Elias looked at the chip, then at the photo of the daughter who hadn't spoken to him in years. The "Ten" offered a fake version of her love. The gray, cold alley offered the slim, painful chance of earning the real thing back.
Elias reached for his wallet. His fingers brushed a weathered photograph tucked behind his ID. It wasn't a happy memory. It was a photo of his daughter's graduation—the one he had missed because he was passed out in a digital haze three years ago. 10 : Kill the Temptation
The Dealer held the chip out. "Last chance. The gate closes at midnight." Elias looked at the chip, then at the
The Dealer vanished into the shadows, his violet eyes fading like a dying ember. Elias stood in the rain, soaked and exhausted, but for the first time in years, he was entirely, beautifully present. Elias reached for his wallet
"Just one," Elias whispered. The Dealer smiled, a predatory tilt of the head. "The first one is always 'just one,' Elias. But this is a Ten. You won’t ever want to come back."
As the clock struck twelve, Elias didn't reach for the chip. Instead, he pulled the photograph from his wallet and held it tight against his chest, the damp paper crinkling under his thumb. He looked the Dealer in the eye and let his wallet fall into a puddle at his feet. "I’m done," Elias said, his voice finally steady.
The temptation was a physical weight, pulling his arm toward the silver chip. His brain chemistry was firing in all the wrong directions, demanding the dopamine hit. "Kill it," he hissed to himself. "Kill the ghost."