Episode 1: The Deal Series: Borrowed Time
The fluorescent lights of the oncology ward didn't flicker; they hummed with a clinical, predatory indifference. Elias Thorne sat on the edge of the crinkling paper-covered exam table, the scent of antiseptic stinging his nostrils. Dr. Aris hadn’t used the word "death" yet, but "inoperable" and "aggressive" did the heavy lifting.
"Three weeks," Elias whispered. It wasn’t a question.
"With palliative care, perhaps four," Aris replied, his voice a practiced soft-landing.
Elias walked out into the rain-slicked streets of the city, the neon signs blurring into smears of electric blue and bruised purple. He was thirty-two. He had a half-finished manuscript on his desk and a stack of unwashed dishes in the sink. He wasn’t ready for the credits to roll.
That night, the shadows in his apartment didn't retreat when he flipped the switch. They pooled in the corner of his bedroom, thickening until they possessed a weight and a silhouette.
"It’s a lopsided trade, isn’t it?" The voice was like dry leaves skittering across a tombstone. "The universe taking so much from someone with so much left to say."
Elias didn't scream. Fear is a luxury for those with a future. "Who are you?"
"A broker," the shadow replied, stepping into the dim amber glow of the bedside lamp. He looked like a man in a sharp, charcoal suit, though his eyes were voids that suggested a complete absence of light. "I can offer you an extension. Thirty days of perfect health. No pain. No cough. Just life."
Elias felt a surge of adrenaline—the first thing he’d felt in months that wasn't exhaustion. "What’s the catch?"
"A balance must be maintained," the Broker said, leaning against the wall. "Energy cannot be created, only transferred. For every twenty-four hours you breathe, someone else’s clock stops. A stranger. A pulse for a pulse. A fair trade for a man of your talents, wouldn't you say?"
Elias looked at his trembling hands. He thought of the manuscript. He thought of the sunset he wouldn't see in June. "Thirty days," he breathed. "Just thirty."
"Sign with your intent," the Broker said, extending a hand.
Elias took it. The cold was absolute. It felt like plunging his arm into a frozen lake, but as the Broker’s grip tightened, the fire in Elias’s lungs—the constant, gnawing heat of the tumors—simply vanished. He drew a breath so deep it hurt. His blood felt like liquid gold.
"The first payment has been collected," the Broker whispered, dissolving back into the darkness. "Enjoy the morning, Elias."
Elias slept for ten hours. He woke up feeling invincible. He made coffee, he ran three miles, and he wrote five thousand words. He was a god among the dying.
It wasn't until evening that he saw the news. A local baker, a father of three known for giving away day-old bread to the homeless, had died of a sudden, unexplained heart failure at 8:00 AM.
Elias looked at the clock. 8:00 AM was exactly when he had woken up feeling "reborn."
The pen slipped from his hand. The silence of the apartment felt different now. It wasn't the silence of loneliness; it was the silence of a vacuum waiting to be filled. He had twenty-nine days left. Somewhere out there, twenty-nine people were finishing their final meals, unaware that their time had been sold to a man who just wanted to finish a book.
Elias looked at his reflection in the window. The color had returned to his cheeks, but his eyes looked just like the Broker's.
Summary
After receiving a terminal diagnosis, Elias Thorne is approached by a mysterious entity offering him thirty additional days of life. The condition: each day he survives costs the life of a random stranger. Elias accepts, but the euphoria of his sudden recovery is immediately shattered when he realizes the human cost of his "borrowed time."
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