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    1. Buzzkill 6 yrs ago

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Life went on, even when you weren’t ready for it. The next day came, painfully bright with pale sky on water; loud with the sounds of distant bells and workers arriving on the docks. Muu’s hospital release day. A sense of deep dread settled in Matteo’s stomach like a slumbering wolf. As he dragged himself clumsily to his feet, muscles cramped, he tried to convince himself it was just lingering effects of alcohol, or maybe just a reaction to the strong fishy smell coming from the harbor. Not guilt. Not shame. Just self-pity if anything, the beleaguered youth thought as he dragged himself across town, each step feeling heavier than the last. I can’t imagine what Ash will think of me after this. The worst part was that he still owed the money, same as everyone else.

Deadlines, deadlines. There were always deadlines, and they were always later than they first seemed (if you were just creative about it.) He’d gone out the night before because he'd thought it was the last day before dues, but in reality, the last day was still before him.

The thought put a little more spring into his step and Matteo arrived at the hospital, still weary (and feeling like a loser, frankly) but already devising a last-minute plan to avoid responsibility. He handed Muu the glass of water he’d come prepared with (a broke man’s only “feel better” gift) and retrieved his shoes from where he’d been storing them under Muu’s bed, sitting down in one of the waiting chairs by the curtain.

“I’ve been thinking about what we ought to do now that all three of us are all right to move around,” he said conversationally, tugging at his bootstrings. “I’ve been making my way around the city for the last week or so under the guise of collecting petty alms, as you know—nobody looks twice at beggars, really—and I’ve been doing my best to keep an eye out for potential recruits who might be interested in assisting our party, so to speak.” The words ran smoothly, albeit lacking a little energy and being a gross exaggeration of the truth. “There’s a few promising candidates. Of course, I didn’t want to approach them until all three of us were present.”

Finishing tying up his boots, Matteo put his hands on his knees and looked back up at his blurry companions. For a moment the 6 and 1, the last dice roll from the night before, flashed unbidden into his mind. The Thief’s smile faltered only for a moment before he forced the thought away, clearing his throat. “If I may make a suggestion, once Muu’s ready, how about we spend the morning with some ‘recruiting’—perhaps we can even make a small venture to hunt some small game to assess their skills for ourselves?”

...Implying they were in any position to be picky was bold, but considering Matteo had no actual idea who to approach and was just trying to divert the issue of his failed “investments”, it paled in comparison to the whole. He was the Thief. He had to make money. Short of charging one silver apiece for an admission fee, getting some kind of bounty out of it had to be possible. Especially if he didn’t have to be the one to do it.
He'd been awake for some time now, staring up at the ceiling of the Church of First Light, saying nothing.

Distorted memories of their frenzied, desperate journey through the woods tapered off into nothingness in his head-- but here he was, awake and alive as ever. As a great thirst came over him, not feeling inclined to serve himself, Matteo called for Ash.

Their talk did little to assure him as Matteo learned about the debt-- that which he'd tried so hard to avoid, by becoming a Thief-- the three now owed their caretakers. Three silver. And how long did he have? ...A week? Maybe a little less. Feeling that he had little choice, lacking the job experience to gain any other kind of employment (and also lacking the ambition to seek more creative or effort-intensive means) he did the only thing he could think of: begging. He knew well enough as a Thief that his own kind were obligated to hand out alms to the poor, and having exactly (0) money, Matteo felt he qualified. So he took off his shoes and took to the streets, collecting grubby copper pieces. Humiliating, of course, but Matteo had made up his mind that it would be worth it once his grand plan came to fruition.

And on the last day, as he collected the last few coins he needed, Matteo knew it was time.



It was dark now, and within the pleasure district of the Seaside Fortress-City of Andeave, everything was beginning to liven up, in the same edgy, seedy way that it always had. While music drifted gloriously from the western taverns and the merrymaking warriors toasted their oaths to the beauty goddess, those within the southwestern district cared less for worship and more for flesh and risk, alcohol flowing freely from holes in the wall while scantily clad women waved at their favorites from the balconies of brothels. All sorts of ne’er-do-gooders stalked the streets, staring down others that looked too curiously in their direction, and occasionally, one could even see scar-faced merchants approaching their equally criminal clients, opening up a cloak to reveal strange vials or dried specimens.

But drugs and sex weren’t what called Matteo to this sordid area. No, clutching what alms he had scraped up over the last few days, the thief now sought to multiply his wealth through dice and cards, the dingy and sinful world around him providing him plentiful avenues to waste away the charity of others.

The brightest attraction was Hotel Moonside, a multi-story building that sparkled in an otherwise dingy district. Two bouncers stood on opposite sides of an open door, and intoxicating fumes wafted out from the resort, where buxom and lithe girls, alongside fair and lean boys, were dressed undergarments and bunny ears, pouring drinks for high rolling adventurers who had plenty of money to spend. Large sums of silver and gold were bet as if they were worth only water, and loud laughter shook the floors of the building, just forcefully enough that one wouldn’t be able to hear the creaking of the higher floors as well.

Occupying a middle ground stood a far humbler abode, if not also much more scary. The Pirate’s Den was bereft of beauty, but was also much more quiet, a darkly lit place where taciturn men threw cards down and traded dagger-glares. A bottle of something was being traded around, and occasionally, small confrontations occured, a knife drawn and then plunged, the injured tossed into a corner to seek their own medical care later. Some were even betting on body parts, a more devilish thrill that racked them large sums if they won. Dangerous, but the bar of entry, at least, felt much lower than Hotel Moonside.

On the lower spectrum were gamblers who occupied small-scale taverns. No officiating was present, some fusion of an honor code and promised violence being what kept the money flowing smoothly, but it was clear that some were also just straight up scams. Scumbags were definitely abound here, and without a buddy backing him up? Who knew how well Matteo would do, even if he did win?

Then there were groups of beggars that, with cheap drink and marked rocks, would play their own games, trading away any possibility of a normal life for a few hours of sating the addiction that got them where they were to begin with. Like Matteo, they only played with coppers, and like Matteo, they weren’t exactly the toughest people in the district, so perhaps...he’d just have to put up with getting some more scraps by gambling with the most derelict?

Stained and barefoot, still clad in the same clothes in which he, Muu and Ash had been ambushed, Matteo made his way towards the sounds of clinking copper coins. The sound, hardly noteworthy for some but thrilling for a lazy hobo with looming hospital bills-- had become part of his daily routine ever since leaving the Church of First Light.

As he approached one of the groups of beggars, some of them (perhaps) familiar from his desperate street-combing from the prior week, Matteo did not once feel bad about gambling with charity. To him, the seventy coppers he’d starved for were not a gift-- they were an investment. Just like the Guild, and the silver from Etono, and even the recruitment office. People trusted him to do great things.

“Evening, gentlemen,” Matteo said pleasantly, stopping near one of the gambling beggar rings. He patted one of his pockets to make it jingle-- he’d prudently stored his copper in multiple locations on his body, just in case-- and crouched down, giving his fellows a mild smile. “Mind if I join you for a couple hands… rolls?”

Though most of the others didn’t pay him much attention, a middle-aged man with stubble and a large hat waved him to sit down. “‘Course, kiddo! Whatcha bettin’ wit?”

Matteo turned his smile on the stubbly man and reached into his pocket, counting out a few coppers on the palm of his hand. “Maybe just five, to start?” he offered.

“Hoho, big payouts already, eh? Gotcha gotcha.” The man turned to the others then, clapping his hands to get their attention. “Starting with five, anyone in?”

Four others approached as well, plopping down in squats or crossed legs or whatever else made them feel the most comfortable. As they did, the stubbly man produced a set of grimy dice. “Looks like you’re new, so I’ll keep it real fast,” he said, “Two dice, you bet on odds, evens, or a number. Win with the odds or evens, and you share it with other odds and evens. Win with a number, and you get the whole pot to yourself. Crystal clear?”

“Sure,” Matteo said, giving the older fellow a polite nod. He glanced over at the other players, trying to read them for a moment before he gave up and turned his attention to the dice. “I’ll call odds, thank you.”

“Odds.” “Odds.” “Even.”

The man shook the cup and slammed it down, pulling it open to reveal a total sum of 8. “Oof, better luck next time, eh, champs?”

The singular winner guffawed, took a swig of some cloudy bottle, before passing it around to the others while he collected his winnings. “Less anty up, boys!” the drunkard said, pushing in the entire 25 coppers that made up his winnings. “Whose gotta balls to take it on?”

Grimacing at his misfortune (and the taste of whatever was in that bottle) Matteo passed it on and wiped the back of his mouth. It seemed to bolster his determination and he ransacked his pockets again, finding 25 copper. “I suppose another round won’t hurt,” he said. “Evens?”

Drawn by the possibility of big money, a couple more joined in now. It was clear that most of them were there for the thrill of the win, not actually trying to make money. Now the pot was a grand total of 225 copper coins, looking rather beautiful as nine people crowded around it. The dicey dealer turned to the others with a cocked head, before the bets were called in.

“Odds! “...even.” “Even.” “Odds.” “8!” “...2?” “6!” “Odds.”

The dealer grinned, exposing a missing front tooth, before rattling away. Once again, he slammed it into the dirt, and lifted the cup up. 5. Odds. The three that won thrust their fists into the air, doing a little jig before trying, unsuccessfully, to split their earnings.

One of the losers spat a wad of phelgm at the wall, before slamming ten coins in, looking at the winners. Naturally, those bunch tossed in ten as well, and the dealer called out. “Big wins today, lads! Ten ten ten, who wants in?”

Matteo put his ten in the pile, frustrated and not-yet-quite-desperate. “Seven,” he said for a change of pace.

The pot was much more tame this time, some scampering off to take a piss while others just wanted to see how anything would pan out. Still, there were more people interested now that the entry bar wasn’t nearly as brutal, and the pot was raised to 110.

“Ey, where my odd bois at!” “Odds!” “Odds!” “Od- I mean, evens.” “1.” “Haha, dude, 1? 2’s where it’s at!” “Evens.” “6.” “...odds.” “10!”

The dealer just smiled as the dice rattled in his cup, before letting it roll out this time, the six sided die bouncing against someone’s shoes. 6. The sole winner leapt up to his feet with a hoot, before doing a quick little tap dance. Others laughed at him, and the drink was passed towards Matteo once more, the first winner of the round slapping him on the back in a half-consoling manner.

“It’s fine,” Matteo assured the man, feeling like everything was assuredly not fine. He swallowed his anxiety. Forty copper gone, thirty left. Four days worth of panhandling. Well, if Muu and Ash also beg, we can make it back in just one day before the hospital bill is due, he reflected and started the next bet with ten. “Odds, please.”

“6!” “God, you always go for that, huh? Odds.” “Evens~” “C’mon, 4, c’mon!” “Evens!” “8!” “Odds.” “Evens.” “...10.” “Vyr-Nilil, pleaseeeeee. 11!” “Even, baby~!”

The stubbly dealer turned around to the others, looking for more takers, but it looked like a pot of 120 copper was going to be the deal this time. With that, he grinned, shook it hard, and let it go. A powerful slam, and wham, 10.

Immediately, the winner snatched up his pot and guffawed, the adrenaline and electricity of the win racing through his fingertips as he slammed twenty down, looking at the others with a wild-eyed look. “Lets go again! Ahaha!”

The others looked unimpressed though, no doubt due to how stingy such a move actually was. Still, many of the same players were shelling out their own copper, as the drink made its way into their veins and brains. A pot of 220 stood there, surrounded by 11 other hobos.

Would Matteo becoming the 12th?

The Thief’s heart had began to pound sluggishly, color rising to his cheeks. The bitter tang of lukewarm ale swam in his senses. His last twenty coppers, rolled into a sock inside his dirty jacket, had never felt so heavy. He’d lost every round. He’d lost almost a full week’s earnings, no, investments, and-- if he took it-- the final bet would cost him everything he had. Should he hang on?

Matteo hesitated.

Scenarios ran through his mind. Dice scenarios-- variables, chance, likelihoods of odds and evens and numbers adding up with one another. Future scenarios-- dying diseased in the gutter, held for ransom by some sadistic hospital loan sharks, gagging down runny bowls of tasteless soup from the Church for the rest of his life. Possibility. Probability.

He remembered a story-- somehow, for some reason-- about a woman whose husband had been in terrible debt. To have these loans forgiven, she made a deal. If she drew the ace of hearts from a deck of cards, his debt would be cleared. But if she drew anything else, she would lose her husband, and she would marry the dealer instead. The woman agreed, and turned over the card-- and it was the Ace of Hearts. Later, her husband asked her why she’d taken the deal when the odds had seemed so impossible. She looked at him and said “What do you mean? There was only two outcomes-- win, or lose.”

The story wound itself through Matteo’s mind as, almost as if in a dream, the youth found himself emptying his final twenty copper into the beggars’ pot. One of them, of course, is talking about probability-- whereas the other is talking about fate.

Four rounds. Four losses.

Is it my fate to lose?

His bleary eyes counted the eleven other beggars, the light in their eyes, the lucky winnings in their pockets. Were these people really meant to be more successful than he was? As their bets began to be called out, Matteo heard his voice say “Twelve.”

Two sixes, no other combinations. Only two outcomes, win or lose.

Matteo closed his eyes. Always commit.

The dice fell.

One settled first, bouncing against Matteo’s shoe. A six, gleaming with chipped gold.

The other one spun still, rattling about. It bounced up the small pile of coins, then rolled down. Struck a rock. Bounced. Flew. In slow motion, Matteo could see the gleam of six on its face.

Then it landed.

Not gold, but the red of a 1.

A total of 7.

How lucky. How unlucky.



He wasn’t sure how long he sat there, long after the dice game had ended, the bitter taste of alcohol and loss mingling together on his tongue. It felt familiar. He felt numb.

Some time later, Matteo found himself on a pier in the Eastern district, legs dangling over the edge of the dock. Above, the two moons cast twin reflections across the harbor. The boy looked down at his bare, dirty feet and wondered, as he had back at the blood-soaked stream, if the easiest thing to do wouldn’t be to sink to the bottom and never come back up.

The sea breeze ruffled his unwashed hair, bringing with it the scent of salt.

He flopped onto his side, still gazing dully out at the distant lights of central Andeave, and let the waves and creaking timbers lull him to sleep.
Eight feet up wasn’t very far, objectively-- but from his vantage point and in his addled state, Matteo felt like he’d scaled the entire damn tree to get where he was. A phenomenal undertaking. Full marks. And with his great success, the youth could sit back, relax, and swing his legs peacefully while trusting the lone wolf would soon move on--

--But it didn’t. Squinting in the darkness, deprived of his eyeglasses, Matteo had only his ears to rely on as the beast prowled closer. Listening for a potential attacker in the dark was old hand to him now after a week of labyrinthine tunnels. The wounded Thief went deadly still and silent, trying to hear over the sound of blood pounding in his head as the wolf drew near.

Some time passed. The animal did not leave.

That eight feet, which had felt so secure only minutes ago, seemed woefully inadequate now. The only reassuring aspect was the stink of blood from the canine, suggesting it had already eaten its fill for the night or was already hurt in its own right. Both possibilities were a relief to Matteo, who wondered for a delirious moment if maybe they could overcome an injured predator. Then again, we’re pretty injured ourselves. Matteo knew for a fact he couldn’t possibly pull off an ambush in his condition. Just the idea made his plethora of injuries flare up in pain.

The dark-haired youth clenched his teeth, biting back his own voice. Even if they wanted to coordinate a plan, they had no way of communicating that an animal’s sharp senses wouldn’t be alerted to.

Squeezing his eyes shut, Matteo gripped the branch harder and willed his body to relax, forcing even his pained breathing to be like no noise at all. As the person currently on the lowest rung of the totem pole, tempting fate was not in his best interests. Not this time.
Maybe it was just the concussion talking (if anyone was seeing strange colors and hearing strange sounds, it was Matteo) but Ash’s words made some amount of sense to him. Strategy. Balance. Even overlooking acronyms like DPS and MMO, which seemed to stir up some murkiness in the back of his head, the word Healer on its own deserved merit. Healer. Ah, I’d sure like a healer. He could have been a healer.

The word bent around his brain, bitter and tantalizing. In the wounded youth’s delirium he fell upon the thought, chewing it over, drowning in hindsight. He should have taken more time to find out about the guilds, learn about the mechanics of these life-or-death parties, scouted out the playing field. If only he hadn’t bought that guide from the Silver Moon office, which he didn’t even read all the way through. I would have had enough money then. I could have healed this arrowhead in my arm, and these scratches, and my head, and fixed my glasses…

When the howl resounded through the woods, a low, rattling moan left Matteo’s mouth as if in response. All his politeness, his conversation skills, his thoughtful approach to any given problem had been stripped from him like daylight from the dark woods. “Let’s climb a tree,” he said sluggishly, then “Never mind, that sounds too hard.” Then, rethinking what it might be like to have his organs pulled out by wolves, the dark-haired Thief shuddered again and said “Maybe we should.”

Maybe we should…

As if continuing that thought, slowly (head still spinning) Matteo said “Maybe we should...do what we’re supposed to. As you suggested, Ash.” She needed distance to shoot her bow, right? Well, Matteo needed cover to attack without being seen first. He made up his mind, wrapping his stinging fingers in a piece of his old jacket to protect them. “I’m going to climb. Muu, I would like a boost, please.” His crisp declaration was somewhat ruined by the fact that he mumbled and ran into the timid girl in the dark, inadvertently stepping on her feet, but his point still stood. They could follow him or not, but getting up high was the only advantage against a wild beast he could think of.
So they fled. Stumbling, bleeding, withdrawing into themselves due to emotional and physical shock. The usual first-day syndrome. Near-death syndrome. Death-still-not-out-of-the-question syndrome. No, the shadow of the group’s mortality seemed only to lengthen as the sun dipped lower in the sky and the forest-- dark as it had seemed before-- only grew darker.

Matteo’s desperation to stop and rest-- anything but this grueling pace with no clear direction-- was still second to his desperation to survive, however. If we stop now... well, that monster might still catch up to us. He was painfully used to the dark after his training, fortunately, so the fading visibility was at least a lesser handicap compared to his other addled senses. As dusk encroached, the Thief became attuned to the forest sounds around them. It felt almost like paranoia-- for every warning trill or distant cry, Matteo’s head shot up reflexively and he felt his world spin and stomach lurch, the throbbing behind his eyeballs growing stronger. Pain tolerance he’d been taught, but pain endurance? Ugh...

He was in bad shape and he knew it, but they had to keep going. If he stopped now, he was as good as giving up the will to live. And don’t think it’s not on my mind. He trusted Ash to get them through the forest even in the dark, and if she couldn’t… well, even as injured as he was, he was reasonably sure he could hide himself if it came down to it.

So barring any directional sense-- or sense at all, in his current injured/befuddled state of mind-- Matteo began to talk. “They were a lot… harder than I thought. It would be. Don’t you agree?” He trudged along, cradling the arm in which the broken arrowhead was still buried. “We certainly got one, but more… how do people do it?” All that talk about cannon fodder and insurance, and in their wounded state… well, Matteo didn’t feel like they were ready at all. “I don’t… know where we are anymore. But all rivers lead to the sea, don’t they?” Was that really true? It seemed right. “Maybe if we follow the stream, it’ll lead back to Andeave. Or at least we’ll know we’re not going in circles.”

Circles or not, he still felt loopy.
For a moment Matteo wondered-- as he had before, during the darkest hours of his Thief training-- if it wouldn’t be easier to just die. Give up. Spurn whatever force had whispered that Awaken into his empty mind and return to that cryptic slumber. The stress, the pressure, the encroaching menace… It’s too much. I can’t. I just… can’t. He didn’t care. He just wanted to close his eyes and sink to the bottom of the river, let the waters drown out the sounds of Muu’s quiet sobs and the approaching predator.

...But it wasn’t safe. Lethargy was a luxury. Fear was stronger than despair and shock. At the end of the day, underneath concussions and moral quandaries, Matteo was not a Thief. He was hardly even human. He was just an animal--no better than the headless beast they’d slain, fighting for his life.

Fear quickened his blood, but not his mind. His vision was still distorted, deluded, and the bedraggled youth barely crawled over to the two girls from the streambed without sliding back into the tainted waters. He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, sickened by the faint taste of rabbit. Blood dripped from his fingertips. “Hate to… bring it up…” he muttered, swallowing heavily as the world seemed to spin around him. Pardon me if I’m not feeling as eloquent as usual.

Taking short, shallow breaths to make it through the rambling thought-- never mind the pain-- he continued “Something’s… coming. I think. Ash, how do we… lead us away from here… we have to…” To run, to hide, to lose whatever it was. Fighting to stay calm, to stay clear, Matteo delivered his last sentence. “We… might want to hurry.” He wouldn’t run away without them. Not when it might mean making himself an even bigger target, like wounded prey splitting off from the group to be picked off.
Matteo didn’t remember the goblin dying. He was sliding in and out of consciousness, no longer fully aware of where he was or what he was doing even as the machete blade cleft its way through the creature’s neck. Just hold on. It wasn’t even a thought in words, just an urge, a remnant of something his battered mind had once assumed important enough to cling to. He clung to the small monstrosity as its life left its body, and he clung to the body its life had left, and he crushed the headless figure untill his fingernails cracked under the tension. Through his wavering eyes, the world swam with thick colors indistinguishable from the blood which stained the stream around them.

It was dead, and he still held onto it. Stubbornly. Stupidly.

He must have finally blacked out-- he came to choking, mud and water dripping from his nose and lips. The Thief didn’t even have to look down at the carnage before his stomach heaved and bile spiked in his throat, shoulders heaving as he retched. He would not pursue the other goblin. He would be lucky if he could pull himself out of the stream without help. Even after a week of painful experiences, the combined force of his injuries now swelled. Between heaves, his breath hitched as waves of lightheadedness pounded at his skull.

He barely acknowledged when Ash spoke. He didn’t even remember speaking. “Okay.”

The cold water numbed his bleeding fingertips, but somehow his hands still moved. They began to shake unconsciously as bits of broken nail felt clumsily over the headless corpse, seeking compensation, before he felt at the bottom of the streambed for the fallen dagger.

Take the money. Join a guild. Kill monsters. Why wasn’t anything ever as easy as it sounded? Why couldn’t Matteo just be part of a big party--maybe ten or fifteen people much more qualified at what they were doing--and just coast along, throwing a punch or two or stealing a rabbit here and there? Why was he the one wrestling in a muddy stream with a goblin pinned under his arm and a brand-new machete wound just yet another tally on the list?

How discouraging.

He thought he must have screamed again as the first blow connected with his skull, but he couldn’t be sure. Somehow he withstood the barrage, brain shuddering under the sickening reverberation as the little monster struck again and again. He felt like stars were exploding behind his eyes as he reeled from the counterattack, grip starting to slacken despite himself.

Thankfully, Ash’s shouting gave him something to come back to. Words for a bruised brain to process, orders for a numb conscience to follow. Keep him down, keep him down. He wasn’t the strongest, but they’d taught him close-quarters combat. With the creature’s knife gone, the two were on the same level. He didn’t have to overpower it. He just had to hang on. His grip around its waist tightened, determined not to let the muddy waters grease the goblin’s escape. “No--you don’t,” he panted, barely able to string together words. Wouldn’t it be easier to just...

”And always commit.”

Matteo screamed again when Ash slashed down at its throat.
A sharp burst of pain. A crack, loud as a gunshot, simultaneously in and all around his skull.

And Matteo dreamed.
...


With a sound like draining water, light and color flooded back to his darkened senses. Vaguely he remembered sitting up, the world tilting, head spinning like a night after too much liquor. Oddly, the feeling was not unlike much of the training they’d put him through at the Thieves Guild. Pain. Poisons. Matteo’s lips moved, shaping a vague mumble, his hands reaching up to clutch the sides of his head.

In his dream, his hands were full of cards. His eyes, glasses intact, scanned their values. It was a good hand. A winning hand. Kings and aces stood out in sharp relief as he shifted his gaze beyond the piles of chips to the other player, masked by shadow--

What was happening? Knowing that seconds could be crucial, life-or-death, he forced his thoughts to process everything around him. Think through the pain, think through the pain... right... A goblin scrambled past him as Matteo sat up, turning to look after the beast. The world warped again as he oriented himself towards the stream, struggling through the throbbing and confusion. He’s got Ash. Was there anything he could do to make the goblin drop its weapon?

...The other player was faceless, hidden, unreadable. Rising panic choked Matteo as he glanced back at his hand and saw his cards had changed. There was no time to make a recovery, not this far in the game. His mouth went dry as he realized the chips on the line were worth sixteen years of textbooks...

It was strange, how a person could move on just momentum. How even staggering, unsteady steps in the right direction could build up force and speed. I feel like we’ve talked about this before. Was it at that first meeting-- that one meeting-- when they'd gone on and on how you didn’t need any experience or athletic ability, all you needed in the beginning was technique? Why was it so hard to remember?

The dealer’s fingers turned over the last card--

As he lunged, arms outstretched to tackle the goblin straddling Ash from the side, Matteo wondered why it felt so familiar. He turned his face aside instinctively and felt his aching head and chest collide with the creature-- he had to hope the momentum would be enough to knock the creature off Ash. Matteo was no heavyweight, but he weighed enough that maybe, maybe, he could pin it down in the water...
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