One negative externality of
Australia's tobacco excise, particularly with today's cost of living, is
increased smuggling of cheap overseas cigarettes. According to your uncle who
spends too much time online, Australian cigarettes contain another chemical.
This chemical snuffs out darts thrown from car window, an adaptation suited to Australia's
proclivity for bushfires. Foreign cigarettes do not share this property.
So Yvette finds a
butt bin, screwed into veranda pylon, smoking enthusiastically on its own. This
is her shopping centre and Yvette its cleaner, so she gets to work. The butt
bin is tough to open after years of the public's scabbing. Yvette grabs a wet
floor sign and the closest 5L jug of water, which are stashed everywhere for
mopping.
Yvette pours water down the cigarette
sized holes. By doing so, she defeats the Zhǒngzú
zhǔyì de, a stowaway Chinese fire demon. It drops the usual loot of unsalvageable
tobacco and dully gross smell. This demon, however, was Legendary, had a star
next to name above health bar, so it also drops a Zippo lighter.
Yvette dons, equips, gloves
before picking up lighter. She uses an Identification Scroll or, rather, a
single use Identification App on her phone. Turns out that the lighter is Never
Ending, fluid and flint, but also inflicts diabetes on whoever uses it. Yvette
drops the lighter into a sandwich bag, just to be sure.
Yvette has plenty of
lighters and does not want diabetes, so she needs a buyer. A customer with that
scarce resource known as disposable income. But magic lighters, cursed or not,
cannot be sold for US or Singaporean dollars. Nor can anyone dispose CatScript
(₵$), Yvette's crypto of choice, because it cannot be held.
Someone will need to barter.
That first potential someone is Fika, smoking a
joint in graffiti-free family toilet. Fika had not locked the door and, green
letters saying 'vacant', Yvettes barges in.
'Wait. Hold on.' Fika is
three quarters done. 'You don't get it. This. This weed. You smoke a joint of
it, just one, you gain Plus Four Percent Mathematical Abilities, rest of your
life.'
'Do I look fifteen?'
Fika drags down to roach:
'Uh. Late twenties?'
'Well played. I see you're a
smoker.' Yvette pokes window open. 'Smokers need lighters and I have a really good
one. It never runs out and gives you diabetes. Do you have another of those
joints to trade?'
'Wait a sec.' Last puff on
roach and Fika calculates odds with plus-four-percent mathematical ability:
'That's fucked.'
Yvette points at sink: 'How
so?'
'If I'm smoking with other
people. Who smoke. Also. Lighters always get exchanged, unintentional. Someone
is certain to get diabetes.'
No Deal. And not in the
sense where you get a fourth 'No Deal' on those 'Deal or No Deal' scratchies.
Where you have three scratches to learn if you have won $10, $50 or $5000.
Because that is fucking exhilarating.
Yvette goes to commiserate
at 'Dirt', the underground bar for cleaners, with a BYO Red Knot Cabernet
Shiraz Merlot. The wine is mid and so is the music but everyone is
dancing and slipping on the grimy floor. Encircled by cross-legged sanitation experts,
the Cabernet Shiraz Merlot scatters its dregs when spun clockwise. Nobody gives
a shit about polka-dot stains on their work pants.
The bottle slows before
stopping to point neck at Luke. He is
already leaning forward, right arm propping him up and left reaching for her
shoulder. He is at least ten years younger than her and tastes deeply of
regret, waste, cigarettes.
They are both exhausted when
dawn is fully underway. They are both in bed but know that they will not fall
asleep. No hangovers, both hydrating between fucks. Well, there is home shit to
do and Yvette swings legs off bed.
'I need to poop.'
He throws on a dressing
gown: 'I forgot to buy toilet paper.'
So he fetches a Mein Kampf
from the his bookshelf. She follows him and stops the peruse the spines of
Shakespeare, Thompson and Dahl. He stops to peruse her body. Not that he can
get another boner without getting into some weird shit, but he landed that. Repeatedly. Lotus
position is his fave so far.
Her fingers trail up
bookshelf and find Gustav
Odenkirk's Wine Journal (1993-1994). Luke places insulin pen on his belly
and it clicks.
She asks: 'You looking to
sell?'
Smirk: 'Did you sleep with
me for stuff?’
'Maybe the third round. Or
the fourth.' She pivots boobs towards him. 'I have a Lighter of Infinite Fuel
and Diabetes. Figure you might want it - nobody will steal, lest they get what
you already got.'
He is legitimately hurt and
it is not just the needle's pinprick. She sidles alongside him, a kiss on the cheek.
They both recall where hands and thighs fell, last night. They both melt.
*And Luke will be able to transfer the curse onto something more valuable.
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