The chips were new, round, and smooth, with denominations of twenty, fifty, and a hundred. Lance wasnât entirely sure if they could be considered cash.
He told Ethan to keep an eye on Mr. White and took two chips downstairs to a payphone, dialing the number Fordis had given him.
Soon, the receptionistâs sweet voice came through, âThank you for calling Lianzu Finance. How may we help you?â
Lance could imagine her speaking in a disinterested tone while doing something unrelated.
âItâs Lance. I need to speak with Mr. Corti, or Fordis would do.â
Recognizing Lance, her tone shifted sharply, and she shouted, âFordis, phone for you!â
Heavy footsteps approached, and soon Fordisâs voice was on the line.
âHaving trouble?â he asked. Fordis assumed Lanceâs call meant things hadnât gone smoothly. Maybe Mr. White was missing, or simply refusing to pay up. Heâd seen plenty of first-timers run into these issues before.
But he was wrong.
âMr. White agreed to pay, but only with chips. Iâm not sure if theyâre worth the full amount.â Lance described the chipsâ appearance and the small print on the back: âIt says âKodak Familyâ on them.â
Fordis laughed, âNo problem at all. Kodak Family chips can be cashed in at their counters with no proof needed.â
He paused, curiosity getting the best of him. âHowâd you get him to pay up?â
The company had sent people after this debt before, but they hadnât managed to collect. Otherwise, Lance wouldnât have been assigned to the case.
âI reasoned with him. Mr. Whiteâs a reasonable guy, so he agreed to settle the debt.â
âDo I need to give him a receipt or the contract back?â
âNo need, Lance. Bring the chips and contract back here. The company has people to handle the follow-up. Donât steal their job.â
âIâll pass the good news on to the boss. Quick workâyou might just surprise us all!â
Hanging up, Lance returned upstairs and, in front of Mr. White, counted out thirty-five hundred dollars in chips.
âThis is what you owe the company, so Iâm taking it.â He glanced at the remaining chips. âThe rest is yours. Iâm only taking whatâs due, and I despise rumorsâunderstand?â á¹ðɴоáÄð
Sitting slumped on the couch, Mr. White nodded, looking defeated. âYes, I understand. I wonât say anything.â
âGood,â Lance handed the paper bag of chips to Ethan. âSorry to have taken up your time, Mr. White. Have a nice day.â
Mr. White looked anything but happy and was unlikely to enjoy the rest of his day.
Leaving the apartment, the three of them headed back to the company in high spirits.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
On the way, Elvin asked what had happened upstairs, and Friend A and Friend B were buzzing with excitement. Ethan was still giddy, saying, âJust one glare, and they ducked back inside like turtles pulling into their shells!â
âI thought someone would call the cops or try to stop us, but nothing happened!â
Lance, steering the car, chimed in. âThat means the Federation citizens arenât as tough as we thought.â
âIf youâre weak and back down to them, theyâll keep pushing you. But if you show you can hurt them and arenât afraid of their threats, theyâre no stronger than anyone else.â
âSo, donât be scared of the Federation people. Theyâre just like the cowards we know. If youâre strong, theyâre weak.â
âIf you ever find someone wonât back down, itâs not because theyâre unafraidâitâs because youâre not fierce enough.â
The words sank in, a powerful lesson that felt true and proven.
Soon they arrived outside the Finance Company, and Lance led them inside, suggesting they rest in the lounge. But seeing the intimidating characters in the lounge, they opted to wait in the hallway instead.
In the office, Lance set the paper bag on Albertoâs desk, who opened it and quickly counted the chips, displaying a meticulousness that left no room for error. He counted down to the last fifty-dollar chip.
âThirty-five hundredâperfect!â he confirmed, looking at Lance with a nod. âThe White I know isnât exactly a reasonable man. Mind telling me how you convinced him?â
Lance settled into the chair across from him, looking relaxed. âWe started by talking about the Jingang City Sailors. Turns out heâs a baseball fan, too. Then we chatted about cooking.â
âWe found common ground, so communication got easier. I asked him where the money was, and he told me, âIn the flower pot.â Simple as that.â
Alberto laughed heartily. âI bet he never wants to see you again!â
He paused, then pulled out three fifty-dollar chips from the stack, pushing them toward Lance. âHereâs your share.â
Alberto knew White had the money; his own casino staff kept tabs on high-rollers. Gamblers rarely bargained over interest or repayment terms but only cared about getting enough chips to return to the table.
Rumor had it White had recently won over four thousand dollars at the Kodak Family casino, an amount equivalent to a hundred monthsâ pay for a regular worker. The Finance Companyâs initial attempts to collect had failed because White wasnât liquid, but Alberto always believed that with enough persistence, heâd get the money back.
He hadnât expected it to happen so quicklyâLance had accomplished it in half a day.
âIâm excited about your next job, Lance,â Alberto said after a pause. âWe usually reward our agents five percent, and youâve earned it here. But this next task might be trickier than Whiteâs case.â
Alberto explained the second âjob.â
âMr. Anderson runs a restaurant in the Bay Area. Last year, he hit a rough patch financially and came to me for help.â
âNow, he denies ever signing a contract, refuses to pay interest or repay the principal, and has even sued us.â
âIf we approach him directly or harm him, heâll file charges. Our lawyer says thereâs a high chance weâd lose.â
âSo this oneâs different from Whiteâs. You canât use force. Understand?â
âYou canât hurt himânot even threaten him. Youâll need to get creative.â
âIf you can solve this, Iâll double your reward.â
âNo matter what you recover from him, Iâll give you ten percent!â Alberto held up both hands to emphasize his excitement.