them. Again Tozzi
thought Redmond the ugliest man in the world. On quick
heels the young officer turned and left the orderly room.
Luck! Luck! Luck! Redmond could not hate any other word
in the language as much as Luck. Luck did not bring the
good pilots over the Hump. It was guts and ingenuity. And
Luck did not bring his women to him. Far more important
was his ability to discover what they really wanted from
a man. What they wanted, he gave them, and he patted the
letter in his breast pocket. Without ever meeting Sara
Twohig, he knew what she wanted. He reminded himself to
make a note that Tozzi should never be recommended for a
command of his own.
In the middle of their third week in Ledo and when the
heat was fiercer than ever before, Charlie Twohig's
streak was still intact. GIs from all over came to see
him play and went away with awe and disbelief riding on
their faces. None of them noticed that the big winner
Charlie Twohig was a pathological museum operating on the
compulsion of sheer distress because time might be
running out on him. None of them, or Charlie, knew the
germs and microbes gathering force in him were bent on
his annihilation. Infantrymen passing to or from the
front lines through Ledo envied him and believed he of
all men had it made. A legend was continuing to build and
they carried it to the lap of the war with the usual
hyperbolic descriptions. Neither did the nights and the
impenetrable darkness swimming like dark thick webs cramp
his style or his luck.
Merrill's Marauders, henchmen of intrigue and sudden hits
and compelling bravery who passed between the two tea
plantations where the company was located (in the
darkness like Sicilian vespers being replayed) had their
own challenger who dropped half his platoon's money into
Twohig's hands, then passed silently on to a Burmese
destiny.
And Redmond waited. Little disturbed him. The war floated
around like a host of discernible balloons in a wind that
did not touch him directly. Sara Twohig was in his blood
as strong as the unseen enemies were in her husband's
blood. Even the appearance of the legendary Doctor Gordon
Seagraves, with his corps of nurses and native doctors,
failed to attract his attention. Redmond just knew that
the war was cleaner and more just than it appeared to
eyes other than his.
In their sixth week in Ledo, Twohig lost his first game.
The tall sergeant, a stranger to Graves Registration,
announced himself to the gambler at dusk of the eventful
day. His name was Paul Cask and he was thin as a weed
with a potential of fibrous energy latent about him. He
had a high forehead and the thin lines of his eyes almost
merged above a sharp nose. Those who watched him play
swore he hardly drew a breath, saw his lack of
expression, saw the steady, quick hands at the cards.
Now it was that goldbricking Charlie Twohig, fully aware
of the aliens in his body, did not allow himself a visit
to the aid station. Fate needed such small impetus to
alter her choices.
"How come you ain't been by before, Cask?"
"Busy." Cask had Biggs' habit, barely moving
his lips when he spoke. Twohig had not liked him from the
start.
"Been winning?"
"Some. We have turns." Cask was cold and
emotionless. Twohig knew the contrast, for the fever was
on him once more. The pain of it was in little digs at
the back of his neck and thousands of pygmy spears
pierced his kin. For the first time in a long while he
thought about Ohio and being captured in Sara's arms. It
all seemed so far away, so unreal, as if it had never
existed at all. Azard Phanitar, the scrawny little
houseboy, sat in a far corner and stared at him. In his
young but knowing mind he was aware that Twohig was a
battleground of unseen but powerful forces. Too often he
had seen the eyes of the foreigners when the sickness
came. He did not know how to tell the big money man. He
was only a boy, after all, and this was a man's war.
Cask won steadily and a violent hatred toward him built
in Twohig. "What's your job, Cask?"
"I'm in the motor pool."
"Know what my job is?" Twohig's eyes were
burning and he thought he was back on the Red Sea.
"No."
"G.R., that's Graves registration. We bury guys.
Sometimes in just a raincoat when a bunch of guys get hit
in one place and we can't get them to a cemetery in the
rear. Know how we identify the bodies?"
"Dogtags." Cask's eyes had not even moved. He
looked like an Aztec statue.
"How we use them is the trick. Know the one with the
groove in the edge?"
"Yuh. Know it."
Twohig's eyes were redder and far more irritating.
"That one's the clincher." He laughed forcibly.
"We stick the groove between two of the top teeth,
and then know what?...we kick his damn jaw shut!"
Cask stood up. "I'll be back tomorrow when you feel
like playing instead of talking." Spinning on his
heels, he left quickly.
Twohig kicked the table over after he had gone.
"Just who in the hell does he think he is!"
Biggs, on the sidelines, knew a moment of joy. "Tall
and mean, Twig. Just tall and mean and cool as hell,
all's he is."
"Just keep your damn mouth shut, Biggs. I'm going to
spend the night planning your day tomorrow." Azard
Phanitar, in the far corner, knew only too well how
Twohig was going to spend his night.
A half dozen times Cask came back and he continued to
win. The games went from blackjack to five-card draw to
stud poker. Twohig went into a panic and the word spread
and the infantry grinned and said, "When your
number's up, you can't do much about it." Twohig was
but another fatality of the war. His bankroll was being
tapped by Cask. When he could, he got into other games
and won, but Cask alone had the evil eye on him. Twohig
was unable to refuse him a game.
Cask became the fulcrum, the point of balance, and when
Twohig won, there came Cask quietly and coolly to take
his money.
The sicker Twohig became, the harder he fought the
disease. And the more he won from other hands, the more
Cask took from him. Never a fist was raised at their
table, but Twohig would scream at his opponent. "If
you ever die out there, you son of a bitch, I hope you
rot and never get a grave.""
"Don't you want to kick my jaw shut, Twig?" The
cold face without expression looked back at Twohig with
complete disregard.
For nearly two months Twohig fought his disease and Cask.
At times he had no knowledge of how he fared, so immense
his hatred and the compulsion to win. Around him war was
a great unknown that did not involve him, and Sara had
long ceased to be. She had never been real. It was only a
dream. Reality was a deck of cards and a man named Cask
who never flinched and never held back.
And one night the war came for real. Lt. Tozzi, so often
on the sidelines talking to Corporal Biggs, came into
Twohig's hut and said, "Sergeant, we just got a
call. A man went over the rim in a jeep at Ketchi. I
think it's about time you had a mission. You've been
goldbricking enough."
"Hell, Lieutenant, I ain't feeling too good. I think
I'll have to go on Sick Call in the morning."
"You'll take this trip, Sergeant, and that's an
order." Tozzi was unable to mask his hatred of the
sergeant.
"I'm sick, I tell you! I ought to go on Sick Call
right now." Now it was he knew the pain as a fierce
and frightening enemy.
Tozzi could not hold it back. "You go out there and
get him, Twohig, and bring him in. It's your friend
Cask."
The gambler leaped from his bunk. "I ain't going
nowhere on the face of this earth to get that bastard! He
can rot for all I care." His face was in Tozzi's
face and colored with hate. No one could make him go out
there and bring in that rotten bastard.
Biggs broke the game wide open as he leaped off his bunk.
Tozzi could not hold him back. The rat began to scream.
"Big gambler! Big stupid gambler! Don't you now who
the hell Cask is? He's a real pro. The old man sicced him
on you! Your old lady's broke and the old man sicced him
on you."
"Shut up, Biggs, before I kill you!" Now the
pain came with weird intensities and fully known in his
head. The needles behind his eyes began to jab!...
jab!... jab!
Biggs had been target long enough, Hadn't he been played
for a sucker as long as he could remember. "You got
taken, big gambler. You got taken! Can't you see it? You
got taken. Cask's all pro. The old man picked him out.
Your old lady wrote to him."
Who wrote to who? What was he talking about? "Who
wrote?"
"Your old lady. She wrote to Redmond." His old
lady? Sara? How long ago was she...how far away? What was
Biggs saying? Sara, Sara so good in bed, what's
happening? His eyes were killing him and the rat Biggs
stood in front of him staring into his eyes. The pain was
shattering behind his eyes.
"She wouldn't do that to me...she wouldn't. I don't
believe you. So help me, Biggs, I'm going to kill
you." He stepped toward him and Tozzi saw murder in
Twohig's eyes.
"It's true, Twohig. Your wife wrote to the captain
and he arranged the whole thing. He knew you couldn't
beat Cask all the time. He's been sending the money home
to your wife, every dime that Cask won."
Charlie Twohig lay down in his bunk and the fever and the
pain leaped at him and he thought he could never stand it
through another night.
After midnight, with an insane idea in his mind, Charlie
Twohig the gambler took a rubber bag and a shovel and
climbed into a jeep. Next day a patrol found them, Cask
and his retriever, on the side of a hill. Twohig had
gotten the body halfway up the hill. The entrenching
shovel was stuck in the ground and Cask's body was pushed
against it so it couldn't roll down the hill. Twohig lay
on top of the body and the fever and the dreams were
gone.
Redmond at first was disturbed. He had no idea that
Twohig was sick. Then he realized: it was his piece de
resistance. He had helped. She would be grateful and
receive him properly. He went to sleep dreaming about
Ohio, the lake, the smoldering voice, only after he
realized luck truly did exist.
Contributor:
Tom
Sheehan
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