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Now reading: Chapter 37: A Moment’s Notice (R18) from My Kaiju Parasite Revived Me, But a Yandere Bought My Streaming Rights, a Fantasy novel by HambinoRanx.

Morning light crept through the cracked blinds. The heavy drumming of the acid rain had faded to a slow drip against the clogged gutters outside.

The motel room was freezing. Caleb sat on the edge of the sagging mattress. The rusted springs groaned under his weight. He pulled his stiff canvas trousers up and fastened his combat belt with his left hand. His right arm felt heavy, the bruised muscles protesting the movent. He kept his head perfectly straight. The torn muscle across his collarbone pulled tight with every breath.

Kikaru stood near the foggy bathroom mirror. She had her gray academy jacket zipped all the way to her throat. She smoothed a crease on her sleeve, pulling the fabric taut over her wrist. Her carbon-fiber leg brace clicked loudly as she shifted her weight. She kept her back to the bed.

Caleb stared at the worn toes of his surplus boots. He reached for his blood-stained undershirt, wadded it into a tight ball, and shoved it into his canvas duffel bag.

"The acid wash didn’t eat through the roof," Caleb rasped. His voice sounded like gravel.

Kikaru kept her eyes locked on her own reflection in the cloudy glass. "Structural luck."

Caleb grabbed his burner phone off the rusted nightstand. The digital clock read 08:14.

He dragged a hand down his face. "The salvage market opens at nine. If I miss the early rotation, the vendors sell out of the carbon sh."

Kikaru turned her head. She looked at his bruised shoulder, then at the red numbers on the clock.

"You almost bled out on the highway," she said. Her voice sounded thin, lacking its usual corporate volu. "You slept in your clothes. And your imdiate priority is an air filter."

"My brother needs to breathe today," Caleb said. He pulled a clean gray undershirt from his bag. "The machine doesn’t care about the highway."

He pulled the shirt over his head. The fabric scraped the raw gash on his collarbone. He winced, rolling his right shoulder to test the joint. The starving heat in his chest had simred down to a dull throb, having cannibalized enough energy during the night to close the torn artery.

He pulled a roll of dical tape from his jacket pocket.

Kikaru took a half-step forward out of the bathroom doorway. Her hand twitched.

Caleb tore a strip of tape with his teeth. He pressed it flat over the gauze himself, locking his jaw against the sharp sting.

She stopped. She adjusted her pristine cuffs, retreating behind her polished academy posture.

A silver phone buzzed sharply from her pocket.

Kikaru pulled it out. She tapped the screen.

"Mitsurugi actual," she answered. The crisp corporate clip returned instantly, masking the exhaustion in her eyes. "Understood. Send the transport to the Sector Seven border route. Bring a flatbed."

She dropped the phone back into her pocket.

"The weather lock is lifted," she announced. "Dispatch is five minutes out."

They walked two blocks down the access road in silence. The cold morning air bit at Caleb’s neck. The rusted sedan sat exactly where he had abandoned it, coated in a fresh layer of gray smog-ash from the upper sector exhaust stacks.

A heavy corporate flatbed truck rumbled down the street and hissed to a stop next to the curb. Two chanics wearing blue jumpsuits hopped out. The lead chanic, a broad man with grease sared across his jaw, took one look at Caleb’s car.

"This is the extraction?" the chanic asked. He kicked the front tire with a heavy steel-toed boot. The zip-ties on the bumper rattled loudly. "Dispatch said we were securing a priority asset vehicle. This is scrap tal. The alternator is completely fused. We should just push it into the ditch and save the fuel."

Caleb pulled his keys from his pocket. "It just needs a tow to the lower-sector yard."

Kikaru stepped directly in front of Caleb.

"You will secure the vehicle to the flatbed," Kikaru ordered. Her voice carried absolute, freezing authority. "You will transport it to the primary Mitsurugi repair bay. You will replace the alternator with a military-grade kinetic coil, realign the suspension, and reinforce the chassis plating."

The chanic scoffed, wiping his hands on a greasy rag. "Lady, the parts cost ten tis what this junk is worth."

"Call your supervisor," Kikaru said. "I’ll wait."

The chanic stared at the tailored gray academy uniform, then down at the expensive carbon-fiber leg brace. He swallowed hard. The rag stopped moving.

"Loading it up," the chanic muttered, turning back to the truck.

Caleb watched the heavy winch drag his rusted sedan onto the flatbed steel. The tal groaned.

"A kinetic coil is a waste of money on that engine," Caleb said.

Kikaru refused to look at him. "The suspension squeaks. It gave a headache. Get in the transport cabin."

The ride to the border salvage market was rough. The corporate truck bypassed the flooded lower-sector traffic, dropping them directly at the chaotic entrance of the rchant district.

The narrow alleys slled of burned engine grease and spiced at roasting over open plasma burners. Caleb navigated the crowded stalls, stepping around broken engine blocks and rusted drone chassis spilling out of the canvas tents.

Kikaru stuck close to his good side. Her pristine uniform drew stares from the scrap rchants. She kept her posture rigid, her chin up, deliberately ignoring the gri coating the walkway. A vendor holding a severed synthetic arm shouted a price at her. She didn’t blink.

"Keep your hands near your pockets," Caleb muttered over his shoulder. "They steal comms-chips here."

"My comms-chip is encrypted with military-grade counterasures," she replied.

"They don’t care. They just lt them down for the trace silver."

Caleb found the specific vendor tucked between two towering piles of rusted exhaust pipes. He dropped two crumpled physical credit chits onto the scratched tal counter.

The rchant, an older woman with a cybernetic eye, slid a stack of carbon sh filters across the table.

Caleb grabbed them. He shoved the filters deep into his canvas bag and zipped it shut. A heavy weight lifted off his chest. The oxygen concentrator would run clean for another six months. The eighty thousand credits he gave his mother bought the debt, but the filters bought the air.

He stepped away from the stall and tapped the cracked visor module hanging from his belt.

The military grid reconnected.

Blue text flooded the small glass screen. The blackout was officially over.

[UNREAD SSAGES: 42] [SPONSOR BID REQUESTS: 2] [CLIP ROYALTIES: PROCESSING] [POST-RAID ENGAGENT ADJUSTNT: PENDING]

The notifications stacked until the glass crowded blue. The brief, freezing privacy of the motel room shattered. The algorithm wanted him back to work.

"Hiro sent four ssages asking if my boots lted in the rain," Caleb said, scrolling through the squad text thread. "Iharu asked who gets my bunk."

Kikaru checked her own silver phone. The glow illuminated her pale face.

"My father’s PR team scheduled a press conference for noon," she said, her voice dropping the sharp edge it had carried with the chanic. "They want to wear the prototype armor for the caras."

"Tell them the hydraulic seals need recalibrating."

"They don’t care about the seals. They care about the optics." She slid the phone away. "I have to report to the dical bay first for a toxicity screen."

They walked toward the transit rail station. The morning crowds thickened. Working-class citizens carrying heavy tool bags shoved past them on the concrete stairs leading up to the mag-lev platform. The noise of a thousand overlapping conversations echoed off the vaulted ceiling.

Caleb checked his visor module one last ti to clear the grid. He needed to route the review flags to his secondary inbox before boarding the train.

A sharp crackle of static popped from the burner chip buried behind his right ear.

The blue military ledger on the glass dissolved.

Vibrant purple code ripped across the module screen, overwriting the squad chat and the sponsor bids.

Caleb stopped walking on the stairs. A commuter bumped hard into his bad shoulder, muttering a curse, but Caleb didn’t move.

[??? : Four hours. You kept your promise.]

Caleb reached to wipe the screen away. His thumb hovered over the manual override button on his gauntlet.

Kikaru stopped two steps above him. She turned around. "rcer, the train is docking."

She stepped back down, bumping his good shoulder in the crowd. She glanced sideways at his belt to see what was holding him up.

The purple text expanded. It printed in a large, undeniable font across the cracked glass, bright enough to cast a faint neon glow over the dark canvas of his jacket.

[??? : She saw the ssage, didn’t she? Good.]

Caleb slamd his thumb down on the purge button. The screen wiped back to standard blue military data.

He turned his head.

Kikaru stood frozen on the concrete steps. She stared directly at the module hanging from his belt. The deafening noise of the transit station faded completely into the background. Her jaw parted.

"Who," Kikaru whispered, her voice dropping into a dangerous absolute, "is writing that to you?"

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