Game Information
Game began with 432 Players
Current Number: 222
Total Dead: 210
Main Characters:
005, Isaac Duncan
036, Michael Janusson
062, Brad Nummerman
088, Anne Robbins
089, Ryan Stilworth
109, Benni Burgos
124, Katya Zander
212, Luis Gonzalez
299, Sato Hideyo
333, Gabriella Janusson
375, Brenda Redman
422, Sophie Reyes
The Living Others
152, "is dead" if they leave the game
365; started an argument about leaving or staying
The Dead Others
014, Simon Says, Black hair and freckles
024, Simon Says - first casualty
278, Simon Says
302, Simon Says, Green eyes
411, Simon Says
431, Simon Says, smuggler's smile
The VIPs
Cat-Mask, Female, bet on 089 to win after initial "horse" died.
Game began with 432 Players
Current Number: 222
Total Dead: 210
Main Characters:
005, Isaac Duncan
036, Michael Janusson
062, Brad Nummerman
088, Anne Robbins
089, Ryan Stilworth
109, Benni Burgos
124, Katya Zander
212, Luis Gonzalez
299, Sato Hideyo
333, Gabriella Janusson
375, Brenda Redman
422, Sophie Reyes
The Living Others
152, "is dead" if they leave the game
365; started an argument about leaving or staying
The Dead Others
014, Simon Says, Black hair and freckles
024, Simon Says - first casualty
278, Simon Says
302, Simon Says, Green eyes
411, Simon Says
431, Simon Says, smuggler's smile
The VIPs
Cat-Mask, Female, bet on 089 to win after initial "horse" died.
~***~
It was another terrible day for Ryan Stilworth, as the red-head ducked into the train station and went to study the maps and available trains. It was high time he got out of this area, and he had enough to buy a ticket. He just had to pick a place tomorrow, grab a bag, and get on his way. ‘It’ll be easy…and staying here….’
Well, that was certain death. Elijah had all but promised that if he couldn’t come up with the full payment by the end of the month, and there was no way Ryan was going to make full payment, even if he sold his ass – literally – down on 10th. His ass was good, but not that good.
He bit his bottom lip as he looked at all sorts of places, each one sounding too familiar, and not small town enough. ‘Wait, everyone knows what goes on in a small town. I should try some place like New York, or Boston, Kansas City….’
“You seem to be having trouble.”
Ryan jolted as someone spoke from at his side, and turned quickly around to face the stranger. They smiled, charming, “Do you need help understanding the map?” He asked, “or do you need help with a larger problem?”
Ryan let his brows knit together, “I don’t know what you’re getting at, bro, but I’m fine.”
“Really? Good, I was hoping you might have time for a game.”
“Listen, I’m in a bit of a hurry, so—”
“The winner of the game takes home $5,000.00.” To make that clear, he fanned out several hundred dollar bills.
That got Ryan’s attention, “Okay. What’s the game?” He asked, turning fully around. The stranger with the dark hair and the fine suit led him a few steps away from the map. He then held out two folded pieces of paper, putting away the money.
“You’ll pick one, and you’ll use it to try and flip my piece over by throwing it. Simple enough?”
Despite being burnt on a ‘sure thing’ before, and not having $5,000.00, Ryan nodded eagerly, and took the blue one. The suit man, ever smiling, set his red paper on the ground, and then gestured. “You can go first.”
And Ryan did, tossing his paper down and…not flipping it.
The stranger nodded, picked up their red paper, and after setting Ryan’s blue one properly, tossed it down artfully – and flipped Ryan’s. “Shit!” Ryan cursed, “Listen, I do—” a hand collided with his face. He stared, stunned, at the stranger who kept that shit-eating grin on his face. Then, he snapped, “Hey, what the fu—”
“In exchange for $5,000 – every time I win, I’ll take a slap as payment instead.” He grinned, “How does that sound? Would you like to keep playing?”
~***~
Tears had welled in Katya’s eyes, making it a bit hard to see the square on the ground. She wiped at them in agitation, took a deep breath, and focused once again on the red paper on the ground. ‘This time.’ She wasn’t sure how many more times she could deal with being slapped in the face. Yeah, she had cats that hit her now and then, but this hurt.
The throw was done.
And, to her own amazement, Katya watched the red paper flip over at long last. She let out a celebratory cry, and punched a fist up into the air as she jumped up, “YES! Finally, yes!” her hand came back down to her chest, and the stranger kept that smile on his face, and offered out the money he had fanned earlier.
Katya almost forgot about that.
“Oh – thank you! I’d almost rather slap you,” she admitted with a laugh, but took the money. Almost wasn’t a hint she’d prefer it.
“I get that a lot,” he said, “I’ve included a business card in there, if you would like to earn more money through children’s games.”
“Is it going to involve slapping?” She asked, tucking the money away, and looking at the business card with the three shapes on it.
He answered, “Unlikely,” but he didn’t add anything else to that, “I hope you have a good rest of your day, miss,” and he picked up his suitcase, and went on through the bus terminal. Katya glanced after him, brows knitting together in concern, before she looked back at the card. Flipping it over, it only had a phone number on it.
No name.
No business.
Just a number, and those weird symbols. ‘How much worse can it be?’ Naturally, the Jigsaw Saw voice came into her head and she shivered. Maybe pretty bad. She didn’t want to play those games. Still…she would have been kidnapped for that, right?
She’d mull it over.
First things first was catching her bus to get back home. ‘At least this should help pay the repair bill for my car….’ Though it wouldn’t dent the mortgage payments, the loans, or much else. Still, it was a start.
Well, after she picked up some good food for Gollum and Meru, of course. And paid a sitter. She didn’t know how long this was going to be, but she could be certain it wasn’t going to be just a day.
~***~
There was a mountain of paperwork on a coffee table.
Gabriella Janusson stared at it over the rim of a steaming cup of spiked hot chocolate with naught but loathing. Not for the writers of the papers, but for the systems through which they were filtered through. ‘Once upon a time….’ She was going to find the secret to world peace through the study of religion.
Now here Gabriella sat, named after an archangel like her brother, almost certain there was no god, and no peace to be found in human nature. ‘But there might be hope.’ Her cheek was still stinging, though on the heels of that thought, and a touch to it, she couldn’t quite help the furious blush that flamed as she considered context.
In another context, the bit of slapping might not have been so bad. Perhaps not for quite that long, but then, that was her fault for being terrible at the game. Still, her cheeks flamed, both with embarrassment and thoughts of context, before her gaze drifted down to her phone, and considered the number she had already saved.
$5,000.00. Just for beating him in one round of a game.
And then he’d slipped her a card, with a square, an ‘x’, and a circle on it – like a playstation controller. And he’d told her she could play other games, and win money – without needing to pay to get in. Everything about it, told her this was a bad idea.
Despite that, as she cast one more loathing look at the pile of papers, she picked up the phone, and dialed the number she had saved. It
It only rang once.
“Hello,” a woman answered, “please state your name and date of birth.”
“Gabriella Janusson, February 28, 1992.” She answered without much hesitation. “Is this for the games?”
“Yes,” the voice answered, “are you willing to participate?”
“Yes,” there, her voice shook, a little. Nothing was this easy.
“Then please meet one of our representatives in two days, by the mailbox at 6th and Young Streets, at 1:15am.”
Gabriella nodded, realized the person on the other end couldn’t see, and said, “Thank you.”
“Thank you,” she chimed back, “have a good evening!”
And that was that. Gabriella set down the phone, looked at the pile of papers, and with some resolve to finish them before two days, went back to work on them to clear her head of what was coming up.
~***~
Michael had been waiting weeks for the call. They needed more players, or so he’d been told, and he ought to wait until they had those players. Now, at last, that number was ringing through on his phone. He was lucky that was even charged, and he almost fumbled it and dropped it to the ground in his shock, “H-hello?” he asked, air coming out in a puff of steam. It was terribly cold.
Another reason for his fingers not being as reliable.
“Hello – for confirmation, can you please state your name and date of birth?”
“Michael Janusson, October 28, 1997,” that had just happened, hadn’t it? How old was he now? He didn’t want to think about that.
The voice on the other end cut into any thinking, as it was. “Thank you, Michael. The games will begin soon. Please meet one of our representatives at Vegas and 21st Street tomorrow at 11:45pm to be brought to the venue. Nothing is required.”
“All right…thanks,” Michael nodded.
With a chipper farewell, he was left to his thoughts once again. He stared at the phone for a long while, before he shoved it into the pocket of his coat. ‘Well…I guess I can afford to live a little tonight.’ He couldn’t help the somewhat wry smile that came across his face. He didn’t have much, between cash app and free dollars, but he could do a bit better than a granola bar and a can of soda.
So, with more of a skip in his step, he left the storage shed he’d been renting to live in, and went to find the nearest open convenience store, dreaming of overcooked hotdogs and a bit of beer in a tallboy can.
It was going to be okay.
Everything was going to be okay.
~***~
“Thanks for taking them on such short notice,” Anna Robbins said, smile fraying at the ends as her gaze left her ex-husband’s almost as soon as they’d met, trailing off to watch her kids vanish up the steps of his deck and rush into what he called a home – a double wide trailer he’d recently painted.
Something about knowing he was keeping it up, and accepting his lot, caused her heart to ache, though Anna couldn’t explain why. It was almost as if he was getting his life together, though the three piece-of-shit Hondas in front of his trailer said otherwise. She bet only one ran – and barely, at that.
“It’s no trouble,” he said, drawing her gaze back, “I hope this place can help your mom.”
Anna had lied and said it was for her mom. Given her mom’s illness, it made sense she’d take a long trip to get her seen at another place. And Anna would…when this was done, she’d get her mom the best treatment, if she was able to get enough money. “Though I won’t enjoy renegotiating visitation schedules.”
Anna’s smile was tight, “Don’t worry, I don’t plan to live up there if she gets accepted,” she lied again, but if this came through, she’d figure things out. Anna didn’t know how much she could win, but her gut told her it was a lot. Otherwise, why would it be shrouded in such bizarre secrecy, and a game of slapping at a bus stop?
Of course, that meant it was also going to be shady as fuck, but Anna could deal with that. “Right,” he didn’t sound sure, and she didn’t blame him, “How long do you think you’ll be gone?”
“A week, at most,” she hoped she wasn’t lying, “if you need anything—”
“I won’t,” he smiled. It was touched with a bit of sorrow, and more than a little regret – or maybe she was reading into it. “They’re my kids, too. And I’ve always intended to play a role and raise them.”
Her smile wavered. Her eyes watered. “I know, I didn’t mean to imply – never mind,” anything she said now would just come off wrong. She stepped back, waving her hand between them, “I’ll get out of your hair.”
That sad little smile seemed touched by a sardonic humor now. “I liked you more in my hair.”
She brought forth what muster she had to give him a dulled glare, before she went back to her car and drove off, huffing out a sound of irritation as she let the radio blare and drove back home, though she knew she wouldn’t be there long. She had to meet the rendezvous. She didn’t know what she was walking into, and though they claimed to need nothing from her – she still dressed up a bit.
‘I am going to look so stupid.’
And arrived hours early. She went to get a coffee at the nearby café, and stayed as long as she could, before she ended up on the street, waiting. ‘Lucky 40. Come on.’ She thought, rising up on her toes and dropping back down, hugging herself as she looked up and down the street.
~***~
‘I should be back in a week. It’s a business trip at another firm, I’m hoping to get employed there. It’s a bit far, but we’ve always talked about moving somewhere else. We should do it while our child is still young.’
Such had been the pretty lie that Sato spun, and now he stood just at the end of a creepy alley, in the rain, in a suit, waiting for an unknown to arrive. He checked his phone for the time, and saw it was 10:29pm. That clicked over to 10:30pm, and almost as soon as it did, a black van came pulling up in the rain.
The window on the passenger side rolled down. “Sato Hideyo?”
“That’s me,” he agreed, and the door opened. He noticed another in there, but focused on getting himself buckled as the passenger door slid closed on its own. The van was filled with a pungent, sour smell. Rotten. He tried to ignore that as he turned to the other passenger, “Hello, good to meet….” As he started to speak, a gas started to fill the van. “What’s this?” alarmed, he reached for his buckle, and tried to undo it, only to find it had locked.
Words slurred together in panicked questions, for only a few more seconds, before the gas did its work, and Sato Hideyo found himself falling victim to it. His thoughts lingered on his wife, Lilly, and their son, as he leaned to the side, and succumbed to sleep.
‘I hope I’ll see you again.’
Those were not the sights he took in next.
The sights he took in next was a room full of beds, with people in various states of consciousness laying upon them, every single one of them in numbered, blue tracksuits. Sato sat up, lifting a hand to his head as he gazed around, bleary-eyed.
An intercom produced a pleasant jingle.
“All players, please follow the instructions of the staff to the holding room. Repeating: all players, please follow the instructions of the staff to the holding room.” He looked around, and saw a few people who stood out, in red jumpsuits with those same odd shapes on their masks.
That had to be the staff.
Sato lurched forward, noting the number on his jumpsuit: 422.
Not too far from where he was, he saw a woman with a head of dark, curly hair, who looked as if she’d been awake at least a little longer than him. Or at least, she seemed more lucid than lots of the others, who looked as if they still needed their first cup of coffee – or a better explanation than ‘go towards the staff’.
The tired gaze was somehow terribly familiar, in a good way.
“Hey,” he greeted, “mystery card, gassed vehicle?” how else to offer an introduction? It would at least confirm that they had a similar experience, and were all, similarly, lost.
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