Once everyone had entered the cave, Voth decided to step inside. What the man was doing with the gold was strange to him, but ultimately he dismissed it as simple transmutation. When he saw the man flinch, though, and the small shadow poking at him, Voth knew there was powerful booyahg at play. The spell he had cast told him that whatever the strange shadows were, they were not any kind of creature. While their effect on the man was obvious, Voth could not tell if the shadows were actually moving, or if it was some manner of hallucination his mind conjured to cover up whatever was actually happening.
Either way, whatever was happening was none of his business. At a guess, Voth assumed this man had likely upset some powerful fey, given his claim to be cursed. Whether or not the rest of it was true - that he asked for the punishment to make amends for past wrongs - was not something Voth cared about, one way or the other. What Voth did care about, though, were all the gifts the old man was giving out. Regardless of what the man said, in Prismeer, Voth had learned that nothing was free. Though, as Voth had learned some time back, just because nothing was free did not mean a bet could not be won.
As he approached, Voth would reach down to the small pouch at his side. Pulling it out, he would begin to shuffle up the deck of cards he had taken off his eldest brother those many years ago.
"Must have something big needs doin', given away such fine gifts as them in the middle of Prismeer. I've a likin' your fancy booyahg, but I've no interest in fallin' for your tricks. Instead, how's about you be a good host, and indulge us in a game?""Nothing over fancy. Simple cut and draw, with the high card wins. 'Course, simple game is no fun without a bet. I win, then those fancy things you're handin' out are the winnings, and each o' us here is getting one. I lose, and whatever it is you're trickin' people into helpin' with, you win my help with it for free. Deal?"Of course, Voth had no intention of leaving any of this to chance. Voth intended to lay the deck face up for the game. That way he could see what card was taken, and just draw a higher one on his turn. There was no cheating, to his mind, since the deck was face up for both players. He could not be blamed if his opponent chose to not take off the blindfold. Of course, even if he did, then Voth could just flip the deck and use the marks on the back to win anyway.