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Macvale Gambling Master

Macvale Gambling Master

Will French

Last update: 2024-09-30

Chapter 1 The Road Beneath My Feet

  • The day Uncle Travis threw me out of the house, I hugged Aunt Rhea for one last time, thanking her for raising me all these years. Then I turned to Uncle Travis and told him that if he ever laid a hand on her again, I'd kill him.
  • My name is Saturn Cress. From the day I was born, my parents sent me to live with my Aunt Rhea and Uncle Travis in Nheron.
  • At first, my uncle, Travis Fleming, treated me well.
  • Of course, it wasn't because he liked me.
  • It was because my parents would regularly send him money for taking care of me.
  • And it was a lot of money—so much that, every time Uncle Travis got drunk, he'd slur through his grin, calling me his cash cow.
  • I was too young then to understand what my parents did for a living.
  • Until that summer day when I was six, when my father came back.
  • He didn't walk back. He was carried back.
  • On a stretcher, my father lay without arms or legs.
  • Blood soaked the white bandages wrapped around his body, turning them a shocking red.
  • By then, he was barely alive.
  • His last words to me were simple. "Live a quiet life, be an ordinary man, and never gamble."
  • That day, I cried until my tears ran dry.
  • And I don't think I ever truly smiled again after that.
  • When my father passed, my mother disappeared too.
  • Without their money, Uncle Travis turned on me.
  • First with insults, then with beatings.
  • And my cousin, Mike Fleming, five years older than me, joined in.
  • I remember every blow they dealt—2,436 slaps, 3,487 kicks, and 2,329 punches.
  • They whipped me with belts and beat me with sticks. Altogether, it happened 336 times.
  • If it weren't for Aunt Rhea shielding me, I'm sure they would've beaten me to death by now.
  • I hated them and held grudges.
  • Otherwise, I wouldn't remember the numbers so clearly.
  • Back then, I didn't know how to fight and dared not fight back, but I learned to endure their beatings.
  • Uncle Travis kicked me out, but I stayed off the streets. I went to Friday and became his student.
  • Friday wasn't his real name. He never told me what it was.
  • After I told him my name was Saturn, he insisted I call him Friday.
  • "Because after Friday comes Saturday," he said. "And Saturn rules Saturday."
  • He arrived in our small town a year after my father died.
  • When I met him, he told me he was the world's greatest magician.
  • He was also willing to teach me everything he knew.
  • I knew his tricks weren't just for entertaining crowds on the street. They were high-level gambling techniques.
  • I thought about my father's dying words, telling me to live an ordinary life and never gamble.
  • Still, I agreed to learn the magic tricks from Friday.
  • I wanted to avenge my old man.
  • My father had lost everything at the gambling table.
  • I was going to win it all back.
  • Friday's tricks were amazing.
  • With cards and dice, he could do anything. They appeared, disappeared, multiplied, or vanished, all in the blink of an eye.
  • So at seven years old, I started learning Friday's magic tricks.
  • Friday's life was carefree.
  • When he wasn't overseeing my training, he was drinking, partying, and chasing women.
  • He had an unusual obsession with women.
  • Even in his sixties, he partied nearly every night.
  • Once, he bragged about spending a night with three women.
  • He even tried to find a woman for me.
  • She wasn't old, probably eighteen or nineteen, with a thick layer of makeup plastered on her round face.
  • As she stood in front of me, her fake smile in place, slowly peeling off her clothes, I only said one word to her, "Leave."
  • It wasn't that I didn't like women. I just didn't like that kind of woman.
  • The woman I wanted had to be obedient, loyal, and dependent on me—someone who'd treat me like a king.
  • On my twentieth birthday, Friday threw a small party.
  • It was just the two of us.
  • He sat there, his silver hair glowing in the dim light, and smoked his favorite pipe. As always, he was the picture of calm and cool detachment.
  • "Saturn, pour me a drink."
  • I poured the golden whiskey into a glass, watching as it swirled and danced.
  • "How long have you been with me?" he asked, puffing on his pipe.
  • "Thirteen years, two months, and twenty-two days."
  • "What have I taught you?"
  • "Gambling skills."
  • "And what are gambling skills?"
  • "Breaking the rules and winning everything."
  • Friday nodded slightly.
  • He was satisfied with my answer.
  • He tapped out his pipe, picked up his glass, and looked at me.
  • He asked, "Do you know why I took you in?"
  • I shook my head.
  • Without waiting for a response, he continued, "I knew your father. He was an extraordinary gambler, but in the end, he was crushed at the table ... against that man. The man who defeated him possesses a level of power that leaves me feeling hopeless. However, God led me to you. You're a genius and a born gambler. You're the only one who can beat him. If you want to avenge your father, remember this: that man is at the biggest casino in Macvale. He's the king of Macvale. You have to sit at his table and knock him off his throne."
  • Then he handed me his glass in a nostalgic manner and said, "Drink this and you're free. You don't have to follow me anymore."
  • I knew this day would come, but I simply didn't expect it to be on my twentieth birthday.
  • As the whiskey went down, a fire spread from my stomach to my head.
  • After setting the glass down, Friday said, "Remember this; you've learned the gambling tricks. From this day forward, you are no longer an ordinary person. You are a professional gambler—someone who will stop at nothing to achieve your goals."
  • I thought of my father's final words, telling me to live quietly and never to gamble.
  • But who would've thought, after all these years, I still became a gambler?
  • Fate has a strange way of turning things around.
  • "Saturn, let me ask you one last question. Do you want to be the card master of Macvale or just some low-life gambler in Pehwell's underground casinos?"
  • "I want to be a card master."
  • Who wouldn't?
  • "Good. Then in three years, I want you to use everything you've learned and defeat your enemy. I want everyone in Macvale to know the name Saturn, the King of Gamblers!"
  • Three years?
  • Could I really do it?
  • I felt lost.
  • All these years, I'd been to countless gambling dens with Friday, but I had never gambled myself.
  • I didn't know how talented I was.
  • But I still nodded.
  • Friday had repeatedly told me, "The hardest part of gambling wasn't the technique." It was the mind.
  • "In front of thousands, whether you can fully display everything you've learned throughout your life, is the real test. Alright, from now on, you'll walk your path alone!"
  • Friday's tone was calm and easygoing. but I saw a trace of reluctance in his eyes.
  • "Path? Where's the path?" I asked, staring out the window, my voice barely a whisper.
  • "The path is beneath your feet."