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Cards lay spread over the pitted table, encircling the pile of gil that'd been haphazardly tossed into the center. The same pile of gil that was presently being drawn away from Zhavi while she stared down at her opponent's hand in pure disbelief. She'd had it. The winning hand had been hers. But, somehow, the churl across from her had slipped in a trick that shouldn't have been possible. Unless she'd miscounted. She frowned, glancing back at her own hand, slowly working through the length of the game through her own fuzzy memory. Nald's balls, did it matter? She'd lost. Losers didn't have rights to complain in Scuttlebutt, premier dive in Limsa Lominsa's lower decks. Beloved of gamblers and alcoholics, it was a tiny open air stall that changed location depending on day and which way the yellowjackets were pissing. It was the sort of place where you could always catch a game or five of whatever caught your fancy, be it by luck or skill.
It was the sort of place only locals knew about, given its lack of permanent location and no sign to declare it as anything more than a spontaneous gathering of layabouts and knaves. Its only constant was the father-daughter pair what run it, and them the most villainous looking of the lot.
So it'd been surprising to see the man sitting across from her join in. Zhi hadn't recognized him -- not altogether impossible, but being that she was a regular visitor to Scuttlebutt, unexpected -- and she hadn't seen anyone greet him with familiarity. Of course, she was also drunk. Drunk, and drained of most of the coin she'd brought with her. It'd been a pretty pile of winnings, too, enough to easily keep her drunk for the next two days. All gone.
Her tail twitched under the table as the jeers of the people watching the game started to flood in. They blurred and overlapped, a tangle of voices she couldn't put forth any effort to decipher, though she knew the insults from those who played regularly with her were flowing hard and fast. She grimaced and waved them off, slouching in her chair with her feet planted wide under the table: a tough little rat in her rough clothes and sarcastic smile. They ignored her brief attempts to silence them, some few who'd been early in the game calling for a rematch. Zhi had other things on her mind as she stared at the stranger.
"Hey," she said, voice loud over the din. "Winner buys a round. 'Stradition."
Her grin was cocky, as if she was entirely unaware of the loss she'd just suffered. As if she hadn't just lied through her teeth. Scuttlebutt's sole tradition was that cheaters who were caught got stomped by any number of enthusiastic volunteers. Not that the stranger would know that, of course.
It was the sort of place only locals knew about, given its lack of permanent location and no sign to declare it as anything more than a spontaneous gathering of layabouts and knaves. Its only constant was the father-daughter pair what run it, and them the most villainous looking of the lot.
So it'd been surprising to see the man sitting across from her join in. Zhi hadn't recognized him -- not altogether impossible, but being that she was a regular visitor to Scuttlebutt, unexpected -- and she hadn't seen anyone greet him with familiarity. Of course, she was also drunk. Drunk, and drained of most of the coin she'd brought with her. It'd been a pretty pile of winnings, too, enough to easily keep her drunk for the next two days. All gone.
Her tail twitched under the table as the jeers of the people watching the game started to flood in. They blurred and overlapped, a tangle of voices she couldn't put forth any effort to decipher, though she knew the insults from those who played regularly with her were flowing hard and fast. She grimaced and waved them off, slouching in her chair with her feet planted wide under the table: a tough little rat in her rough clothes and sarcastic smile. They ignored her brief attempts to silence them, some few who'd been early in the game calling for a rematch. Zhi had other things on her mind as she stared at the stranger.
"Hey," she said, voice loud over the din. "Winner buys a round. 'Stradition."
Her grin was cocky, as if she was entirely unaware of the loss she'd just suffered. As if she hadn't just lied through her teeth. Scuttlebutt's sole tradition was that cheaters who were caught got stomped by any number of enthusiastic volunteers. Not that the stranger would know that, of course.