66 Fall, 511
He should have been tired.
It had been three weeks since he had given all his money to his closest friend and a charismatic stranger, a little less than that since he had unwittingly committed the best hours of his evenings to a piss-and-whiskey bar that sold as much blood as bets. He was a positively diurnal creature and yet he slept through the greater part of the day when he could not help it, and so he never slept enough because he hated to miss it. The echoes of dark lines had begun to weigh down on his young face, and yet...
The tavern still contained a group of lingerers, huddled around a single table at the tail end of a clumsy conversation, when the door swung open to admit him. The place was dark; the moon was a sliver on the ceiling. He crossed the long lobby to the bar with more energy than anyone should have had that time of night, then offered its usual tender a well-deserved break. The change and commotion unsettled the men, all but the one who dozed alone beside the hearth. By the time Victor had topped off a mug of lager, a chorus of chairs began to shriek of their departure.
If he cared, he did not show it. The door opened and closed in the time it took him to take his first swig. He set it down with a knock, gripped the inside of the bar, stared flatly and honestly at the sleeping man. “What are you unconscious for, hm?” He spat, but there was no malice on his tongue. His toes itched and his fingers bounced.
Finally, he produced a deck of cards from the pocket of his thin wool jacket. They were in the Ravok style, stolen from the ‘Wager with all intention of returning it the next evening. The quiet room was soon filled with the snap and whisper of moving paper beneath nearly-deft hands, training to be quick, to be exact, to be sneaky. He took off the jacket, tried and failed to fling the cards into and out of his sleeve as he dealt them, gathered them, shuffled them. They slid over the long counter and tripped to the dirty ground, but he did not bother with them until he was certain there were too few. When that time came, he collected each one with patient and practiced speed, that habitual look of indifference carved hard over restless determination. Then he rewarded himself with a gulp of cold alcohol and resumed his idle drills.