"She really almost did it, but in the end she backed out. She didn’t want to ruin the university’s reputation or lose her job. Some people even came to make offers, but she refused—probably because the money wasn’t enough."
Liam, "..."
"How do you even know all this?" he asked.
"Of course I know. I know all the dark sides of that university. There are plenty of shocking things happening there."
"That makes sense. You’re part of that dark side," Liam replied sarcastically.
"I’m not. I’ve never done anything improper."
"What about what you did with me?"
"Oh, come on. How is that improper? We’re neighbors, we’ve known each other for so long. If we’re attracted to each other, doing that isn’t excessive at all... Being neighbors and childhood friends is even closer than dating."
Liam, "..."
When they arrived at the café, Liam immediately spotted Jack.
He was standing in the parking area with his bicycle and a bag.
The first thing Jack looked at when they got out of the car was Luna.
He couldn’t help but stare at her for a few seconds too long, making Luna frown in annoyance.
"So, how is it? Can we start working now?" Liam said.
"Yeah, let’s go," Jack nodded.
They entered the café, and Liam didn’t just order food and drinks—he booked a private room.
Jack pulled out his laptop and said,
"I’ve already created the website, Twitter account, groups, everything. Now you just need to create the coin."
He showed Liam the website.
It displayed the smoking brain logo, along with several data panels—all still at zero.
"It’ll update after the coin is launched," Jack explained.
Liam nodded and opened BridgeChain through his wallet.
"By the way, what percentage of profit are you going to distribute?" Jack asked.
"Half of all profits, whenever they come in. The rest will be reinvested into trading capital," Liam replied.
"Alright... Then make sure your bot handles that too."
Liam began creating the coin on BridgeChain.
He filled in all the required data Jack had prepared—website, links, and everything else.
There was even an option to automatically sync the data to Dex for an additional fee.
Of course, Liam paid it.
He also set the transaction fee to 5%.
It was high—but he was confident no one would complain once they saw results.
All he needed was promotion—and to boost volume using his own capital.
The process was simple.
Once everything was filled and the $5,000 liquidity was ready—
One click.
The coin went live.
He received the contract address, and when he opened it on Dex, it was already listed.
0 holders.
Market cap: $10,000.
Liquidity: $5,000 spread across Solana, BNB, Ethereum, and others—along with 1 billion MindChain tokens distributed across networks.
"Send me the address," Jack said.
Liam did.
Jack immediately started typing rapidly on his laptop.
Meanwhile, Liam used his main wallet to buy 510 million MindChain.
It should’ve cost only $5,000—
But due to slippage, he had to pay $20,000.
He didn’t care.
Using his bot, the purchase was split across thousands of wallets—then redistributed again across even more wallets.
Green numbers appeared on Dex.
The market cap jumped instantly to $100,000.
Even without ads, MindChain immediately rose among new coins on Dex.
After all, it already had $20,000 volume.
Liam noticed the views increasing to dozens, though no one was buying yet.
People were still trying to understand what this coin was.
And even if they understood—
That didn’t mean they would trust it.
Anyone would suspect a structured scam.
"Done. Take a look!" Jack said.
He showed the laptop screen.
The website was now live.
It displayed:
Price
Holder list (thousands of wallets)
Accumulated fee
$950.
It should’ve been $1,000, but BridgeChain took its cut.
When Liam checked his second wallet—
There it was.
$950 added from transaction fees.
"This site uses a premium feature to track holders in real-time," Jack explained.
"Now tell your bot to distribute 50% of the fees to these wallets whenever profits come in. The amount depends on how many tokens they hold."
Liam nodded.
It sounded complex—
But modern bots made it easy.
"Sigh... the price is already this high, and I only have $300 to buy in," Jack said jokingly.
"Liam, don’t scam me or I’ll lose my money."
He became the second buyer.
Luna, who had been silently observing, also bought some—
Then smiled to herself.
Other people started buying too—
But only small amounts: $1, $2.
DING!
(Your Trading Cheat has gained a new feature:
You can now see Bitcoin’s highest and lowest price within each hour!)
Liam froze.
This feature—
With this, he could always tell whether the current price was closer to the top or bottom.
Within an hour, there would always be small movements.
All he needed was enough free margin to avoid liquidation.
This meant—
He could extract maximum profit from Bitcoin every single hour.
MindChain...
This was going to explode.
More precisely, he could make it explode.
After all—
He still controlled 51% of the profits.
And if MindChain kept growing—
He wouldn’t just be rich.
He’d become a billionaire.
After all, something can be worth $100 just because it pays out $1 a year.
A faint smile appeared on his face.
"What’s wrong?" Jack and Luna both noticed the sudden smile.
"Jack," Liam said calmly,
"I’ll give you $15,000 right now. In exchange, you give up your shares."
"It’s basically the same as buying the coin now, right? You’ll still get about 10% of the supply—equivalent to your original 20% stake."
Liam had made his decision.
He wanted full control.