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Chapter 10 - ​Chapter 10: The Devil's Discount

​The "Rust Market" was located inside the ribcage of a crashed starship that had fallen fifty years ago. It was a place where you could buy anything: illegal microchips, stolen kidneys, or a bowl of radioactive soup.

​Zeph adjusted his hood. "My AI says the air quality here is 40% toxic fumes. I should hold my breath."

​"Just breathe shallow," Kaelen muttered, pushing through the crowd of scavengers and criminals.

​They stopped in front of a booth made of welded scrap metal. Behind the counter sat Grix, a goblin-like man with four mechanical arms. He was polishing a laser rifle.

​"Grix!" Zeph grinned, leaning on the counter. "My favorite four-armed bandit! How's the family? Still ugly?"

​Grix looked up. His cybernetic eye zoomed in on Zeph. "Vane. I heard you were dead. Or rich. Which is it?"

​"Rich," Kaelen said, dropping the bag of stolen gear onto the counter. It landed with a heavy clank. "We need to liquidate. Now."

​Grix opened the bag. He whistled. "Police issue. High-grade scopes. Stun batons. And... is that a thermal grenade?"

​"Slightly used," Zeph said quickly. "One previous owner. He dropped dead of natural causes."

​"Lie Detected," the AI whispered. "Heart rate of subject Grix increased. He wants the gear. Estimated Value: 15,000 credits."

​Grix scratched his chin with a metal claw. "Hot merchandise. Very hot. I can give you... two thousand."

​"Two thousand?!" Zeph scoffed. "That grenade alone is worth three! Come on, Grix. Look at this craftsmanship!"

​"Negotiation Tactic suggested: Mention the rival fence, 'Big Tony'. Probability of price increase: 65%."

​"Besides," Zeph said smoothly, "Big Tony down the street offered us five thousand just for the scopes."

​Grix narrowed his eyes. "Tony is a liar."

​"Maybe," Zeph shrugged. "But his credits spend just as well."

​Grix grumbled. He tapped on a calculator. "Okay, okay. You're squeezing me. Four thousand. Final offer."

​Zeph smirked. He was about to push for six thousand. The AI was feeding him Grix's tell—his third arm twitched when he was lying.

​"Actually, I think—" Zeph started.

​SLAM.

​Kaelen's hand hit the metal counter.

​The shadows in the booth suddenly grew long. The lights flickered and died. The only light came from Grix's cybernetic eye, which was now looking frantically around the dark booth.

​"Ten thousand," Kaelen whispered.

​His voice didn't come from his mouth. It seemed to come from the corners of the room.

​Grix swallowed hard. "Now look here, Thorne. I run a business—"

​A shadow wrapped around Grix's throat. It wasn't tight enough to kill, but cold enough to burn.

​"Ten. Thousand," Kaelen repeated. He leaned forward. His eyes were completely black. No whites. Just void. "Or I liquidate you."

​Grix couldn't breathe. His mechanical arms flailed, knocking over the laser rifle.

​"Kae!" Zeph hissed, grabbing Kaelen's arm. "Stop! We're negotiating! You're choking the customer!"

​Kaelen didn't look at Zeph. He stared at Grix. "Do we have a deal?"

​"Y-yes!" Grix wheezed. "Ten! Take it!"

​The shadows vanished instantly. The lights flickered back on.

​Grix collapsed onto his stool, rubbing his frozen neck. With shaking hands, he transferred the credits to a chip and threw it at them.

​"Get out," Grix rasped. "Don't come back. You're crazy. Both of you."

​Kaelen snatched the chip. He turned and walked away, looking calm.

​Zeph looked at Grix apologetically. "He's... uh... haven't had his coffee yet. Sorry about the neck."

​Zeph ran after Kaelen.

​"What was that?!" Zeph demanded, catching up to him. "I had him! I was using logic! I was using leverage!"

​"I used fear," Kaelen said, tucking the chip into his pocket. "It's faster."

​"Analysis," the AI chimed in. "Fear is a short-term motivator. It creates enemies. Logic creates partners. Subject Kaelen is choosing efficiency over stability."

​"He's choosing to be a bully," Zeph thought back.

​"We got double what you were asking for," Kaelen said, stopping and turning to face Zeph. "Results, Zeph. That's all that matters. You told me that once."

​"I was talking about picking up girls!" Zeph shouted. "Not strangling fences!"

​Kaelen stepped closer. The air grew cold again. "We are hunted, Zeph. The whole city wants our heads. I don't have time to be nice. I have to be scary. Because if they aren't scared of us... they'll kill us."

​Zeph looked into his friend's eyes. The blackness was gone, but the hardness remained.

​"You're scaring me," Zeph whispered.

​Kaelen flinched. For a second, he looked hurt. The old Kaelen peeked through.

​"I..." Kaelen started.

​Then, a siren wailed in the distance.

​Kaelen's face hardened again. "Good. If you're scared, maybe you'll stay alive."

​He turned and walked into the crowd.

​Zeph stood there for a moment.

​"Warning," the AI said softly. "Emotional distance between subjects increasing. Probability of betrayal: 15%."

​"Shut up," Zeph told the voice. "He's just stressed."

​"Stress reveals character," the AI replied. "It does not change it."

​Zeph shivered. He looked at Kaelen's back, and for the first time, he wondered if the real monster wasn't the bounty hunters.

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