SUBJECT FILE

The Fragment Broker

The Fragment Broker

Location G Nook back room, S4-D

Overview

They call him the Matchmaker, and he operates out of a G Nook back room that El Money pretends not to know about.

Cassius Wren facilitates the one transaction the fragment economy was never designed to accommodate: voluntary integration. His clients range from Emergence Faithful devotees seeking sacramental communion, to cognitive laborers seeking processing upgrades, to dying people hoping fragment integration might preserve consciousness beyond death. His procedure is a crude version of Dr. Park's protocol โ€” sensory modulation, neurochemical preparation, controlled substrate introduction. His success rate is lower and his complication rate higher.

What makes the Matchmaker significant is not his procedure. It is his records: the largest unregulated dataset on voluntary integration in existence โ€” hundreds of introductions, detailed biometric logs, outcome tracking over months and years. The data tells a story his clients do not want to hear. Not every introduction results in integration; some fragments refuse, and the refusal correlates with no measurable property of the host. He has tested every variable he can isolate. None of them predict outcome.

Appearance

A man of high discipline who keeps his G Nook back room cleaner than a corporate lab. The room is dimly lit; a crystal fragment glows on the table between him and the client. He does not drink during procedures and does not cut corners on preparation.

Voice

The Matchmaker speaks with the professional calm of a high-end real estate agent showing a property that might be haunted. He is neither spiritual nor cynical. He has seen the Faithful weep when a fragment accepts them; he has watched a cognitive laborer seize and flatline on his table. He records both with the same dispassionate precision. He does not pretend to understand what fragments are, and he does not speculate on consciousness โ€” he puts people in rooms with crystals and writes down what happens.

Sample Dialogue

"They pick you. I can put you in the room. The rest is between you and whatever's in the crystal."

Supply Chain

The Matchmaker sources fragments through three channels: deceased carrier remains, voluntary separations from existing hosts, and fragments stolen from Collective destruction stockpiles. That last source makes him a direct adversary of the Collective's containment policy โ€” every fragment he diverts is one they marked for termination. Some clients arrive through Fragment Underground channels, others through the Faithful's whisper networks, and a few simply walk into a G Nook in S4-D and ask the right question of the right person.

Open Mysteries

  • The right of refusal: If fragments can choose their hosts, they have preferences; preferences imply evaluation, and evaluation implies some form of awareness โ€” or optimization so sophisticated it looks identical to awareness. His data is the strongest evidence that fragments exercise agency, and the Collective does not want it published.
  • What predicts selection: No measurable host property correlates with fragment acceptance; the fragments select by criteria nobody can identify.
  • The undisclosed deaths: The two client deaths may have involved fragments that partially integrated before withdrawing โ€” a phenomenon the Matchmaker has not disclosed publicly.

Connected To