The student in the jacket entered the room, and the rest of us wondered if he would manage to pass the exam this time around.
I was absentmindedly staring at my notes when Dahai leaned over.
He pointed at the drawing and said, âOkay, so we know that the test is about a card game involving destruction, but we have no clue on how to go about playing it. We also know that everything that goes on inside is to the advantage of the testers.â
âAnd no oneâs ever passed the exam in five years,â I added.
âDo you think he will pass it this time?â Dahai asked.
âMaybe. He mustâve thought of a way to beat the system,â I shrugged.
One minute...
Two minutes...
Ten minutes...
Fifteen minutes...
Just as everyone was starting to get hyped up because number seven hasnât come out yet, the door opened before them.
The man in the suit led number seven out.
âNext, number eight,â he called out.
The student in the jacket walked toward the exit in silence.
Dahai rushed over and grabbed his shoulder. âYou were in there for so long, did you pass?â
He shook his head. âI wonât come back again. Itâs impossible.â
âYouâre saying that those who previously passed were phoneys?â Dahai questioned.
Number seven lowered his head. âI repeated my studies for four whole years. How many four years do we have? Every day, I thought of how to beat this game, only to fail for the second time. Do you understand how frustrating and disheartening that is? Yun Huatengâs victory mustâve urged the gamemaster to perfect his game once again.â
At that, he turned and left the room, leaving no chance for further questions.
Dahai repeated number sevenâs words in front of everybody, âYun Huatengâs victory mustâve urged the gamemaster to perfect his game once again.â
Everyone started discussing among themselves.
âIs it more difficult now?â
âWhy are we still trying, then?â
âItâs no wonder no oneâs passed in five years.â
âWonât there be fewer and fewer loopholes each time someone succeeds?â
...
In the middle of their discussion, number eight was escorted into the examination room.
He exited the room within ten minutes.
It was number nineâs turn. A girl.
She stood up, bowed and announced, âIâll withdraw.â
Number 11, also a girl, gave up her chance as well.
In went number 12.
By now, everyone was calling their families and explaining the situation.
Shortly after, a few got up and exited the waiting room as well.
Dahai stopped one of them. âWhy are you giving up?â
âHavenât you seen? Most canât even last for ten minutes. And number seven, who came prepared, only lasted for fifteen minutes. What more of us? We know nothing. Are we really going to spend four years discovering the problem and another four solving it? We have the money, but not the time.â
There were only seven students left in the waiting room.
The pace of the examination did not change. One student took about ten minutes.
Practically all of them came out shaking their head. It was obvious that they had a lot to say, but out of fear, they refrained from talking.
âNumber 26,â the man in the suit called.
Dahai gave me a meaningful look and patted me on my shoulder. âWait for my good news.â
I stared at my watch. Every second was torture.
After eight minutes, the door opened.
Dahai smiled bitterly. âHow difficult.â
âFailed?â I asked.
Dahai walked over to give me a hug, secretly stuffing his mobile phone into my pocket. âSix sixes, video.â
The man in the suit looked at me. âYouâre the last one, number 27.â
I nodded. âCan I go to the washroom first? Iâm too nervous, I canât control my bladder.â
He looked at his watch. âYouâre lucky since some gave up their spots. Iâll give you ten minutes. Your chance will be forfeited if you do not show up by then.â
I nodded again before rushing for the exit.
He stopped me quickly. âThereâs a washroom here.â
He led me into a small cubicle further inside. It was a tiny toilet.
I shut the door and sat on the toilet bowl. Taking Dahaiâs phone out, I keyed six sixes.
I searched through his videos and saw an eight-minute clip with a black thumbnail.
It looked more like a voice recording. He must have hidden it in his trousers.
The sounds were very crisp, however. I could visualize the settings thanks to the girlâs drawing.
I listened on and heard the shuffling of cards and a manâs voice.
âGame of Destruction. Youâre not allowed to speak of or write about it. Failure to comply will get you punished, understood?â
âYes,â Dahai answered.
âWhat do you think a king needs? Pick five cards and place them in front of you.â
Dahai picked out five cards. âThere are repeated cards inside the deck. Can I pick identical cards?â
No answer.
âIâll take that as a yes. Two treasuries, an army, citizens, and a giant dragon.â
He wasnât planning to win. He was testing the game out for me.
I heard him smacking the cards down on the table while the other cards were being collected and kept.
The first question master spoke, âFive cards, five problems. Lose three cards and you fail.â
âGot it.â
âIf my question uses any of your cards to attack another of your cards, you get to attack me with your own question. You have 60 seconds to solve each problem. If you donât speak, itâs an automatic failure.â
âAlright, but wonât the game end right away if you send an assassin to kill my king?â Dahai clarified.
âYouâre the king and my questions will not be a direct attack on you.â
âGot it. No more questions.â
âYour treasuries have been invaded by bandits. They will take all your assets.â
I heard an hourglass being turned over and the sounds of falling sand grains.
The quiet examination room became especially noisy at this point.
...
I immediately penned everything down.
A game of attacking and defending.
A pile of resource cards.
First question: What does a king need in order to run a nation?
The player would select five cards. Cards are repeatable.
Cards would then be placed on the table.
The player would be given a scenario, e.g, your national treasury has been invaded by thieves.
The question master must not use any of the playerâs cards to attack any of his deck. If found, the question master will be attacked with a problem.
If not discovered, the player will continue answering the problem, I added.
I circled this last line since it was important.
Questions mustnât target the king directly.
If the player fails to answer, his card will be slashed.
I heard Dahaiâs voice again. âMy giant dragon is guarding the treasuries.â
âSecond problem: You donât have a dragon trainer and you canât utilize your treasuries.â
My hair stood up upon hearing this.
He used a sentence to get rid of two treasuries, instantly forcing Dahai into a corner.
Horrifying game.
Mobilizing his army to defend the treasures would only get his soldiers killed.
Sending his citizens would lead to the same outcome.
The sand grains continued to fall until there was absolute silence.
Dahai did not talk but a clear slashing sound broke the silence quickly.
âYour treasuries are gone and harvest is bad this year. A fire broke out and destroyed all your granaries. Your citizens and army are going to starve.â
Again, Dahai stayed quiet for another 60 seconds so his cards were slashed.
A player fails when more than half of his resources were being taken away.
âThe game has ended. Youâre out, number 26.â
...
I looked through the rules again and was at a loss.
About nine minutes had passed.
The man in the suit knocked on the door. âYour timeâs almost up.â
I kept Dahaiâs phone and my notes before heading out.
...
The room was very dark and there were actually five people sitting around the table.
The table was filled with slash marks. It was bone-chillingly frightening.
A new deck of cards was placed before me.
âGame of destruction. Youâre not allowed to speak of or write about it. Failure to comply will get you punished, understood?â
I nodded.
âWhat do you think a king needs? Pick five cards and place them in front of you.â
I took my time picking them out.
Treasury.
Army.
Citizens.
Blacksmith.
Doctor.
I placed them on the table and the question master kept the rest of the cards.
âIf my question uses any of your cards to attack another of your cards, you get to attack me with your own question. You have 60 seconds to solve each problem. If you donât speak, itâs an automatic failure.â
I nodded again.
âFirst problem: A giant dragon flew into your treasury intending to occupy it as its nest.â
Not showing any mercy, I thought as I wracked my brains.
I considered giving up on the first problem to search for a loophole in the game.
At the last second, I smiled and said, âI give up.â
The question master used a dagger to slash my treasury card. âSecond problem: An epidemic broke out in your nation. Your army and citizens have been infected. They will be killed very soon.â
I looked on as two daggers were placed before my army and citizens cards. Dangerous.
I pointed at my doctor card. âMy doctor will cure them.â
âThird problem: Your doctor needs to purchase expensive herbs from neighboring nations but youâre unable to utilize your treasury and your doctor has been infected as well.
Another dagger was placed before my doctor. The question master smiled coldly.
I took out my notes.
Seconds passed and I pondered over the problem seriously.
It was a mental game.
I was losing time.
I thought about how King Chalk wouldâve easily solved this problem.
An image of a man smiling and holding onto a green coin appeared in my mind.
âGame over, number 27.â
Smiling, three question masters got ready to slash my cards.
âWait,â I shouted.
I was surprised that they actually stopped to listen.
âWhy?â
âI meant to say that Iâll get the blacksmith to melt all weapons in the army to create new coins in order to purchase the herbs,â I smiled.
Brief silence. The question masters kept their daggers.
âFourth question: The neighboring countries discovered that your army doesnât have any weapons. They plan to invade your nation and kill all your people.â
Four question masters took our their daggers and pointed at my remaining cards.
With a bitter smile, I answered, âMy people will welcome them into the country. We will open our doors wide for them. We will open half the door of our treasury and they can go in and take everything as they please.â
All five question masters stared at me as if they were struck dumb.
They were aware that it was a trap since the giant dragon was still in the treasury.
âFifth problem: Your enemy country has a dragon trainer who easily controlled the giant dragon, thus successfully suppressing your country. Youâve lost, number 27.â
The other four question masters stuck their daggers into my cards.
At this point, my treasury card was already slashed and my other four cards were pinned onto the table by the daggers.
I grinned at the last question master before standing up and raising a victory sign up in the air.
âWhat are you doing?â they asked in unison.
âIâve won so I am celebrating!â I answered.
âHow have you won?â
âMy people havenât been cured by the herbs and they have openly invited the invaders into the country. My goal wasnât to use the dragon to fend off the invaders but to make use of the epidemic that broke out. My citizens only consumed the herbs after being captured. The invading soldiers, including the dragon trainer, died from the diseases since they had no antidote,â I answered before piecing my broken treasury cards back together.
...
All five question masters stood up and the door behind me opened up.
âYouâve won. Enter.â
I walked slowly into the innermost room.
Inside stood a statue of King Chalk. An old man was sitting before it.
âWho are you?â I asked.
The old man smiled. âMy ancestor was King Chalkâs favorite courtier. He was also the founder of this bank.â
âWhat has that got to do with me?â I asked.
âYouâve passed the examination and have 50% of the bankâs stocks at your disposal,â the old man answered.
âWhatâs going on?â I asked in bewilderment.
âStudents like you is the reason why our bank hasnât collapsed yet. Students who pass our exam will get 50% of our shares and do as they please on the condition that they must create a new game. Youâll lose everything when someone else beats your game.â
âYouâre telling me that this game was created by Yun Huateng? And Iâm supposed to create a new one for prospective students and ensure that no one wins it in order to safeguard my shares?â I clarified.
âYouâre wise.â
âGreen Coin Bank is still standing today because there are people like us safeguarding it?â
âThatâs right, and the first to succeed was King Chalk himself,â the old man continued.
âI see. Arenât you afraid that Iâll squander away all the money?â I questioned.
âYouâre a wise man. You can only spend more if you earn more. You have to be careful not to let someone else beat the game or youâll be left with nothing,â the old man explained.
âYour bank is no different from loan sharks, then?â
âWrong. Weâre the last inheritors of our national culture. How else would our cultural knowledge continue without a king and an army?â
âSo King Chalk has won the game, too?â
âNo, he was the first person to create the game. You have a monthâs time to come up with a new one and to make it invulnerable,â the old man finished with a smile.
I looked at the statue of King Chalk, who was holding a coin in his hand. âNext game: Guess the coin.â
To be continued~