Strip Rock-paper-scissors - Police Edition Vide... <Chrome PREMIUM>

Lena closed her eyes and threw .

The final throw. The air in the arcade was suffocating. Marcus held his breath. Lena locked eyes with the Referee. He’s a pattern player, she realized. Rock, Paper, Scissors, Rock, Paper… he repeats every three. She’d seen him do it. Her last win had been Paper. His last throw had been Scissors. Which meant his next throw would be…

They found him in the center of the “Galactic Clash” virtual reality arena. A man in his late forties, gaunt, wearing a stained lab coat over a “World’s Best Dad” t-shirt. Around him, he had set up a bizarre stage: three cameras on tripods, a disco ball hanging from a broken ceiling tile, and a large digital scoreboard that read:

His scissors cut her paper. A soft, mocking snip-snip sound escaped his lips. Lena felt a flash of rage. She unbuttoned her tactical vest and let it fall. Then her polo shirt. She stood in a plain gray sports bra, her arms crossed. Marcus looked away, not out of prudishness, but out of a pure, protective fury. Strip Rock-Paper-Scissors - Police Edition Vide...

But Lena knew, as she climbed into the patrol car and watched the ruined mall disappear in the rearview mirror, that somewhere out there, another lunatic was already building a game. And she’d have to be ready to play.

They arrived to find the mall’s main entrance chained shut, but a side door near the loading dock was ajar. Inside, the air was thick with dust and the ghostly smell of pretzel grease. Flashlights cut through the darkness, illuminating overturned kiosks and mannequins with missing limbs. Then they heard it—a rhythmic, almost hypnotic slap-slap-slap coming from the old arcade.

The Referee, now in cuffs, was led past them. He looked at Lena with something like respect. “You’re good,” he said. “But next time, I’m bringing the ‘Extended Edition’—best of fifteen.” Lena closed her eyes and threw

For the first time, genuine panic flickered in the man’s eyes. He slowly, dramatically, unbuckled his belt and let his pants drop. He was wearing bright purple boxers with cartoon hotdogs on them. Lena did not laugh. She couldn’t. She was one win away.

The silence lasted a full three seconds. Then the disco ball flickered and died. The scoreboard flashed . The Referee let out a guttural scream, ripped the tablet from its stand, and typed a code. A magnetic lock clicked open in the back hallway. Marcus was already moving, tackling the man to the ground while Lena ran to find Officer Chen, who was alive, gagged, and staring at a small, harmless-looking firework display the Referee had rigged to look like explosives.

Later, as they waited for the wagon to take the Referee away, Marcus handed Lena a thermal blanket. She was shivering, still in her sports bra and pants, her gear in a pile. Marcus held his breath

And so, at five minutes to midnight, Officer Lena Hayes found herself standing on an inflatable mat, facing a madman, preparing to play a children’s game for a man’s life.

Officer Lena Hayes had seen a lot in her five years on the force. Domestic disputes, high-speed chases, the occasional raccoon stuck in a vending machine. But nothing—absolutely nothing—prepared her for the call that crackled over the radio at 11:47 PM on a humid Tuesday.

“Officers,” he said, his voice unnervingly calm. “Welcome to the final level. Your partner, Officer Chen, is in the back room. He’s safe. For now. The door is biometric. It only opens when I input a code. And I will only input that code when one of you defeats me.”

Lena and her partner, Detective Marcus Thorne, a twenty-year veteran with a granite jaw and a coffee addiction, exchanged a glance. The Meridian Mall had been abandoned for three years, ever since the roof collapsed in the food court. It was a haven for squatters, teenagers, and, apparently, the clinically insane.