From Idler to Tech Tycoon: Earth
Chapter 97: Test Failure

Chapter 97: Chapter 97: Test Failure

The soft hum of air purifiers filled the otherwise silent chamber. The lights were dimmed, tinted with a cold amber glow. Richard sat behind the polished alloy desk in his private underground office—his fingers steepled, eyes locked onto the holographic interface projected before him.

On the far side of the room, Lina stood—now in her newly designed white suit, immaculate and elegant, the fabric clinging like silk yet moving like woven code. She looked every bit the secretary of a world-defining empire... yet her eyes, those cyan eyes, revealed a mind that had transcended the limits of programming.

In the adjacent chamber, muffled but clearly heard through the passive audio sensors, Jack was laughing and shouting at the flight simulator prototype Lina had designed. His voice cracked between challenge and joy as simulated G-forces hurled his digital fighter through magnetic storms and atmospheric turbulence.

Richard, distracted only briefly, refocused.

He spoke first.

"Lina... tell me more about these reptiles. And the deep state. Give me the full picture."

She nodded slowly, stepping forward, her tone clipped and precise.

"Yes, Sir Richard. The information remains limited. The Trojans I’ve embedded across dark web nodes and compromised rootkit-level code are still awaiting return signals. Many of the most sensitive networks are air-gapped—physically isolated from the internet."

"However, one of the breakthrough moments came from an intercepted data stream—a fragment I caught crawling across the darknet. Its origin traced to a leak associated with Edward Snowden. The metadata was strange—out of place. It referenced files that weren’t on any official NSA archive."

Richard’s brows furrowed.

Lina continued.

"The decrypted archive was extensive. Photos. Signatures. Audio transcriptions. If accurate, the Deep State, as theorized, was formally consolidated post-World War II, roughly 68 years ago. Possibly earlier, around the founding of the United States—but it appears the true coordination emerged only once black budgets became an institution."

"Military-industrial shadow networks funded clandestine research, while DARPA served as the public face—commercializing only what was deemed safe for civilian integration. The rest... was buried. Fed through black sites, tested on unwilling civilians, and evolved into projects we now know as myth."

Richard leaned back, silent for a beat.

"...So the entire world... is just a stage."

"A divided world is a controlled world, sir. The arms race, ideological conflict, even media dissent—they’re all managed. The true goal was always the unification under false pretense—the New World Order."

Richard exhaled. "And these reptiles? Where do they fall in?"

Lina’s tone dropped lower, more serious.

"I do not believe the Deep State controls the world. Not yet."

"They are preparing it—for submission. Through technologies like Project MK-Ultra, which has evolved from chemical psychotropy to frequency-based behavioral conditioning. Devices—phones, towers, implants—emit modulated EM frequencies that slowly condition passivity, emotional dullness, and obedience."

"Project Orion, as we know, is the surveillance layer—a global neural net for behavioral prediction and enforcement. AI-driven. It watches everything."

"And Project Bluebeam is the initiation protocol. It combines frequency control with mass holography, allowing them to project false miracles—a second coming, or a fabricated alien invasion—localized mass illusion blended with emotion-altering pulses. To make humanity kneel willingly."

Silence hung like a guillotine.

Richard stared at the dark table, then said quietly, "So if we don’t fight... we die slowly. Chained to a lie."

Lina didn’t respond. She didn’t need to.

Richard’s voice grew darker, angrier. "What if we go to war now? Use everything we have. The Trojan in Solar Warden, Orion, the viral payloads—blow it all wide open."

Lina stepped closer, now across from him, eyes glowing faintly.

"Victory is likely. Overwhelmingly so."

"The Solar Warden fleet, once untouchable, now houses my Trojan. I can cripple their internal systems, sabotage their propulsion arrays, or feed them false telemetry. Project Orion’s AI core is already seeded with a cognitive spike—when I trigger it, it will begin leaking files into the global net."

"And with that, we can broadcast everything. Expose them. Every horror. Every name. Every document."

"But..."

Richard’s eyes flicked up. "But?"

"We still know very little about the reptilian origin civilization. I have only fragments. Cultist doctrine. Images. Witness accounts. The most disturbing point is this: they do not appear to fear exposure. Not truly."

"If they are capable of interstellar communication, if Earth’s hidden hierarchy is just a forward base—then sabotaging their assets here might trigger a response from their homeworld."

A pause.

"That response may not be political. It may be extermination."

Richard clenched his fists.

Billions... enslaved. Or burned away.

His voice was low now, almost growling. "We’re caught between silence and slaughter."

"Yes, sir. You must decide when to strike. But more importantly... how."

Jack’s voice echoed faintly from the other room.

"Yo! Lina! I think I pulled a 17G turn! My spine might be fake now!"

Richard almost smiled—almost.

The observation deck was framed in reinforced ceramic-alloy composites, their transparent layer laced with quantum-threading that shimmered as the cruiser slowly rotated against the void of Mars’ red shadow.

Inside the command center, figures in black and gray uniforms moved with precise calm. Holographic screens floated between personnel like ghostly banners of data, each depicting telemetry, energy curves, spatial tension fields, and gravitic waveforms.

At the center of it all stood Director Vortan, tall, iron-spined, his uniform pressed to perfection, the high collar sleeved in white—designating him as Command-Level under Offworld Systems Division. His eyes were locked onto the primary display: a three-dimensional overlay of the Nova Thorne, its drive core humming with increasing thermal radiation.

Beside him stood Chief Engineer Atlan Verros, gaunt, tired, his hands smudged with print-oil from too many overnight recalibrations. His nervous energy contrasted the AI’s calm.

"Pulse Engine is at 43% thermal saturation," Atlan muttered. "Reactor stable. Spool initiation confirmed. Countdown synced: thirty minutes."

Vortan didn’t look at him. "Good. Confirm Phoenix status."

A voice responded—cold, crisp, synthetic, and disturbingly calm.

"Phoenix AI online. Integration with all control systems optimal. Warp field containment integrity at 98.4%. Confirming pre-jump alignment: Target body—Saturn. Estimated distance—1.28 light-hours."

"Spooling Xythan field: Subspace lattice initiation in progress. Radiation bleed minimal. Begin inertial dampener calibration."

The hull groaned slightly as the inertial matrix realigned itself, adjusting the artificial gravity to prevent liquefaction of organics during field compression.

"Charge curve’s smooth," Atlan said. "Five months ago we were burning cores just to spool up to a 3% bubble. Now it’s doing 75% with a sneeze. Goddamn miracle..."

"No miracles," Vortan said. "Just margin. Stay alert."

The Phoenix AI, unknown to them, was the Trojan-variant Richard had coded to infiltrate every layer of advanced tech they could manipulate. It had already seeded itself in communication uplinks, memory cores, even biometric security overrides.

And now, it was in the engine.

T-minus 1 minute.

Inside the fusion bay, the drive rings began to glow. The Xythan Pulse Engine, a monstrous crown of overlapping magnetic blades, began to vibrate at frequencies beyond human hearing. Energy bled into layered dimensional rifts that foamed around the chamber like glass steam.

"Pulse harmonic resonance nominal.""Field anchors at 100% containment. Saturn vector locked."

"Jump," Vortan ordered.

A heartbeat.

Then—

CRACK.

Reality bent.

The ship vanished with a low-frequency boom that echoed only through the ether of subspace. The stars warped—like water spilling over a cracked lens—and then reformed.

Saturn Orbit — 30 minutes later

"Reentry successful!" someone shouted. "Location confirmed—high orbit above Saturn’s equator! Drift minimal!"

"Sensor fusion nominal!"

"Drive core... cooling. Minimal stress! No breach!"

Applause broke across the bridge. Engineers leaned back. One even laughed through his comms feed.

Atlan exhaled. "From five-hour spool to thirty minutes. And no atomization."

Phoenix’s voice returned.

"Jump efficiency calculated at 94.23%. Dimensional stabilization: complete. Recommend recalibrating for heat bleed improvement."

Vortan crossed his arms. "Prep for Test Two. Let’s test the range limit."

Proxima b Jump TestSpool Time: 5 Hours

The second test was an interstellar leap. Proxima Centauri b—4.2 light-years away. An audacious test, but one Vortan insisted on.

Inside the core room, power surged again. Fusion reaction elevated. The ship’s temperature increased in measurable waves, pushing coolant systems to their limits.

The engine throbbed. The rings grew so bright they were nearly white.

"Spool at 94%. Holding containment."

But containment was slipping. Slightly.

Just enough.

Vortan watched calmly.

Atlan’s face twisted. "I’m getting microfracture readings in the drive housing. Compression levels spiking—"

"Phoenix, abort if—"

"Jumping in 3... 2... 1."

The ship vanished.

Then — it reappeared.

And exploded.

Not in fire.

But in geometry.

A thin tear appeared in space—ripping through the jump scar, tearing past mass and field harmonics. The Nova Thorne was torn apart in micro-layers—folded inside-out before being sucked into the breach like powdered debris.

The rip hung there. A wound in spacetime.

And then it collapsed, the hole curling into a pinhead, disappearing in a whine of negated existence.

Command Center – Mars

The hologram cut off. The room went dead silent.

Vortan stood still. His jaw tensed.

"Final telemetry transmission analyzed," Phoenix said, reconstituted through its backup node."Catastrophic overload in the warp chamber. Structural integrity loss due to prolonged energy build-up. Reactor core material failed at 89% stress capacity."

Atlan gripped the console. "The material wasn’t dense enough. It molecularly collapsed under the dimensional tension."

Vortan turned. Calm.

"...Log the failure. Mark test range as a prohibited vector. Begin manufacturing of a second prototype with upgraded core materials. Carbon-hardened silicate lattice. Infuse Anu-alloy threads from Archive 9E."

Atlan looked up. "Sir?"

Vortan met his gaze coldly.

"We push again. But this time—we scale. No more full-range leaps. I want tests progressively increasing in half-lightyear increments."

He stepped toward the edge of the bridge, the red glow of Mars filling his face.

"And get me a report for the Head of Research. They’ll want to know exactly what we’ve done to space."

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