Games Old and New
Thirty-Sixth Day of Ikomi-eza (Ikomi Ascendant) 1348 A. L. (After Landfall)
"Would you speak of..." you begin, but before the full question is even formed in your thoughts Esha shakes her head sharply.
"There are some things best not bandied about for the gossips to pick over like crows with a carcass."
"That is not a tale for this day, honorable Bragi," you say, choosing the words with care so as not to let some slip of the tongue embarrass you. Alas if that were all you had to worry about...
The man in grey and silver laughs, as though he just heard the best jest he had heard all evening. "Ah, a pity then for I have held that question in my heart for many months. You see, I met the lady in the summer in a place where many hearts were lost, many hearts and some heads even..." Again he smiles brightly, but this time Esha's expression shifts from confusion to worry for a moment, gone so fast you might have thought you had imagined the whole thing if you did not still feel the nervousness upon her thoughts like a pale of acrid smoke.
"You must be mistaken good sir, for I did not know your face or your voice before this day and surely I would not have forgotten one as noble of mien and fair of manner as yourself," she says with full and unshaken aplomb.
"Ah, but your eyes were upon the board where mine were upon you, fair lady... and not only my eyes," Bragi replies. "While it is hardly that uncommon to see a stranger in the Broken Carafe laying silver on the game of Senim it is rare indeed to see one start with so little and gain so much as the Lady of the Blue Veil. Why, by the end decent winnings could be had simply betting on thine own victory. Is it any wonder then that I have marked the person 'neath the mask?"
A odd, uneasy silence had fallen over this corner of the hall, enough so that Antonio had raised his head from his talks, but among the titters and curious whispers that follow it is one man who looks on with a look far from indulgent, the fellow who you had noted before, saying that you must have looted the tin and not carried it from the north, Toki. His gaze is like hot coals on Bragi as he moves ponderously.
"He who makes light of misfortune shall not lightly escape the prick of Nikure's spindle," he proclaims.
Esha brushes the tip of her fingers against yours, a flash of magic in the doing. "
I fear I have lead you unknowing into a snare and now it is closing, I will do my best to distract them..."
Whatever else she had wished to say, whatever means she might have found to extricate herself, you do not know for Bragi is still speaking, for the first time a hint of anger in his words at the affront. "I do not jest nor do I speak lightly. Tis her. I know her by the lilt of her words that speaks of far Agber and if you would invoke Nikure than so shall I. That woman was the Lady of the Blue Veil, the one who won no less than six times six games of Senim and who thus gained herself a small fortune form many who are here, though if I recall aright none lost so much as you in bright gems Toki..."
"Did you...?" you whisper the words this time, in French, less so for the secrecy and more because surprise has robbed you for the moment of other means.
"Yes. It was the swiftest, surest way to gain enough wealth not to impose upon your charity," she replies.
Truth be told you would have preferred that to the very much uncharitable look of Toki the mage-blooded, as he has been reminded of his losses at the gaming table in a most public and humiliating manner.
"So then she is a witch. I knew that could not be any natural luck, but twisted sorcery that makes folly of fate!" he shouts, shaking off his wife's hand as she tries to restrain him. "I demand that my property be restored to me!"
Esha's thoughts flow into your mind almost too fast to parse now, faster by far than words through air can pass.
"I used no magic in moving the bones nor in the course of the game, though I did present myself in a manner that seemed to the eyes of the other players less skillful in the game, but if they were the sorts who upon seeing such a 'lucky streak' thought to profit by it then they deserve their fate."
What do you do?
[] Give in, you can pay what he is asking for, though it stings and the admission of dishonesty would likely harm you more (Lose 5,000 gp; Esha will pay you back 3,200 that remains of her initial haul)
[] Deny Bragi's words altogether, it is only his word against yours and he does not even seem to be a noble
[] Do not back down, Esha did not use magic on the players or the dice, only on herself
[] Write in
OOC: Esha did not cheat at the game proper, she is just very good at the strategy aspect and got good dice rolls, but she did use Aspect of Innocence to buff her bluff through the roof and play the novice with a lucky streak which drew in more players with more money and by the time she was done she had squired quite the haul.