The rec room was unusually quiet for an evening on the ship; with shifts turning over and exhausted crew members eager for relaxation and good company the room was usually at least semi-crowded and abuzz with the din of easy conversation between friends. Regardless, with the exception of a few relatively quiet officers in the far corner, the room
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But this evening was different. He was in a good mood, what with Scotty having returned to duty earlier in the day, and after he'd finished his shift and gone to the mess for dinner, he found himself in a mood to socialize. Or rather, to at least pretend to socialize. He wasn't, he'd admit, much good at it. Still, somehow or another he'd found himself in the rec room.
Not wishing to intrude on the small groups already present, he commandeered an abandoned pack of cards and settled down close to the Vulcan commander; he laid the cards out in preparation for a game of solitaire, content to keep to his own devices for the time being.
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"Good evening, Lieutenant."
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He paused in his game to glance up at the chessboard, his expression shifting nearly imperceptibly as he studied the final moves. "Find self worthy opponent?"
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"I have found that, while it is an adequate exercise in tactics, playing against myself is a sub-par substitute for true opposition."
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He turned his attention fully to Keenser, giving up for the time being on the game he'd almost concluded. Of all his crewmates Keenser was, perhaps, the least abrasive on Spock's nerves. He felt a certain amount of camaradarie towards the Captain, and lingering affection for Nyota, but Keenser was a quiet individual and only tended to speak when he actually had something to say. It was refreshing after spending so much time around humans with tendencies to fill silences up to the brim with inanity.
"Perhaps you are not a tactician, but being an engineer requires a skillset that is just as relevent to chess as tactics. The ability to read a situation and react to it in a manner that is effective. All of a player's carefully considered moves might be proven useless through the movement of a single, unexpected piece by his opposition."
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He was silent for a very long moment, before finally replying, "Difference, unexpected piece played purposely, and unexpected piece played by luck."
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