Barley Barrington J. – The Grand Wheel

“One of the simplest of these,” the alien continued, “though one of the hardest to play, employs only two symbols and offers equal probability on either of them appearing after a randomizing process, the players calling bets on each result. This can be done, for instance, by flipping a coin. The process is repeated many thousands of times while the players pit their randomatic skills against each other in predicting the throws.”

“We’ve played it,” Dom said confidently, “but we don’t intend to play it here.” He pulled out a deck, ripped off the wrapping and spread it on the table before the alien. “We play cards. My game is Kabala.”

The alien’s face bent to view the painted cards. “Yes, we have studied it,” he remarked. “We have a comparable game, and I suggest it is a game of this type that we now play.”

He pointed to a console that stood on one side of the

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domed chamber, against the wall. “It was agreed during negotiations that the game could not be one in which one but not the other of the parties was versed, which effectively rules out both your Kabala and our game, which we call Constructions. Instead, the designing machine will put together a special game for the occasion, of the same type as both Kabala and Constructions, and will teach it to us by means of mental induction. The experience we have gained in the past with our respective games will thus find a natural application here.”

He clapped his hands, and looked expectantly at the console. For about a minute nothing happened. Then a cool, bright light issued from it and seemed to dart, first to Scarne’s eyes, and then into his brain.

He was dazzled by the light: it was like having a spotlight trained on one. He fancied he could feel it, like something icy, alive and intelligent.

And there formed in his mind complete knowledge of the new game. It was a game using a hundred and fifty card deck, as difficult and abstruse as Kabala was, if not more so, and bore many resemblances to it.

Scarne felt as if he had been playing it all his life. He wondered how Dom had satisfied himself that the galactics would not cheat. It was obvious they had an impressive armory of tricks.

“You are ready to play?” the seated alien asked.

The solmen all nodded.

“A playing team may consist of up to four players, which may reduce as the game proceeds,” their host continued. “We will therefore begin with four a side. You may, between rounds, stand any member down and use substitutes. There is a room nearby where the others can rest, or else they may kibitz.”

“Understood,” Dom said. “I’ve already got my four picked out.”

The alien moved his hand and suddenly there appeared on the table before Dom an avalanche of little oblong objects in various colors. They appeared to be made of some rubbery material. “We have agreed

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beforehand on the stock represented by these tokens,” the alien said. “The pile before you consists of one million units, in various denominations.”

Dom nodded.

Scame stared in fascination while Dom sorted out his starting team, thinking over what that pile meant. He failed to understand how Dom’s mind could encompass so gigantic and final a fact. But there it was.

When the discarded members had retreated, Dom, with Scame sitting at his right, looked questioningly at the alien. The creature spoke again, in a cordial tone.

“We will play for twenty hours, or until your stake is exhausted. The bank cannot be broken-it is inexhaustible. There is only one further point for me to mention. To be able to read an opponent’s facial and bodily expression is held by some players to be part of the game. Since in this case the players are of differing biological species and are strangers to one another it would not normally be possible. We have overcome this difficulty by arranging for visual translation. Your opponents will appear to you to be human beings, and vice versa. “Let us begin.”

All at once the big alien disappeared, together with the chair on which he had been sitting. Immediately following, the table underwent a transformation. It dwindled, drawing in on itself. The obscuring curtain disappeared. The four men found themselves sitting at a smaller circular table, just large enough to comfortably seat eight people.

Facing them were the alien team, aged perhaps between twenty and sixty. Scame looked at each of their faces in turn. He could find nothing unusual in them. They were not exactly average human beings-they were average-looking professional card players. They were the sort of people he had been staring at over green baize tables all bis life.

The scene was delusively familiar. Even the setting was unremarkable, for the architecture of the domed

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room was nondescript. It could have been anywhere. It was hard to imagine that so much hung on what would transpire between these eight players in the next few hours.

On the table was a deck of cards that the designing machine bad in the intervening minutes newly manufactured. One of the aliens picked it up and inserted it into a shuffling machine. When the shuffled deck was ejected he began dealing it round the table, placing the residue in a shoe dispenser of the type used by the Grand Wheel.

Scarne picked up the ten cards dealt him. They were no ordinary cards. Some carried complicated picture symbolism, like the major arcana of the Tarot. Some of the number cards sported colored decals which responded to thought. By concentrating, he could change their values.

These shifting cards, an elaboration of the principle of wild joker, were a feature of the game. Even one’s opponents could, in certain circumstances, change the cards in one’s hand.

Dom was straining at the leash, the excitement already building up in him.

The game began.

Depth after depth.

It was already apparent that Dom had early anticipated what kind of game they would be called on to play. Mutating cards, changing rules, were features of one of the games Scame had been taught at the Make-Out Club, under the identity machine.

But here were no machine aids; everything was done by strength of mind. The rules of the game were hierarchical; it constructed itself as it went along in a dizzying spiral of strategy which made each round a consequence of what had gone before.

The objective of the game was to create a symbolic structure out of the cards according to certain definite laws. There was a range of such structures, each comprising a sufficient number of cards to pre-

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clude any other similar system from being assembled from the same deck. To win, a team had finally to hold all the requisite cards and no others, neither one too few nor one too many-and the team leader had to announce the fact without ever having seen what his partners held.

The calling of bets, again the business of the team leader, was a close combination of bluff and intention. At the beginning of a round it was rarely possible to envisage the target system with any accuracy; only later did the outlines of a possible structure take shape. Betting began modestly, leaping prodigiously as events progressed, controlled as much by random influences as by the will of the players. Cards were bought unseen for enormous sums; subtle and pernicious double, treble and quadruple bluffs were perpetrated.

Total concentration was necessary; only someone with complete control over bis mental faculties could hope to play a game with so many layers of complexity. As the hours passed Scame became oblivious of bis surroundings; the symbols of the deck enveloped him, seeming to constitute the only reality, a new universe in which he and the other players were trapped and destined to live out their lives.

It was rumored that Kabala could heighten one’s consciousness. With this game, the promise was kept. Scame broke new mental ground, his mind working with a speed he had never experienced before. It was like being reborn.

Then, after seven hours, Dom called a break. Scame brought himself down to earth with difficulty; it was like coming out of a trance.

He was covered with perspiration. So, he noticed, was Dom.

Dom rose, bowing stiffly to the other side of the table.

“If it’s all the same to you, I would like to play two a side from now on.”

The alien players glanced at one another. As they got the feel of the cards, both sides had by common

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consent already reduced their teams to three. The leader, depicted by visual translation as young and suave, nodded.

“That suits us perfectly.”

The solmen took themselves to a buffet on their side of the dome; the aliens retreated to a corresponding facility in their half. Dom’s redundant players, some of whom had been trying to follow the game, gathered round. Dom, however, took a single shot of whisky and spoke only to his co-players.

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