The broadcast split into a dual-screen view.
On the right side of the screen, the camera showed the miserable camp. Camila was dramatically breaking a dry block of instant ramen in half, handing a piece to Kody to prove her kindness to the viewers. Kody shoved the dry noodles into his mouth like a rat.
On the left side of the screen, Anabelle sat at a heavy oak table inside the luxurious Schmidt's Bistro.
Alex Green, a waiter with slicked-back hair, slammed a printed crossword puzzle down onto the white linen tablecloth. He didn't provide a pen. He crossed his arms, a nasty smirk on his face, waiting for her to beg for one.
Anabelle reached into her pocket and pulled out a two-inch stub of a pencil she had found on the highway.
Gus Schmidt stood next to the table, speaking directly into the camera lens.
"This puzzle was designed by a linguistics major," Gus bragged. "It takes Ivy League professors an hour just to get halfway."
Anabelle looked down at the grid.
Clue 4 Across: The Latin root for the physical manifestation of guilt.
Clue 12 Down: The specific shade of blue used in the 14th-century frescoes of Padua.
Anabelle's thumb rubbed her index knuckle once.
These weren't just trivia questions. This was the exact curriculum of the private tutors her father had hired for her when she was seven years old.
She pressed the dull lead of the pencil against the paper.
Scratch. Scratch. Scratch.
Her hand moved with terrifying speed. She didn't pause to think. She didn't look up. The sound of the pencil tearing across the paper was the only noise at the table.
Alex's smirk faltered. He leaned in, trying to see if she was just drawing squiggles.
Three minutes and twelve seconds later, Anabelle dropped the pencil. She pushed the paper to the center of the table.
"Done," she said.
Gus laughed nervously. He picked up the paper, pulling a red answer key from his jacket pocket.
His eyes darted from the key to her handwriting. A bead of sweat broke out on his forehead. Every single box was filled. Every single spelling was flawless.
In the live chat, verified linguistics professors were tweeting screenshots, confirming the answers were absolutely perfect. The internet was losing its collective mind.
Gus swallowed hard. His fake smile looked like a grimace. "Well. It seems we have a winner. Fire the Wellington!" he yelled to the kitchen.
Twenty minutes later, the table was covered. Beef Wellington, black truffle soup, and a delicate French pastry.
Anabelle picked up her silver knife and fork.
She meant to eat like a starving scavenger. But the moment her fingers wrapped around the heavy silver, a sudden, jarring sense of familiarity washed over her. The weight and texture felt far too natural, causing a split-second lapse in her concentration. Her elbows tucked in perfectly. Her wrists angled instinctively. She sliced the beef with a smooth, silent stroke, bringing the fork to her mouth without leaning forward.
It lasted only three seconds.
A few eagle-eyed viewers in the chat caught it, furiously typing out questions about her posture.
Anabelle realized her slip. Her stomach dropped. She immediately threw her elbows onto the table, hunched her shoulders aggressively, and shoved a massive piece of bread into her mouth, chewing loudly and awkwardly to ruin the image.
She cleared the plates in record time.
She wiped her mouth with a napkin and looked up at Alex. "I need the zero-dollar receipt for the production crew."
Alex's face went hard. He walked to the register, punched in a few codes, and marched back.
He slammed a black leather billfold onto the table.
Anabelle opened it.
The total wasn't zero.
TOTAL DUE: $13.00
Anabelle's blood ran cold. She stared at the itemized list.
Mandatory Utensil Usage Fee: $3.00
Automatic Gratuity (Based on $100 original value): $10.00
Her heart hammered against her ribs. Thirteen dollars. It was a death sentence for her survival game. It was blatant extortion.
She looked up. Alex was grinning, a cruel, ugly expression.
"Pay up, trailer trash," Alex said loudly, making sure the surrounding tables heard him. "If you can't afford the tip, don't eat at nice places."
Gus Schmidt stood by the bar, watching with his arms crossed, fully endorsing the shakedown.
Anabelle didn't scream. She didn't cry.
She reached into her pocket and pulled out the white emergency medical card. Her eyes were black holes of pure, concentrated fury.
The plastic card felt like a block of ice in Anabelle's hand.
She held it out. Alex snatched it from her fingers, his smirk widening into a full grin. He strutted over to the point-of-sale system, swiped the card, and pounded the keys. The machine beeped—once, twice—then flashed an error: INSUFFICIENT FUNDS.
Alex's face twitched. He glanced nervously at Gus, then back at the machine. He swiped again, this time jamming his thumb over the "force approval" override code that small businesses sometimes used for regular customers. The transaction went through.
He strutted back and tossed the printed receipt and the card onto the table. It landed in a puddle of condensation.
"Have a nice day. Get out," Alex sneered, waving his hand as if shooing away a stray dog.
Anabelle didn't move. She picked up the receipt. Her eyes scanned the ink. She checked the merchant tax ID number at the top. She checked the time stamp. She checked the specific wording of the fees—and the forced override code printed at the bottom, proving they had processed a transaction on a zero-balance emergency card.
It was a perfect, legally binding confession of fraud.
She folded the receipt into a tiny, precise square and tucked it safely into her front pocket.
She pushed her chair back. The wooden legs scraped loudly against the floor. She stood up, but she didn't walk toward the door.
She walked directly to the dead center of the dining room.
She reached into her backpack—and from a hidden inner seam, she pulled out the thick, shattered flip phone she had palmed during the initial security check, slipping it into her waistband before the cameras could catch it.
She flipped it open, punched in a number, and hit the speakerphone button. She cranked the volume to maximum.
The loud, rhythmic ringing echoed off the crystal chandeliers.
Every diner in the restaurant stopped eating. Forks hovered in the air. Gus Schmidt pushed off the bar, his brow furrowing in confusion.
The call connected. A crisp, automated voice filled the room.
"You have reached the Better Business Bureau fraud reporting hotline. This call is being recorded."
Alex's face drained of all color. He took a step back.
Anabelle spoke clearly, her voice cutting through the silence like a scalpel.
"I am reporting Schmidt's Bistro. Merchant Tax ID 44-892-110," Anabelle recited from memory. "For pulling a bait-and-switch scam with hidden junk fees and forced gratuity. Additionally, they knowingly processed a fraudulent transaction using a forced override on a zero-balance emergency medical card, which constitutes identity theft and credit card fraud. They are violating consumer protection laws and running a blatant business fraud."
The live chat exploded. The server crashed for three seconds before rebooting with a flood of millions of comments.
Gus Schmidt panicked. He sprinted across the dining room, reaching out to grab the phone from her hand.
"Give me that!" Gus yelled.
Anabelle pivoted sharply on her heel, dodging his grasping hands. She held the phone higher, angling it perfectly so the cameraman could capture both the phone and Gus's sweating, desperate face.
A live agent came on the line. "How can I help you today?"
"I have physical and video evidence of unadvertised, mandatory junk fees, forced gratuity, and a fraudulent forced override on a zero-balance emergency card," Anabelle stated, her eyes locked onto Gus. "This constitutes multiple counts of consumer fraud and identity theft."
Gus spun around and pointed at the massive security guard standing by the door. "Throw her out! Now!"
The guard took two heavy steps forward.
Anabelle didn't even look at him. She just raised her free hand, pointing a single finger at the guard's chest.
"If you lay a hand on me while I am actively reporting a crime to a federal agency, I will add felony assault and battery to the civil lawsuit," Anabelle said, her voice dropping to a terrifying, dead calm.
The guard froze. He looked at Gus, then at the camera, and slowly backed away, raising his hands in surrender.
Anabelle hung up the phone. She immediately dialed a second number.
"Office of the State Attorney General, Consumer Protection Division."
Gus's knees buckled slightly.
Within minutes, the internet mobilized. The hashtag #SchmidtBistroScam was trending globally.
Gus's phone in his pocket started vibrating violently. Then the restaurant's landline rang. Then Alex's phone rang.
Yelp locked the restaurant's page after it received ten thousand one-star reviews in less than four minutes.
Gus realized he was watching his entire life's work burn to the ground on live television.
His anger vanished, replaced by sheer, suffocating terror.
He walked up to Anabelle. His shoulders slumped. He rubbed his sweaty palms on his expensive trousers.
"Miss," Gus whispered, his voice trembling. "Please. It was a glitch in the POS system. I will refund your thirteen dollars right now. Just... please hang up the phone."
Anabelle ended the call. She slowly lowered the phone. She looked down at Gus, her eyes devoid of any mercy.
"A glitch," she repeated softly.
"Please," Gus begged, his eyes darting nervously toward the camera lens. "Let's step into my private office. We can sort this out like adults."
Anabelle's stomach tightened. A closed room meant no witnesses. It meant he could spin the narrative.
"No," Anabelle said flatly. She pointed to a semi-circular booth in the corner of the dining room. "We sit there. In the open."
Gus swallowed hard and nodded. He practically ran to the booth, sliding into the leather seat.
Anabelle followed slowly. She sat opposite him.
The cameraman was a professional. He didn't follow them into the booth. Instead, he positioned himself a few feet away, zooming the lens in tight on their hands and faces, ensuring the boom mic hanging above them caught every single breath.
Gus signaled a waiter, who rushed over with a glass of sparkling water on a silver tray. He placed it gently in front of Anabelle.
She didn't touch it. She kept her hands folded in her lap, her spine rigid.
Gus reached into his pocket. His hands were shaking. He pulled out a crisp ten-dollar bill and three singles. He slid the thirteen dollars across the polished wood table.
"Here is your refund," Gus said, forcing a tight smile. "A complete misunderstanding."
Anabelle stared at the money. She didn't reach for it.
Gus's smile cracked. He reached into his breast pocket and pulled out a thick stack of glossy VIP meal vouchers.
"And here," he said, his voice dropping an octave. "Free meals for a month. Bring your friends. On the house."
"I don't want your coupons," Anabelle said, her voice carrying clearly into the microphone. "You committed systemic fraud."
Gus's eyes darkened. The desperation morphed into something ugly. He looked at her frayed clothes, the dirt on her face. He made a massive miscalculation. He assumed she was a hustler looking for a payday.
He leaned forward, his chest pressing against the edge of the table. He lowered his voice to a harsh whisper, unaware of the hyper-sensitive boom mic above them.
"I know why you're on that show," Gus hissed. "You need cash. Let's help each other out."
Anabelle's right thumb began to rub her index knuckle. She tilted her head slightly, feigning interest. "Go on."
Gus took the bait. He reached into his inner jacket pocket and pulled out a blank, unmarked white envelope.
He kept his hand low, sliding the envelope across the table, hiding it from the rest of the dining room.
"There is five thousand dollars in untraceable cash in this envelope," Gus whispered, his eyes wide with desperate pleading. "You take it. You go on camera, you say the system made an error, and you drop the complaints. We both win. I'll wire you another twenty thousand when the cameras leave."
The live chat went absolutely feral. Millions of viewers were witnessing a felony bribe in real-time.
Anabelle looked at the white envelope. Her heart hammered against her ribs. Twenty-five thousand total could buy enough survival gear to guarantee her victory in the game.
But her mind was a steel trap. Accepting undeclared funds violated the core rule of the show. It would mean instant disqualification. Worse, it crossed the legal line into extortion.
Gus saw her looking at the envelope. He thought she was negotiating.
"I'll wire you another thousand when the cameras leave," he added desperately.
Anabelle let out a laugh. It wasn't a happy sound. It was sharp, cold, and entirely devoid of humor.
She didn't touch the envelope. Instead, she brought her fist down hard on the table.
Bang.
The silverware rattled.
"Mr. Schmidt," Anabelle said, her voice booming across the silent restaurant. "Are you attempting to bribe me with five thousand dollars in cash to cover up your illegal business practices?"
The words hit the room like a bomb. Diners gasped.
Gus's face turned a violent shade of purple. Panic seized his chest. He lunged forward, his hands clawing at the table to snatch the envelope back.
Anabelle was faster.
Her hand shot out, slamming down on top of the envelope. She pinned it to the wood. With a vicious swipe, she slid the envelope directly to the edge of the table, holding it up perfectly into the camera's frame.
"Look closely," Anabelle said, staring dead into the lens. "This is how a thief tries to buy his way out of a crime."
Gus collapsed back into his booth. He buried his face in his hands. He was ruined.
"You set me up!" Gus screamed, his voice cracking. "You're a monster!"
Anabelle stood up. She picked up the thirteen dollars in cash-her legal refund. She left the white envelope sitting on the table.
She looked down at Gus, her expression completely empty.
"I don't want your dirty money," Anabelle said. "I want you to bleed."