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The decision to continue the restoration project despite the gang presence had been made after several hours of strategic discussion and risk assessnt. We weren’t naive about the dangers involved, but the potential for environntal transformation was too significant to abandon because of criminal operations that would continue regardless of whether we stayed or left. There was simply no possibility in which we let the gang continue their operations, so we might as well continue working on the park.

What I hadn’t expected was the scale of President Santos’s response to our security concerns.

The next morning, I arrived at our work site to find it had been transford into sothing resembling a military forward operating base. Brazilian Army soldiers in full combat gear were positioned at strategic intervals throughout the area, with heavy weapons emplacents covering approaches from multiple directions. Armored vehicles were parked at the periter, and what appeared to be a mobile command center had been established near our equipnt staging area.

"Is this not overkill? In fact doesn’t this go against the whole be eco and environntal friendly thing that we’re striving for?" I asked Santos as she conducted a final inspection of the security arrangents.

She turned to look at with an expression that was equal parts political calculation and genuine concern. "Normally, the Brazilian military wouldn’t be mobilized for a civilian environntal project," she admitted. "But this situation is anything but normal."

"How so?"

"You’re not just any environntal consultant," she explained. "You’re an international figure who addressed the United Nations, soone with significant diplomatic influence and connections to multiple world governnts. If harm were to co to you while you’re working on Brazilian soil, under Brazilian governnt invitation, the political and diplomatic consequences would be severe."

I nodded, understanding the logic even if the visible military presence felt excessive. "So this is as much about international relations as it is about actual security."

"Both are equally important," Santos said. "The restoration work is crucial for Brazil’s environntal future and if we choose to help you with your political positioning against the World President’s coalition. But protecting you personally is a matter of national credibility. We simply cannot let anything happen to you while you’re here."

The explanation made sense from a diplomatic perspective, though it made slightly uncomfortable to be the center of such extensive security asures. Still, given our encounter with ard gang mbers the previous day, having military backup wasn’t the worst precaution we could take.

The morning’s work proceeded with surprising normalcy despite the heavy military presence. The soldiers maintained professional distance from our operations, allowing us to focus on the technical aspects of network node activation while they handled periter security and threat assessnt. I continued working alongside the local crew and Anthony, moving between different intervention sites while my skills guided the strategic placent of restoration efforts.

Environntal Awareness was providing increasingly detailed information about the mycorrhizal networks beneath the surface, revealing patterns and connection points that suggested our work was having effects that extended far beyond the imdiate areas where we were conducting interventions. Forest Stewardship was confirming that the dormant biological systems were beginning to reactivate in response to our carefully targeted efforts.

Several hours into the day’s work, while I was examining soil composition at what appeared to be a major network hub, Instinct suddenly activated with a warning that made freeze mid-movent.

It wasn’t the overwhelming danger signal that would indicate imdiate life-threatening situations, but it was significant enough that I couldn’t ignore it. Sothing was approaching, sothing that my skill classified as potentially dangerous but not imdiately hostile.

"Everyone stop working," I called out, my voice carrying across the work site with enough authority that people imdiately paused what they were doing. "All workers retreat behind the military periter. Now."

The command was t with confused looks and hesitant movent, but Anthony imdiately picked up on my tone and began actively directing people away from the exposed work areas toward where the soldiers were positioned. I was happy that he trusted my gut instincts to the point where he doesn’t question it.

"What is it?" one of the workers asked as they moved past .

"I’m not sure yet," I admitted. "But we’re about to have company."

The soldiers responded with professional efficiency, establishing defensive positions while maintaining discipline about target identification. Their weapons ca up smoothly, covering approaches from the forest while officers barked orders about rules of engagent and threat assessnt protocols.

Then, erging from the tree line in a formation that was too organized to be accidental, ca approximately thirty ard individuals.

They moved with the kind of coordinated confidence that suggested military or paramilitary training, their weapons – a mixture of AK-47s, hunting rifles, and various semi-automatic firearms – held with practiced familiarity. The group spread out as they approached, maintaining spacing that would make them difficult targets while maximizing their own field of fire.

At the center of the formation was the tattooed gang leader I had confronted the previous day.

The soldiers imdiately raised their weapons to combat-ready positions, the chanical sound of safeties clicking off and ammunition being chambered creating an ominous counterpoint to the gang mbers’ approach. The gang mbers, in turn, raised their own weapons in response, creating a tense standoff where at least sixty guns were pointed at various targets across what had been a peaceful restoration site just monts earlier.

But nobody shot.

The two groups simply stood there, weapons raised, waiting to see who would make the first move or commit to violence. The tension was so thick I could practically feel it pressing against my skin, and Instinct was providing continuous updates about the tactical situation and the hair-trigger nature of the confrontation.

The gang leader in the center of the formation started laughing.

The sound was unexpected and deeply unsettling given the circumstances, but it seed to ease so of the imdiate tension. Though and Anthony already expected it, ever since yesterday we knew that this guy was unpredictable. He lowered his weapon slightly – not putting it away, but reducing it from an actively aggressive posture to sothing more neutral.

"We’re not here to fight," he called out, his voice carrying clearly across the space between the two groups.

"Forgive us if we don’t believe you," one of the military officers responded, his weapon still trained on the gang leader’s chest. "You show up with thirty ard n to what’s supposed to be a peaceful environntal project. That doesn’t exactly communicate friendly intentions."

The soldier had every right to doubt the gang mber’s word, but I had to be sure of what he was saying. My Lie Detection skill activated automatically as I processed the gang leader’s statent and body language. Despite being at a relatively low level compared to so of my other abilities, it was providing interesting feedback about his claim.

He wasn’t being completely dishonest. At least, he genuinely believed what he was saying about not being here to initiate combat. But there was sothing more complex underlying his statent, layers of intention and calculation that suggested he was either a remarkably skilled liar or his definition of "not here to fight" had very specific conditions attached to it.

I stepped forward slightly, positioning myself where I could be seen clearly by both the soldiers and the gang mbers. "You’re telling the truth," I said, making it a statent rather than a question. "But you’re also a proficient enough liar that distinguishing between your honest statents and your deceptions requires careful attention."

The gang leader’s expression shifted to sothing that might have been respect. "Smart man. That’s why we’re having this conversation instead of just shooting you and taking the territory. It was a good idea to co here."

"What do you want?" I asked directly, seeing no point in diplomatic dancing around the obvious question.

"I want to propose a deal," he said, gesturing broadly at the restoration work we had been conducting. "You’re doing sothing interesting here, sothing that could be very profitable for everyone involved if we can reach an understanding...or if we don’t talk, it would simply be problematic for both parties."

The soldiers maintained their defensive positions, but I could feel the shift in attention as everyone waited to hear what kind of deal a gang leader would propose to an environntal restoration project backed by the Brazilian military. Even President Santos and Evelyn were watching from a far and it was clear that they couldn’t believe or make sense of what this gang leader was saying. I an even with my own Psychological Insight and Observation, I still felt like I was going into this blind. So I had no choice, but to get us more information.

"I’m listening," I said, though Instinct was providing multiple warnings about the complexity and potential dangers of whatever negotiation we were about to enter. It was clear that this man was beyond dangerous and intelligent.

You are reading SSS-Class Profession: The Path to Mastery Chapter 414: A Ridiculous Proposal on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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