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Golden Eye Tycoon: Rise of the Billionaire Trader-Chapter 9: Momentum
Tuesday mornings on campus always felt louder than they had any right to.
It was never because something special happened on Tuesdays. If anything, the day was painfully ordinary. But by then the sluggishness of Monday had burned off, and everyone seemed to remember at once that deadlines existed. Students moved faster, conversations overlapped in every walkway, and coffee cups appeared in so many hands that the whole university felt like it was being powered by caffeine and mild panic.
Jake moved through it without matching the energy around him.
His backpack rested lightly on one shoulder, and his pace remained even as people drifted past him in clusters. He could still feel a trace of yesterday’s session sitting quietly in the back of his mind.
112,940 VM.
The number had resurfaced more than once the previous night. Not because he was obsessing over it, and not because he was trying to force himself to feel something dramatic. It simply carried a new kind of weight now.
A few weeks ago, every big number in his life had meant debt, pressure, or limitation.
Now a big number meant options.
He had gone to sleep knowing he could clear the hospital bill twice over if he chose to. That knowledge hadn’t made the world brighter or easier, but it had made it feel less crushing.
Less narrow.
Like the walls around his life had shifted back by a few inches.
By the time he reached the study hall, his thoughts had settled into focus again.
The room was more crowded than usual. A few students were already bent over laptops and notebooks, while others sat with the blank, haunted expressions of people who had arrived early but regretted every decision that brought them there. No one paid much attention to Jake when he walked in.
That suited him perfectly.
He took his usual seat by the window, placed his bag down, and opened his laptop. The gold chart loaded a second later.
Then the shift came.
It was immediate enough that he almost expected it now, though the sensation still never felt completely normal. The faint pulse behind his left eye returned, and with it the market changed shape. Noise became structure. Randomness gave way to intent. What had looked messy a second ago now carried a pattern so clean it felt like someone had peeled away a layer and exposed the truth beneath it.
Jake exhaled slowly and settled deeper into the chair.
"Alright," he murmured.
He logged into his account.
112,940 VM.
The number sat there without ceremony, calm and unchanged, as if it had always belonged to him. Jake rolled his shoulders once, let his hands rest lightly near the trackpad, and fixed his attention fully on the chart.
The first setup began forming not long after.
Price pushed upward into resistance with just a little too much enthusiasm. To anyone impatient, it might have looked convincing. But Jake could see the weakness inside it. Liquidity was collecting above recent highs, drawing buyers in, encouraging them to commit just a little too early.
He waited.
That had become one of the biggest differences between who he had been and who he was becoming. He no longer confused seeing a trade with taking it. A setup wasn’t real just because he liked the idea of it. He let it finish forming. Let the trap close. Let the market reveal its hand.
Then the rejection came.
It was sharp, but controlled. Not panic. Not chaos. Just the kind of clean reversal that made the move before it look embarrassingly obvious in hindsight.
Jake entered short.
Three positions.
The candles stepped downward almost immediately, each one carrying enough momentum to keep him in the trade without making the movement feel reckless.
+10 pips
+22 pips
+37 pips
His fingers hovered over the trackpad with practiced steadiness. He closed one position to secure profit, then adjusted the stop on the remaining trades based on structure rather than nerves.
The move continued.
+45 pips
+69 pips
Jake closed the rest.
Clean trade. Clean management. No wasted motion.
He leaned back slightly and let the smallest smile touch his mouth.
"Good start," he said under his breath.
The second setup took longer. Fifteen minutes, maybe a little more. He didn’t mind the wait. He watched the market build itself, let the shape become obvious, then stepped in when it was ready. That one played out just as smoothly. The third was even cleaner, the kind of move that felt almost unfair once he was inside it.
By the time the hour ended and the clarity cut off as abruptly as ever, Jake sat back in his chair and checked the result.
146,880 VM.
He stared at the number for a moment, then ran a hand slowly through his hair. "Okay," he muttered. That was nearly thirty-five thousand in a single morning.
He didn’t react outwardly. No fist pump. No stunned laughter. No dramatic pause with his head in his hands. But the realization still landed with force.
A few more days like this and the hospital bill wouldn’t feel like a burden anymore. It would feel like admin. Something to settle and move past.
"Bro."
Jake looked up.
Alex stood beside the table holding two coffees and wearing an expression so suspiciously cheerful that it almost felt rehearsed.
"You’re becoming predictable," Alex said as he set one of the cups down. "Same seat every morning. Same serious face. Are you secretly running a company from here?"
Jake lowered the screen of his laptop halfway. "If I were, would I tell you?"
Alex dropped into the chair opposite him with theatrical confidence. "Yes. Because I’m your emotional support system."
Jake picked up the coffee. "You’re my financial liability."
Alex pressed a hand to his chest. "After everything I’ve done for you?"
"You borrowed money and forgot."
"That was once."
Jake looked at him. "Three times."
Alex waved this away as if facts were a minor inconvenience. "Technicalities."
Then he leaned forward, lowering his voice as if he were about to uncover state secrets. "So what do you actually do here every morning? You always look like you’re calculating something."
Jake held his gaze for a second before answering. "Studying markets."
Alex blinked. "You’re still trading?"
"Yes."
"On a live account?"
Jake paused just long enough for the silence to become its own answer.
Alex’s eyes widened a little. "Wait. Seriously?"
Instead of replying, Jake took a slow sip of coffee.
Alex leaned back and gave him a longer, more thoughtful look. "You’re not joking," he said. "You’re actually trading live."
Jake shrugged. "Trying to."
"Man..." Alex let out a low whistle. "That’s risky. But also kind of cool." Then the grin returned. "When you become a millionaire, remember I supported you from day one."
Jake snorted softly. "You’ll be the first to know." Eventually, he added silently.
By Thursday, Jake’s balance crossed 200,000 VM.
The number mattered, but what he noticed more was how it changed the shape of ordinary life around him. The shift was subtle, the kind of thing no one else would name directly, but he felt it in small moments.
He no longer checked the price of every meal before ordering.
He no longer felt that quiet sting each time money left his account for transport or food or some minor expense that used to matter more than it should have.
He wasn’t rich. He knew that better than anyone. But money had stopped feeling like something that was always disappearing faster than he could catch it. Now it felt like movement. Flow. A resource he could direct rather than simply survive around.
That difference changed the way he carried himself. Not with arrogance. Not with swagger. Just with ease.
That evening, Aliya noticed before anyone else did. Jake had barely stepped through the front door when she appeared in the hallway as if she had been waiting for him specifically.
"Why do you look happy?" she demanded.
Jake blinked once. "Hello to you too."
She folded her arms. "You’ve been smiling at your phone all week."
"I have not."
"You did yesterday."
"I saw a meme."
Aliya dismissed that instantly. "You don’t smile at memes. You exhale slightly."
Jake stared at her. "You observe too much." She pointed at him in triumph. "Aha. Defensive behavior." Their mother’s voice floated in from the kitchen. "Aliya, let him breathe."
Aliya ignored the instruction for at least three more seconds and leaned closer. "Did she agree to date you," she asked in a conspiratorial whisper, "or did you win the lottery?"
Jake answered without missing a beat. "Yes. I won the lottery. First prize. I’m buying you nothing."
Aliya gasped as if genuinely wounded. "You’d abandon your only sister like this?"
"Yes."
She narrowed her eyes, then broke into a grin. "Fine. When you become rich and famous, I’ll tell everyone embarrassing stories about you."
Jake moved past her toward his room. "You already do that for free."
She followed him halfway down the hall. "At least buy better bread tomorrow. If you’re secretly rich, contribute to society."
Jake stopped at his door and looked at her. "You contribute nothing."
Aliya placed a hand on her chest. "I contribute vibes."
That got him. Slightly, but enough for the corner of his mouth to lift before he stepped into his room and closed the door behind him.
Later that night, he sat at his desk and opened his trading account again.
204,660 VM.
The number looked almost unnaturally calm on the screen.
Jake leaned back slowly, letting the reality of it settle without trying to force it into something bigger or more poetic than it was. Two hundred thousand. Not imaginary. Not simulated.
Not some lucky spike on a demo account that meant nothing once the screen closed. Real money. Real growth. A real shift in what was possible.
The hospital bill came to mind again, but this time it no longer felt heavy. A few days earlier it had seemed like a problem that required careful timing and strategy. Now it looked smaller.
Not unimportant. Just manageable.
Jake closed the app and set the phone down. By next week, he wouldn’t be thinking about whether he could clear the bill. He would simply do it.
And once that happened, things would start moving faster. Not only financially, but in the way people around him would begin to notice that something had changed.
He leaned back in the chair and looked up at the ceiling, his thoughts already turning toward tomorrow’s session.
Tomorrow meant more opportunities, more precision and more room to build. Outside his window, Aurelia City hummed under the night lights, restless and alive. Inside, Jake felt the shape of his life continuing to shift.
He wasn’t patching holes anymore. He was climbing. And very soon, the height difference between him and the life he used to live would be too large for anyone around him to ignore.
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