Jaycee didn't just walk into the Badlands; she owned the dust that rose to meet her boots. In a place where the law was a rumor and survival was a full-time job, she was the one the rumors were about. They called her "The Bad" not because she was cruel, but because she was better at being dangerous than anyone else.
She stood at the edge of the Sunken Crater, the heart of the Private Society’s territory. It was a restricted zone, a playground for the wealthy and the lawless who bought their way out of the world's problems. Jaycee wasn't invited, which was exactly why she was there. She had a debt to collect, and the Society had a habit of forgetting their bills.
The Badlands had seen many outlaws, but Jaycee was a different breed. She was the storm that the Private Society thought they could fence in. By the time the sun dipped below the canyon walls, the vault was open, the Society was in ruins, and Jaycee was already a ghost in the wind, leaving nothing behind but the scent of ozone and the legend of the woman who made the Badlands look tame.
Jaycee didn't slow down. She reached into her coat, pulling out a small, hum-pulsing cylinder. "I’m putting the 'bad' back in Badlands today," she whispered. With a flick of her wrist, she activated the pulse. The world didn't explode—it just stopped. The enforcers’ cybernetics seized, their armor locking up like rusted hinges.
She walked past them, tapping the lead guard on his helmet as he stood frozen in a scream. "Tell the Board I’m here for the vault," she said, her eyes reflecting the jagged horizon. "And tell them I don't give change."
As she moved through the neon-lit shanties of the inner rim, the air grew thick with the smell of ozone and expensive tobacco. A group of enforcers, clad in the sleek, matte-black armor of the Society, stepped into her path. They were three times her size, bolstered by cybernetics and arrogance.
"You're out of bounds, little girl," the lead enforcer sneered, his voice echoing through a metallic vocalizer.
Jaycee didn't just walk into the Badlands; she owned the dust that rose to meet her boots. In a place where the law was a rumor and survival was a full-time job, she was the one the rumors were about. They called her "The Bad" not because she was cruel, but because she was better at being dangerous than anyone else.
She stood at the edge of the Sunken Crater, the heart of the Private Society’s territory. It was a restricted zone, a playground for the wealthy and the lawless who bought their way out of the world's problems. Jaycee wasn't invited, which was exactly why she was there. She had a debt to collect, and the Society had a habit of forgetting their bills. PrivateSociety.Jaycee.Putting.The.Bad.In.Badlan...
The Badlands had seen many outlaws, but Jaycee was a different breed. She was the storm that the Private Society thought they could fence in. By the time the sun dipped below the canyon walls, the vault was open, the Society was in ruins, and Jaycee was already a ghost in the wind, leaving nothing behind but the scent of ozone and the legend of the woman who made the Badlands look tame. Jaycee didn't just walk into the Badlands; she
Jaycee didn't slow down. She reached into her coat, pulling out a small, hum-pulsing cylinder. "I’m putting the 'bad' back in Badlands today," she whispered. With a flick of her wrist, she activated the pulse. The world didn't explode—it just stopped. The enforcers’ cybernetics seized, their armor locking up like rusted hinges. She stood at the edge of the Sunken
She walked past them, tapping the lead guard on his helmet as he stood frozen in a scream. "Tell the Board I’m here for the vault," she said, her eyes reflecting the jagged horizon. "And tell them I don't give change."
As she moved through the neon-lit shanties of the inner rim, the air grew thick with the smell of ozone and expensive tobacco. A group of enforcers, clad in the sleek, matte-black armor of the Society, stepped into her path. They were three times her size, bolstered by cybernetics and arrogance.
"You're out of bounds, little girl," the lead enforcer sneered, his voice echoing through a metallic vocalizer.