Page 85 - What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours
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shudders of euphoric terror that only increased as the day and then the hour itself

               drew ever closer. The cards spoke to a suspicion that many whose work is play
               can never be free of: that you can only flaunt your triviality for so long before
               punishment is due. A date has been selected, and on that day there will be a great
               culling . . .

                                                           —

               WE FILED into the school theater chattering with nerves. The volume increased

               when we were handed pens at the entrance and informed that choices made in
               pencil would not be accepted. When we sat down nobody removed their coats or
               bags; everybody was ready to evacuate immediately. Poor Radha and Gustav . . .
               their performance was merely something to sit through as we got ready for our
               shocks or our pieces of cheese.

                   Gustav’s puppet troupe was already onstage, seated on chairs with their backs
               to us. Brunhild the shipbuilder was tallest of them, and I could see the top of her
               head. There was a strangeness in the way that head was positioned: I accept that
               this is an almost meaningless thing to say about the posture of a puppet, which is
               intrinsically all sorts of strange. But still. I began to mention this to Radha, but
               Tyche and Rowan sat down beside us and I thought better of it. Tyche asked
               Radha which card she’d got: shock or piece of cheese? Radha smiled very

               sweetly and said, “Wait and see,” and Gustav walked onstage to the sound of
               TLC’s “No Scrubs.” As he did the puppets’ chairs turned, and after that
               everything compressed into a split second; we saw that every single one of the
               puppets’ throats had been slashed wide open so that they erupted strings; they’d
               been hacked at so savagely that even those internal strings were cut. And when
               Gustav saw them he lost consciousness. He didn’t collapse, exactly—it was

               more as if he’d been dropped from a height. He fell plank straight, and without
               making a sound, and that fall of his was just as unreal to us as the glazed eyes
               with which the puppets onstage surveyed their own innards. Their expressions
               were the kind that couldn’t be altered unless physically dismantled, each smile,
               scowl, or beseeching look disappearing piece by piece. Laughter was the first
               response, perhaps the only natural response to such excess. It felt intended that
               we laugh. Puppets and puppeteer slain by an unknown hand; for about thirty

               seconds the scene was so complete that no one dared intrude upon it. Then
               Gustav’s friends began to call out to him, reminding him that they’d always
               known he was too serious for comedy, demanding the next scene, telling him
               that it was time to get up, that they needed to know if he was OK. From where
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