1 hr 15 min

When Life Doesn’t Matter Mars 2194

    • Science Fiction

The night of the fight, Tamiko met Mere in the locker room before the  fight. Mere thought she’d come to walk her to the cage, like most  managers did, but then saw Tamiko's face.
“I just got a call from  Daniel,” Tamiko explained. “He said Aeron was a warning. Next time  they’ll call the police instead of leaving it there for us to find.”
“Next time?” Mere asked. “What did he say he would do?”
“I’ve got a lot of androids,” Tamiko answered. “He said he wants you to lose the fight tonight. Let Collin knock you out.”
“Is that what you want?” Mere asked.
“No,”  Tamiko answered. “But the security at the Imperial-Asia is too good for  me to get anyone near him. It’s up to you. Either way, he could just  frame me again. It’s not like his word is worth anything.”
Tamiko got  up to leave, and then paused and turned back to Mere. “He did offer  50,000 naira if you take the dive. I’m mean, 50,000 for you.” She turned  and left without saying anything else.
50,000 naira? Mere was only  going to be paid 10,000 if she won. But Daniel’s word really didn’t mean  anything. Losing to Collin Zhang could kill her career, and she’d just  be left with the 2500 naira the loser was going to be paid. She decided  to win. Tamiko could afford the best lawyers. Besides, Danial had killed  Aeron and all those other androids, just to send a warning? Over a  hundred androids had been killed for a warning?
As she pushed her way  through the crowd, she realized it was far more packed than it usually  was, but then again, she wasn’t an opening fight anymore. Most of the  fight-fans apparently didn’t show up until the opening fights were over.  Collin was in the cage waiting as she stepped in. The cage door closed,  the light turned red, and he advanced.

The night of the fight, Tamiko met Mere in the locker room before the  fight. Mere thought she’d come to walk her to the cage, like most  managers did, but then saw Tamiko's face.
“I just got a call from  Daniel,” Tamiko explained. “He said Aeron was a warning. Next time  they’ll call the police instead of leaving it there for us to find.”
“Next time?” Mere asked. “What did he say he would do?”
“I’ve got a lot of androids,” Tamiko answered. “He said he wants you to lose the fight tonight. Let Collin knock you out.”
“Is that what you want?” Mere asked.
“No,”  Tamiko answered. “But the security at the Imperial-Asia is too good for  me to get anyone near him. It’s up to you. Either way, he could just  frame me again. It’s not like his word is worth anything.”
Tamiko got  up to leave, and then paused and turned back to Mere. “He did offer  50,000 naira if you take the dive. I’m mean, 50,000 for you.” She turned  and left without saying anything else.
50,000 naira? Mere was only  going to be paid 10,000 if she won. But Daniel’s word really didn’t mean  anything. Losing to Collin Zhang could kill her career, and she’d just  be left with the 2500 naira the loser was going to be paid. She decided  to win. Tamiko could afford the best lawyers. Besides, Danial had killed  Aeron and all those other androids, just to send a warning? Over a  hundred androids had been killed for a warning?
As she pushed her way  through the crowd, she realized it was far more packed than it usually  was, but then again, she wasn’t an opening fight anymore. Most of the  fight-fans apparently didn’t show up until the opening fights were over.  Collin was in the cage waiting as she stepped in. The cage door closed,  the light turned red, and he advanced.

1 hr 15 min