The Adjoa Gambit
by Rick Novy
Shannon pressed the door firmly closed before embarking on the long walk to the
rationing station. Today marked the sixth anniversary of her arrival at ARIP, the
Antarctic Reservation for Indigenous Population, but she still couldn't get used to
the bitter cold. Shannon's mind drifted to the memories of a warm Phoenix
evening from somewhere in her childhood, then shook it off to concentrate on the
task at hand -- collecting the family's food ration for the week.
As she approached the rationing station, Shannon saw the line snaking around the
corner of the two-story corrugated aluminum building. The wait would be at least
an hour today. She adjusted the empty bag slung over her shoulder and hastened
to the end of the line, settling in behind a woman with three children. The woman
was struggling to keep her children from complaining about the cold.
"Most of us leave the children back in the domes," Shannon said.
When the woman turned around, Shannon could see that her face was very dark.
She said something in a language Shannon never heard before, maybe an African
language. Life at ARIP was rougher on some people than others. English was the
default common-tongue, and the newcomers who didn't speak English really
struggled until they could learn.
The tallest of the woman's children said something in their language, then they
conversed for several seconds before the little girl, no more than ten years old,
turned to Shannon and said, "We don't have a dome."
No dome? Everyone had a dome. The little girl had to be lying.
The line edged forward three steps. The girl helped her mother to chase the two
younger children back into the line before they moved.
The girl had a look on her face. It was the look of a person numbed by trauma, as
if Shannon could disembowel someone and the girl wouldn't blink. It was the
look of acceptance that death was inevitable, and soon in coming, and the look
that the good times were gone forever, if they ever existed at all for this little girl.
Shannon felt pity for the girl and her family, even though her own situation was
not much better. "Where are you staying until you get a dome?"
The girl conversed again with her mother, but this time, the woman grabbed her
shoulder and turned her away from Shannon. A few moments passed and the line
shuffled forward another few steps. As the girl moved, she turned her head and
mouthed, "Nowhere." The mother placed a gloved hand on the girl's head and
turned her around.
The girl remained silent until they reached the entrance, just a wooden door
propped open to allow the snaking line to slither inside. Upon entering the
building, the African family was confronted by a guard, a big, leather-skinned
troglodyte of a Proc. He sat behind a folding table, and a worn deck of cards
rested near his left elbow.
He looked grumpy. Most Procs were grumpy, or worse. Rumor said that their
planet in the Procyon system was largely tropical jungles and swamps, and they
hated the cold. As a result, only the dregs of their society ended up at ARIP as
guards.
The African woman began to cry as the Proc gestured with wild
incomprehensibility. Shannon was terrified despite being able to understand the
guard with her meager vocabulary of the Proc language. At first, he was waving
around the deck of cards, then he was just trying to get the woman to sign in with
her thumbprint.
A gap formed in the line ahead of the African family. Shannon tried to approach
the little girl to explain the situation, but retreated when the troglodyte growled at
her. The woman finally seemed to understand, pressed her thumb against the
reader, then filled the gap in the line.
The Proc waved the cards at Shannon, but she just pressed her thumb against the
reader and continued on her way, ignoring the Proc.
The line flowed quickly once past the gatekeeper. Shannon exchanged her food
coupon for a box of rations, dropped it into her bag, then made her way to the
door. She passed the African family on the way out. The little girl was talking to
Larry, a black preacher from Oakland. Her mother stood nearby, wrestling to keep
the girl's two younger siblings from running off. Shannon waved when the girl
glanced in her direction, but the girl quickly turned her attention back to Larry.
#
Back in her dome that evening, Shannon had just put her little one to bed when she
heard a knock on the door. Who would come to call at this hour? Sure, there was
still daylight at this hour, but protocol . . . She opened the door until it was
stopped by the chain, then looked out the crack to see Larry and the African
family. The children were shivering from the cold.
Shannon unlatched the chain then opened the door wide. "Come in, get out of the
cold."
Larry let the family file past. The mother was still carrying her box of rations.
Larry entered last. "Thank you for letting us in." Shannon closed the door as
Larry continued. "I have a favor to ask of you."
Interesting. This woman who would have nothing to do with Shannon earlier was
now sitting in her dome. And Larry, he was usually on the granting end of favors.
"What kind of favor?"
The two now joined the African family in the living chamber. Larry took a seat on
the sofa next to the woman, and Shannon sat on a packing crate she used as an
extra chair. Larry waited until everyone was seated before answering Shannon's
question.
"This is the Olympio family." He waved his hand in their direction. "They are in
need of shelter, and my dome is far too small."
So, the little girl was telling the truth. They really didn't have a dome -- but why?
"What happened to the dome they were issued by the Procs?"
Larry and the oldest girl, the girl who understood some English, exchanged
glances before he answered. "They lost it."
"Would you mind explaining how one loses something the size of a dome?"
Shannon asked, hoping that the tone of voice didn't sound overly condescending.
The little girl answered. "The dome is still there."
Shannon's face must have telegraphed her confusion, because Larry spoke as she
looked toward the little girl. "They lost title to the dome to a Proc. They love to
gamble, you know."
After six years at ARIP, of course Shannon knew of the Proc penchant for
gambling. She'd just never heard of anyone stupid enough to bet their dome -- or
desperate enough.
"I know what you're thinking," Larry said, "but they were duped." He shook his
head. "So many of our people are being duped, but never anything like this.
They've been forcing people to bet their ration coupons for quite some time. I fear
this family might be the first of many to lose their dome.
"I didn't realize it was that bad a problem," Shannon said.
"People talk to me, it's part of the job of being a preacher."
"How long do they need to stay?" She asked, but she already knew what the
answer would be.
"I don't know, Shannon."
Her instinct was right, the answer was indefinitely.
Larry continued. "The town council plans to discuss a course of action this
evening." He glanced at his wristwatch. "In fact, I must be going if I'm to be
there on time."
Shannon let Larry out, then turned her attention to her unexpected guests. The
African woman, tired and haggard-looking, sat at the end of the sofa, picking
absently at the thread on the arm that was pulled loose when it snagged on the
door latch the day Shannon moved it into the dome.
The oldest child, the one who could speak some English, sat still, staring at the
door. The other two children had already fallen asleep. An odor wafted through
the room. One of the children must have farted.
Shannon closed her eyes so the family wouldn't see her roll them, then she sat
back on the packing crate and addressed the oldest girl. "Did you eat?"
The girl shook her head almost imperceptibly. Something had definitely changed
the little girl. She seemed eager to talk in line, now she was so closed up. The
mother had stopped playing with the thread and was now using her fingernail to
trace the scratches on the end table left when Shannon's son pushed a brick across
the surface.
She glanced back and forth between the two Africans as she realized that she still
didn't even know their names. She left them there to fetch extra blankets and
pillows from the linen closet. When she returned with arms full of bedding, they
hadn't moved.
"You can sleep in this room," Shannon said as she set the pile of blankets on the
floor in front of the sofa. Nobody moved, so she walked away. A glance at the
clock accompanied by a yawn told her that she needed sleep, too.
#
Shannon awoke with the feeling she was being watched. She opened her eyes to
see the oldest African girl standing arm's length away from the bed, then struggled
to revive enough mental capacity to talk.
"What is it, honey?"
The little girl didn't move at first. Shannon was about to say something when the
little girl spoke in a quiet voice. "We didn't mumble mumble."
"What did you say, sweetie?" She propped herself on one elbow as the little girl
repeated what she said.
"We didn't need to lose our dome."
"I don't understand."
The little girl fidgeted before she replied. Her voice remained quiet. "The Procs
aren't good players. I know how to beat them, but my mother wouldn't listen to
me because I'm just a kid."
Shannon's mind was still groggy with sleep, so what the girl said wasn't really
sinking in. She though about it for a moment, fighting the urge to go back to
sleep. Finally, she asked the girl, "What do you mean they aren't good players?"
She put her head down and kicked at the carpet with her right foot as she replied.
"They are sloppy. They try to scare you to make you sloppier than them, but I
know they're sloppy so I can beat them. I'm not sloppy."
Confused, Shannon pushed herself to a seated position. "I don't understand why
you're telling me this."
The little girl stopped fidgeting now. She looked Shannon square in the eye and
said, "Because I need your help."
What did this little girl really want? It couldn't be just a place to sleep. Shannon
had a feeling there was something more. Something dangerous. "You need my
help? With what?"
There was great determination in those dark little eyes. Whatever the girl wanted,
Shannon was sure she would get it.
"I'm going to get my dome back." Not her family's dome now, her dome. "I need
you to bet with the Proc. I'll tell you exactly what to do. Trust me."
Trust her? Shannon didn't even know the girl's name! And then, bet with a Proc?
Bet what? The only thing of any value was her own dome. Why repeat somebody
else's mistake? No, betting with a Proc was out of the question.
Shannon had to give the girl some kind of answer so they both could get back to
sleep. But, what to say?
"Why don't you have your mother help you?"
The little girl's face contorted in anger. "She didn't listen to me the last time,
what makes you think she'll listen this time?" She made an exaggerated sigh.
"Besides, she doesn't have anything left to bet."
The girl had a point, but that wasn't good enough for Shannon to risk her own
dome. "What's in it for me?" Shannon stared down the girl as she would an adult.
"Why should I risk my dome to try winning back the dome of complete
strangers?"
The girl looked hurt. "But we're staying at your house. We aren't strangers."
"I don't even know your names!"
"Really?" The girl's face softened. "Now that I think about it, I don't know your
name either."
Shannon extended her arm. "I'm Shannon. My son Alvin is asleep in his room.
You'll meet him in the morning."
The girl took Shannon's hand and as they shook, the girl said, "My name is Adjoa
Olympio. My mother's name is Amima. My sister is Ama, my brother is Kossi."
Shannon couldn't help but pry. "Where is your father?"
"His name was Koffi. He was killed in the resistance." She gazed down at her
feet. "A lot of the dads died in the resistance in Togo."
Shannon pulled young Adjoa closer. "A lot of dads died in the resistance in every
country. And so, the Procs send the women and children here along with the few
remaining men, like the preacher, Larry." With Adjoa opening up, Shannon
wanted to get as much information out of her as possible. "Your mother, she
doesn't speak any English?"
"She can only speak in Ewe."
Shannon tried to pronounce it. "Elway?"
"That's close," she said, "but without the L. It's named after my tribe." There was
an uncomfortable pause, and then Adjoa continued. "Will you help me?"
Shannon sighed. "Let me sleep on it."
#
Shannon had already made her decision not to do it, but wanted to save the
inevitable fight for morning. Morning came, and she still didn't know how to tell
Adjoa that there would be no betting. Reluctantly, she threw off the covers and
was about to make her way to the kitchen for breakfast when her son, Alvin, burst
into the room in tears, boogers flowing out his nose.
"Mommy! There's strangers in our house!"
She brought the boy close to comfort him, then pulled a tissue from the box on the
nightstand to wipe his nose. He knew the routine, and waited patiently while
Shannon wiped it away.
"The people in our house arrived after you went to sleep." She stood to put on a
robe. "They don't have a dome, baby." She tied the robe then picked up the boy.
"Everybody has a dome," Alvin said.
Shannon smiled at the innocence of the three-year-old. "They don't. That's why
they're staying here."
"Why don't they have a dome?" Sometimes Shannon wondered what it was like
to know nothing other than ARIP -- to never have seen Arizona, highways, cacti,
a lake, or even dirt free of ice and snow.
"I don't know." How would the kids get along? As far as she knew, Adjoa was
the only English-speaker in the group. How would Alvin react to children his age
that spoke only, what was that language? Elway? She asked her son, "Do you
want to meet them?"
The boy nodded, barely perceptible, but it was a nod nonetheless. Shannon carried
the boy out to the living chamber, where Amima, the mother, was folding her
blanket, and her three children were still asleep.
Adjoa looked surprisingly childlike in her slumber; nothing like the girl Shannon
spoke with in the night. Deceptively peaceful. She set Alvin on the small kitchen
counter. Amima had finished folding the blanket and was now placing it on the
floor next to the sofa, then she walked toward the kitchen.
"Good morning, Amima."
If the woman was surprised that Shannon knew her name, she certainly didn't
show it. Instead, she nodded at Shannon with a curt smile.
"There's no coffee," Shannon said. "Hasn't been any coffee for three years. I
have some tea." She reached into the cupboard and handed the box to Amima.
The African woman studied the box, turning it end-over-end. Finally, she opened
the box and put it to her nose. She smiled, a real smile this time, then removed
one of the tea bags and handed the box back to Shannon, who took one herself
before putting it back in the cupboard. When it was put away, she walked to the
small electric burner to heat some water. As the water boiled, Adjoa stirred from
her sleep and stumbled into the kitchen.
Alvin, still sitting on the counter watching the activity, was the first to notice her.
"Joa," he said.
"You must be Alvin," she said. "Good morning, Alvin. Good morning,
Shannon." She turned to her mother next, and they exchanged a few words in
what had to be Ewe.
"I have oatmeal," Shannon said. "It's not much, but my rations are only for two
people."
"Please," Adjoa said. Shannon poured the boiling water into two cups then filled
the pan with water, setting it on the stove before she went digging for the oatmeal
Adjoa stood in the middle of the kitchen doorway watching. Finally, as the water
started to boil, the girl said, "Have you decided?"
It was time. "Yeah," Shannon said as she turned off the burner. She poured the
hot water into two bowls then dumped in the instant oatmeal. She spoke again
only after she started to stir the oatmeal. "I'm not going to be able to help you."
A hurt look imprinted itself onto Adjoa's face. "I'm sorry, but there it doesn't
make sense for me to bet my dome to win yours back." She lifted Alvin from the
counter and handed him one bowl of oatmeal. "If I win," she continued, "I gain
nothing, if I lose, I lose everything. It's a bad risk."
That argument didn't seem to persuade Adjoa. "You won't lose. I know how to
beat them," she said.
Poor girl. She's been through so much that she believes her story. "I'm sorry,
Adjoa. I've made my decision." Shannon tried to hand the other bowl of oatmeal
to her, but she refused to take it. Instead, she turned and walked away. Not letting
them in would have been so much easier.
Amima looked at Shannon with eyes that said she didn't know what was wrong
with her daughter. She followed Adjoa into the other room and a heated
discussion in Ewe followed. Shame to waste the oatmeal. Shannon ate the second
bowl herself.
The water was running low, and Shannon wanted to leave Alvin with Amima in
order to fetch some ice from the quarry. Adjoa was still too angry to act as an
interpreter for the two adults, so Shannon gesticulated as best she could. Amima
clearly didn't understand.
She sighed as she pulled Alvin's coat from the closet. Amima started barking
orders to the children. Shannon really didn't want the woman along. She didn't
want Alvin along either, but at least he would sit still. A gentle touch on the
shoulder and a shake of the head was enough to communicate to Amima that she
was to stay here.
Shannon pulled Alvin's coat from the closet, but Amima shook her head this time,
then took Alvin by the arm to gently pull him toward the other children. Maybe
progress was being made. Shannon put Alvin's coat back on the plastic hanger
and into the closet it went. Instead, she pulled out her own parka, complete with
the zipper torn away from the fabric for the bottom three inches. She took one last
look at Alvin, but he was already busy playing with Ama and Kossi. She left him
playing and went to get the ice.
She grabbed the pull sled at the side of the dome then began walking toward the
ice quarry. The quarry was still on the outskirts of town, even with the steady
population increase. If the Procs kept finding people to relocate, the quarry would
be in town within the next two years. If.
The wind was still, so the arctic air was almost bearable. She walked quickly after
she was out of town. A small mountain separated the quarry from the town. As
she walked around the mountain she was stopped by a Proc guard. Tall and ugly
as a troll, the Proc fondled her parka, perhaps appraising its worth.
The Proc ran its hand up and down the seams and along the zipper. When he
discovered the small tear where the zipper had separated from the fabric, he
inspected it carefully. Then, suddenly, he stood and said in horribly mangled
English, "I want to bet for your garment."
Shannon rolled her eyes. Same troll, once a week at least. "I'm not interested in
placing any bets."
The gargoyle took a step closer to Shannon, spreading his arms to make himself
look as large as possible. "I think you should reconsider."
"And I think you should invest in a toothbrush," Shannon said. "Your breath
stinks." She took a few more steps, still pulling the sled behind.
The Proc shuffled after her. "I could have your dome destroyed," he said.
Shannon smiled because she knew all the Proc tricks. "Get real," she said.
"You bet me the garment."
Shannon stopped and turned around. "What's in it for me?"
"Ah, you interested. Good." The Proc smiled as if it was pleased at itself. "I bet
you extra meal to-day."
"What is the game?" Shannon asked.
"Morningstar."
Shannon shook her head. "Too risky. Give me a game with better odds."
"Morningstar with wild card."
Shannon turned her back on the Proc and continued to the ice quarry. Upon the
return trip, she discovered the same Proc, only this time, he was wearing an ill-fitting white fur coat. She just shook her head, hoping the alien would go away.
Anywhere.
When she got back to the dome, a strange smell was in the air. Shannon opened
the door to discover Amima cooking bananas in a skillet. She decided it was some
strange African recipe. As long as the kids ate them, she didn't mind. ARIP was
not a place to waste food.
She walked into the kitchen and stood looking over Amima's shoulder. The
African woman turned to her and said, "Kele Wele."
"Kele Wele," Shannon repeated.
"It's not going to be as good as it is at home." Shannon looked around to find
Adjoa laying on the floor in the next room. "There are no plantains, so we had to
use regular bananas, and there are no hot peppers anywhere."
Shannon smiled, happy that the girl seemed to have forgotten the betting idea.
"I'm sure it will still taste good."
"Well," Adjoa said as she propped herself up on one elbow. "After we win back
our dome, maybe we can get some plantains and hot peppers from Togo."
Naïve little girl.
#
As the weeks passed, Shannon and the Olympio family grew closer. Amima liked
to eat the Mexican dishes that Shannon cooked whenever meat was available, and
Amima cooked Kele Wele whenever bananas were available. Shannon found Kele
Wele a bit too spicy for something that was meant as a dessert, but all the kids
liked it, including Alvin.
Early one morning as the children were all eating a breakfast of oatmeal, there
came a knock on the door. Shannon peered out the peephole and saw a uniformed
Proc accompanied by a human. This didn't bode well. She opened the door.
"Good morning, ma'am," the human said. "I am Blockman Jones and this is
Sergeant Ukk of the ARIP Security Force. Sgt. Ukk would like you to know that a
new ordinance was passed today restricting single-family domes to single
families."
The Blockman's declaration didn't make sense to Shannon. "Why? That's a
stupid ordinance."
Ukk grunted, followed by a one-sided conversation, the Blockman nodding as the
Proc spoke. When he was finished, he turned to Shannon and said, "The other
family living with you must leave your dome immediately."
"You still haven't answered my question. Why?"
"I don't make the law." He pointed with his thumb at the Proc standing next to
them. "I only enforce it."
The Blockman and Proc both continued to stand in the doorway. Shannon made a
slow turn and walked into the living chamber with her mind in a state of shock and
disbelief. Where would they go? To throw these people out into the cold with no
shelter was tantamount to murder. There had to be a way out. She couldn't throw
out this family she was becoming attached to. Her conscience wouldn't allow.
As she entered the living chamber, her eyes went directly to Adjoa. She was about
to call the girl over to help translate the situation into Ewe, but she checked that
when she had an idea, a desperate idea. Someone once said, desperate times call
for desperate measures. She turned her back to the living chamber and walked
back to the door.
"Blockman," she said, "Ask this Proc - Ukk was it? - if he would like to make a
little wager."
The Blockman shifted nervously from foot to foot as Shannon finished speaking.
He looked up at the Proc, then back at Shannon before he said, "Procs always are
willing to wager." He smiled. "What is it you have in mind?"
Shannon snuck a quick glance over her shoulder to Adjoa, who was creeping
toward the door. "I want to win a dome for this family."
The Blockman laughed with more conviction this time. He motioned for the Proc
to bend down, then he whispered something into the Proc's ear. The Proc stood,
then emitted an enormous belly-laugh. He wiped his nose on his sleeve, then said
in thickly accented English, "Of course!"
What had she gotten herself into?
The Blockman whispered with the Proc for another moment, then declared, "The
wager will be dome for dome. If you lose, you forfeit your dome."
"I understand that."
"Good," the Blockman said. "Meet us in the main square in one hour. As the
challenger, you have the right to name the game."
"Blackjack."
It was the voice of Adjoa, now standing at arm's length behind Shannon, and
something told her to trust the girl. "Blackjack it is," Shannon said.
The Blockman turned to leave, but the Proc hesitated. He looked Shannon in the
eyes and said, "Make sure you arrive on time." With that, he turned to leave,
following the Blockman out the door.
Shannon looked down at the little girl whose words may decide whether they all
would live or die.
"You must find a way to allow me to play blackjack against the Proc," Adjoa said.
"Impossible," Shannon said. "The Procs won't allow a minor to gamble."
Impossible, but crucial because she didn't even know how to play.
"You must teach me to play blackjack, Adjoa."
The girl was animated, waving her arms and pacing the floor. "No, I must be the
one to play."
"They will not allow."
Adjoa's face melted, then it brightened again as she voiced another idea, "Maybe I
can walk you through the game as it's played."
"I doubt it," Shannon said. "I've never seen a child at any gambling event, much
less helping to play the game." She shook her head. "Out of the question. Teach
me the game and I'll manage on my own."
"No, you will lose," Adjoa said with passion. "The trick to beating a Proc isn't in
the game, it's in his head. I know how to do it, you don't."
The Proc just wouldn't be willing to wait until Adjoa turned eighteen. The game
would begin at noon, and Shannon had to face him alone.
#
As high noon approached, Shannon fed the fish, then left Alvin with Amima and
walked to the main square alone. No point in looking back. In an hour, there
would most likely be no place to call home. Adjoa had taught her the basics of
blackjack, but she didn't have a good feel for how to play -- when to draw and
when to stand. She quickened her pace.
At the main square, a table had been set up, and a crowd of people had already
gathered around, hoping for a chance to watch the destruction of the stupid human
girl. She took her seat to the applause of the crowd. A Blockman acted as
announcer, and began to speak through a megaphone.
"The rules to the contest are plain. The game is simple blackjack. Each contestant
is being given one hundred red chips. The first contestant to gain all the chips is
the winner."
A dealer stood at the head of the table, and Shannon sat opposite her opponent,
Ukk. Each player threw in one red chip, then the first cards were dealt. The Proc
had face-up the queen of diamonds. Shannon was dealt the three of clubs face-up,
and the ace of hearts face-down.
The Blockman indicated Ukk as the first to play, but Ukk motioned that he wanted
no cards. At the same time, Shannon felt something on her leg. She looked down
to see Adjoa under the table.
Ukk must have noticed her eyes leaving the table. "What is she hiding!"
The blockman came around to Shannon and discovered Adjoa under the table. He
grabbed the girl's parka in the back and pulled her to her feet. "What kind of
deception is this?"
"I should be playing the Proc!" Adjoa shouted, but the big Proc laughed so hard he
almost fell off his chair.
"That child against me!" Ukk snorted as he inhaled. "Imagine, that child against
me!"
Shannon had an idea. "You think you can beat that child?" The crowd gasped at
the very idea of a Proc gambling against a child. Even the Blockman was taken
aback. "I think she can beat you."
"Ah! It would be like taking candy." The Proc couldn't stop laughing.
"Then, since we haven't completed the first hand, I would like to change the
game."
"What!" The Proc didn't like that idea.
"The stakes remain the same, but the game is now a bet that this little girl can beat
you at blackjack."
The Proc looked to the Blockman. "Is that legal?"
The Blockman nodded. "Technically, it is still the woman who is gambling. The
minor is just a component of the game. Yes, the bet is legal."
"Then I accept the new terms. Sit, child. Continue this hand." Shannon got out of
the chair and let Adjoa sit.
The little girl looked at the Proc, who waved at the dealer. The dealer turned his
attention to Adjoa.
"Hit." The five of clubs fell to the table. Not enough. Shannon was shaking with
nerves.
"Hit." The two of hearts fell to the table, and she waved off the dealer. The little
girl tossed two more chips into the pot, and Ukk matched it. The two players
showed their cards and Ukk pushed the chips to her.
"Lucky hand," he said.
Adjoa's face lit up with a smile. "You let a little girl beat you! Ha, you're a
loser!"
The skin around the proc's eyes wrinkled in irritation. He slammed five red chips
into the pot. Adjoa matched it as the dealer shuffled the deck. The cards soon
began falling, and the three of diamonds landed face-up for Ukk. The ace of
Hearts landed face-up for Adjoa, and she was dealt the three of spades face-down.
"A little girl beat you," Adjoa whispered.
The dealer looked at Adjoa and she waved him away. She took no cards.
Attention turned to Ukk.
"Hit." The two of spades fell.
"Hit." The five of hearts fell. Ukk was breathing harder.
"HIT!" The jack of clubs fell, and Ukk threw his cards into the pot. "Bust."
Adjoa scooped the ten chips and pulled them to her end of the table. "A little girl
beat you again."
Shannon leaned over Adjoa's shoulder and whispered into her ear. "Don't egg
him on too much, he might eat you."
She turned her head and whispered back. "No. There are too many people here."
Ukk was not amused. "You playing?"
"I'm winning," Adjoa said.
"Gaaaah!" Ukk gathered his chips and pushed them all into the pot. Adjoa took
her time counting out ninety-two chips, setting the few remaining chips carefully
aside. Ukk fidgeted as Adjoa slowly counted, dragging it out as long as possible,
but the Proc said nothing. Finally, she pushed her pile of chips into the pot.
"I'm ready," she said.
Ukk just groaned in response. The deal came. Ukk received a face-up nine of
clubs. Adjoa received a three of clubs face-up and a seven of hearts face-down.
Shannon was nervous, but Adjoa only smiled.
She started whispering again. "Don't let the little girl win. What would all the
other Procs say if you lost everything to a little girl?"
The Proc reacted with a growl. "Hit." The eight of spades fell to the table, and
Ukk threw the card in his hand to the ground. He stood, pushed his chair to the
ground, and pushed the bystanders aside as he walked around the table to Shannon
to put the key to the Olympio dome into her hand. His aim was poor, and it fell to
the ground. As Shannon picked up the key, the Proc stormed away. When Ukk
was ten paces on his way, the crowd erupted in cheers.
Shannon handed the key to Adjoa. "Go find your family. You just won back your
home."
Adjoa took the key, but she shook her head. "No," she said. "I only won back the
dome. Winning back my home -- our home -- that's going to take more than one
game."