Lost in Neon-lit Confusion

"All the time." Di eyed the dealer before offering his move, paying more attention to Lyn than the game. "I'll call." He looked over to the electric Navi as he gave a nod, explaining his response. "Akua always wants me to do stuff for him that I don't want to do. Wandering around this town is just one of them. He usually bugs me about something, I ignore his childish behavior, then either he or I gives in, depending on how set one of us is in our stance. It usually ends in me giving in and doing what he wants, but it's never really a big deal. Sure, I don't want to do it, but it's selfish of me to only do the things I want to do and ignore what my partner wants. It would be nice if it worked the other way around, too."

"Hey! I listen to you sometimes. It's not my fault you're a giant stick in the mud."

"That doesn't seem to be your problem, though." Di habitually checked his cards, diverting his eyes from Lyn. "You seem to put what your partner wants over what you want all the time. I don't think I could ever be that devoted to Akua."
"Got me." The dealer cheerily says, flipping the last card over. It's a 3 of Diamonds. He snatches up three more cards, hand moving like it's on a rubber draw, and considers them for a moment before putting down two more. "5 of Diamonds, 5 of Hearts."

The dealer tilts his head back up after laying the cards down... and hits Dee with a gaze that's like a set of teeth closing around his neck. There's no malice, no hate or anger in his gaze... but the steely-eyed look, the grin at the corner of his mouth... the dealer knows something.

DOWN: 5D, 5H
Dealer hand: 2 cards
Dee hand: 3S
Lyntael blinked as she looked up at her companion, hands clasped together in front of her. Her features were open now as she listened, an image of innocent surprise, and she tilted her head slightly as he spoke, then blushed as his answer turned back to her again. The slight pink of her cheeks only lasted for a few moments, but it was enough to make her drop her gaze again.

"I guess I do. I mean, I feel like I should, like I want to. Before I was given to Rogan, Eric told me a lot of things I should remember... that I should never be afraid to stand up for what I want," He'd told her many other things about herself, some of which made her blush, and others she wasn't convinced were really true, but she left it at just the one example out loud. "but I guess, I never feel like that really applies to Rogan. I try to object sometimes, but... The way he talks, his voice. I can't even begin to think about telling him no... even when it's something bad." She glanced up again, biting her lip. "So... how... I mean, when you argue or disagree, Akua... he'll listen to you then? Even if he still insists sometimes, I mean? Hmm..."

She seemed like she was about to say something more, but the play on the table caught her eye, and she looked down at the cards, her brows knitting. She blinked a few time,s then looked up tot he rule board for a few moments, and back to the tabletop. Her eyes flicked a few more times before turning up to fix on the dealer's face now. She hesitated, but then pointed down to the cards.

"H-hey... Um, if a call was made, shouldn't we see the whole play? Not just the last card? I-I mean, that's what the board says." She bit her lip, feeling out of place for bringing it up, since she had only just learned the game herself, and their dealer was clearly very experienced.
Di shrugged at Lyn's question, unsure himself on how the specific mechanics of the game worked. "I guess it doesn't matter either way, since he doesn't pick his move back up. Either way," he directed his glance at the dealer, "I'll throw down my three of spades and you can give me three cards, unless there's some weird rule that makes it and the five of hearts connect."

---

Move: 3S (throwing it away, pretty much)
Hand: ??, ??, ??
"I was trying to be quick, miss. I will be happy to show you my previous move." The dealer sets down his hand-- what remains of it, anyway-- and then moves the two cards he just laid down off of the pile before flipping the three cards in question over; they show, in order, 5S, 4S, 3D.

A moment later the navi lays the cards back onto the discard pile-- followed immediately by Dee's 3 of Spades-- and then draws three cards from the deck and hands them to Dee. "You are allowed to draw your own cards, sir. In fact most find it preferable. Regardless... it is still your move."

Dealer hand: 2 cards
Dee hand: 3C, AD, AS
Lyntael nods softly, momentarily put in her place by the dealer's completely reasonable answer, but she's taken aback only for a moment, returning instead to the problem before her. She bites her lip, examining the table, and one and begins to fidget gently with the hem of her skirt while she contemplates the cards.

"But it is important..." As much as she does say it aloud, it sounds far more like a small thoughtful murmur, and she seems to direct the words more at the card table than anywhere else. Caught in her thoughts now, she taps her teeth together and rocks slightly side to side as she thinks. "Because there's only five cards in the deck now and two in his hand, and we know that..." the remainder of the thought trails into silence, retreating back into her own head, but her eyes continue to flick between the cards, focused more closely now than before. After another moment she darts back a small step so that she can lean up to look from behind Di at the cards he receives, and add them to her calculations. By accident, perhaps, Di and their dealer both have unwittingly come across one of Lyntael's more bothersome personal foibles; her love of numbers, and playing with them.

She blinks quickly as she adds up, then purses her lips, pouting slightly. Under control while her focus and attention were divided before, the now deciding nature of Di's game seems to have tweaked her desire to reason things out to the point of excluding most, if not all of her other thoughts for the time begin. Sadly, enlightenment seems to elude her for the time being, and she sighs only a few moments later. "Hmmm... we know... but neither of them can be... mmm... too many variables." She shakes her head.

Apparently giving up, she turns her head to look up to Di again and her features are smooth and calm once more, irritation set aside.
"Hey, Di... Thankyou for doing this. I-I mean, tonight. I really do feel much better, and well..." Her eyes flicked down for a moment, her left hand still tweaking and tugging at the hem of her skirt distractedly. "I mean, you don't even know me, but you stopped anyway to see if I was ok, and then you stayed, to make sure I was. I've not been around very long, so, it really does mean a lot to me to meet someone so kind." She looks up, ducking her head slightly with the smallest hint of a grin, and perhaps the most delicate of pink spots at her cheeks, "Even if all I seem able to do is find interesting ways to lose money..." She swiftly turns back to the card table, looking down at it again, a little embarrassed at herself.
Di thoughtlessly looked at his cards before playing the first thing that seemed reasonable. When it came to strategy in this game, the navi was hopeless. "3 of Clubs" he said distantly before he half listened to Lyn. It was getting late, and he had already had a busy day, but he held on as best as he could.

"You can thank Akua for that. I'd much rather be helpful than wander around this city while my partner eyes everything. And don't worry about the money. It's not a big deal, and we can still win it back."

"Not the way you're playing!"

---

Move: 3C (3C)
Hand: AD, AS
((Apologies for the delay. Real life has kind of shaken me up lately, and I had to re-find myself a bit.))

"Three of Hearts." The dealer says, laying a single card face-down in response. Is he lying, or is he telling the truth? The dealer's face, his tone, his voice-- they're all the picture of a calm, jovial mindset. There's no trace of a bluff on his features, no hint of a lie. So... is he?

Dee will have to think carefully about this one; if the dealer wins this game, he wins the entire set.

So... does Dee call the dealer's bluff? Or does he play a card?

DOWN: 3H
Dealer hand: 1 card
Dee hand: AD, AS
((Hugs for Twi. Don't worry, real life always should come first, of course, no worries here.))

Lyntael's head comes up again and she manages a small grin for Di, her small embarrassment diffused by his casual response. She seems more comfortable again as her eyes go back to the table, and she focuses on the cards again, though there's still not enough information to placate her curiosity. It's clear that a small part of her at least, is fighting the urge to flip all the cards that are down, over, just to get the count right in her head, and her fingertips twitch delicately at the edge of the tabletop.

"I guess I still haven't found what I was looking for, not really. But it's ok for now, I think." She spares another glance up to Di. "This has been my first time out alone, and I've already learned a lot from it, especially if I'll need to start doing this more often." She shakes her head softly and looks back to the table, then up to the dealer, tilting her head slightly as she watches his face.
Di didn't want to get rid of one of his cards, since he could safely get rid of both if the right card popped up. The longer the game went on, the more unprepared the Navi felt to play the game. It seemed he needed the Pixie pixie to help him win at this point, and maybe her blessing would be over her after this next move. So hey, why not?

"I'll call."

---

Move: Call
Hand: AD, AS
The dealer hissed through his teeth. "Good call." He flipped the last card he'd played over-- revealing a 2 of Diamonds. With speed, the dealer's hand snapped out to the deck again and snatched up three more cards, a definitive frown on his face this time. "Only two more cards left in the deck, eh?" Sure enough...

"Don't worry. If it comes to it, I'll shuffle the deck. As for right now..." the dealer sighed. "2 of Hearts, Ace of Hearts." Two cards down. Two cards in the dealer's hand. Two cards left in the deck. Two cards in Dee's hand.

But would there be two more turns?

DOWN: 2H, AH
Dealer hand: 2 cards
Dee hand: AD, AS
As before, Lyntael's eyes followed the movement of cards as the dealer revealed and drew. Even though the young girl was only watching, her gaze showed as much concentration on the game in progress as any other, if not more, judging by the far more casual expressions the others wore. Between Di's resignation and their opponent's calm, she seemed to be putting more serious weight into the game than either player. Her lips moved silently as the cards were revealed, and even slightly vexed, their dealer seemed less concerned than her, caught up in trying to trace what cards were left... though chances were, he was simply far better at hiding it.

She perked up slightly, ears first, as their dealer called his cards. As he named them her mind derailed from trying to track what cards were actually in and out of play and she broke into a small grin, though thankfully only after he had finished speaking and moved his hand back. The smile was small and reserved and she was clearly trying to hide it, but the rest of her face was less guarded in her glee, lighting up with a quick excitement. Unconsciously she bounced on her toes again, ducking back and slightly behind Di so that she could peek up at his cards again, before returning to her place beside him at the table. pointlessly late, she schooled her face smooth and her body still, though her fingers fidgeted slightly against the table-top as she looked up to Di to watch his response.
Di let out a sigh of relief from his correct call. It was really just a shot in the dark, but it seemed to be exactly what he needed in order to wrap this game up. A smile and a confident nod accompanied his move, his whole demeanor changing as fortune began to smile down at him. He threw both of his cards on the table as he gave an almost arrogant reply. "Ace of Diamonds, Ace of Spades. That wraps this game up." Akua couldn't help but chime in at his partner's victory, heard only be the aquatic navi. "It's about time! You would have won this game ages ago if you just listened to me! Some partner you are."

A hand went to rub Di's neck as he glanced over at Lyn. This game felt like it had taken eternity, and he was glad that at least that match was over. But didn't they have one more to go? Di wasn't about to ask. "Maybe I should just let you play both hands next time. I'm not sure I can take another one of these games seriously."
As her companion played out, Lyntael bounced on her toes and clapped her hands softly in front of her chest. His hesitation a moment later drew her eyes to him though, and she looked up, biting her lip as her expression calmed again. Between his gentle reluctance and the occasional moments of distance when she was sure he must be listening to his operator, a small realisation occurred to her.

"Oh! I shouldn't... I mean, I don't want to hold you here, or, or, ah... make you feel like you need to stay or look after me, if you don't want to, or if you've got other things to do, or, or..." She trailed off again, and swallowed, giving herself a small shake. "What I mean is, I'll be alright, at least, I should be, now, if you or your operator don't want to waste any more time taking care of a silly girl who always thinks too much, and too little. I— I don't want to keep dragging you about, if you'd rather be doing other things, or, if you need to go, or if..." Once more the words tumbled into a mumbling of other possibilities, and as she spoke her hands clasped together at her waist again, over her skirt, her eyes darting down and to the sides between coming quickly back up to his. "I, I don't mind, it's alright. I'll be ok."

Amidst this short time out, Lyn has barely looked at their dealer, forgetting completely to ask whether such a thing would be alright with him, or what that would mean for the game. For the moment though, she was more focused on Di's hesitation.
And so, Dee lays down the winning move. The dealer claps, the cards lightly slapping together between his hands, and then puts them down on the table. "Good game. Well then, that evens the score up at 2-2. Who will be playing the tiebreak- ohp, one moment, please." A small light sits blinking on the dealer's wrist, and he taps it-- prompting a screen to appear in front of him. It's opaque from Dee and Lyn's end.

"Stanley! What is it?" The dealer's body moves, making it clear that he's nodding.
"Well yes, but I'm with some clients right now--" More movement.
"Oh, very well."

A moment later the window closes. "Folks, I am sorry, but I'll have to cut this short. However--" he reaches below the table, then pulls out the two chips that they were playing for. "I'm not a crook! So I'll forego the tiebreaker round and give you both these for playing some good games." The navi lightly tosses the two boxes-- one to each navi-- and then claps his hands twice. Not a second passes before the dealer's table disappears, and then a second later, he does as well, shooting off in a beam of light.

LYNTAEL GET: ZAPRING1
DIDIVER GET: MISTCONVERGENCE1
Di barely noticed the box as it fell into his hands, fumbling to keep it from falling on the ground. It wasn't a very big container, but the prize inside wasn't large either. He gave a smile and a glance towards Lyn. "Well that paid off, I think. And really, sticking around isn't a big deal. I've got no-"

Suddenly, Di disappeared, box and all.

On the other side of the partnership, Akua was scrambling to get back towards the computer to no avail. A few employees had dragged him out as he made the case that "Closing time doesn't mean leaving time!", but of course the not-so-bright teen's words wouldn't break through his capture's skulls. The cafe was closing, and Akua had already ignored the last few warnings to leave before the staff had to take action. The result was an emergency Jack Out for Di as the PET's connection to the net was broken, although the aquatic navi still had his rewards from the dealer. Di scolded Akua for his irresponsibility as his partner stared at the cafe's door from the outside, bitter at the way he had been treated. "You could have given me a warning or something. I didn't get a chance to properly say goodbye to Lyntael, and if they had taken you a second sooner we would have walked away empty handed."

"Hey, it's not like I didn't try," Akua defended. "They were stubborn about me leaving, although I swear I wasn't the last one in there. I think they just didn't like me."

"Probably because you were yelling half of the time we were in there."

"That has nothing to do with it!"

"Sure. Right."

"Whatever!"

[exit]

[Obtained Mist Convergence 1]
In an interesting irony, it was their dealers distraction that brought Lyntael's attention back to him, from her companion. Unconsciously, her head tilted slightly as she watched him, listening without thinking to half a conversation. The thought came to her to ask if it would be alright to cut their game short somehow, but even as she was beginning to decide how exactly to ask, the apparently harried card-sharp wrapped up his call and made his own apologies to them both.

She found herself nodding softly, accepting the curtailing of the game, but her eyes opened wider as he tossed them the prizes they hadn't quite won. She caught hers, blinking a few times in shock, and opened her mouth to say... what exactly, she wasn't sure, but something at least; it seemed too much to simply give them what they'd played for, without actually winning. She'd only begun trying to pick the right words in her mind though, by the time their host made very fast work of packing up and jacking out. She closed her mouth again, looking at the spot where he'd been for another moment, and still feeling like she'd been given more than she'd earned.

Another part of her mind answered back, gently pushing her instinctive feelings to the side with logic: they had made a wager, after all, a sum of money from them, against chips from him... If he'd won, he'd have kept both the money, and the chips, of course... and so if they had, the thought went on, have gotten the prize, and reclaimed their wager, too... so, really, giving them the chips was just a good-natured way of breaking it evenly, since he wasn't gong to return the wager, right? She was still a little annoyed at herself for how quickly her mind rationalised it, but as she glanced down at the chip case in her hand, she shrugged, letting her thoughts move forward.

She managed a pleased grin as she looked up to Di once more, the satisfaction in his voice spreading to her as well as he spoke. Just as suddenly, though, he was gone, vanishing instantly in the simplest form of instant automatic jack-out, cut off mid sentence, mid word even. Lyntael couldn't help but start backward with surprise, instinctively looking around herself even as her brain caught up with what her eyes had already seen. No, there was nothing hostile, of course not. After a moment's hesitation, she reached out her spare hand to the place where he's been standing and closed her eyes, letting the part of her that was designed for it feel the residual pathways as they faded swiftly back to the background hum of the network. Definitely a jack-out enforced from the operator's end, she concluded. A soft sigh escaped her and her shoulders slumped. He had said his operator was a bit flighty and quickly distracted, though she found herself wondering if that would be better than an operator the seemed to forget she even existed except when he needed something.

Giving herself a small shake, Lyntael took another couple of moments to look about, stifling a small yawn. She hadn't really been out all that long, but Rogan never usually slept for more than a few hours at a time, and he couldn't wake to find her missing. Probably best to head back. She glanced down to the box in her hand and held it between two fingers, tapping it gently with a third. It converted quickly into a soft glowing data string that curled around her fingers and wrist for a few seconds, before spiralling up her arm and under her vest, to reappear from the other side in the middle of her chest, darting into her emblem. Or it should have. The string seemed to strike at the centre of her emblem an them recoil, beginning a slow circling pattern around the symbol at her chest. Her brows drew down. That was right; she wasn't properly jacked in, just on one of the PET's emulated connections, and without Rogan awake to stabilise it on the other end, she couldn't even feel the connection at all, this far away. She'd have to trace back to near her point of entry at least until she could feel the connection again, if she wanted to get home safely.

The reminder of just how cut off she was, alone once again and later in the night now than before, brought all the feelings of fearful isolation rushing back, and she hugged herself unconsciously, trying to shake it off. Don't be silly; there had been nothing even remotely dangerous about the outing so far, and she'd felt perfectly safe all the while she had been walking around with Di. It had been positively fun, except for that first encounter when she'd arrived... back where she had to make her way now. She immediately wished the last part of that thought hadn't come to her. A faint static hum danced over her skin outside of her control, marking her nervousness even as she fought to tell herself she wasn't.

Lyntael forced herself to take a deep breath and did her best to shake off the mood, again. It worked a little better this time and she looked around. Right. That was the way they had come; time to get moving. She set off, walking quickly with the unmissable haste of a young girl who really wished she wasn't out alone in the night.

Following the way back wasn't too hard really. It was a small comfort that at least her memory for such things was good; one less thing to worry her, certainly. She tried to convince herself that there was nothing at all to worry about, in fact, not really, but it wasn't working. All she could think about as she walked, instead, was the fear that the ones who had said those frightening things, and followed after her, would still be around the area, waiting. That really was silly, she knew. They might still be around, perhaps, but it would be very foolish to think they'd be waiting for her, wanting to follow her and even wanting to... visible sparks crackled off her skin and she quickly shoved the thought away and quickened her pace further, seeking desperately for another one to distract herself with.

She wasn't looking around much as she pressed on, returning bit by bit towards the busy intersection where she'd first arrived. She was so caught up in tyring not to fret that aside from following the path she remembered taking, she barely watched about herself at all. Exactly the wrong sort of behaviour for the situation, in fact, though the thought never occurred to her. She barely noticed passing by the quiet park she had met Di in. Instead she was busy finding other thoughts to drown out the unwanted ones. She wondered whether she'd ever meet Di again, after tonight. He was so kind, and considerate to her, and she thought she wouldn't mind seeing him again, even if just to thank him properly, and hopefully be able to say a proper farewell, too. She wondered if it had just been his operator being flighty and distractable, and pulling the poor navi along with him, or whether it had been something more serious. She hoped it wasn't anything bad that had pulled him out so suddenly. Still, in the end she had to admit, she'd probably never know. The chances of Rogan having anything to do with a person like Di had described his operator to be seemed very slim, and unless she planned on making trips out alone like this more often...

She paused, her thoughts trailing off as she felt the faint trace of the emulated link from her PET tickle at the edge of her awareness. Almost close enough to get home again. The thought was followed by several moments of blank-minded shock, while her feet dragged to an equally abrupt halt. That same group of navis were still lounging around the place where she'd first seen them, chatting amongst themselves. She stared, frozen for a moment, and one of them looked up. He blinked and looked again, surprise crossing his face as recognition surfaced, then grinned and waved to her. The others followed his gaze, some turning around to see.

A calmer Lyntael would probably have recognised that they weren't waiting for her to come back, and were merely a group of navis hanging out and killing time. A calmer Lyntael would probably have also recognised the first one's hesitant smile and even more hesitant wave as that of a guy feeling like he should apologise to a pretty girl, and unsure if he'd get the chance. Lyntael was not calm. Instead, she let out a small shriek, flinching back and away, even though she was on the other side of the street, arms in front of her face as jolts of electricity danced madly over her skin and even broke free enough to arc to the ground and nearby objects. The next moment she was running, completely heedless, for the alleyway she'd first arrived in. As she got close enough she reached out desperately and the shoddy, unstable link sprang to life just long enough to engulf her form in a faltering cascade of light and electricity, dragging the poor girl roughly back to her PET.

----------
((Jack out, Return to => Electown))
((+25 FXP between DiDiver and Lyntael... if you want the NPC FXP you will need Twi))