DEACTIVATE STOREFRONT: Eversharp Edge
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Theo didn’t hesitate. His finger found the confirmation button, pressing down with decisive force. Click. Gone. The slowly building reputation, the trickle of income, the five-star ratings built on low cost knives infused with impossible power, erased with the same ruthless efficiency he’d once applied to corporate rivals.
He leaned back, the cheap office chair groaning under his weight. The decision wasn't born of panic, but cold, hard calculation, the kind honed in the unforgiving corridors of Bank of America. Eversharp Edge had served its purpose: a proof of concept, a capital-generating engine fuelled by desperation and his strange new ability. But its lifespan was inherently limited, its foundation built on sand, specifically, the ten un-enhanced knives he’d shipped out during the unexpected demand spike to get some quick profit. His need for quick cash outweighed his morals. Complaints were inevitable. Negative reviews, accusations of inconsistency, perhaps even platform suspension… they were liabilities waiting to materialize. Clinging to Eversharp would be like holding onto a ticking time bomb wrapped in butcher paper. Cut losses, ditch the evidence, move on. Standard operating procedure for a man whose career, until recently, involved navigating treacherous waters in a corporate world full of sharks.
A deeper, more primal fear cemented the decision. Anonymity was paramount. His power, this inexplicable "+1" singularity in an otherwise mundane world, was his ultimate asset, his secret weapon in the war against the poverty that haunted his past. But if word got out? If anyone knew what he could do? He envisioned greasy gangsters in tracksuits, not the polished thugs of the corporate world, kicking down his flimsy apartment door. They wouldn't offer him a partnership, they'd chain him in a basement, forcing him to enhance guns, cars, whatever illicit tools they desired, day after day, ten pings at a time, until he burned out or became disposable. The thought sent a shiver down his spine that had nothing to do with the apartment's morning chill. No, the power had to remain his alone. Untraceable. Each venture needed to be compartmentalized, disposable, leaving no trail back to Theodore Sterling, the man who could make things better.
Eversharp was dead. Long live the next hustle.
With the ghost of the knife business exorcised, a familiar, predatory energy surged through him. The $2825.62 in his account felt less like a safety net and more like seed capital. It was time to leverage the +1 more effectively. Ten uses per day. That was the iron constraint. Enhancing $25 knives yielded maybe $45 profit per charge, $450 a day max before the tedious grind of packing and shipping. Pathetic. Small-time. It wouldn’t even cover the rent on a decent place, let alone build an empire. He needed higher margins, bigger ticket items where a single +1 enhancement translated into hundreds, even thousands, in added value.
The laptop screen became his hunting ground. He dove into the digital warrens of online marketplaces, eBay, specialized forums, classifieds. He scanned business news sites, looking for trends, for weaknesses, for gaps where enhanced quality could command a premium. His fingers flew across the keyboard, tapping with their characteristic impatience, his analytical mind sifting through gigabytes of data.
He considered specialized tools again, dental drills needing +1 precision, jeweller's loupes needing +1 clarity. Too niche, required expertise he didn't possess to sell convincingly. Medical devices? He saw an article on brittle catheter components, a flicker of morbid interest, then dismissed it, the regulatory hurdles and ethical implications were a minefield he wasn’t ready to navigate, not to mention the astronomical start-up costs. Enhancing cheap laptops? Margins were too thin, the market saturated. Plus, explaining a sudden leap in performance on a budget machine? Too suspicious.
He needed something where performance and durability were obsessions, where enthusiasts paid premiums for incremental gains, where the enhancement would be felt, appreciated, yet plausibly deniable as mere "tuning" or "optimization."
His eyes snagged on a forum thread discussing lightweight bicycle components. Carbon fibre frames, aerodynamic wheelsets, groupsets shaving off precious grams. Riders arguing passionately over marginal gains, spending hundreds, sometimes thousands, to upgrade a single part. A world of obsessive hobbyists with disposable income.
The idea struck him like a physical blow, sharp and exhilarating. Bicycles. High-end road bikes.
Think, Theo, think. A serious amateur cyclist might drop $1,500, maybe $2,500 on a decent carbon fibre bike. It's fast, light, a significant investment. But it's not the $10,000+ machine the pros ride. There's a gap. A performance gap. What if he could take that $1,500 bike and give it a +1? Not just one part, but the whole damn thing, piece by piece?
Frame: +1 stiffness and durability, maybe even fractionally lighter or more aerodynamic in feel. Wheels: +1 strength, better rolling resistance, truer spin. Crankset: +1 efficiency, smoother power transfer. Derailleurs: +1 precision, faster shifting. Brakes: +1 stopping power, better modulation. Ten charges. Ten key components brought to a higher state of being.
The result wouldn't just be a tuned bike. It would be fundamentally better. It might feel like a $5,000 bike, maybe even approach the performance of something costing far more. And he could sell it, not as some unknown magic brand, but as a standard model that had undergone expert "professional optimization." Plausible. Lucrative.
His heart hammered against his ribs. This felt right. High value, enthusiast market, plausible deniability, and a perfect fit for his ten daily charges applied strategically. He quickly searched used marketplaces and clearance sales. He needed a good base model, something recognizable, reputable, but cheap enough to leave room for massive profit.
There. A local bike shop's online clearance section. A Giant TCR Advanced. Carbon fibre frame, Shimano 105 groupset. Two years old, last year's colourway, hence the discount. Originally retailed around $2,200. On sale for $1,000. Perfect. It had the pedigree, the right materials. It was a canvas worthy of his power.
The price made him pause. $1,000. That was more than a third of his current capital. A single bet, far riskier than the knives. Failure wasn't just inconvenient; it pushed him right back to the brink of financial ruin. The image of the eviction notice, the memory of the guards escorting him out of the bank tower, they flashed behind his eyes. Fear, cold and metallic, tasted on his tongue.
He clenched his jaw. No risk, no reward. This was the kind of calculated gamble necessary to escape the gravity of his past. He typed in his debit card details, the numbers decreasing on his online banking portal with sickening finality. $1825.62 remaining. He arranged for pickup, shipping something this valuable and bulky was out of the question.
Later that day, wrestling the surprisingly light bike box through his apartment door felt like smuggling treasure into a secret tree hole. He cleared a space amidst the debris, carefully assembling the machine. Even un-enhanced, it was a thing of stark beauty. Sleek black carbon frame with subtle grey logos, clean lines, components that looked precise and purposeful. It felt leagues away from the cheap junk littering his apartment, a symbol of the world he aspired to rejoin.
Evening descended, painting the grimy windows with strokes of orange and purple. The internal hum of his power had returned earlier, a low thrum of potential waiting to be unleashed. Ten charges ready. It was time.
He approached the bike not as a rider, but as an artisan focusing on his craft. He could, he suspected, just touch the frame and infuse the entire bike with a single +1. But this was his flagship project, his high-stakes gamble. It needed to be perfect, overwhelmingly superior. Each key component deserved individual attention. Precision work.
Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.
He knelt, placing a hand gently on the sculpted carbon fibre top tube. Frame. +1 Stiffness, Durability, Responsiveness. He pushed his intent, focusing the power into the intricate weave of the material. Ping. A deep, resonant hum vibrated through the frame, a feeling like settling density, a tightening of its very structure. It felt… more solid, more present. One charge down.
He moved to the front wheel, fingers tracing the rim, the thin spokes. Wheelset (Front). +1 Strength, Rolling Efficiency, Trueness. Ping. A cleaner, higher tone this time. Two.
Rear wheel. Ping. Three.
Crankset – the heart of the drivetrain. He touched the cold metal of the crank arm. +1 Stiffness, Power Transfer Efficiency. Ping. Four.
Front derailleur. +1 Shifting Speed, Precision. Ping. Five.
Rear derailleur. +1 Shifting Speed, Precision, Durability. Ping. Six.
Brake calipers, front and rear. +1 Stopping Power, Modulation. Ping. Ping. Eight.
Handlebars. +1 Stiffness, Vibration Dampening. Ping. Nine.
Seatpost. +1 Strength, Security. He focused, pushing the last dregs of his daily allowance into the simple carbon tube. Ping. Ten. Fainter this time, leaving behind the familiar feeling of psychic emptiness, the quiet waiting for the 24-hour recharge.
He stood back, hands tingling slightly, a bead of sweat tracing a path down his temple despite the cool air. The bike looked unchanged. No visible aura, no magical glow. But Theo felt the difference. It seemed to sit with greater poise, radiating a subtle energy of coiled potential. It felt tighter, sharper, more integrated.
He had to know.
Waiting until the dead of night, when the streets were relatively deserted save for the usual nocturnal ghosts, Theo carried the bike down the rattling fire escape, his heart pounding with anticipation and the thrill of the clandestine. He wore dark, nondescript clothing, pulling a beanie low over his forehead. On the cracked pavement below, bathed in the sickly yellow glow of a single functioning streetlight, he swung a leg over the frame.
The moment his feet clipped into the pedals and he pushed off, he knew.
Oh.
The bike didn’t just roll, it surged. It leaped forward with an eagerness that startled him. The enhanced frame felt impossibly stiff, translating every ounce of his effort into pure, forward momentum. It was light before, but now it felt almost weightless, dancing over the uneven pavement. The wheels hummed, a smooth, frictionless sound, holding their line with uncanny precision.
He shifted gears. The clicks were instantaneous, telepathic. The chain snapped onto the next cog with zero hesitation, the enhanced derailleurs operating with a speed and accuracy that belonged on a Tour de France machine. He accelerated, pushing harder, the wind whipping past his ears, tearing at his clothes. The bike responded instantly, eagerly, feeling like an extension of his own body, a perfectly calibrated instrument of speed.
He swerved around a pothole, the bike leaning with fluid grace, the tires gripping the asphalt tenaciously. He braked hard as a stray cat darted out from an alley. The enhanced brakes bit down with smooth, immense power, scrubbing off speed without a hint of judder or fade.
This wasn't just a +1 bike. This felt like a +10. It was phenomenal. Exhilarating. He rode for nearly an hour, looping through the darkened, derelict streets of his neighbourhood, a phantom rider on a machine that felt utterly alien to the surroundings. He felt a surge of pure, unadulterated confidence. He could sell this. Easily. This wasn't just marketing fluff, this was a genuinely superior product. The $4,000 asking price suddenly felt entirely reasonable, maybe even modest.
Returning to his apartment, muscles pleasantly aching, mind buzzing, he immediately set to work on the online listing. No new brand name this time. High-end bikes relied on established marques. Giant was the brand. His enhancement would be the hidden value proposition.
He took meticulous photos, capturing the bike's sleek lines under the harsh glare of his apartment light. Then, the description:
For Sale: Giant TCR Advanced (Carbon) - Professionally Optimized
- Model: Giant TCR Advanced (2023 Colourway)
- Size: Medium/Large
- Condition: Like New. Meticulously maintained.
- Description: Selling my exceptional Giant TCR Advanced. This bike is already a fantastic lightweight climbing machine, but it has undergone extensive professional optimization and performance tuning focusing on drivetrain efficiency, frame responsiveness, and overall ride quality. The result is a bike that punches far above its weight class, delivering performance comparable to models costing thousands more. Perfect for the serious enthusiast looking for a competitive edge without the pro-level price tag. Selling due to upgrade.
- Price: $4,000 (Firm on price reflecting the unique performance enhancements)
- Pickup Only: Due to the high value and nature of this item, shipping is not available. Local pickup only. Inspections and test rides welcome for serious buyers.
He deliberately avoided specifics, sticking to vague terms like "optimization" and "tuning." Let the test ride do the talking. He set the price at $4,000, building in a buffer. He expected haggling; everyone haggled on used marketplaces. His mental floor was $3,500, a $2,500 profit on his $1,000 investment, all from ten uses of his power. A stunning $250 profit per charge. Now this was the kind of margin he needed.
He hit "Publish Listing," the familiar mix of anxiety and hope prickling his skin. This felt different from the knives. More substantial. More… real.
Just as he was closing his laptop, feeling a sliver of exhausted satisfaction, his phone buzzed with a notification. An email alert from the defunct Eversharp Edge marketplace account forwarded to his personal address.
Subject: Item Not As Described - Order #7834B Message: This Eversharp knife is garbage! It dulled after cutting one chicken! Felt no better than the cheap knife I replaced. Total scam! I want a refund NOW!
Another buzzed through almost immediately.
Subject: Where is the +1? Rating Changed to 1 Star Message: Used the knife for a while. It's okay, but definitely not worth $100. Doesn't hold an edge like advertised. Feels like a rip off. Changing my review.
He swiped the notifications away, archiving the messages without replying. Predictable. Annoying, but ultimately irrelevant noise from a burned bridge he’d already crossed. He’d siphoned the funds, the platform could handle the fallout. It was the cost of doing business in a world that had never shown him any kindness, a dog-eat-dog reality where you took what you needed to survive, or you got chewed up and spat out like he'd been from the bank tower. Did he feel good about shipping plain steel to people expecting something more? No. The world wasn't fair, it hadn't been fair to him, snatching his parents, leaving him scrabbling in the dirt. He did what he had to do to survive, to climb out. If a few online buyers felt cheated out of a hundred bucks for a knife… well, they weren't facing eviction. They weren't one step away from the abyss.
His survival trumped their minor dissatisfaction. A flicker of something uncomfortable, maybe guilt's pale shadow, touched him. But it wasn't sharp enough, wasn't deep enough to cost him any sleep. Back then, staring at the rapidly dwindling numbers, facing eviction, it had felt like a do-or-die calculation. Secure the capital for the real play, or sink back into the poverty line that he was so desperately trying to escape from. Ethics felt like a luxury item, something you could afford once you weren't drowning. Maybe, a tiny, nagging voice whispered, karma kept accounts. But for now, survival was the only currency that mattered. He pushed the thought down, pragmatism had always been his strongest suit.
The end of week three arrived like a deadline notice. Friday morning. Rent ($450) and estimated living expenses ($300) were due. He logged into his bank account. He initiated the transfer for rent, paid his estimated weekly cost of living via various bills and cash withdrawals, watching the balance decrease.
Theodore Sterling - Financial Ledger (End of Week 4)
- Starting Balance (Beginning of Week 3): $2825.62
- Income:
- None
- Expenses:
- Giant TCR Bike Purchase: -$1000.00
- Rent Paid (Week 4): -$450.00
- Living Expenses (Week 4): -$300.00
- Total Expenses: -$1750.00
- Net Change During Period: $0.00 (Income) - $1750.00 (Expenses) = -$1750
- Ending Balance: $1075.62
- Status: Pressured. Significant capital invested in bike. Bike sale pending. Current balance covers next week's rent/living ($750) with approx. $325 buffer remaining. Runway approx. 1.6 weeks basic expenses before bike sale revenue. Success of bike sale is crucial for next phase.
He stared at the number: $1075.62. Better than the brink, but still precarious. The thousand-dollar hole the bike purchase burned in his finances was starkly visible. While not facing immediate eviction tomorrow, his entire pivot, his escape from the low-margin grind, depended entirely on recouping the bike investment and making a substantial profit. The pressure remained immense.
Just then, his phone buzzed again. This time, it wasn't an angry knife buyer review. It was a message through the marketplace platform where the bike was listed...
User: CycleNut88 Message: Hi, saw your ad for the Giant TCR. Looks mint. When would be a good time to come see it? Am very interested.
Another message followed quickly.
User: PedalPusherPete Message: Hey mate, that TCR looks sick. Is the price negotiable? Can potentially come by tomorrow.
And a third.
User: SpeedySarah Message: Interested in the Giant bike. Available for viewing this weekend? Let me know.
Theo’s breath hitched. Interest. Multiple potential buyers, already. He quickly drafted replies, suggesting meeting times early the following week. Keep them slightly eager, manage the logistics.
He leaned back, the tension easing fractionally, replaced by a sharp, focused anticipation. The gamble was placed. The bait was taken. Now came the crucial part, landing the fish. The enhanced carbon fibre bike sat gleaming in the gloom of his apartment, a potential ticket out or a $1,000 anchor dragging him under. The meetings were set. Everything depended on the next few days.