Chapter 742
Debra met his gaze steadily. โI donโt know how to control the dice.โ She couldnโt do it like others, rolling the exact number Drake wanted.
His eyes narrowed. โYou donโt know how, yet you asked me to take you here?โ
โBut even so, I can still make money,โ Debra countered. โDidnโt I help you make some just now?โ
Drakeโs frown deepened, but she pressed on. โSure, I canโt control the dice, but I know human nature. No one can win forever by betting all on small or big while doubling the stakes each time. Eventually, theyโll lose. Itโs inevitable.โ
โAnd you think thatโs some brilliant strategy?โ he scoffed. โIf that idiot down there had any clue what he was doing, do you think youโd have been able to take him for that much?โ
Debra accepted his scolding without protest.
โIf you canโt handle being a dealer, then get out of here. Stop wasting my time,โ Drake snapped, turning to the manager. โTake her back.โ
โYes, boss.โ The manager nodded and turned to Debra. โMs. Frazier, please come with me.โ
Debra muttered reluctantly, โJust because I donโt know how to roll dice doesnโt mean Iโm useless. You run legitimate businesses in public. I refuse to believe thereโs nothing else I could handle.โ
Drakeโs eyes darkened, and his voice dropped low. โOh, there are other things, but youโd better think carefully. In my world, there are only two kinds of jobs for women. Which do you think youโre suited for?โ
The implication hung heavy in the air. The work for women in his line of business was either what she had just done or what those women had done at that party earlier. Drake had never respected women, probably because all the women he had encountered could only do such things.
But Debra was undeterred.
โTranslator, investment advisor, financial planner, or pianist. You name it, and I can do it.โ
โBased on what? Your black box admission into Arcane Academy?โ
โLooks like youโve done your homework.โ
โYou think thatโs impressive?โ
โI earned my Masterโs degree in linguistics. That wasnโt something I bought.โ
Chapter 742
To prove her point, she scanned the crowd and spotted a passing foreign guest. Without hesitation, she began conversing fluently with him in the Phorian language.
The managerโs eyes widened in surprise. โBoss, sheโs good.โ
Debra turned to Drake for approval, but his expression remained impassive.
To impress him, she walked over to a piano and sat down to play Clair de Lune. The note was flawless, and the tone was euphonic.
The manager was impressed. โWe pay our weekend pianists about twenty thousand dollars a month, and theyโre not even half as good as she is.โ
After a moment of silence, Drake went over and tapped on the piano.
Debra stopped playing and asked, โMr. Lowe, have you changed your mind?โ
He replied, โThereโs another piano in the plaza. If you can draw a thousand people to watch you play, Iโll consider keeping you around.โ