VOLUME 1 — THE SIMP ECONOMY
CHAPTER 19: THE COST OF STAYING CLEAN
The first thing Aarav noticed was the silence.
Not peaceful silence.
Operational silence.
No alerts.
No warnings.
No nudges.
The system interface stayed minimal, almost distant—like a supervisor who had decided the employee was capable enough to be left alone.
That, somehow, felt heavier.
Guidance Mode: PASSIVE
User autonomy: HIGH
Error tolerance: REDUCED
“So now it’s on me,” Aarav murmured.
The system didn’t reply.
The opening bell rang.
Aarav watched the charts instead of rushing in.
Normally, the system highlighted zones of interest—subtle probability hints, nothing explicit.
Today, there was nothing.
Just raw data.
Candles. Volume. Time.
This was the cost.
Capital deployed: ?7,500
Entry was slightly late.
Exit was cautious.
Profit: ?190
Clean.
But inefficient.
SYSTEM NOTE:
No optimization assistance provided
Reading on this site? This novel is published elsewhere. Support the author by seeking out the original.
Outcome entirely user-driven
Aarav leaned back.
The trade wasn’t bad.
But it felt… lonely.
By noon, something else became clear.
His order execution speed was marginally slower.
Not broken.
Not blocked.
Just… average.
He checked his internet.
Fine.
Platform?
Fine.
Then he understood.
Priority routing.
User declined network leverage
Result: DEFAULT EXECUTION PATH
This is not punishment
This is neutrality
Neutrality.
In a world optimized for insiders, neutrality was a disadvantage.
He opened the Daily Financial Panel.
Opening Balance: ?1,42,870
Capital Used Today: ?12,000
Current P/L: +?340
Opportunity Cost (Estimated): ?900–?1,300
So this was the price.
Not loss.
Missed upside.
By afternoon, doubt crept in.
Not loud.
Quiet.
Persistent.
*You could’ve done better.*
*You chose harder, not smarter.*
*Is this discipline—or ego?*
Aarav closed his eyes.
He didn’t ask the system.
He asked himself.
SYSTEM OBSERVATION:
User resisting validation-seeking behavior
Mental load: INCREASING
No intervention requested
The system waited.
At 3:10 p.m., his phone rang.
Unknown number.
He almost ignored it.
Almost.
“Hello?”
“Aarav Kumar?” the voice asked.
“Yes.”
“This is Vikram. We spoke briefly last month—about freelance analytics.”
Aarav remembered.
A casual conversation.
Nothing concrete.
“I have something,” Vikram continued. “A short-term contract. Nothing shady. But… you’d need to be flexible.”
Flexible.
Another soft word.
“What kind of flexibility?” Aarav asked.
A pause.
“Information sharing,” Vikram said carefully. “General behavior trends. Not your trades.”
Aarav closed his eyes.
The incentives never stopped.
They just changed shape.
SYSTEM ALERT:
SECONDARY INCENTIVE DETECTED
Form: LEGITIMATE EMPLOYMENT
Hidden Cost: DATA LEAKAGE
Decision Weight: MEDIUM
“I’ll think about it,” Aarav said.
“That’s all I ask,” Vikram replied.
That evening, Aarav stood in front of the bathroom mirror longer than usual.
He looked the same.
But felt different.
Cleaner.
Poorer.
Slower.
More real.
SYSTEM PROMPT (UNSOLICITED):
Do you regret the earlier refusal?
YES / NO
Aarav didn’t answer immediately.
He thought of:
* Faster execution
* Bigger profits
* Easier growth
Then he thought of:
* Silent obligations
* Invisible expectations
* Becoming predictable to someone else
He tapped NO.
Decision acknowledged.
Regret level: LOW
Conviction: STABLE
NOTICE:
Clean paths compound slower.
But they compound without collapse.
That line stayed with him.
Aarav shut down his laptop.
Daily Profit: ?340
Emotional Cost: HIGH
Integrity Cost: ZERO
Old Aarav would’ve called this a bad day.
New Aarav called it expensive—but necessary.
As night settled, notifications trickled in.
Muted opportunities.
Missed connections.
Silence where noise once existed.
Autonomy didn’t make him invisible.
It made him inconvenient.
Lying in bed, Aarav understood the truth no one advertised:
Staying clean doesn’t make life easier.
It makes your choices heavier.
And tomorrow—
those choices would start attracting consequences.

