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Nothing happened for ten seconds. Then, a small window appeared with a slider labeled The slider was currently set to the far left, in a red zone labeled Deficit .

He reached for the mouse, but his hand shook. He realized then that "Karma RX" wasn't a game or a video. It was a prescription. And he was just about to see if he was cured.

Leo rolled his eyes. "Edgy," he muttered. He opened snapshot.bmp . It was a grainy, low-resolution photo of a messy desk—uncomfortably similar to his own. In fact, in the corner of the image, he could see the edge of a coffee mug that looked exactly like his favorite chipped ceramic one. Having_Fun_with_Karma_RX.rar

He looked back at the folder. The .rar file was gone. In its place was a new file: .

It was tiny—only about 450 KB. Too small for a video, but plenty big for a collection of text files or a small executable. Curiously, the "Date Modified" field was blank. Leo right-clicked and hit Extract . The folder contained three items: ReadMe.txt Karma.exe snapshot.bmp He opened the text file first. It contained a single line: "The debt is always paid in the currency you value most." Nothing happened for ten seconds

Heart rate spiking, he looked at Karma.exe . His rational brain told him it was likely a Trojan or a simple prank script. But the curiosity that made him a "digital archaeologist" won out. He ran it.

A notification popped up on his actual desktop: [Outgoing Transfer: 1.04 BTC - Confirmed] He realized then that "Karma RX" wasn't a game or a video

Leo froze. That was his entire "rainy day" fund, gone in a blink. He scrambled to close the program, but his mouse cursor moved on its own, dragging the "Balance" slider toward the middle.