by Rachel Rodman
any of the following
6 pm
Pre-game: 1 bottle
of vodka; 1 deck of cards.
Play solitaire,
game after game. Red on black; black on red. Each time your options run out,
take another shot. Then reshuffle.
7 pm
Welcome your
guests; retire to the patio.
Inside a chalk
grid, position 10 grasshopper cocktails--extra crème de menthe--each set inside
its own wide-mouthed glass, with a fancy thin stem. Then: hop.
And whenever, in
your hopping, amid the squares, you jostle a glass, even in the slightest, you
must/are permitted to drink the contents--down to a grisly hopskotch token,
consisting of a dead grasshopper, pickled in crème de menthe.
See who can collect
the most.
8 pm
As the light fails,
retire to the basement rec room. And play Candyland with Peppermint Schnapps.
8:45
pm
And Chutes and
Ladders. With moonshine.
9:15
pm
And Monopoly. With
Manhattans.
Each time that a
player--any player--passes “Go,” take another long sip, then add more whiskey,
to top it up. Build a house? More whiskey. Build a hotel? More
whiskey.
11:15 pm
Battleship. In order to get into the nautical
theme--and to honor Winston Churchill--growl
contemptuously:
“Naval tradition?
That’s nothing but rum, sodomy, and the
lash!”
During the game, there will be no
actual sodomy and no
actual lash.
But there will be
rum.
Lots and lots and
lots of rum.
Drink rum whenever
you sink a battleship. Drink rum whenever your battleship is sunk. Drink rum, to
congratulate yourself, when you hazard a good guess. Drink rum, to console
yourself, when you make a poor one.
And, at the least
sign of tedium, kickstart the cheer, once again, with another round of
rum.
12:15 am
Later, when you are
quite sick of rum, and of the sailor’s life, and the
phrase “sodomy and the lash” begins to seem rather more tired than amusing,
switch to gin. And, alongside, play several hands of Gin
Rummy.
12:45 am
Parcheesi,
Parqueasy. With Pear Bellinis.
1:30 am
Ring Around the
Rosy, with wine--Rosy red, Rosy red wine--and while falling down, rather
frequently.
2
am
Play 1-2 games of
Hearts, while remaining focused--as focused as you can--on the Queen of Spades.
Between tricks, sip Budweisers: the King of Beers.
Wonder aloud, “Is there no Queen of Beers?” Ask this impassionedly--and
secretly, on top, of that, you think, fairly
wittily, too: I mean, right?--but, by this point, for some
reason, no one is paying any attention to
you.
Soak cards--the
entire deck--in the contents of your stomach. So that every card, spread across
the table, is equally repellent; every card is the Queen of Spades; every card
constitutes a massive trick that no one wants; and the other players, pushing
back their chairs, with expressions of alarm (And they’re paying attention now,
aren’t they?), leave them all to you.
Gurgle: “I shot the moon!” though,
even in the
midst of this
triumph--truth be told--you still feel pretty
awful.
3
am
1 game of Yahtzee.
Play--or watch the others play, if that’s easier--with sips of
Jägermeister, intermittent, between the rolls. And, as the dice spin, watch
them, clacking and whirling: the numbers,
still, remaining strangely indistinct, even as the faces skitter to a
stop.
And you, breathing slow, are like that also:
the blur and the
tumble and the fog simultaneous, somehow, with the act, technically, of
not-moving-very-much, and then, you, too, are still--quite still.
About the author
Rachel's work has appeared at
Fireside Fiction, Grievous Angel, The Future Fire, Expanded Horizons, and
elsewhere.
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