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Chapter 4 - Playing the Long Game

Chapter 4 Playing the Long Game

The rest of the weekend played out almost exactly as I remembered from the show.

Evelyn, my "grandmother," showed up on Saturday, radiating disapproval and expensive perfume. She barely spared me a glance, too busy criticizing Alan for existing. Charlie, as usual, endured her visit with the patience of a man who had long since accepted his fate.

Then came the poker game.

Charlie had his usual crew over—his friend Andy, a couple of music industry guys, and some dude named Stan who I was pretty sure had mob connections. They had cigars, whiskey, and the overconfidence of men who thought they knew how to play.

And then there was me.

I kept up my usual act—quiet, clueless Jake—until I got a seat at the table.

And then?

I cleaned up.

Charlie watched in mild horror as I methodically dismantled his friends, calling every bluff, raising at just the right times, and walking away with a stack of chips that would make a Vegas shark proud.

By the end of the night, Charlie just stared at me.

"Kid," he said slowly, "are you some kind of card-counting prodigy?"

I shrugged. "I dunno. I just play by the numbers."

He looked at me for a long moment, then smirked. "Alright, remind me never to bet against you."

That was fine by me.

I had just proven a simple fact:

I could play along with the storyline… but I could also win at it.

Monday Morning: Harpers Don't Do School

The weekend passed in a blur, and before I knew it, Monday had arrived.

And with it…

School.

The thought hit me as I stared at my reflection in the bathroom mirror that morning.

I wasn't really Jake Harper. I wasn't some average kid who barely scraped by in math class. I was a genius. A literal prodigy. I had a mind that could process complex equations before breakfast.

Why the hell was I wasting my time in middle school?

Could I skip a few grades? Probably. Could I go straight to college? That was an even more interesting thought.

With my intelligence, I could test out of high school today if I wanted.

I had options. Real options.

But then I thought about it.

Skipping ahead meant changing the storyline. It meant making waves, drawing attention. And I wasn't sure if I wanted that yet.

Did I want to stay in school and play dumb for a while?

Or did I want to take a risk and start pushing things my way?

I had a decision to make.

And whatever I chose… it was going to change everything.

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