Golden Eye Tycoon: Rise of the Billionaire Trader-Chapter 11: Eyes On Him

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Chapter 11: Chapter 11: Eyes On Him

Thursday morning felt subtly different. Jake noticed it the moment he stepped onto campus.

Nothing dramatic had changed. No one stopped in their tracks to stare at him. No whispers chased him across the courtyard and no spotlight followed his footsteps. Students moved between buildings as they always did—some laughing with friends, others glued to their phones while rushing to early lectures.

Yet something in the atmosphere felt... different. It was small enough that most people wouldn’t have noticed. But Jake did.

A few glances lingered a little longer than usual when he passed certain groups. Conversations dipped slightly in volume before rising again once he moved further away. It wasn’t suspicion—there was no tension in the air, no hostility.

Not yet. What he felt instead was the faint beginning of awareness.

Jake adjusted the strap of his backpack and continued walking across the courtyard with the same relaxed pace he always used. From the outside, he looked completely ordinary.

Inside, however, a quiet current of energy ran beneath his calm. The past three days had been strong. Exceptionally strong.

He slipped his phone from his pocket as he walked and opened his trading app.

Balance: 284,320 VM

The number glowed softly on the screen. Jake slowed his steps for a moment as he looked at it. Not in disbelief—he’d watched it grow trade by trade—but seeing it there still carried a certain weight.

Almost three hundred thousand. He locked the screen and slid the phone back into his pocket.

Just a week ago, the hospital bill had felt like an impossible mountain standing between him and financial collapse. Clearing it had been the only goal that mattered.

Now?

It was already behind him. He pushed open the doors to the study hall and stepped inside.

The quiet atmosphere greeted him instantly—low murmurs of conversation, the faint tapping of laptop keyboards, sunlight filtering through tall windows along the wall. Jake walked toward the corner seat he had begun using over the past few days.

Same seat. Same view. Same routine.

Routine minimized variables, and fewer variables meant fewer mistakes. He set his backpack down beside the chair, opened his laptop, and logged into his trading platform.

Gold chart.

The moment it appeared on screen, the shift came. It was always like this. One instant the market looked like chaotic movement—candles rising and falling with no clear purpose. Then his left eye pulsed faintly, and the world sharpened.

Clarity settled into place like a camera lens snapping into perfect focus. The randomness disappeared. Price action began to make sense.

Every candle had intention. Every hesitation carried meaning. Liquidity pools became visible like currents beneath the surface of water. Patterns that had once taken hours of analysis now revealed themselves almost instantly.

Jake leaned slightly forward, his breathing slowing as his mind slipped into the familiar state. The state where the market felt readable and predictable. He glanced at the clock in the corner of his screen.

*09:08*

He had roughly an hour. "One hour," he murmured quietly. That was all he needed.

---

The first setup appeared about ten minutes later.

Price pushed upward into a resistance cluster that had formed during the Asian session. The move was aggressive, almost too clean—buyers chasing momentum as the candles extended.

Jake watched without touching the mouse.

Liquidity sweep.

The pattern was obvious once he looked closer. Retail traders would see a breakout and rush to join the move, believing price was about to run higher. Institutions, however, were preparing to do the opposite.

Jake waited.

Patience had become one of the most valuable skills he possessed. Entering too early meant unnecessary risk.

Then the confirmation came. A sharp rejection wick printed across the resistance zone. Jake entered short. Four positions opened in quick succession.

The position size was slightly larger than what he had used earlier in the week, but it was still within his rules. Discipline mattered more than speed.

Price hesitated for a moment.

Then it began to fall.

+15 pips.

+31.

+48.

Jake felt the familiar surge of adrenaline flicker somewhere deep in his chest. It wasn’t overwhelming anymore—just a controlled spark of excitement as numbers climbed.

He closed one of the positions and secured the initial profit. The remaining trades stayed open. Price dropped faster now, momentum building as trapped buyers rushed to exit their positions.

+72.

+89.

Jake closed everything.

Clean.

He leaned back slightly and exhaled through his nose before checking the account balance.

318,540 VM

For a moment he simply stared at the number. Three hundred thousand. It felt strangely unreal.

Not because the money wasn’t real—every trade had been executed with careful precision—but because his life only weeks earlier had looked completely different.

He remembered calculating whether he could afford transport to campus. Remembered standing in grocery aisles debating whether he could stretch his budget for basic meals. Remembered the constant, quiet anxiety of living one emergency away from total financial collapse.

Now a single morning had pushed his account beyond three hundred thousand. The realization sparked a bright flare of excitement in his chest. Sharp. Alive. But Jake didn’t let it take control.

He closed the trading window and rested his hands briefly on the table. "Keep moving," he told himself quietly. One good trade didn’t change the rules.

---

Another opportunity formed roughly twenty minutes later. This one came faster.

Price attempted to recover after the earlier drop, forming what looked like a temporary bullish retracement. But Jake could already see the weakness behind it. Liquidity had been taken. Momentum was fading. He entered again. The trade unfolded almost as cleanly as the first.

By the time his clarity window began fading—the subtle mental exhaustion that always followed the enhanced perception—Jake leaned back and checked his results.

Balance: 356,880 VM

He ran a hand slowly through his hair while staring at the screen. "Okay..." he muttered under his breath. Nearly seventy thousand in one morning. Not simulated. Not theoretical. Real money.

Jake closed the platform and shut his laptop before he could stare at the numbers any longer. Obsession had a way of creeping into the mind if you let it.

And obsession led to mistakes. Discipline, on the other hand, kept him growing.

Still, as he packed his laptop into his bag and stood up from the table, the excitement moved through him like a quiet electric current.

At this rate... One million didn’t feel impossibly far away anymore.

---

"Jake."

He had just taken a few steps toward the exit when the voice stopped him. It came from behind him—female, calm, familiar. Jake turned. Catharine stood a few feet away, holding a tablet against her chest.

She looked much the same as she always did in class: composed posture, neat clothing, long braids tied back carefully. There was a quiet confidence about her that had always set her apart from most of their classmates.

But today her expression carried something else as well. Curiosity and relief. "You’re back," she said. Jake nodded once. "Been back for a few days."

Catharine studied him more carefully now. "You disappeared after the accident," she said. "People were saying you were hospitalized."

"I was."

"And now you’re walking around campus like nothing happened?"

Jake shrugged lightly. "Nothing permanent happened."

She didn’t smile, but the tension in her expression softened slightly. "I’m glad," she said. For a moment neither of them spoke.

Jake realized that the last time they had actually talked had been before the accident. Back then Catharine had simply been another classmate—someone intelligent and friendly but outside the narrow focus of his survival.

At the time, he had been too busy worrying about money to think about anything else.

"You seem different," she said suddenly. Jake raised an eyebrow. "Recovered." She shook her head. "That’s not what I meant."

Her gaze moved briefly over him before returning to his face. His clothes were still simple, but they were cleaner now, better fitted. His posture carried a quiet steadiness that hadn’t been there before. "You seem... lighter," she said.

Jake didn’t answer immediately. Because she wasn’t wrong. "I’m sleeping better," he said eventually.

Catharine held his gaze for another moment, as if debating whether to ask something else. Then she decided against it. "Good," she said simply. "See you in lecture." She turned and began walking away before he could respond.

Jake watched her for a second before shifting his bag on his shoulder. Then another voice cut across the room.

"Yo."

Jake turned again. Three guys stood near the entrance of the study hall.

They were dressed the way people with money usually were—effortlessly stylish, expensive watches, relaxed confidence in their posture. The kind of presence that came from never having to worry about whether their next expense would empty their account.

At the center of them stood Mason.

Tall. Athletic. His watch flashed briefly in the light as he adjusted the sleeve of his jacket. His expression looked neutral but his eyes weren’t. They were locked on Jake. Not casually but intentionally.

Recognition flickered across Mason’s face for a brief moment. Then something sharper followed—something like mild irritation mixed with curiosity.

Jake felt the shift instantly. The room seemed to quiet slightly as the two of them looked at each other.

For a moment neither of them spoke.

Then Mason looked away first. He said something quietly to his friends with a faint smirk before turning and walking out of the study hall as if the moment had meant nothing. As if Jake were irrelevant.

Jake didn’t react outwardly. But inside, something settled firmly into place. A calm awareness— not emotionless, but controlled.

Because the boy who had once been too broke to matter... wasn’t that boy anymore. And if Mason ever decided to look a little closer— he would eventually realize something important. Jake was no longer someone to overlook.

Jake adjusted the strap of his backpack and walked out of the study hall without another glance behind him. The sunlight outside felt warmer than it had earlier that morning.

And as he stepped into it, one quiet thought lingered in the back of his mind. ’Let him keep underestimating me.’

For now.

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