That casino was old and forlorn. Inside, it had the outdated concert
hall where gaudy revues and magic shows used to be abundant. Since the
casino lost its popularity and customers, the hall had been used as a
makeshift break area. Those who used up money for gambling and no longer
had anything to do sat there sparsely with vacant eyes, producing a
wretched atmosphere that perfectly matched the whole casino. My partner,
my mother and I was resting there after we lost most money. As it was
too gloomy to be sitting in the break area, my partner suggested that we
should use up the scarce rest of our money and leave the casino.
Each of us sat in front of our favorite slot machine. On the screen
of my slot, I came close to win with two matched pictures but the third
one didn’t come up in every turn. My mother and I quickly ran out of
money. Further down the floor, I saw my partner still playing. I left
him there and went back to our hotel with my mother.
It was the last day of our stay and I started packing for checkout.
The hotel looked out on the waterway that connected the hotel and the
casino. For a brief break from packing, I went out on the balcony of our
room and watched the waterway. Then I noticed something gigantic
floating far up the waterway. It was slowly flowing toward the hotel.
The closer it got, the more monstrous it became. It approached near
enough to tell what it was.
A tall, triangular-shaped white condominium was carried on a massive
barge. Tied behind it was a white enormous sailing ship. They were
carried carefully from the direction where the casino located.
Considering where it came from and how unusual they were to be carried
along the waterway, I assumed that they were some prizes of the casino. I
called my mother to the balcony and we wondered what kind of person had
extremely good fortune like this.
The barge and the ship stopped in front of the hotel, right under our
balcony. There was the third boat tied behind the ship. A man was
sitting in it almost buried in numerous boxes and bags. It meant he was
the winner. I gazed at the man with the biggest possible amount of envy.
And I gasped. The man who won all of those was no other than my
partner! I couldn’t shout, couldn’t scream but was just speechless. I
saw my partner getting off the boat and being welcomed by the hotel
staff. He gave them some instructions and they hurriedly moved around.
Soon, there was a knock on the door of our room. The bellboys brought
countless boxes of shoes and bags of brand clothes into our room.
Finally my partner came in. He said calmly, “It’s time for checkout.” I
told him that I hadn’t finished packing and he said, “It’s all taken
care of. I hired people to do the rest. We can just leave.”
We stepped out of the hotel. In front of my eyes, the white
condominium gleamed under the bright sunshine. The white sailing ship
gently swayed with its sails furled. I asked myself repeatedly, “Can
anything like this actually happen?”. My mother said, “I’ve always
wanted a condominium like this!” and got onboard the barge. My partner
returned onto the boat. I was excited enough to jump in the water and
floated by a swim ring that was connected to the boat. The fleet began
to move again and we were heading home.
While we were slowly moving down the waterway, I saw some parade
floats in the water ahead of us. The area was a popular resort
destination and the waterway threaded through many hotels. The parade
seemed one of the events held in the area. Seeing the floats far ahead
and the big condominium and the sailing ship before me, I asked my
partner, “This is a dream, isn’t it?” He had been expressionless up
until this point but smiled for the first time since he won. “Why? Are
you that happy?”, he asked me back. I usually dream a lot. Sometimes I
dream a very good one and feel ecstatic in it. But in those cases,
waking up is excruciatingly painful. Dreadful disappointment crushes me.
I’ve had those experiences more than too much and want no more. I would
do anything to avoid it. If this is also a dream, I have to wake up now
before euphoria gets inside me. Otherwise, I couldn’t bear a
disappointment of this magnitude.
I was sad that everything I had gotten would disappear when I woke
up. This was undoubtedly the best and the most vivid dream I’ve ever
had. But I had to know whether this was reality or not at this point in
order to minimize disappointment. I looked at the clear blue surface of
the waterway on which I was floating. It was sparkling in the sunlight. I
hit the surface and made it splash. Sprays of water showered on my
face. It was cold and refreshing. I slapped my wet cheeks with my both
hand. It hurt. Still, everything stayed as it was. I slapped my face
over and over, hearing the sound of slapping and splashing water and my
partner’s laughter. The condominium and the sailboat were still there. I
felt gentle breeze and drips of water streaming down my face. I looked
up the bright blue sky and got the dazzling sunshine over my face. I
didn’t wake up. This was all real!
Now that I was convinced this wasn’t a dream, I was able to take it
in. Indescribable happiness seized me. It almost choked me and I panted
for breath. I felt my lungs were pressed with happiness and heated like
coals. I’ve never been this happy in my entire life. I became a
billionaire. My life got redeemed. I was finally getting out of a prison
and living in a place where I should be. I was filled with a sense of
relief, peace, and freedom. I felt a lump in my throat. It was as if the
heated coals in my chest reached the boiling point and were about to
explode. Tears appeared in the bottom of my eyes. They began to liquefy
my sight. I blinked to shed tears. I felt tears rolling down my cheeks. I
opened my eyes again. Then - much to my horrible surprise - the sight
remained black. I blinked again and fixed my eyes on the darkness. It
was the ceiling above the bed of my room.
It was completely beyond belief. Although I made sure so many times,
all what happened was a dream. I was simply lying on my bed with tears
streaming down my face. The sensation I had felt was so real that I even
suspected this awakening was a dream. I sat up on the bed, bewildering.
Everything was gone along with happiness. I was dazed for a while
without moving. I uttered several times, “Can’t be a dream.” because it
was too real to be a dream. I made a mistake again that I’ve tried to
avoid all the time. This time, the mistake was huge. The dream was too
good, too vivid, and too happy. Accordingly, disappointment was
severely grave.
I felt the massive disappointment was trying to squash me. I couldn’t
get up. I kept sitting on the bed, and started weeping...
Showing posts with label casino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label casino. Show all posts
Saturday, November 10, 2018
Friday, January 6, 2017
Gold Dust hr584
“Would you believe it if I said gold dust could fall on you?” I was
asked out of nowhere by Kuri-chan who sat behind me in the classroom
when I was a senior in high school. I had known her since junior high
and we had chatted casually all the time. Although we had never belonged
to the same group to hang around, the last year of high school made us
closer as we were in the same class sitting next to each other. She
abruptly asked this question with strange solemnity, looking set on
confiding her big secret. I had never seen her like this. While I had no
idea what she was implying with the question, I answered I would. I
thought someone who was seeing the meteor shower was so excited that she
or he felt that gold dust was showering on her or him. Or, someone
having the happiest moment in the snow might feel the snow gold. Or,
gold dust was simply an analogy to an inconceivable happening that made
someone very happy. Those thoughts led my answer to yes, on which
Kuri-chan hesitantly began to explain her question. She had visited
frequently a certain shrine where gold dust fell on a person who
believed. And she wanted me to come. I promptly asked her if it had ever
fallen on her. She said it hadn’t because she hadn’t believed enough.
Then I asked if she had ever seen it fall on anyone. Her reply was no
and she added, “But there are people who have seen it.” My head got
filled with doubt and questions. How often does it happen? How much does
gold fall when it happens? By what size? How is it collected when it is
sprinkled all over her or him? Are a broom and a dustpan provided near
at hand? Don’t other people scramble for the fallen dust to steal it?
How do you declare it as yours? And when you collect it safely, where
should it be brought? Can it be cashed out? Does it fall at a time with
an enough amount to make a living? I couldn’t subdue my curiosity,
greed, and weird self-confidence. What if it fell on me today? Actual
gold dust, not an analogy, could be possible when it comes to me. I
followed Kuri-chan to the shrine after school, feeling as if I was going
to a casino, although I sensed it was some sort of cult. The shrine was
in the vast, luxurious premises. There were many people in the main
hall, mostly middle-aged and elderly. They were intently praying, which
seemed waiting for gold dust to me. A large framed portrait of the
founder of the religious sect was hung on the front wall of the hall.
Kuri-chan told me that gold dust fell on him first. I somehow refrained
from asking her if he built this cult with the money from that gold
dust. In my mind, though, I was thinking it would fall quite an amount. I
sat face to face with Kuri-chan inside the hall and she put her hand
above my forehead. She was going to pray for me and gold dust would fall
on me if I believed. I was told to keep my eyes closed until the
praying was over. It lasted for about five minutes and I believed hard
that gold dust was falling on me now. “It’s done,” She said. I opened my
eyes and looked for the dust around me. None. I asked her, “Didn’t only
a bit fall?” She smiled wanly and said no, looking surprised that I
thought it would happen to me on the first try. I was led to a small
room for a new comer. A group of ten new comers was greeted by an
unnaturally friendly middle-aged woman. She told the story about gold
dust falling on the founder but didn’t explain how to cash it out to the
end. When we were leaving, a woman who was an acquaintance of Kuri-chan
ran toward us and said hello. She offered a ride to the bus stop. She
casually asked where I lived. She said she knew the area well and would
drive me home. I began to feel uncomfortable. I declined repeatedly, but
she insisted strongly. The car finally stopped near my house and I said
goodbye. To my surprise, she told me to let her meet my parents. I
asked why and she said she wanted to tell the story about the gold dust
to my parents. She gave me a ride to recruit. I was too stupid to know
earlier. I said my parents were out for work, but she said she would
wait. I said they would come home late because they were farmers, but
she was adamant about waiting. I asked her to leave, but she wouldn’t
let me out of the car. I felt scared as if I was kidnapped. Kuri-chan
joined me and asked the woman to let me go home. With repeated angry
begging from two of us, she finally gave in and released me. Next day at
school, Kuri-chan apologized to me about how it had gone. “It should
never be that way. Trust me. I didn’t know that woman was wicked”, she
said regretfully. A few days later, she asked me to go to the shrine
together again. I rejected. She asked, “Why? You said you believed gold
dust would fall.” I still believed it but wasn’t interested in the cult.
I thought if gold dust fell on me, it would happen anyway, with or
without a cult. I’ve never joined a cult. But the fact remains that I
believe in miracles…
Monday, January 4, 2016
Casino de Montreal hr559
I visited the casino in Montreal for the first time in seven years. It
had been remodeled into an even more gorgeous, glorious place than
before. I arrived there before noon and had an all-you-can-eat buffet
lunch at a fancy restaurant. I enjoyed the splendid buffet at an
incredibly low price. Compare to the amount of money I was about to
spend for gambling, everything seemed cheap. Every time I lose, I always
try to calm my anger by thinking the money I spend here somehow serves
to make the city better since it’s a public-managed casino. The city is
so beautiful that I regard what I lose in the casino as an entrance fee
to a theme park called Montreal. I used to live in Montreal but had to
leave as I became short of money for life abroad. When the time to go
back to Japan drew near, I seriously thought of gaining money to stay in
Montreal, by gambling. I determinedly sat at the slot machine of a high
progressive prize for a couple of days. On the last day, it happened.
As the slot I had played kept gobbling up my money, I moved over to
another slot machine and a middle-aged woman came to the one I just
left. She turned it for only five or six times and hit the jackpot
unbelievably quickly and easily. If I had continued for five more
quarters on that slot, I would have won. She snatched $100,000 away from
me right before my eyes. While she screamed for joy, the lights
flashed, the sound blared and the casino workers scurried toward her
with papers, I was running into the bathroom. I couldn’t help crying in
there. I was trembling with chagrin. I cursed my bad luck and my coming
life in Japan. A long time ago, my mother asked a fortuneteller about my
future. She told me that according to the fortuneteller, I would often
come close to big money, but it would slip away each time. “So, you will
never be rich,” my mother said to me. I remembered that and I thought I
saw proof that she was right. After I returned to my apartment, I
wailed out loud like a baby. My former self was that stupid. Now, I play
the slot machine just for fun. I sat at the minimum bet slot with a low
prize. If I was lucky and won a little, it meant that I could play
longer with that money. The band started playing at the stage on the
casino floor and I enjoyed soft drinks that I took from the free drink
bar listening to it. I won a little, which let me stay and play there
longer than I had planned. As fatigue from the long flight began to kick
in earnestly, I got back to my hotel room and fell into bed. It was an
excitingly fun day at the casino that cleaned me out yet again, as
usual…
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Back to Montreal hr558
A trip to California I took in May changed my mindset. When I found
bargain fares online, I quickly decided to go to Montreal for the first
time in seven years by using my emergency savings. I felt it was
ridiculous to keep money in a bank although we are mortal and we don’t
know when our time is up. I once lived in Montreal for about a year in
total. I wanted to stay there, but I had to leave and come back to Japan
as my money ran out. Since then, I have always hoped to live there
again or at least to visit there as a tourist. What I like about
Montreal are its beauty, a relaxing atmosphere and people there who seem
to live to enjoy life rather than achieve success. I’m not sure if it’s
because of their ways of life or the French-spoken region of Canada,
but they are fashionable with excellent taste. For that combination of
the city and the people, just walking down the street is fascinating
enough. I took on a 12-hour flight to Toronto during which I happened to
find ‘Tomorrowland’ among the in-flight movies, saw it twice and cried
yet again. I went through immigration where an immigration officer gave
me lengthy, irrelevant, even harassing questions including about my pin I
was wearing on my jacket. It was a pin from ‘Tomorrowland’ and she
almost made me begin to explain the whole movie story. The airport
system in Toronto was somewhat odd. I was just in transit en route to
Montreal, but I needed to pick up my luggage, carry to the distant
counter and check it in all over again. Although I had already been
through the security checkpoint before I got on board in Japan and had
never left the airport, I had to do it again. I ended up gobbling a
whole bottle of water in front of the security gate, which was exactly
what I did on the last trip to California. After the security
checkpoint, I saw an information screen for departure to make sure the
gate number for my flight to Montreal. The flight was missing. There was
no information about my flight, no cancelled, no delayed, no nothing.
Among the long list of departing flights, my flight itself didn’t exist.
I was close to panic. And I realized we don’t have anybody around for
something like this nowadays. There is no information counter, airport
workers don’t know about flights, and airline personnel at the gates
don’t know other flights’ status. I had no one to ask. The only place I
came up with as where the airline personnel with flight information were
working was an executive lounge. I went up there and asked about my
flight. She glanced at her computer display and said, ‘It’s on time.’ My
flight did exist, but for some weird reason, the airport screen showed
information only for selected flights. I had scurried around the
terminal for this absurd system. I finally arrived at Montreal after a
one-and-a-half-hour flight. A cab ran on the freeway at 75 miles per
hour through the night and downtown Montreal appeared in 20 minutes. It
was the same freeway on which a cab carried me in the dark before dawn
seven years ago when I was leaving for Japan. I remember I wished upon
the moon that I could return here someday, as I had no way to find the
money to come back. The moon satisfied my wish, I supposed. I checked in
a hotel and looked out of the window. Beneath the window was Sherbrooke
Street where many people were still passing by. Above the town lights
of the city, I saw the cross on the Mont-Royal that was lighted up and
floated in the dark sky. It was a view that I felt like I was strayed
into a dreamland. I thought my bold decision to spend money for this
trip was right. It would be a big loss not to come to such a beautiful
place like this when it exists. I literally fell down to bed to sleep
since I was completely exhausted from the 24-hour trip from home to here
and the turmoil at Toronto Airport. Next morning, I woke up early
because of jet lag. The first thing I decided to do in Montreal wasn’t
to get a rest in the hotel room or to take a walk in the city. It was
going to casino to win back all the money I had spent there in the past…
Labels:
airport,
cab,
casino,
flight,
freeway,
French,
hotel,
immigration,
in-flight movie,
jet lag,
Mont-Royal,
Montreal,
moon,
pin,
security gate,
Sherbrooke,
Tomorrowland,
Toronto,
transit,
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