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Episode 53: Part 1 – The Aftermath of a Humbling

  The final, echoing BAM of the mic drop faded, leaving a silence so deep and profound it felt like a physical void. In the virtual studio, the only movement was the gentle, programmed sway of the prairie grass. The live chat, which had been a screaming torrent of hype and shock, just… died. For a solid ten seconds, it was a slow, hypnotic scroll of pure, unadulterated disbelief.

  [User_1111]: ... [User_Beareve]: …..[User_098]: what just happened to my face[User_Momon]: …………………..[User_yuig]: i think i need to lie down…

  Sael VT’s avatar was the picture of serenity. He leaned back on his stool with an effortless cool and let out a soft, almost bored sigh—the kind you make after a decent, but not mind-blowing, sandwich.

  “Well,” he said, his voice a calm, deep rumble that cut through the silence like a warm knife. “That should do it… I guess,”

  He said it with the same energy as someone who’d just taken the trash out. Not like he’d just surgically dismantled a gangster rapper’s entire career live on a global stream.

  On the other side of the screen, Millie was staring at him, her avatar’s face a frozen mask of shock. The color had slowly returned to her features, leaving her looking pale and utterly bewildered. Her mouth opened, closed, then opened again, like a goldfish that had just seen its castle get rearranged.

  “Did you…” she stammered, her voice a thin, reedy thing. “Did you just… create that? Right now? In, like, a minute?”

  Sael’s avatar turned its head toward her. A faint, amused glint seemed to fsh in its anime-style eyes. “Yeah? You were watching…. Took about a minute…. Maybe ninety seconds. The beat’s simple.”

  “A—A full song?” Millie pressed, leaning forward, her earlier fear completely repced by sheer awe.

  “Could you… could you make a full version? Please? That was the hottest thing I’ve ever heard in my entire life!”

  The chat, kickstarted by her question, erupted from its stunned coma into a full-blown frenzy of begging.

  [User_1111]: PLEASE!!![Uer_John]: WE NEED THE FULL TRACK SAEL I AM ON MY KNEES [User_Kimble]: TakeMyMoney[User_Hookgut]: MY WALLET IS OPEN! NAME YOUR PRICE! [User_deary]: SpotifyWhen?[User_Camgy]: I NEED THIS ON REPEAT FOR THE NEXT 10 YEARS..

  Sael’s avatar gave a zy, dismissive shrug.

  “I could,” he said, his tone implying it was the easiest thing in the world. “Don’t really want to, though…. Not really my genre, Rap’s… fine…. I guess, Just not what I’m passionate about….”

  The casual rejection of a song the entire digital world was already desperately craving was its own form of breathtaking audacity. The chat scrolled with cries of despair and increasingly outrageous offers of bribes. He seemed to relent, just a fraction.

  “Maybe I released the full version, ter,” he conceded, waving a hand. “We’ll see… If I’m bored enough...”

  ***********

  In a soundproofed home studio in Detroit, the rapper Heminem sat alone in the glow of a single monitor. The repy of Sael’s verse was on a loop. He didn’t move a muscle, his expression pure granite. After the fifth listen, he gave a single, slow, definitive nod. It was a gesture of pure, unadulterated respect from one master to another.

  “The flow,” he muttered to the empty room, his voice gravelly.

  “It was Impeccable…. The wordpy was sharp, cutting…. The sheer disrespect of it… wrapped up in a goddamn life lesson.” He shook his head, a rare, genuine smile touching his lips. “The man’s got talent… a real, raw, fucking talent.”

  ***********

  Across the country, in a mansion that looked more like a modern art museum, the mogul Wayne East was surrounded by his usual chaotic entourage. He was standing on a pristine white leather couch, pointing at the massive screen and ughing, a loud, booming, uninhibited sound that shook the room.

  “This man wild!” he roared, spping his thigh.

  “He shut that shit DOWN! Hah! On his own stream! With a beat made in a minute! Sit yo ass down, D.Minor! Sit down!”

  He stumbled off the couch, grabbing a tablet from a startled assistant. “Get me that donation thing! Now! Five bands! Nah, make it ten! Split it with Em!”

  A moment ter, two simultaneous Super Chats, each for 5,000, bsted into Millie’s stream with a deafening KA-CHING! KA-CHING!

  The messages were simple, brutal, and final.

  @Heminem: Sit down. Be humble.

  @Wayne East: ^ what he said. LOL. -YE

  The co-sign from the two undisputed kings of the industry was the ultimate verdict. The beef was over. Sael hadn’t just won; he’d been crowned.

  **********

  Back in the virtual Atnta mansion, the mood had gone from a raging inferno to a cold, ashen pit. Lil D.Minor’s avatar was statue-still, its chest heaving with ragged, silent breaths. The silence from his crew was absolutely deafening.

  With a sudden, guttural roar, he snatched a virtual bottle of thousand-dolr Clique Ace of Spades and hurled it against the nearest wall. It exploded in a shower of pixeted gss and golden liquid. CRASH.

  “FUCK!” he screamed, his voice cracking with rage. “FUCK! THAT ANIME-LOOKIN’ ASS—”

  His rant was cut short as his manager’s avatar teleported directly in front of him, face grim. “D! D, stop! Enough!” he hissed, his voice low and urgent.

  “Brand calls are coming in… Right now, they’re nervous, your metrics are tanking…. He beat you. He beat you at your own game, on your own turf, in front of everyone. The only move left is to take the L… Take it gracefully, and stay on the down low,”

  D.Minor’s shoulders slumped. The fight drained out of him, repced by a cold, sickening realization. The money. It was always about the money. He gave a curt, jerky nod.

  He restarted his own live stream. His face, now visible on camera, was a mask of forced calm over seething humiliation. He cleared his throat, avoiding the eyes of his viewers in the chat.

  “A’ight. A’ight, look,” he began, his voice tighter than usual. “That was... that was some cold shit…. I ain’t gonna lie.” He took a deep breath, the words tasting like absolute ash. “Dude can rap…. I’ll give him that. That was a... a spicy track.”

  It was gruff. It was reluctant. But it was a concession. The humbling was complete. The king of mumble rap had been dethroned by a ninety-second verse from a ghost.

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