IC C10
by berryChapter 10
âIt wasnât.â
A blatant lie slipped from Siwonâs lips, but Lei Jun didnât look convinced.
It wasnât hard to see why. Anyone watching could have noticed how odd it was. Siwon had been bold the entire time, pushing hard with aggressive betsâyet suddenly he backed off. It was the kind of choice that screamed intention. In a game where one could very well win by going all in until the end, folding at that moment was suspicious at best.
âWhyâd you do it?â
ââŠâ
âDidnât you care at all about those 300,000 patacas?âÂč
âIt wasnât my money to begin with. And even if it were, itâs not like weâre allowed to take money from guests anyway. Why even ask that?â
âHmâŠâ
Lei Jun fixed his gaze upon him, his eyes foxlikeâsharp enough to feel as though they saw right through him. Siwon ignored that stare completely, acting natural as he rinsed his hands at the sink, fetched water from the fridge, and drank.
Even as he loosed buttons on his stifling shirt, Lei Junâs eyes didnât waver. The constant, unabashed observation gnawed at him. Finally he spun around.
âWhat are you staring at?â
âThinking youâre oddly⊠selfârestrained.â
âSelfârestrained, my ass. I just donât want to mess around with some creep.â
He snapped back curtly, stripping the last of his work clothes. Lei Junâs eyes lingered still, but Siwon couldnât care less.
âThat pervert with his twisted tastes⊠hitting on another guy with the same parts⊠disgustingâŠâ
The irritation rose again midâsentence. He dragged his arms harshly into his loungewear.
âBy the way, Xiao Wei⊠poker wasnât really your first game, was it?â
Lei Jun had caught his excuse. Siwon fell silent. Beginning midâgame, he himself had stopped trying to look like a clueless beginner anyway. Someone claiming ignorance of rules had no business beating Peng Tao repeatedlyâeven luck wouldnât explain it.
âWhereâd you learn?â
ââŠJust picked it up, watching others.â
âYou play way too well for that.â
âI was lucky.â
âReally? Just luck?â
He probed openly, but Siwon had no energy left to humor him. He had done enough todayâand still more loomed.
âYou not eating dinner?â
âI will. Why, want to eat together?â
âNo. I need to rest.â
It wasnât an invitation but a request for space, if not an outright demand: stop staring, leave him alone. As roommates, Lei Jun had every right to remain, but he simply turned away.
âAlright. Good work today, Xiao Wei. Rest easy.â
ââŠYou too.â
Perhaps heâd been too brusque. Lei Jun had worked just as hard today. But then, Lei Jun had thrown those uncomfortable questions at him too, so they were even.
Siwon collapsed onto his bed and pulled out his phone.
It was time for his regular Baeksaâpa report. He had even checked transaction records more carefully than usual today, making certain of details. As per Director Parkâs orders, he had to identify any patrons exchanging 10,000âdenomination chips more than a hundred times.
Four individuals fit the criteria. He memorized their names, totals, and times, later inputting it all from memory.
Taking notes was impossible. Too many eyes. CCTV everywhere. This crude method was the only safe one.
âHaaâŠâ
The moment he hit âsend,â all strength drained from him. He set the phone aside, limbs slack.
Even during tenâhour days in a kitchenâs battleground, this hadnât happened. Yet lately he felt as heavy as wet cotton. He wasnât agingânot at twentyâthree. It could only be stress, the root of all ailments.
Either wayâthe long day was finally over. Time to rest.
When he opened his eyes again, a day had already passed. Heâd meant only to napâbut slipped into deep, dead sleep. Precious evening hours vanished, and he sat there blank.
âOh, youâre awake?â
The bedroom door cracked. Lei Jun peeked in, already dressed for work, face sharp and bright as always.
âI was wondering if I needed to wake you. You sleep like a rock.â
ââŠMm.â
Still dazed, Siwon sat up. It felt like he had only just come home, and yetâit was time to leave again? Utterly unfair. Worse, his head throbbed even after such a long sleep.
âGet ready, letâs head in together. Iâm on evening shift too.â
âYou can go ahead.â
âNo need. Weâre headed the same way anyway.â
Lei Jun smiled easily, his usual sociable self. But today, Siwon had no patience to mingle.
âGo on. Iâll shower. Iâll be late. You donât want to risk being late too.â
âGuess not, then.â
Lei Jun accepted smoothly and walked out. At least he didnât seem offended. Siwon quietly sighed before rising.
After washing, he found the room empty. Lei Jun had already gone. He dressed quickly himself, stepping into the corridor.
He wasnât late exactlyâbut lacked much cushion. Normally he would have hurried. Today, he couldnât even muster the will. So he walked at his own pace, halfâresentful: fire me if you want. He still arrived on time.
âYouâre here, Xie Wei? Time for your shift?â
âYes, sir.â
âNot much today.â
His colleague handed off duty. Siwon prepared for work, then moved into place before the exchange counter. The view of the casino spread before him.
Just as his coworker said, nothing stood out. Guests gambled in garish light, the atmosphere bright yet curiously dry, just like always.
Thenâa familiar face. At a table, resting between games, sat Lei Jun.
Lei Jun noticed him too. His smile curved clear as water, luminously fresh. For Siwon, it felt almost like stepping into a forest glade.
The kindnessâafter Siwonâs earlier brusquenessâpricked him with guilt. He raised a hand sheepishly in greeting.
Lei Jun waved slowly back. Heat flickered awkwardly at Siwonâs nape.
He looked unusually cheerful. Had he scored a big win off some patron?
Not that wins or losses mattered for a dealer. For them, what counted was how much and how long patrons played.
So maybe it was simply a good day. But just as Siwon considered this, a shadow fell over his counter.
âHello.â
âI need chips. Twentyâfive tens.â
âYes, please provide your ID.â
The manâZhang Yurenâhanded over his card. The exchange was wordâforâword the same as always. Taking his cash and exchanging it for the chips, Siwon felt trapped in a loop of repeated time.
He had done 250,000 into tens yesterday. And the day before. And five days before. Always demanding tens.
Perhaps just a personal habit. Yet with Baeksaâpaâs orders in mind, the pattern gnawed at him. His instincts whispered there was something dirty beneath it.
âHere is 250,000 patacas, exchanged into twentyâfive 10,000 chips. Please verify.â
He presented the chips politely. Zhang gathered them carelessly and left. Siwonâs eyes clung to his back.
The man paused as if pondering, glanced around, then moved toward Lei Junâs table.
Siwon saw him rise to meet the patron. Though obstacles hid his face, Siwon could picture it clearlyâthat faint smile Lei Jun always wore.
They sat together. Cards spread. The game beganâperhaps poker again, perhaps baccarat.
Siwonâs gaze narrowed. But before he could observe further, another guest approached his counter.
âExchange. 100,000 patacas.â
âYes, may I have your ID?â
He shelved all else, resuming work. Yet in the spaces between, his eyes still flickeredâback toward Lei Jun and Zhang Yuren.
Footnotes
- 300,000 patacas: About 36,000 USD. For scale, this was nearly unimaginable money for Siwon, who measured it against his workingâclass wages in Korea.