Chapter 501
High above, fighter jets streaked across the blue sky dotted with white clouds.
Inside the lead S-level mecha fighter, Judy asked, โHow much longer until we reach Baykeep?โ
โYour Highness, ten minutes.โ
She would see them in ten minutes. Judyโs eyes turned cold as steel. โWhatโs the situation with the gambling tournament?โ
โIt doesnโt look good,โ Harry replied.
โTurn on the live broadcast. I want to see for myself.โ
The feed showed only five players remaining at the table.
Shermaine stood out as the sole woman among them, drawing every eye in the room.
Simon had been targeting her relentlessly, yet his every attempt backfiredโinstead of eliminating Shermaine, heโd watched other players fall one by one. With each failure, his frustration mounted.
Shermaine, however, appeared completely unbotheredโcasually munching on snacks and sipping her coffee, clearly enjoying herself.
โThe final three are about to be determined!โ the director announced. โAll five players, please reveal your cards.โ
Barrett stared at the results, disappointment written across his face. He hadnโt made it to the top three. He was out.
Now their only hope rested with Shermaine.
โEliminated players must leave the table immediately. The game will resume in five minutes,โ the director continued.
Before leaving, Barrett glanced once more at Shermaine. The final threeโthis was the moment of truth. They were finally going head-to-head for real.
During the intermission, the dealers cleared the cards from the table. Soon, only stacks of chips remained. Shermaineโs pile towered above the rest, a mountain of winnings.
What theyโd be gambling on next remained a mystery.
Simon leaned forward with a sneer. โBoa, donโt think youโre going to win this.โ
Shermaine chuckled softly, โYou might want to save that line for yourself.โ
The next game was announced quicklyโblackjack. The moment Shermaine heard it was blackjack, she raised an eyebrow with interest.
For a mathematician, blackjack was practically childโs play to manipulateโall it took was using her analytical mind to calculate probabilities and tip the odds in her favor.
The rules were straightforward enough. After removing the jokers, cards 2 through 9 held their face value, while 10s, Jacks, Queens, and Kings were all worth 10 points. Aces could count as either 1 or 11, depending on what worked best for your hand.
The game rules were straightforward enoughโboth players added up their card values, and whoever had the higher total won. The maximum was 21 points, and going over meant you โbustedโ and lost automatically. If both players tied, it was a draw.
For the first round, the tournament director randomly selected Shermaine as the dealer.
Simonโs eyes lit up at this development. He exchanged a meaningful glance with the other playerโa look that said everything. They were working together. This player had already been bought.
As the dealer, Shermaine would get to shuffle the deck. If she shuffled, their chances of hitting 21 would essentially vanish. So one of them would have to be eliminated from the equation. The question was who would draw the short straw.
Shermaine took the fresh deck and began cutting the cards.
Unless you watched very carefully, her shuffling technique was almost impossible to followโlightning-fast cuts and flourishes that made your eyes water just trying to track them.
Even more impressive, she could flip individual cards through the air and catch them in perfect sequence.
Within moments, sheโd finished shuffling.
The director took the deck back and began dealing. Shermaineโs first card was a 7, Simon drew a 10, and the other player got a 9. Both of her opponents had drawn better opening hands than she had.
By the time the third card was dealt, they had already doubled their bets and were eager to draw more cards.
โDealer, are you in?โ the director asked.
โIโm in.โ Shermaine didnโt hesitate for a second.
โSince the dealerโs playing, how about we just reveal our hands now?โ Mammon, the other player, suggested with obvious confidence. โThere are only two cards left anyway.โ
โFine by me.โ Shermaine tossed in a hefty pile of chips and revealed his cards.
Simon matched the bet.
Mammon had calculated the oddsโhis chances of busting were slim. He wasnโt worried.
But when the final two cards were revealed, his expression shifted. He never expected such low-probability bad luck to strike him directly, while Shermaine landed perfectly on twenty. Simon also hit twentyโa push. Mammon was out.
Simon had lost his right-hand man. It was down to one-on-one.
โYouโre cheating,โ Simon said, disbelief written across his face.
Shermaineโs laugh was light and dismissive. โWhich eye of yours say me cheat?โ
The director issued Simon a yellow card warning for his accusation. According to the rules, since the dealer had won, they couldnโt deal againโSimon would take over as dealer next, giving him his chance to shuffle the deck.
Inside the fighter jets, Judy exploded. โUseless idiots, getting played like fools!โ She turned away from the screen in disgust. โSpeed up. Take down Shermaine before this tournament ends.โ
Simon would never beat Shermaineโsheโd just toy with him like she had with everyone else.