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Apocalypse Trade Monopoly

Chapter 22 / 163

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Chapter 22: : The Plan in Motion

Apocalypse Trade Monopoly

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The market still buzzed around them. Stalls overflowing with stolen tech, scavenged weapons, ration bars priced like gold. The stench of sweat, rust, and desperation clung to the air.

Jessica was gone.

The soldiers were gone.

But

the problem?

Still here.

Ava turned to Lucas, muscles tight with tension.

"What's your plan?"

Lucas's golden eyes flickered, gleaming under the dim bunker lights.

Then—

He

smiled.

Not reassuring. Not kind.

Just sharp. Calculating. The kind of smile that

set people up before tearing them down.

"Oh, Beauty," he murmured. "You make it sound like I only have

one

."

Ava's stomach twisted.

He was enjoying this too much.

"Lucas." She stepped closer, voice low.

"Jessica will talk."

"Of course."

"And the military?" Ava's jaw clenched. "They'll dig into our trades. Into the Token System."

Lucas

grinned.

"I know."

Ava inhaled. "Then tell me—

what's your move?

"

Lucas tilted his head. Studying her.

Measuring.

Then—finally—he answered.

"We make ourselves too valuable to touch."

Ava's pulse

kicked up.

Lucas turned, walking leisurely through the market, forcing her to follow.

"Right now,"

he murmured, "Renshaw and his superiors see us as a

problem.

An inconvenience. A thorn in their perfect little system."

Ava fell into step beside him. "And you want to change that?"

Lucas

chuckled.

"No. I want to make it so they can't afford to fight us."

They passed a stall lined with scavenged body armor. Another displaying high-caliber ammo. Lucas barely glanced at them.

Instead, his focus was on something

bigger.

Ava could

see it.

The gears turning in his mind. The way his fingers tapped idly against his belt—

calculating. Predicting. Plotting.

Ava's gut tightened. "Lucas, are you trying to—"

Lucas cut her off, voice smooth.

"What do people fear more than the military?"

Ava frowned. "Starvation. Disease. Losing their place in the bunker hierarchy."

Lucas smiled. "Exactly."

He gestured around them. "The military? They think they run everything.

Food. Medicine. Weapons.

But what happens when the people realize

they don't need them?

"

Ava exhaled. "You're shifting power."

Lucas's golden eyes burned with amusement.

"Not shifting.

Creating."

Ava's stomach

tightened.

She could

see it now.

This wasn't just trade. It wasn't just a way to make money.

Lucas was

building something

big. Dangerous. Unstable.

Her voice was tight.

"People are unpredictable, Lucas. You think you can control this, but what if it backfires? What if it makes the military stronger?"

Lucas exhaled—sharp, amused. Like he'd been

waiting

for her to catch up.

"Ava." His tone was

patient.

Too patient.

Like he was speaking to someone who didn't know how the world worked.

"There are always

at least

four possible outcomes to an event." He lifted a hand, flicking up fingers lazily. "Chaos. Order. Stagnation. Collapse."

His golden gaze locked onto hers.

"I just pick the best one for me."

Ava's pulse

kicked up.

Not

for the market.

Not

for the people.

Not

for survival.

But for Lucas.

She swallowed.

"And if your best outcome gets people killed?"

Lucas

stopped walking.

Turned.

And when his golden eyes met hers—

something shifted.

The lazy amusement was still there, but underneath it?

Something

colder.

He took a slow step closer, and for the first time, Ava

felt it.

Not just the charm. Not just the intelligence.

The

weight

of him.

The kind of presence that didn't just

survive

in a world like this but

thrived.

"People die every day, Beauty," he murmured, voice softer now. "You think the military cares? You think the traders care?"

Another step.

Ava didn't move.

Wouldn't.

"They'll die whether I play my hand or not," Lucas continued. "The only difference is—"

He leaned in. Just enough that she could see

every gold-flecked detail

in his eyes.

"Who benefits."

Ava's breath

hitched.

Lucas Bai showed her his hand.

He

built the table.

Stacked the deck.

And when the pieces fell?

He'd already planned for every outcome.

Her voice was quieter now.

"And what happens when it's you?"

Lucas smiled.

Slow. Sharp.

"Then, Beauty—

I make sure I'm the last one standing."

Ava had exactly

half a second

to register before—

h

e had grabbed her wrist.

Firm. Unrelenting.

And then—

he walked.

Dragging her through the market, through the shifting bodies, past vendors shouting over each other for scraps of trade.

Ava

yanked back.

"Lucas—"

"Keep up, Beauty." His grip

didn't loosen.

Her jaw clenched, but she let him pull her forward.

For now.

"Where are we going?" she demanded.

Lucas's smirk was effortless. "Two more trades to make. Then—"

His golden eyes flickered with

something sharp.

"I save the best for last."

Ava exhaled, irritation curling in her chest.

Of course.

Lucas

always

had something up his sleeve.

They stopped at a stall tucked in the shadow of a rusted-out transport truck. The vendor was a

short, wiry man

, his left arm replaced with

a crude mechanical limb

—scrap metal bolted together, hissing slightly as he moved.

Sun Lei.

Ava recognized him

immediately.

A weapons broker.

One of the best.

And, more importantly—

one of the most dangerous.

Sun Lei

grinned

when he saw Lucas. A sharp, unpleasant thing.

"

Bai.

Thought you might be dead by now."

Lucas

laughed.

"Not yet. But you might be if you don't have what I want."

Sun Lei's grin didn't fade, but his fingers

twitched.

Ava

tensed.

She shifted just enough to

loosen the knife at her hip.

Sun Lei's sharp eyes flicked to her—

assessing. Calculating.

Then back to Lucas.

"Depends," Sun Lei said. "What does the golden boy of the market need so badly he actually came in person?"

Lucas's smirk sharpened.

"A prototype."

Ava's stomach

dropped.

Oh, no.

Sun Lei's amusement faded.

Fully.

"You're insane," he muttered. "Not moveable.

Suicide to trade.

"

Lucas's

golden gaze gleamed.

"And yet, here I am. Asking."

Ava's pulse

kicked up.

Tech that shouldn't even exist anymore.

Pre-catastrophe. Military-grade.

She stepped closer, voice low. "Lucas, if they find out—"

"They won't," he murmured. "Not until it's too late."

Sun Lei

exhaled sharply.

"You better have something big, Bai."

Lucas

grinned.

Then—

he reached into his jacket.

Pulled out a

single silver chip.

And dropped it on the table.

Sun Lei's entire body

locked up.

Ava's breath hitched.

She recognized it immediately.

A data drive.

Not just any drive.

Encrypted. Old-world.

Sun Lei

cursed.

His metal arm

hissed.

"You're going to get me killed," he muttered.

Lucas

tilted his head.

"Not if you take the deal."

A long,

tense silence.

Then—

Sun Lei moved.

He grabbed a

small, reinforced case

from under the table. Slid it forward.

Lucas didn't even hesitate. He picked it up,

checked the weight

, and

smiled.

"Pleasure doing business."

Ava barely exhaled before—

Lucas grabbed her wrist again.

"One more stop, Beauty."

She barely had time to

curse

before he

dragged her off.

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