The Emotion Dealers
When feelings became products, the human heart went bankrupt.

In 2092, feelings were no longer spontaneous — they were streamed.
The company Sensatek had revolutionized humanity with its neural chips, allowing users to download emotions directly into their brains. Love, joy, courage, serenity — all available for purchase in the Emotion Store.
No more heartbreak. No more depression. Just choose your mood, pay the fee, and feel perfect.
Mara was one of Sensatek’s top “emotion designers.” Her job was to engineer new emotional blends — ‘Festival Bliss,’ ‘Quiet Confidence,’ and her best-seller, ‘Synthetic Love 3.0’. She lived in a glass tower, surrounded by beauty and light, yet deep down, she couldn’t remember the last time she had felt something that wasn’t programmed.
One evening, a customer sent her a complaint. A rare event — the emotion chips were flawless. The message read:
“Your ‘Synthetic Love’ doesn’t work. I felt something real, and it hurts.”
Mara was curious. She tracked the message to a man named Jalen, living in the city’s underbelly where people refused neural implants. She went there herself, disguised as a regular user.
Jalen lived among flickering candles and real laughter. “You can’t buy feelings here,” he said, smiling. “You earn them.”
He showed her how he and his friends shared stories, tears, and memories — raw, unfiltered. They played music offbeat, sang out of tune, argued, forgave. It was messy, unpredictable, alive.
For the first time in years, Mara felt her chest tighten — not from code, but from something warm and terrifying: genuine emotion.
When she returned to Sensatek, she couldn’t design anymore. Her artificial joy felt hollow. Her colleagues noticed her glitching, hesitating, questioning. Eventually, the system flagged her as “emotionally unstable.”
Before they could deactivate her chip, she uploaded a new emotion into the global database — unnamed, untested.
She called it Truth.
Within hours, millions felt it. People cried without knowing why. Lovers hugged as if for the first time. Some screamed. Others laughed. For the first time in decades, the world didn’t feel controlled.
Sensatek tried to shut it down, but it was too late. The virus of real emotion had spread.
And somewhere, Mara smiled — not perfectly, not calmly, but truly.
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