Diana looked up at him, the dark, venomous thrill of the impending slaughter reigniting in her eyes.
"The debt call."
"At the opening bell," Ryan confird. He stepped back, keeping one hand resting firmly on the small of her back. "Co out to the kitchen. You’ve been staring at spreadsheets all day."
He guided her out of the library.
In the kitchen, Zara had laid out a massive spread of catered Italian food across the dark soapstone island. Sophie was already sitting on one of the heavy steel barstools, a plate of truffled pasta in front of her, looking more relaxed than she had in weeks.
Iralis erged from the hallway, her wire-rimd glasses pushed up on her head. She held a mug of black coffee, her oversized college sweatshirt swallowing her fra.
"The house is digitally safe," Iralis reported, stopping near the edge of the kitchen. She looked at Ryan, the fierce, unshakeable devotion in her dark eyes burning bright. "I isolated the penthouse network from the main grid. We are invisible almost."
"Good work," Ryan said.
He stood at the head of the island, looking at the four won.
They weren’t fighting for his attention. They weren’t performing. Zara plated food with effortless grace. Sophie argued lightly with Iralis about the optimal temperature for server rooms. Diana stood close to his right side, her shoulder brushing his arm, entirely anchored by his physical proximity.
They were distinct, fiercely intelligent, and massively lethal in their respective domains.
And they were entirely, unequivocally his.
He had built the fortress.
He had secured the assets.
"Eat," Ryan commanded softly, picking up his own fork. "Tomorrow, we drop the hamr."
----
Friday morning arrived with blinding, razor-sharp clarity. The storm had finally blown out over the Atlantic, leaving the New York skyline crisp and hyper-defined against a pale blue sky.
The forty-second floor of Rebuild Tech was silent.
It wasn’t the frantic, caffeinated silence of coders working against a deadline.
It was the heavy, breathless quiet of an execution squad waiting for the drop.
Ryan stood at the head of the black marble table in the war room. The eighty-five-inch monitor on the wall displayed a single, highly classified feed: the internal banking ledger of ridian Tech.
Diana sat to his left, an encrypted phone headset resting around her neck. She wore a bone-white pantsuit, her posture rigid, radiating the cold, terrifying authority of an apex predator about to snap the spine of its prey.
Sophie sat to his right, her iPad loaded with the finalized receivership docunts.
"It’s 8:55 AM," Liam noted from the far end of the table, his eyes glued to his laptop screen. "ridian’s CFO just logged into their primary comrcial banking portal. They are refreshing the page, waiting for the sixty-million-dollar bridge loan to clear from their creditors."
"They are waiting for a ghost," Diana said, her voice dripping with aristocratic ice. "I bought their senior secured debt yesterday afternoon. The comrcial bank canceled the bridge loan the second our blind trust took control of the covenants."
Jas Sterling was sitting in his corner office three miles away, entirely unaware that the floorboards beneath his desk no longer belonged to him.
He thought he had survived the quarter. He thought his fraudulent user trics had bought him enough ti to fix his rotting architecture.
"Trigger the audit," Ryan commanded.
Diana slipped the headset over her ears. She pressed a button on her console, opening a direct, recorded line to ridian Tech’s executive boardroom.
The call connected.
"This is Sterling," Jas’s voice echoed through the war room speakers. He sounded strained, arrogant, attempting to project an authority he was rapidly bleeding. "Who is this? My assistant said this was a priority call from our primary creditors."
"It is," Diana stated, her tone dead-flat and lethal. "This is Diana Lockridge, representing the blind trust that currently holds seventy-four percent of ridian Tech’s senior secured debt."
A heavy, confused silence hit the line.
"Lockridge?" Jas stamred, the arrogant edge instantly faltering. "Diana Lockridge? The venture capitalist? What are you talking about? Our debt is held by a private equity consortium."
"Your debt was sold yesterday at 3:45 PM," Diana corrected ruthlessly. "As your primary creditor, we are executing our right to an imdiate, unannounced audit of your operational trics, as stipulated in Section 4 of your loan covenants. Please transmit your verified daily active user counts for the past ninety days to my servers. You have sixty seconds."
The sound of a chair scraping violently against a floor echoed over the speaker.
"You can’t do this!" Jas shouted, raw, unadulterated panic tearing his voice apart. "An unannounced audit? That requires a thirty-day notice! You don’t have the legal authority—"
"We hold the paper, Jas," Ryan’s voice cut across the room, low, gravelly, and carrying the immovable weight of a falling anvil.
The silence on the other end of the line was so absolute it felt like the connection had dropped.
"Russo," Jas whispered. The sheer, staggering horror in the single syllable was palpable. "No. No, that’s impossible. You don’t have the capital to buy our debt. This is a joke."
"You have forty seconds to produce the verified user trics," Ryan said smoothly, leaning his hands flat against the cold black marble. "If you fail to produce them, you trigger a catastrophic default on your loan covenants. The debt becos imdiately payable in full."
Jas was hyperventilating. The microphone picked up the ragged, desperate sawing of his breath. He couldn’t produce the trics. The trics were fabricated. If he sent the real numbers, he confessed to federal wire fraud. If he didn’t send them, he defaulted.
He was trapped in a burning room with no exits.
"Ryan, listen to ," Jas begged, the pride entirely incinerated, leaving behind a pathetic, whining coward. "We can work this out. I can give you board seats. I can give you equity. I’ll make you CTO. Just... just don’t call the loan. Please. It will bankrupt us."
"Your ti is up," Diana announced, her voice devoid of a single ounce of rcy.
"Execute the default," Ryan ordered.
Sophie’s finger tapped the screen of her iPad.
"Default notice transmitted," Sophie reported, her dark eyes flashing with a fierce, victorious heat. "The legal filings are hitting the federal docket now. ridian Tech is officially in receivership."
"Russo, you son of a bitch!" Jas scread, the sound echoing wildly. "I’ll kill you! I’ll drag you into court for the rest of your life! You can’t just steal my company!"
"I didn’t steal it, Jas," Ryan murmured, standing up straight. "I bought it. And as the primary shareholder of your liquidated assets, I’m making a few structural changes."
Ryan looked at Hayes, who was standing by the glass doors of the war room.
"Make the call," Ryan said.
Hayes tapped his earpiece.
"Breach."
On the massive eighty-five-inch monitor, the banking ledger vanished, replaced by a live, high-definition video feed.
It was security cara footage from the lobby of ridian Tech.
Twelve heavily ard PMC operators in tailored suits marched through the revolving doors. They didn’t stop at the security desk.
They bypassed the turnstiles entirely, flashing federal receivership warrants that legally authorized them to seize the premises.
Jas’s shouting over the phone abruptly cut off.
"What is going on down there?" Jas yelled, not at Ryan, but at soone in his own office. "Who are these people? Get security!"
The video feed switched to the executive floor.
The PMC operators kicked open the heavy double doors of Jas’s corner office. The cara caught the exact mont Jas Sterling realized his life was over. He backed away from his desk, his hands raised, his face drained of all blood.
One of the operators handed Jas a cardboard box.
"Your company belongs to Rebuild Tech," Ryan’s voice echoed through the phone sitting on Jas’s desk. "Put your personal items in the box. Leave the laptop. Leave the phone. If you attempt to access a single server, you will be arrested for corporate sabotage."
Jas collapsed into his executive chair, his head falling into his hands. He was sobbing. A pathetic, broken sound that carried over the live feed.
"Get him out of my chair," Ryan commanded.
The operator grabbed Jas by the back of his collar, hauling him roughly to his feet, and shoved him toward the door.
Ryan ended the call.
The war room was silent.
They had just publicly, legally, and brutally executed a legacy tech company. They hadn’t just beaten Jas; they had erased him from the industry entirely.
Sophie let out a long, shaky exhale, a brilliant, ferocious smile breaking across her face.
Diana leaned back in her chair, closing her eyes, the dark, addictive thrill of the Warlord’s absolute dominance washing over her nervous system.
Ryan didn’t celebrate.
His private phone vibrated in his pocket. A heavy, sustained chanical pulse.
He pulled it out.
[WARLORD PROTOCOL: ACTIVE]
[Hostile Entity Eradicated. Total Liquidation Achieved.]
[Base Impact Acquired.]
[Bold Action Multiplier Applied: 5x]
[POWER: 110 → 135]
[STATUS: Apex Predator Recognized.]
Ryan stared at the numbers. The power scaling was reaching critical mass.
Then, a second notification dropped down from the top of the screen.
It wasn’t the System.
It was an encrypted SMS.
Unknown Number.
’You cleared the board in New York, Russo. Very clean. Very loud.’
Ryan’s jaw locked.
The Syndicate?
’But you are fighting in a sandbox,’ the ssage continued. ’Aegis Global isn’t a company. It’s a hydra. We are revoking the ceasefire. Look at the sky.’
Ryan frowned. He walked toward the floor-to-ceiling windows of the war room, looking out over the sprawling Manhattan skyline.
The sky was clear.
The sun was shining.
Then, his phone rang.
It was Iralis, calling from the bunker on the forty-first floor.
"Ryan," Iralis’s voice was completely devoid of its usual clinical calm. She was terrified. "The power grid. They aren’t attacking our servers. They are attacking the city’s infrastructure."
Suddenly, the lights in the forty-second-floor office flickered.
Then, the massive eighty-five-inch monitor died.
Below them, across the sprawling grid of Midtown Manhattan, building after building plunged into absolute darkness.
Traffic lights blacked out. The hum of the city abruptly ceased, replaced by the rising, chaotic chorus of thousands of car horns and shouting pedestrians.
The Syndicate hadn’t sent an assassin.
They had turned off the power to half of New York City.
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