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Now reading: Volume 2—Chapter 16: Loaded Dice and a Loaded Gaze from Records of Immortality, a Reincarnation novel by A.S. Storyteller.

Ashan took the proffered dice.

It sat in his palm, deceptively light, deceptively innocent. But the weight was wrong—he could feel it, the subtle imbalance that spoke of hollowed wood and hidden lead. The surface was too smooth, worn by countless manipulated rolls, each one designed to separate fools from their coin.

A cheat's die. His face betrayed nothing. Of course.

His grayish-white eyes swirled for a fraction of a second—not enough for Rokan to notice, not nearly enough—but enough for [Viksana: Analyse] to dissect the cube's hidden architecture. The weighted core revealed itself, the internal chanism that favored certain outcos over others, the careful craftsmanship of a man who had learned that honesty was for those who could afford it.

A lesser man might have accused Rokan. A reckless one might have relied solely on his foresight to play around the disadvantage. But Ashan was neither. He saw a simpler, more elegant solution.

"Thank you," he said, his voice flat, utterly without inflection.

He made a show of shaking the dice in his cupped hands—loose, casual, the motion of a beginner who had never held a die before. But as he brought his hands over the board to roll, his pinky finger moved.

It was a small motion, almost invisible, the kind of adjustnt that would have been lost in the general chaos of the ga hall. But it was precise, deliberate, the product of a vision that had already shown him exactly how much pressure to apply, exactly where to strike. The counter-force nullified the weight before the die ever left his hand.

The dice clattered onto the board. Tumbled. Wobbled. Settled.

A six.

Rokan's smug smile faltered for a heartbeat. His eyes flicked down to the die, confusion flickering behind them before he quickly masked it, the smile snapping back into place like a mask being adjusted.

"Ah!" His voice was strained, the cheerfulness forced. "A fine start for a beginner. Luck favors you."

"Luck has nothing to do with it." Ashan moved his Padati piece forward two squares, his fingers finding the grooves with the ease of long practice. "It's all in the roll."

The ga began in earnest.

The board was an eight-by-eight grid known as an Ashtapada, its squares alternating between light white and dark black. At its center lay a four-by-four area called no man's land—a killing ground where pieces went to die and strategies went to be tested. One player held the first and second horizontal columns. The other held the seventh and eighth. Between them, sixty-four squares of possibility and consequence.

Rokan, flustered by the failed gambit, played aggressively. His moves were sharp, practiced, the moves of a man who had spent years learning the rhythms of the ga, the patterns that separated victory from defeat. He was clearly experienced.

But Ashan was sothing else.

He didn't just see the board. He saw the flow of the ga—the way pieces moved in relation to each other, the way a sacrifice here could create an opening there, the way the geotry of victory was written in the spaces between the squares.

His eyes didn't glow. But in micro-bursts, flickers that lasted less than a heartbeat, he used [Viksana: Foresee]. He wouldn't see the entire ga—that was beyond him, beyond anyone. But he would glimpse the imdiate consequences of a potential move: a vision of his Raja in check, a key piece being captured two turns down the line, a trap that had been laid three moves ago and was only now springing shut.

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It was like having a constant, whispering intuition of danger and opportunity. Not a map of the future, but a shadow of it—just enough to guide his steps, just enough to keep him from falling into the holes that Rokan was digging.

He played not to make the perfect move, but to make the move that forced Rokan into a position with no good options. He sacrificed a minor piece to lure Rokan's Gaja into a trap, watched the man's face flicker with triumph as he took it, and then struck with his Ashwa, forking two pieces at once, forcing a loss that would have been avoidable if only Rokan had seen it coming.

Rokan's confidence eroded with every move. The smugness drained from his face, replaced by a sheen of sweat that gathered at his temples, his upper lip, the space between his brows. His hands, which had been quick and sure, began to hesitate. His eyes, which had been sharp with calculation, grew dull with the slow realization that he was being outmaneuvered on a board he had thought he owned.

The small crowd that had gathered around them began to murmur. Side wagers shifted, coins changing hands as the spectators adjusted to the new reality unfolding before them.

"Wow! He sure has a knack for this."

"Where does he co from?"

"You..." Rokan's voice was a hiss, low and furious, the voice of a man who had been beaten and knew it. "You're no beginner."

"I read the rules on the way over." Ashan didn't look up from the board as he moved his Mantri to control the center, his voice calm, unhurried. "They were quite clear."

The Mantri is the most powerful piece on the Ashtapada. It can move in any direction—but only within a radius of three squares from the Raja. It is tethered to its sovereign, always near, always watching. And to move the Mantri, one must roll a six.

It was a slow, thodical strangulation. Rokan, realizing he was outmatched in strategy, grew desperate. His moves beca erratic, his calculations wild. On his turn, he tried to make a move that was blatantly against the rules, sliding his Ratha diagonally across the board, his hand trembling with the weight of his own desperation.

Ashan's hand shot out.

His fingers closed around Rokan's wrist before the piece could touch the square, the grip like iron, reinforced by a trickle of prana that made his bones feel like steel.

"The Ratha moves only vertically or horizontally." His voice was cold, quiet, carrying only between the two of them. The crowd had gone silent, watching, waiting. "Unless you are playing a different ga you haven't told about."

He let the words hang in the air between them, heavy as stones dropped into still water.

"Would you like to forfeit the fifteen bronze now?"

Rokan's face paled. His wrist twisted in Ashan's grip, once, twice, a futile attempt to break free. Then he yanked it back, his eyes blazing with pure, unadulterated hatred. He knew he was beaten—beaten in the ga, beaten in his attempt to cheat, beaten in the one arena where he had thought himself untouchable.

He slumped in defeat.

"Checkmate," Ashan said a few moves later. His Raja was positioned safely, protected by the pieces that remained, while his Mantri closed the net around Rokan's sovereign. There were no escapes. There were no last-minute saves. There was only the slow, inevitable fall of the final piece.

The last grain of sand fell through the hourglass.

For a mont, no one moved. Then, in stunned silence, Rokan counted out fifteen bronze coins from his purse and shoved them across the board. The tal clinked against the wood, bright and accusing. He stood without a word, his face a mask of fury and humiliation, and walked away, the crowd parting before him like water before a stone.

Ashan collected his winnings. The coins were warm in his palm, fifteen small weights that added up to sothing larger. He tucked them into his pouch, feeling the weight settle against his hip.

Twenty-one bronze coins. He let the number turn over in his mind, examine its edges. Not a fortune. But breathing room.

He looked at the empty board, at the scattered pieces, at the hourglass that had run its course. His fingers found the pendant in his pocket, its surface cool, its thread worn.

The pendant had told him he would win. But it was his own mind, sharpened by a power that peered into fate itself, that had secured the victory. He had trusted fate—but he had relied on himself.

It was a good lesson.

He gathered his winnings, rose from the table, and walked out into the fading light of the evening, the weight of bronze in his pocket and the taste of victory on his tongue. Behind him, the ga hall buzzed with speculation, with wonder, with the slow spread of a reputation that would follow him wherever he went.

He did not look back.

The future, he had learned, was best approached with eyes forward.

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