[HOST INTEGRITY: 6%]
[LOCATION: SECTOR 9 – LOWER SLUMS / DISTRIBUTION ZONE C]
[TIME: 10:40 PM]
The slums didn’t sleep.
They twitched.
Thousands of crooked alleys stacked on top of each other like rotting teeth. Neon signs flickered—some dead, some strobing. Acid rain dripped from exposed pipes, hissing when it hit metal. Ghosts drifted between dumpsters, clutching their stomachs like addicts waiting for a fix.
Hunger was a constant background noise.
A low spiritual whine that never stopped.
Ren Wu watched it all from inside a dented black delivery van. The engine idled rough—needed new filters. The windows were blacked out with spray paint that was already peeling.
Inside: forty sealed crates.
Each crate: two hundred sticks.
Grey sticks.
No logos. No artwork. No seals.
Just plain ash-grey cylinders wrapped in thin paper that felt wrong to the touch. Too smooth. Too uniform.
Jian sat in the passenger seat, nervously refreshing a handheld scanner that kept glitching.
“Boss…” He licked his lips. “This price is fucking insane, right?”
Ren leaned back against the metal wall. The van reeked of cigarette ash and Red Dog’s cheap cologne.
“Say it.”
“One coin per stick.”
Jian’s hand shook slightly.
“Nether-Core’s cheapest product is eight coins. Even their garbage tier—the stuff that barely works—sells at six.”
Ren stared at the slum outside.
“Then tonight, six becomes obsolete.”
Red Dog sat near the back, sharpening a cleaver out of habit. The scraping sound filled the silence.
“If this stuff doesn’t work,” Red Dog said, not looking up, “we get lynched. Like, actually torn apart.”
“It works,” Ren replied.
He closed his eyes briefly.
The smell of static and damp ash still lingered in his nostrils from the factory.
Soulless.
Sterile.
Functional.
Perfect.
Ren opened his eyes.
“Open channel.”
Jian pressed a button. Static crackled.
A distorted voice came through a cheap communicator.
— *Sewer Rat One online.*
— *Bone Alley Runner online.*
— *Scrap Queen online.*
— *Three Fingers online.*
— *Hook Face online.*
Five low-tier street distributors.
Not gangs. Not corporations.
Parasites who lived between cracks.
Ren spoke.
“You each get two crates.”
Static.
Skepticism.
“Payment?” Scrap Queen’s voice was suspicious.
“Cash on delivery.”
A pause.
Three Fingers laughed—high-pitched, nervous.
“You fronting inventory? You stupid or desperate?”
Ren’s voice stayed flat.
“Sell at one coin per stick.”
More laughter.
“That’s suicide pricing, friend.”
“Correct.”
Silence crept into the channel like cold water.
Hook Face spoke slowly.
“…Why?”
Ren looked at the slum. Watched a ghost child dig through trash.
“Because hunger doesn’t give a shit about brand loyalty.”
Another pause.
Ren continued.
“No contracts. No exclusivity. Sell whatever else you want.”
“But if you cut the Grey Line with anything—herbs, ash, fucking sawdust—I kill you.”
The temperature inside the van seemed to drop.
Nobody questioned how he’d know.
“Delivery points uploaded,” Jian said, voice cracking slightly.
Ren opened the door. Cold air rushed in.
“Move.”
—
The first sale happened in Bone Alley at 11:04 PM.
A hunched ghost with half a jaw missing—looked like he’d been dead for years.
He had three coins clutched in a translucent fist.
He expected half a stick. Maybe a third.
The runner handed him three full sticks.
The ghost stared.
“…Trick?”
“Light it,” the runner said.
The ghost lit it with shaking hands.
He inhaled.
The reaction wasn’t euphoric.
No moaning. No screaming pleasure like Nether-Core’s premium lines.
Just—
Relief.
His shaking stopped.
His bent spine straightened slightly.
The hollow look in his eyes dulled from sharp panic to manageable dread.
“I’m… not fading,” the ghost whispered.
—
Word spread in seconds.
Not through ads. Not through announcements.
Through mouths.
Through coughing.
Through shaking hands grabbing sleeves in dark alleys.
“One coin.”
“One coin.”
“One fucking coin.”
Lines formed.
Silent lines.
No cheering. No excitement.
Only survival.
—
Ren watched the sales through Jian’s live feed. The scanner kept losing signal, then reconnecting.
Numbers climbed.
10 sold.
50 sold.
200 sold.
Crates opening. Hands exchanging coins—some copper, some barely recognizable as currency.
No bargaining.
No haggling.
Because nobody was comparing flavors or brand reputation.
They were comparing hunger levels.
Red Dog leaned closer, cleaver now resting on his knee.
“They’re not even asking what it is. What’s in it.”
Ren nodded.
“They don’t care what it is. They care that it stops the pain.”
—
At 11:30 PM, Nether-Core noticed.
It didn’t come from informants.
It didn’t come from street patrols.
It came from a graph doing something impossible.
A junior market analyst—night shift, overworked, underpaid—stared at his screen.
“S-Supervisor?”
“What.” The supervisor didn’t look up from his own terminal.
“Low-tier incense sales in District C dropped… uh…” He refreshed the screen. “Ninety-two percent in forty minutes.”
Silence.
“Explain.”
“Consumers migrated to an unknown product labeled… Grey Line? No manufacturer signature. No—”
“Price?”
The analyst hesitated.
“One coin.”
The supervisor laughed.
Then stopped laughing.
“Trace supplier.”
“Unknown.”
“Trace raw materials.”
“Unknown. Actually, wait—” The analyst’s fingers flew across the keyboard. “Unknown.”
“Trace manufacturing signature.”
The screen flashed red.
**ERROR: NO BIOLOGICAL INPUT DETECTED**
**ERROR: NO HERBAL MARKERS FOUND**
**ERROR: SPIRITUAL SIGNATURE ABSENT**
The supervisor felt a chill crawl up his spine.
“No herbs?”
“No herbs. No plants. No… anything we recognize.”
The supervisor slowly stood up, chair scraping.
“Call Branch Manager Zhou. Now.”
—
Back in the slums, 11:47 PM.
Scrap Queen was already out of stock.
She stared at her empty crate in disbelief, surrounded by ghosts asking if she had more.
“I need more. Right fucking now.”
Her communicator buzzed.
Ren’s voice, distorted slightly.
“Warehouse pickup. Dock 3. Come alone.”
She ran.
—
Inside the van.
Jian stared at the dashboard, watching numbers update.
“Boss… collections rate is insane. Like, actually insane.”
“Numbers.”
“Seventy percent sell-through in forty minutes. That’s… that’s not normal. Premium products take days—”
Ren nodded slowly.
“Good.”
“Also…” Jian hesitated. “Weird side effect reports coming in.”
“What kind of weird?”
“Users report… emotional flattening. No high. No euphoria. But also no despair either. Just… nothing. They stop feeling hungry but they also stop feeling much of anything else.”
Ren shrugged.
“Industrial grade. We aren’t selling happiness. We’re selling continuity.”
Red Dog frowned.
“People gonna complain about that. Nether-Core at least makes you feel good.”
Ren looked at him.
“They can complain after they stop starving.”
—
Midnight.
Nether-Core emergency meeting.
The conference room smelled of burnt coffee and recycled air.
Branch Manager Zhou slammed his fist on the table hard enough to make coffee cups jump.
“Find the factory. Shut it down. I don’t care how.”
“We already know the factory,” another executive said quietly, not meeting Zhou’s eyes.
Zhou froze.
“…Last Stop?”
“Yes.”
Silence filled the room like cold water.
Zhou felt a headache blooming behind his eyes.
“They don’t have herbs. Their supply lines are cut. They shouldn’t be able to produce anything.”
The analyst whispered from the corner.
“They aren’t producing incense, sir. They’re producing something else. Something we don’t… recognize.”
Zhou slowly sat down.
“Synthetic?”
The word tasted wrong. Impossible. Illegal in seventeen sectors. Extinct technology from the old wars.
“Kill it.”
“How?”
Zhou clenched his jaw so hard a tooth cracked slightly.
“Price war. Drop lowest tier to two coins. Flood the market. Crush them on volume.”
Another executive hesitated.
“Sir, we lose profit margin. Shareholders—”
Zhou snapped.
“If we lose the slums, we lose distribution gravity. Everything above collapses. Deploy. Now.”
—
12:20 AM.
Street runners received new messages on their cheap communicators.
**NETHER-CORE PRICE UPDATE: LOWEST TIER NOW 2 COINS**
Scrap Queen, halfway through restocking, laughed.
“Doesn’t fucking matter.”
She lifted a Grey Line stick.
“Mine’s one.”
Customers didn’t even look at the Nether-Core crates being unloaded nearby.
They were already in line for grey sticks.
—
Ren watched price updates on Jian’s glitching scanner.
“Expected.”
Jian looked nervous, sweat beading on his forehead despite the cold.
“Boss, they halved their price. That’s aggressive. That’s—”
Ren closed his eyes.
“Then we halve again.”
Silence.
“New price. One stick. Half coin.”
Jian’s mouth opened.
“Boss that’s—we can’t—there’s no margin left—”
Ren cut him off.
“We’re not competing on margin.” He opened his eyes. They looked tired. Empty. “We’re competing on oxygen.”
He tapped the dashboard.
“Nether-Core is a publicly traded company. They have shareholders. Quarterly reports. Board meetings. They need profit.”
Ren’s voice dropped.
“I don’t.”
[HOST INTEGRITY: 5%]
Red Dog slowly grinned, understanding dawning.
“Oh. Oh, that’s dirty.”
—
1:00 AM.
Grey Line price updated across all channels.
**0.5 COIN PER STICK**
Nether-Core cheapest: 2 coins.
Four times higher.
The slum market collapsed.
Not metaphorically.
Literally.
Unopened Nether-Core boxes piled in alleys like abandoned trash. Street dealers stopped answering calls from their suppliers. Middlemen began returning shipments.
Warehouse inventory backed up.
Nether-Core logistics software began flashing yellow warnings.
Then orange.
Then red.
**CRITICAL: INVENTORY OVERFLOW**
**ALERT: DISTRIBUTION CHAIN FAILURE**
**WARNING: MARKET SHARE LOSS ACCELERATING**
—
Ren Wu leaned his head back against the van wall.
Pain throbbed behind his eyes.
Worth it.
“This is day one,” Ren said softly.
Jian looked at him.
“What’s day five?”
Ren stared at the neon skyline through the cracked windshield.
“By day five… Sector 9 associates hunger relief with my brand.”
“They won’t ask who I am. They won’t ask where it comes from.”
“They’ll just know… if Grey Line disappears… they starve.”
Silence filled the van.
Red Dog felt a chill.
Jian swallowed.
Ren finished.
“That’s called leverage.”
[SYSTEM ALERT]
[MARKET SHARE – SLUM TIER: 38% → 61%]
[ECONOMIC DESTABILIZATION: ACTIVE]
[NETHER-CORE LOSS RATE: ACCELERATING]
[HOST INTEGRITY: 5% (CRITICAL)]
Ren closed his eyes.
“Drive.”
“Where?”
Ren didn’t open them.
“Next district.”
The van’s engine coughed to life.
Ren said quietly, “Good. Let it rot.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 96 - 93 — "We Tore Her Soul Apart"
- Chapter 95 - 92 — Every Breath Made the Weapon Heavier
- Chapter 94 - 91 — Gravity Began Obeying the Wrong Man
- Chapter 93 - 90 — He Stepped Out of the Skybox and Fell
- Chapter 92 - 89 — He Crushed Them With Their Own Debt
- Chapter 91 - 88 — Contracts Only Matter If You Survive the Room
- Chapter 90 - 87 — He Wagered an Entire Sector
- Chapter 89 - 86 — Half the Room Went Bankrupt in 12 Seconds
- Chapter 88 - 85 — The Monster They Deployed to Save Their Money
- Chapter 87 - 84 — Their Fortunes Began to Bleed
- Chapter 86 - 83 — The Arena Learned to Fear Iron
- Chapter 85 - 82 — They Bet Billions Against Scrap Metal
- Chapter 84 - 81 — Champagne, Silk… and a Soul in a Glass Cage
- Chapter 83 - 80 — He Bought the Man Who Insulted Him
- Chapter 82 - 79 — Denied Entry by a Man Already Dead
- Chapter 81 - 78 — The River Was Made of Acid and Bones
- Chapter 80 - 77 — We Brought Cash Instead of an Army
- Chapter 79 - 76 — The Eight Traitors & the Clock That Will Kill Me
- Chapter 78 - 75: The New King
- Chapter 77 - 74: The Section Chief Kneels
- Chapter 76 - 73: The Financial Nuke
- Chapter 75 - 72: The Blockade Breaker
- Chapter 74 - 71: The Worship
- Chapter 73 - 70: The Delivery of Rust
- Chapter 72 - 69: The Alchemist’s Wrath
- Chapter 71 - 68: The Declaration
- Chapter 70 - 67: The Iron Baptism
- Chapter 69 - 66: The Heavy Hand
- Chapter 68 - 65: The Floodgate
- Chapter 67 - 64: The Formula of the Yellow Springs
- Chapter 66: SIDE STORY 3: THE FALL
- Chapter 65: SIDE STORY 2: THE HARVEST
- Chapter 64: Side Story 1: The Broken Oath
- Chapter 63 - CHAPTER 63: THE HEADHUNTER
- Chapter 62 - CHAPTER 62: THE DEBT COLLECTOR
- Chapter 61 - CHAPTER 61: ORIENTATION DAY
- Chapter 60: The Merger
- Chapter 59: The Hostile Takeover
- Chapter 58: The Cease and Desist
- Chapter 57: The Supply Chain
- Chapter 56: The Distressed Asset
- Chapter 55: The Cost of Business
- Chapter 54: The Liquidation
- Chapter 53 - 53 — The Hostile Restructuring
- Chapter 52 - 52 — The Walk-In
- Chapter 51 - CHAPTER 51: The Sovereign Reborn
- Chapter 50: The High Court
- Chapter 49: The Hostile Ledger
- Chapter 48 - CHAPTER 48: THE DEAD SHIFT
- Chapter 47: The Bleeding Ledger
- Chapter 46: The Grey Line Launch
- Chapter 45: Administrative Pressure
- Chapter 44: The Supply Switch
- Chapter 43: The Chokepoint Market
- Chapter 42: The Asset Unfreeze
- Chapter 41: The Board of Directors
- Chapter 40: The Audit of the Ice Clan
- Chapter 39: The Blackout
- Chapter 38: The Subpoena
- Chapter 37: The Liquidation
- Chapter 36: The Silent Banquet
- Chapter 35: The Remote CEO
- Chapter 34: The Cartel
- Chapter 33: Supply & Demand
- Chapter 32: The Black Label
- Chapter 31: The Headhunter
- Chapter 30: The Surveyor
- Chapter 29: Shop Level 2
- Chapter 28: The Hostile Takeover
- Chapter 27: The Zoning Dispute
- Chapter 26: Mr. Crow
- Chapter 25: The Spy
- Chapter 24: Withdrawal
- Chapter 23: The First Taste
- Chapter 22: The DMV of Hell
- Chapter 21: Production Line Alpha
- Chapter 20: The Audit
- Chapter 19: The Supply Chain
- Chapter 18: The Decree of 1,000 Ghosts
- Chapter 17: The Ice Queen Cometh
- Chapter 16: The Warden’s Abacus
- Chapter 15: The Warlord’s Ledger
- Chapter 14: The Standoff
- Chapter 13: The Grinder
- Chapter 12: The Last Stop
- Chapter 11: The Warlord vs. Two-Factor Authentication
- Chapter 10: The Midnight Raid
- Chapter 9: The Reaper at the Dinner Table
- Chapter 8: The Safe House
- Chapter 7: The Currency of Violence
- Chapter 6: The Sanctuary of Tiles
- Chapter 5: Blood for Mana
- Chapter 4: The Reaper in the Next Seat
- Chapter 3 - 3 — The Fracture Begins
- Chapter 2: The First Command
- Chapter 1: The Forty-Seven Second Death