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The boardroom was quiet, too quiet. The air inside Apex Council’s main chamber felt unusually tense, charged with invisible friction. Lin Feng sat at the head of the polished onyx table, his gaze calm but razor-sharp. Around him sat eleven key figures—so loyal, so wavering, all watching each other.

Minutes earlier, a quiet storm had swept across their internal network: a leak suggesting that one of the council’s secondary financial nodes—code-nad "Cirrus Green"—had been compromised. It was a surgical hit, one that revealed precision, timing, and an understanding of internal hierarchy.

"Who had clearance for Cirrus Green’s signatory access as of last quarter?" Lin Feng’s voice cut through the room like a scalpel.

Zhou Min, the young compliance auditor Lin had elevated months ago, opened his tablet with practiced speed. "Three signatures. Yours. Deputy Treasurer i Jia. And... Founder-tier override granted to Ji Qianye two weeks ago during the quarterly roll-forward."

Ji Qianye, sitting to Lin’s left, stiffened slightly. She was sharp—one of the early mbers who had shown loyalty but increasingly walked a tightrope between Lin Feng’s directives and internal pressures. "The override was procedural," she said quickly. "There was a delay in i Jia’s digital signature. I inford the protocol channel."

"Yet the leak ca from that exact junction," Lin said. His tone wasn’t accusing, but it bore a weight that made Ji Qianye avert her eyes.

Before anyone else could speak, Jiang Yuehua—the most senior of the external strategic advisors—cleared her throat. "Whether or not the leak was internal, this proves sothing we’ve all feared. We are being dissected. Not attacked blindly—dissected."

Lin nodded. "Agreed. And whoever is doing this knows we are fracturing."

Silence. It was rare for Lin to speak so plainly about the internal stress.

For weeks now, fractures had appeared—subtle disagreents over direction, simring resentnts about influence, and the undeniable pressure from Cassandra and Asher Keller’s charm-led counter-campaign. And now, one of the council’s more obscure economic funnels had been traced and exposed in the dia. It wasn’t just a data breach—it was psychological warfare.

Before anyone could offer comnt, the system buzzed in Lin’s head.

[Crisis Perception (Advanced) Activated]

Imdiate threat proximity: Internal dissent manifesting within 48 hours. Recomndation: Quarantine sentint hotspots. Deploy distraction vector.

New Sub-Mission Triggered: "Balance the Burning Tree"

Objective: Preserve cohesion among top 5 Apex Council founders. Prevent 2 defections. Reward: Faction Stabilization Protocol 200 Influence Points.

Lin suppressed a breath. The system’s prompts were rarely this specific. But now he understood—this wasn’t just external pressure. Sothing inside Apex was preparing to snap.

He turned toward Jiang Yuehua. "What’s our leverage position with Cassandra’s cultural push?"

She responded without hesitation. "We’ve blocked the licensing of three of her branded educational modules in southern provinces, but she’s pivoting. There’s now a coalition building around her dia architecture—soft power is the currency."

"Which explains the celebrity endorsents we saw this morning," Ji Qianye muttered.

"Not just celebrities. Look closer." Lin tapped into the presentation screen with his phone. A set of social dia graphs appeared—most notably, spikes in audience attention toward Keller’s newly acquired talent incubator in Hangzhou, where Cassandra had invested heavily.

"Those spikes aren’t organic," Lin said. "They’re sentint-engineered."

"I’m telling you, she’s embedding herself into China’s value chain of aspiration," Jiang added. "It’s seductive. Not confrontational—just... comfortable. Her soft power undermines us by offering an alternative to what we’re building."

Which made it dangerous.

But Lin wasn’t without counters.

He stood, walking to the edge of the boardroom’s floor-to-ceiling window. The city skyline was beginning to shimr with evening light. "Cassandra is betting on fatigue. On distraction. On temptation. We won’t beat her by arguing or reacting."

Then he turned.

"We’ll launch the ’Mirror Stage’ initiative."

Several heads tilted in curiosity.

"Three-tiered. First, we segnt the Apex Circle’s outward branding into regionalized cells. Make it seem fractured but actually centralize internal protocol. Second, we elevate new voices—not founders, but youth leaders, won-led NGOs, new blood. Controlled, but real."

Ji Qianye frowned slightly. "And the third?"

Lin’s gaze was unyielding. "We run a public ntorship program, designed to contrast directly with Keller’s dia schools. And we host it on the streets."

Whispers passed between mbers.

"You want to draw Cassandra out in public optics war?" Yuehua asked.

"No. I want the people to choose."

And they would choose, if they felt empowered. Lin had already seen it in motion. The protest that defended Guo Yuwei. The rise in local journalists pushing back against corporate-backed narratives. He didn’t need a million people—he needed a few thousand minds waking up.

"But the price—" Zhou Min began.

"I’ll handle it," Lin interrupted. "The system fund is still active. And I’m redirecting two hundred billion yuan from Tier 2 luxury pipelines into underground infrastructure. If they want to wage a war in broad daylight, we’ll build our resistance in shadow and silhouette."

That made a few mbers stiffen—his personal use of system funds was always veiled in so plausible deniability. But this was the first ti Lin was declaring it aloud.

Jiang Yuehua nodded slowly. "This... could work. But it requires absolute loyalty."

Which brought the room back to the central problem.

"I’ll be conducting individual reviews of all Founders over the next 72 hours," Lin said quietly. "In private. Off-record. Anyone with divided loyalties is free to leave. But if you stay—then you stay until the end."

His tone was not threatening. It was cold, calm truth.

Everyone understood the implications.

The room slowly emptied after the eting, each mber retreating to their silos, their encrypted devices, their whisper networks. Lin stayed behind, watching the screen.

As he stood in silence, his phone buzzed again. A single ssage.

From: Yue Qing

"You need to see this. Keller just made her next move. It’s a docuntary—about you. Premiering next week."

Lin narrowed his eyes.

He opened the attachnt: a teaser clip from an international platform. It showed a silhouette standing in a shadowy urban alley. Dramatic voice-over.

"In a world shifting at terrifying speed, one man stands between freedom and control. But what price has he paid to shape tomorrow?"

It cut to brief, distorted footage of Lin during a protest—surrounded by chaos, frad as a manipulator. Then a quote overlay:

"Not every leader is a savior."

It wasn’t just an attack.

It was character assassination wrapped in cinematic finesse.

Lin Feng exhaled slowly.

So this was how Keller wanted to play it—through narrative warfare. Through illusions painted in soft light and thunderous music. A new type of battlefield.

Fine.

He turned back to his terminal, eyes cold.

Then we make our own story.

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