I Sold My Memories to Pay Rent
Speculative fiction with a dark twist where memories can be traded for money.

I Sold My Memories to Pay Rent
In the city of Vale, memories had become currency.
They called it “neurocommerce”—a booming industry where moments were traded like stocks, and nostalgia had a price tag.
It started innocently enough. People sold tiny, disposable memories—what they had for breakfast, the lyrics to a childhood song they no longer liked, the way someone once said their name. But as the economy collapsed and prices soared, people began selling more.
I sold my first memory the day rent went up again.
The landlord had slipped another notice under the door. “Final warning,” it read in red. I stared at the eviction notice with a dry throat and five dollars in my bank account.
My options were few. I was already working two jobs, skipping meals, and boiling pasta until it was flavorless mush. My friends had all left—moved in with family, taken government memory stipends, or disappeared into the gray zones outside the city walls.
That night, I walked into MemoirVault, a glossy, sterile building on 7th Avenue. A receptionist greeted me with a smile too bright to be genuine.
“First-time seller?”
I nodded.
She handed me a waiver the length of a novel and said, “We’ll be gentle.”
They led me into a small room with a reclining chair and a machine shaped like a spider made of glass and wires. A technician—his ID badge read “Dez”—clipped soft, silver discs to my temples.
“What are we extracting today?” he asked, typing rapidly on a touchscreen.
I hesitated. Then I said, “My high school graduation. All of it.”
He blinked. “That’s a good one. Strong visuals, emotion, pride... You’ll get about $600 for that. Enough for half your rent?”
“Barely,” I muttered.
He smiled with the kind of sympathy only someone who had sold memories himself could offer.
“Close your eyes. You’ll feel a pull.”
And I did.
When I opened my eyes again, it was gone.
The photo on my wall of me in the cap and gown? It looked like a stranger. My diploma felt like someone else’s achievement. My mother’s tearful face in the crowd—a void.
I stumbled home, lightheaded but $600 richer. I paid rent. I ate real food. I slept through the night.
It was easier than I expected.
The next month, I sold my first kiss.
The month after, the day my little sister was born.
Each time, the memory vanished. Not like a file deleted—but like a story someone told me once that I barely remembered.
People warned me. They said the emptiness creeps up. That when you lose enough of yourself, there’s no one left to hold the money.
But I kept selling.
The morning I woke up and didn't remember my father’s voice, I cried for the first time in weeks. I sat on the floor of my studio apartment, clutching a picture of us fishing on the lake. I knew it was him—I had written “Dad” on the back in shaky ink—but I couldn’t remember the sound of him saying my name.
I tried to stop. I really did.
But life got harder. Bills stacked. My job cut hours. My landlord raised the rent again.
So I returned.
They welcomed me back like an old friend. I traded the memory of my first heartbreak. The summer my family drove across the country. The way my mother hummed in the kitchen while she cooked.
The more I sold, the more I forgot who I used to be.
But at least I had a roof.
Last week, I was offered a premium buyer request—private, confidential, black-label transaction. They wanted my best memory.
“That’s the big one,” Dez said. “The emotional core. You only get one.”
I didn’t ask who “they” were. You never did.
I hesitated. Then I said, “The night I knew I was truly in love.”
He nodded, understanding. “That’ll buy you six months’ rent, easy.”
I lay back, shut my eyes, and let it go.
Now, I stare out the window of my apartment, watching the rain crawl down the glass like tears I forgot how to shed.
I don’t remember who I loved. I don’t even remember their name. But I know something important is missing.
I smile at people and pretend I’m whole.
My walls are lined with photos I don’t recognize.
My journals read like fiction.
About the Creator
Huzaifa Dzine
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Comments (10)
Great
Very well written.
Nice work🙏😊
Chilling and beautifully written — a haunting reflection on the cost of survival in a world where even our memories aren’t safe.
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Too good
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Very lovely
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