Chapter 204: 204. Planning A Way To Stop The Phoenix Gang (While Also Taking Over It)
[INFINITE REACTION ACQUIRED. PASSIVE. STATUS: ACTIVE.]
[FREE SKILL SELECTION EXPENDED. STANDARD PURCHASE PATHWAY RESUMES.]
The notification vanished into the ether of his consciousness, leaving behind a silence that felt strangely heavy. Mike waited.
He braced himself for a surge of adrenaline, a tightening of his muscles, or even a subtle shift in the way his nerves hummed. But there was nothing. He felt exactly as he had ten seconds ago.
He turned his hand over on the mahogany surface of the desk, watching the play of light over his tan skin. He moved his fingers slowly, then snapped them into a rapid, fluttering motion.
The sensation was identical. His hand was his hand; his body was his body.
"I wouldn’t even know if it was working unless something tried to kill me," he said, his voice laced with a dry, skeptical humor.
[CORRECT,] the System replied, the text shimmering with a clinical, almost smug precision. [CONSIDER IT INSURANCE THAT YOU HOPE TO NEVER DIRECTLY OBSERVE.]
"Insurance," Mike repeated, a slow, predatory grin spreading across his face.
He liked that. He liked the idea of a hidden godhood tucked away in his marrow, waiting for the moment the world turned violent.
"Good framing."
[WE HAVE OUR MOMENTS,] the System countered.
His gaze drifted to the remaining prize.
[JOB PASS MANAGEMENT LEVEL. APPLICABLE TO ANY PROFESSIONAL ENVIRONMENT. FABRICATED CREDENTIALS VERIFIED UPON ENTRY. STATUS: VALID UNTIL UTILIZED.]
He let the concept settle. The academic pass he’d secured at Valcrest was his key to the ivory towers, the world of intellect and prestige.
But this? But this opportunity was different. This was the key to the boardrooms, the high-rise offices, and the places where the real decisions were made—the places where men like Gerald sat in leather chairs, thinking they were in control.
He wasn’t just a student or a visitor anymore; he could be the architect of the room itself. He turned the idea over in his mind, a tool to be unsheathed only when the target was perfect, and set it aside.
He stood up, the movement fluid and effortless, and stretched his neck until the vertebrae popped. He walked to the window, looking out at the world below.
The Sunday afternoon in District 4 was deceptively tranquil. It was the specific, curated calm of a residential district, a place where the rhythm of the working week dictated the pulse of the streets, and the weekend was merely a quieter, slower frequency of the same existence.
Below, the scene was a tableau of the mundane: a couple strolling leisurely with a dog, a man meticulously checking the lock on his bicycle, and the distant hum of a car. Ordinary components of an ordinary life.
To anyone else, it was peace. To Mike, it was a landscape of untapped potential.
"The Phoenix," he said, the name a low, resonant command that seemed to vibrate in the quiet room.
He let the name hang in the air, letting the weight of his ambition settle. He wasn’t just playing a game anymore; he was building an empire.
"Talk me through what I know," he commanded.
He didn’t direct the words at the system; he directed them at the void, at the air, at himself. He knew that the moment he forced his thoughts into spoken words, they ceased to be vague intentions and became a concrete inventory.
He needed to see the map of his power.
He began to pull the threads of his reality together, methodically dissecting everything he had gained, everything he had seen, and everything he was about to take.
The Phoenix. The name itself was a lie, a beautiful, burning facade.
They didn’t own the casino ecosystem of District 4; they merely haunted it. They operated through intricate, shadow-drenched arrangements, not through the crude ownership of deeds, but through the far more potent ownership of secrets.
They had people in the casinos who managed their presence, which meant they had relationships. And in Mike’s world, relationships were just another word for leverage.
The operation wasn’t a gang of thugs using physical intimidation; this was a structured, parasitic entity that had woven itself into the very fabric of the district.
He visualized the nerve center: the commercial unit tucked at the dead end of the lane behind the casino. A squat, single-story building with a wide, unassuming frontage and a door heavy enough to muffle a scream.
Two guards at the entrance. A rotating cast of at least six people inside.
He saw the whiteboard with its seven property designations. He saw the lockbox and he saw the laptop.
"Seven buildings," Mike murmured, his voice dropping into a low, predatory register. "Gerald is just one of them..."
"There are six others in District 4 where they’re running this same parasitic arrangement."
He picked up a pen, twirling it between his fingers with a rhythmic, hypnotic dexterity, the restless movement of a man whose mind was moving ten times faster than his hands.
"The ledger on that whiteboard? It’s a lie," he said, his eyes hardening. "It’s a working copy, a sanitized version for the eyes of the low-level runners."
"It’s cross-referenced, but it isn’t the truth..."
"The real ledger, the one with the actual names, the actual blood, the actual figures, is either sitting in that lockbox or encrypted on that laptop."
"And whoever holds that data holds the leash on a lot of compelling, very desperate people."
He began to map the players. The District 4 police were a variable he wouldn’t touch yet.
Criminal operations that thrived under the noses of the law for years didn’t do so by accident; they were either on the payroll or they were ghosts. Until he knew which one they were, he wouldn’t walk into their light.
But there were other channels. Much more delicious ones.
"The six other properties," he continued, his gaze sharpening as the logic clicked into place. "If I track the addresses, I find the landlords." freeweɓnøvel.com
"If I find the landlords, I find the common denominator... I find everyone The Phoenix has been squeezing with this same debt structure for the last three years."
"And there are people who have been carrying a debt they didn’t choose, living in buildings they helped build, and serving a criminal organization they can’t even name..." He paused, a dark, knowing smirk playing on his lips. "Those people don’t just want money."
"They want a savior... They have a massive, desperate use for someone who can dismantle the system from the inside."
He set the pen down with a definitive click.
"Gerald isn’t the problem to solve," he said, dismissively. "Gerald is just the key..."
"He got me in the door, and the real prize is whatever is waiting in the room behind that door."
His mind drifted back to Saturday night to the sight of Big G waking up in a dumpster, disoriented and broken. He thought about the two men who had trailed him through the residential footpath, the ones who had lost him on the wider street and had been forced to lie to their superiors, claiming Big G had left through the front door while the alley remained empty.
"They’re having internal conversations right now," Mike said, his voice laced with a cold, calculated amusement. "Big G is going to come back with a story."
"The two men from the footpath are going to tell a different one..."
"In an organization built on hierarchy and fear, mismatched stories are a death sentence..."
"If one man is lying, the question is why."
"And that question breeds paranoia..."
"Paranoia makes men sloppy. It makes them make decisions they wouldn’t otherwise make."
[YOU ARE USING THEIR INTERNAL DYNAMICS AS A FORCE MULTIPLIER,] the System observed, recognizing the sheer tactical brilliance of his maneuver.
"No," Mike corrected, his eyes flashing with a playboy’s confidence and a conqueror’s intent. "I’m using their internal dynamics as a distraction."
"The force multiplier comes later."
[AND WHAT COMES LATER?]
Mike turned his gaze back to the window. The man with the bicycle had finished his task and disappeared inside his house.
The couple with the dog had turned the corner, vanishing from sight. The world was quiet, oblivious to the storm Mike was brewing.
"Later," he whispered, "is when the real fun begins."