From Idler to Tech Tycoon: Earth
Chapter 108: Consequences

Chapter 108: Chapter 108: Consequences

In the quiet solitude of the Oval Office, the weight of unseen wars pressed heavily on the shoulders of President Obama and the world teetered on the brink of a shadow conflict that threatened to erupt into a global conflagration. The Resolute Desk, a symbol of steadfast leadership, bore witness to the gravest of decisions made in the silence of that powerful room.

The night was deep and the Oval Office bathed in the soft glow of desk lamps. President Obama stood by the window, gazing out at the South Lawn, his posture rigid with the strain of unseen burdens. The door opened quietly, and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel entered, his face etched with grim resolve.

"Mr. President," Hagel began, his voice barely above a whisper, "it’s done. The Wallenberg estate has been sanitized by our assets. The children, Jean and Andre, have also been neutralized. From a public standpoint, it will be presented as a tragic family dispute."

The words hung heavily in the air, a conversation shrouded in secrecy, dealing with events that officially never happened. The weight of the secret was palpable, a silent testament to the unseen wars fought in the shadows.

Obama turned from the window, his face etched with weariness. He didn’t acknowledge the grim details of the cleanup; his mind was already racing ahead to the greater threat. "And the packages? The letters?" he asked, his voice steady but urgent.

Hagel sighed, the lines on his face deepening. "That, sir, is the problem. It’s an operational nightmare. They used old-school tradecraft. Physical mail. No digital footprint to trace. Jean and Andre Wallenberg’s names don’t appear in any post office logistics database; they used aliases. We have teams from the NSA and Postmaster General’s office combing through millions of pieces of mail, but it’s like finding two needles in a continent-sized haystack."

Obama walked to his desk, his calm demeanor hardening into the firm resolve of a commander-in-chief. He understood the stakes and the urgency of the situation. "Then find them, Chuck. Whatever it takes. You have one month before those sleeper cells in Pyongyang receive their orders and we have World War Three. I want the CIA to have teams ready to neutralize the recipients the second we identify them. I don’t care who they are or where they are. This threat ends with them."

His voice lowered, the weight of his words heavy with finality. "And the source. The maid at the estate. Take care of her. Put her in a permanent, deep-cover protection program. She needs to disappear so thoroughly she forgets her own name. No loose ends."

Hagel nodded, his expression grim. "I understand, Mr. President."

Obama leaned back in his chair, a thoughtful frown on his face as he considered the source of their salvation and their current crisis. "Any progress on our anonymous informant? The one who dropped this apocalypse in our lap? It’s unsettling that someone can see all of this and we can’t see them."

Hagel shook his head. "Still nothing, sir. The data packet was routed through a thousand dead-end servers. It’s a ghost. Whoever they are, their capabilities are... significant."

The President shifted topics, moving from the immediate crisis to the long-term strategic landscape. The name that replaced the Wallenbergs was now the name he must court. "Speaking of significant capabilities... what’s the status of the Bytebull proposal? With everything happening in Syria, and the domestic gridlock, we need a win. We need their technology on our soil. I want their solid-state batteries and their CNT chips made here. What will it take to get Richard Santamo to prioritize investment and expand his manufacturing operations in the U.S.?"

Hagel’s expression shifted slightly, a hint of determination in his eyes. "The State and Commerce departments are drafting an aggressive incentives package. Tax breaks, land grants, defense contracts. Given that Ford and Tesla are already scrambling for partnerships, the private sector will help make our case. We believe Mr. Santamo will see the... mutual benefits... of a closer relationship with the United States."

As the night deepened, the Resolute Desk stood as a silent witness to the weight of unseen wars, the burdens of leadership, and the strategic pivots that would shape the future. In the quietest, most powerful room in the world, the fate of nations was decided, one shadow at a time.

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Dark Side of the Moon

The concealed, dimly lit torture chamber 200 feet beneath the dark side of the moon was a place of nightmares. Metallic walls encased the sterile, cold air, heavy with an unspoken dread. A single, focused light source illuminated Robert Wallenbern, bound to a cold, metallic chair with powerful gravimetric cuffs that hummed with a low frequency, holding him slightly aloft.

Thick, black wires, akin to an alien neural interface, were attached to his scalp, sending agonizing waves through his brain, forcing a constant, piercing pain that prevented coherent thought.

Robert Wallenbern, disoriented and bound, slowly regained consciousness. The insistent, vibrating hum of the gravimetric cuffs filled his ears, the sharp, metallic tang in the frigid lunar air biting at his senses. The burning, phantom pain radiating from his skull was unbearable.

This is surely not the re-education, I expected. This is a meat locker. A cold, echoing void where screams mean nothing. I wished I had killed myself the moment they let me go

.A heavy, resonant clang echoed through the chamber as a massive, armored door slid open with a hiss of displaced air. The chamber’s dim light was momentarily swallowed by the imposing forms that entered. Lord Krull’Kahn, a male reptilian, dominated the entrance at a colossal 15 feet tall, his burly, scaled physique exuding raw, primal power.

Beside him, Apostle Krill Khian, a female reptilian, stood at a formidable 14 feet, draped in noble garments of deep purple interwoven with strips of gold ornamentation. Their mere presence radiated an aura of overwhelming fear, causing a primal instinct of submission in Robert. McKnight entered behind them, appearing almost like a child beside the towering reptilians, a stark visual representation of his subservient role.

This was his first direct, physical encounter with the true rulers of the Divine Concordance, previously only seen as distant holographic projections in the sterile, air-conditioned meeting rooms where he had once felt so important.

Krull’Kahn and Khian moved with an unnerving grace for their size, circling Robert’s suspended chair. Their eyes, like polished gold, fixed on him with an amused, predatory intensity. A low, guttural rumble emanated from Krull’Kahn, a sound that vibrated through the floor and up into Robert’s bones, followed by Khian’s more sibilant tones as they began to mock his current predicament.

"So, the little human falls off the tree," Lord Krull’Kahn rumbled, a deep chuckle that vibrated through the room. "From the ’Table’ to this. Not that I expected anything from a human anyway."

"Such a pity, Robert," Apostle Krill Khian’s voice was a silken hiss, laced with condescension. "Your family’s legacy, built on generations of... service to the Concordance. And you thought you could defy the very hand that fed you the illusion of power? The taste of controlled immortality? Even other humans like you aren’t as foolish."

Robert’s jaw clenched, a futile attempt to suppress a whimper of pain and rage. He strained against the gravimetric cuffs, but they held him in an unyielding embrace.

Without a word, McKnight walked to a small, sterile console near the entrance. He picked up a thick, nondescript canvas bag.

With a casual flick of his wrist, he threw two severed heads onto the metallic floor directly before Robert. They rolled slightly, coming to a stop – undeniably, horrifyingly, Jean’s and Andre’s. Robert’s eyes, wide with disbelief, quickly contorted into a mask of pure anguish, despair, and then incandescent rage.

A primal scream tore from his throat, quickly cut short as the brain-wave device intensified its agonizing assault, plunging him deeper into the inferno of pain.

"NO!" he shrieked, the sound raw and torn,

"JEAN! ANDRE! You... you soulless monsters! After everything! After serving you, our family, for generations! How could you do this?!" He thrashed violently, uselessly, against his restraints.

"We built Project Orion for you! Everything we built! You took everything! My family’s legacy, just disposed of, like trash! All of it! Why?! So you can install some fucking farm boy from some backwater of a country!"

"Your family’s legacy? You seem to have mistaken something, Robert." Apostle Krill Khian echoed, her voice dripping with scorn. "It was merely a tool, Robert. It was never yours in the first place. We merely repossessed our property. And why did you betray the Table, you fool? Was the promise of extended life not enough? The immortality you so desperately clung?"

Trembling with a torturous mix of physical pain, overwhelming despair, and a defiant spark of conviction, Robert finally vocalized the truth he had kept hidden from everyone, including his own family. The horrific realization that had driven his desperate, self-destructive plan.

"Immortality?! You lie! You drain us! You are parasites! Better for humanity to be wiped out, to be ash, than to be your personal blood banks! Your cattle! Just feeding off our vitality for your endless existence!"

Apostle Krill Khian offered a cold, almost sympathetic smile. "And what, Robert, do you think of your cattle? Do you not feed your livestock, protect them from predators, fatten them, only to lead them to the slaughter? We are at the top of the food chain, human. It is the rule of nature. We feed on you, just as you feed on your beasts. It is our right, our prerogative as predators. A cosmic symbiosis, if you will."

"Indeed," Lord Krull’Kahn affirmed, his voice resonating with chilling finality. "Your rage is... quaint. A last, pathetic flicker of self-deception. Embrace your true place, human. It is merely a universal truth, however painful the revelation is."

Suddenly, a slightly smaller reptilian soldier, approximately eleven feet tall, entered the chamber. Its movements were disciplined, almost robotic. Its gaze briefly fell on McKnight, a flicker of disdain in its eyes, which McKnight subtly, almost imperceptibly, returned. The soldier stood beside McKnight, further emphasizing the human’s diminutive stature and lower status within the reptilian hierarchy.

" Ka’lar T’han! Krill Shuha’dar sum’moni! K’voth k’tal r’quiron! " the soldier stated, its voice deep and guttural, devoid of inflection. (My Lords! Chancellor Krill Shuha’dar summons you. Urgent quota review required. Immediate attendance requested.)

Lord Krull’Kahn and Apostle Krill Khian exchanged a quick, knowing look. They then began to converse in their alien language, a complex series of clicks, hisses, and deep, resonant growls, utterly incomprehensible to Robert.

" V’nar K’lath r’kon sha’zha. R’ak-thar K’lath d’nar-ith v’shok, " Lord Krull’Kahn rumbled, his head turning slightly towards Khian. (The Chancellor again. Always about the quota. He’s almost always never satisfied.)

" Sh’kri v’nor. Ma’lek th’nar. O’rik k’tha. H’shok k’ra, " Khian replied, her hiss almost a sigh. (Such tedium. A necessary evil, though. Our dominance demands it. Let him endure.)

With a final, dismissive glance at Robert, they turned. Their massive forms departed as swiftly and silently as they arrived, the heavy door hissing shut behind them, leaving only a faint glow from the hallway to filter through the cracks before plunging the chamber into near-darkness once more.

The reptilian soldier moved to a control panel near Robert, its clawed hand making precise adjustments. The brain-wave device attached to Robert’s head intensified its assault tenfold, causing his body to seize and convulse uncontrollably against the gravimetric cuffs. McKnight, without a word, approached Robert, a clinical expression on his face, preparing to continue the physical torture. Robert was beyond screaming now, only capable of ragged, silent agony.

"Let’s see if we can improve your understanding of ’service,’ Robert," McKnight whispered, his voice low and chilling. "You’re gonna wish, you were dead."

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