Nick felt the game weave its spell over him, so that, for the moment at least, he was no longer uncertain, running up and down the stairs clenching a spork in his fingers, but part of something greater in which the pounding of the footsteps and lights and the occasional gasps and giggles formed a pattern that thrummed through him.
As something to keep him awake, it worked wonders.
Up and down the stairs again. Sometimes there were people in front of him, sometimes behind them. The lights mounted on the wall flashed by as he ran past, blurred. Doors opened and closed. More lights. The footfall quiet on the carpeted floor in the hallways, then loud again on the stairs, then quiet again…
It was New Years, and it occurred to him that this was a fitting way to celebrate, with laughter and mischief, by feeling alive and by enjoying yourself and not thinking too much about why you were enjoying yourself.
“Assassination!” Cried Nick, catching up with his first mark and touching the spork to his shoulder.
The boy wheeled around and laughing, panting, said another name and once again Nick was running, stretching his legs as he took the stairs up two at a time, the hallways a blur around him.
There was a pattern to everything. Perhaps it would not be as beautifully symmetrical and neat as the sequences of numbers, but it would be there and, in understanding that pattern, one could gain the strategy to winning a game.
“
“Thanks,” said Mike over his shoulder as he sprinted away. Looming suddenly on his left was the stairs, which he took, running full speed downwards. There were less people running about now and as the game progressed, number would continue to decrease. Briefly he wondered if either Zach or Nick had learned that the trick to the game was not speed, but catching people unaware. It was strategy, like checkers or chess, but of a different sort. Fully enveloped in it, he no longer had to think about anything else. No grades or family, or possible soon-to-be families. Just this, this moment where people of his age were moving, fleet-footed, around him, having fun. It didn’t matter if some of them didn’t care about a greater meaning to life, it didn’t matter if they’d never heard of Euler’s formula. In this moment they were having fun. In this moment nothing else mattered.
There is bliss in ignorance, thought Mike, and poked the shoulder of a fair-haired girl with his spork.
“Assassination,” he yelled. The girl squealed and grabbed his spork-holding hand, then stared at him.
“Name?” He demanded impatiently, using the few moments of respite to catch his breath.
“
“No. Your target’s name.” He asked even more impatiently.
“Oh. Um…” she scrunched up her face, then brightened. “Kim!”
“Alright, thanks,” Mike straightened, eager to be off again, and was forced to pause. “Um. You can let go of my hand now.” The girl stared at him. “No. Really.”
Footsteps. He glanced over his shoulder, swore, and ran, not knowing if it was rude to snatch his hand away like that and not caring if it was.
Nick was getting slightly dizzy because, after all, he had been running in a circle. Sort of. It was more of a multi-levelled polygon where one repeated ones steps over and over again and got dizzy just as if one were running in a circle. But anything that bore repeating eventually, if only metaphorically, was a circle.
Would that he did not get dizzy when the patterns were circles, but who could escape? Life itself was a circle that hypnotizes, from which no one ever escaped. Because it repeated itself. Step by step. Over and over. Yes.
I’m thinking in circles, thought Nick with a laugh. He paused, briefly, to catch his breath, wishing he’d thought to leave his jacket in his room. Who knew he’d last this long? He felt a surge of pride. In his first game too, who knew?
It was not often that he could give himself boosts in self-confidence, and he treasured the moment—gasping, sweating, laughing a little at himself. It was New Year’s Eve! Perhaps this ought to have something to do with his New Year’s resolutions. This. Self-confidence.
Circles. Something.
But no, this wasn’t it. This wasn’t what he really thought about, what he wanted, Nick realized. It was what was underneath it that he really cared about. It was the moment. It was happiness.
How would one go about making resolutions on happiness?
Footsteps. Nick looked over his shoulder, brushed hair out of his eyes, and ran. Down another flight of stairs, along another floor and he saw his next target, unaware, who was resting and trying to catch his breath. He paused briefly, double-checking with his memory. James. The guy’s name was James. He braced himself for the sudden dash.
A spork suddenly jabbed him in the side. Nick yowled and twisted around, hearing departing footsteps and knowing that James had just escaped.
“Sorry,” wheezed the girl, appalled. Her face was bright-red but it could be from either the running or embarrassment. “Oh God are you alright?”
“Yeah,” Nick assured her, absent-mindedly rubbing his side and resigning himself to the fact that indeed, the game was now over for him.
“You sure?” asked the girl.
“Yes. James, and good luck” Nick told her, smiling.
Something changed, just slightly, in her expression, but she grinned back at him. “Thanks!”
Nick caught himself beginning to yawn again as he watched the girl spring away. Slowly making his way down to the first floor, he saw some open doors and participants of the game…who waved at him. He waved back, feeling cheerful…no, not cheerful, but happy, with a warm glow that seemed to fill the air that night (a part of his mind asked if this was, perhaps, the jetlag talking again but he ignored it). He considered returning to his room, but after finding no one else there yet, he thought it’d be much more interesting to sit in the lounge and watch the people go by.
It was less than fifteen minutes away from
The game continued.
He watched people go by. He would guess that about half of the people were eliminated now, maybe more, and while watching, saw Mike go by twice, though neither time he stayed longer than the time required to say “Hey” or give him a thoroughly evil grin, saluting him with a spork. Nick wondered where Zach was.
As if summoned by his thought, Zach suddenly appeared, flushed and breathing heavily.
“Hey. Are you ‘dead’ yet?” Nick asked curiously.
“Not yet,” gasped Zach, froze, looked over his shoulder, then turned to run. He was not fast enough, however and another guy thwacked him over the head with a spork and hollered “Assassination!”
“Now I am. Mike,” he told the other guy, who promptly rounded the corner and disappeared. “Ow. Bugger this,” added Zach, for good measure, ruefully rubbing his head.
“You okay?” asked Nick, thinking that maybe getting jabbed was better, after all.
“Yes,” huffed Zach, still looking a bit rueful, but his hand dropped to his side. He looked down at his watch. “Ten minutes to
“This is why you should’ve taken PE with us,” Nick told him, when Zach spent a few moments doing nothing more than taking in great gulps of air.
“So I can run around like a madman, stabbing people with sporks?” Zach looked sceptical.
“Yes,” said Nick empathetically, then realized that some part of this didn’t come out quite right. “Erm.”
“I’ll make a note of it,” said Zach mischievously.
“Your target’s Mike?” Nick hastily changed the subject. “Is that…yours or someone else’s?” He frowned. “I know it’s yours now, but you know what I mean.”
Zach sighed and stretched. Nick winced at the small crackling sounds. “Yeah I know what you mean and no. Originally I had…what’s her name…Lisa, I think, then I had to go after Sam…” He sighed again and stood up. “Well if nothing else, that was good exercise. Want to go make hot chocolate now?” He asked Nick with a grin.
“You should know,” Nick informed him. “That I will never say no to hot chocolate.”
At approximately four minutes to twelve Mike returned to Nick’s room, closed to his eyes, and collapsed to the floor. However, he was breathing and appeared to be in no immediate danger.
“Is he dying?” Nick asked. He nudged Mike’s leg with his foot.
“Ow,” said Mike, tried to kick him, and missed on the account that he was attempting to accomplish it with his eyes closed.
“Since we were playing Assassins, that would depend on which definition you mean,” Zach mused, “but I don’t think he’s dying.” He walked over to where Mike’s head was and looked down. “Hi Mike.”
Mike opened his eyes, then pointedly closed them again. Somewhere in the room, a microwave chimed.
“Hot chocolate?” Offered Nick.
“Hot stewed marshmallows?” Corrected Zach.
“Hot marshmallows stewed in chocolate?” Amended Nick, giving Mike’s foot another kick when he received no response. “Miiike?”
“Ugh, and stop kicking me!” responded Mike, groaned, and sat up. He favoured them with a grey-eyed glare.
“Hot marshmallows stewed in chocolate?” repeated Zach, unruffled, possibly because it appeared that he had not noticed the glare.
Mike grumbled, but accepted the cup from Nick, noticing that both Nick and Zach were already holding similar cups. “How many cups did you guys have already?”
“This’s our first,” said Nick cheerfully.
“We weren’t sure where you’d be at
Mike sighed and closed his eyes again. “Stupid girls.”
“Erk,” agreed Nick, thinking that either way you interpret that sentence, it could have some truth to it.
Zach decided to keep his mouth shut.
In the quietness they could hear the small sounds of others, moving about the building. Through the closed door, the small thuds and rustles where no more than the background noise of some place far away…another world where time trickled by as before while in their room it froze and spun about, spiralling into the moment.
Outside there was the sound of someone singing, very loudly and off key until someone louder still yelled, “Shut up!” Yet another world, out there in the darkness, amid the lights and shadows of
Somewhere, then, in another world, an alarm went off. In another world there were people screaming and squealing and celebrating New Years, people who were alive to the moment.
“Ah well,” said Mike, raising his cup, “Happy New Years.”
“Happy New Years,” echoed Nick, likewise raising his cup.
“Cheers,” murmured Zach.
They looked and smiled at each other at that moment, together, and drank their hot chocolate.
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Happy New year, indeed. It's the year of the Dog,- Sirius keep reminding me about this. ;P