Chapter 220: CH : 212 To Japan
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*****
"I am not saying you can’t deliver. I am saying the contractual protection functions mutually. It protects my financial investment, and it keeps a healthy fire burning under both of us."
"And if I simply can’t meet a contracted deadline?" George issued the challenge. "If the knot is too tangled?"
"We negotiate like adults." Marvin spoke reasonably. "The clause has flexibility built into it. What it lacks is a legal mechanism for indefinite, years-long delay while a sprawling production budget and an aging cast sit idle."
Marvin paused, dropping his tone into a serious register. "If the worst-case scenario occurs, George, and a book simply fail to arrive in time to shoot the season... I will write the bridge material myself. Governed by the contract, requiring your consultation and review. Nothing contradicting your established canon. Nothing taking the story in cheap directions you haven’t explicitly sanctioned. But the production does not stop."
George studied the boy for a long time, processing the audacity of the statement.
"You’d write it yourself." George dragged the words out slowly. "If I failed to deliver the pages."
"Yes." Marvin confirmed the plan without hesitation.
"You’re twelve years old, kid."
"I know exactly what happens in the remaining, unwritten books." Marvin chose his words carefully, referring to his transmigrator knowledge of the old timeline. "Well enough to bridge the gap if necessary."
George stared at him.
He held the stare. It carried the weight of a brilliant creator who had spent his entire career writing characters who were more than they appeared on the surface. A man who constructed Westeros because conventional, boring heroes bored him to tears.
A man holding a finely calibrated instinct for anything breaking the normal mold... encountering something sitting across the desk that defied the human category.
"How?" George did not issue an angry challenge. He posed a genuine, bewildered question.
"Because I read everything." Marvin answered smoothly. "I understand narrative mechanics at a structural level. And I understand your work well enough to continue it in a direction completely consistent with your established trajectory. And if I’m wrong you always have the books"
George remained quiet for a moment longer, searching the boy’s blue eyes.
Then, the author slowly leaned forward and planted his hand flat on the desk.
"You give me the structural canvas," George commanded, a new, dangerous excitement thickening his voice. "I paint the picture. The publication clause stays in the contract. But the review process remains genuine—if I tell you a timeline proves impossible for quality reasons, we talk man-to-man before you invoke any penalty provision."
"Agreed." Marvin offered a firm nod.
"And if you ever, *ever* put words in my characters’ mouths that I determine are fundamentally wrong for them—"
"You flag it immediately." Marvin smoothly interrupted the threat. "And we revise the script until the dialogue matches the soul."
George held his gaze for one more heavy moment, weighing the soul of the Wonder Boy of Hollywood.
Then, a smile broke across the author’s face—the rare expression of a cynical creator finding, entirely against his bitter expectations, something truly worth trusting in Hollywood.
"Welcome to Westeros, kid." George extended his hand across the desk. freewebnovel.cσ๓
"Welcome to the future, George." Marvin gripped the extended hand firmly.
They shook on it, sealing the fate of television history.
---
The handshake marked only the beginning. A week of fierce, closed-door warfare between Marvin’s legal team and George’s literary agents followed to hammer out the gritty details.
Their agents and lawyers scrutinized every word of the contract. They fought over merchandising definitions, the timeline of the publication clause, and development windows.
Marvin demanded a nine-year window; if he didn’t have cameras rolling on the first adaptation by July 2007, the rights reverted back to George. The ticking clock forced Marvin’s own production team to move, ensuring the IP wouldn’t languish in development hell.
By mid-July, the ink dried on a stack of paper thicker than the novel itself.
Sitting in his office, looking at the finalized signatures, Marvin let out a slow exhale. He secured the exclusive big-screen, television, and merchandising rights to one of the most violent, complex, and unfilmable epics in modern literature.
By July fifteenth, the Pelican suitcases sat loaded in the trunk of the car.
The bird, exactly as his father predicted at the dinner table, finally flew away from the nest.
Marvin hugged his silently crying mother tightly, received an encouraging, firm pat on the back from his father, and stepped into the car.
Next stop: Tokyo.
---
The first-class cabin of a late-1990s Boeing 747 offered one of the most serene, comfortable ways to travel by air during its analog era. It served as the closest thing to a flying, luxury living room that commercial human engineering had produced. Wide, generously spaced plush seats, upholstered in muted, slate-grey tones chosen for long-haul practicality rather than flashy flair, reflected the understated, corporate design trends of the decade.
The legroom accommodated Gordon’s large frame without the painful, contortionist adjustments a coach ticket demanded. A carpeted spiral staircase in the forward section led directly to an exclusive upper-deck lounge, featuring a stocked bar, mixing bartenders, and soft, amber ambient lighting.
Marvin sat silently by the window, watching the 747 steadily climb high over the dark Atlantic.
Veteran flight attendants moved through the dim cabin with a honed sixth sense. They materialized when needed and vanished when not, operating seamlessly while reading the subtle, psychological difference between a passenger desiring another champagne refill and one wanting solitude in the dark.
July 15th, 1998. The twelve-hour flight from Los Angeles to Tokyo tracked somewhere over the dark, sprawling expanse of the Pacific Ocean.
The dim first-class cabin remained illuminated only by the pulsing glow of aisle floor markers and the quiet, steady hum of the aircraft’s engines. Most elite passengers had long since succumbed to expensive champagne and altitude.
A businessman in 3A snored softly, his laptop closed on his stomach. A woman in 5C wore a thick silk sleep mask. Her half-finished gin and tonic slowly melted its ice on her wooden tray table.
Marvin sat upright in his spacious seat, wanting only to be left to his work. Even Amy, sleeping soundly beside him under a blanket, didn’t break his intense concentration. He remained deeply submerged in the architecture of his own fictional world, ignoring the quiet cabin.
His targeted reading light served as the only illumination in the entire section. It threw a sharp, bright, circular pool directly onto his lap, where a thick stack of high-quality Bristol sketch paper rested against his knee. A pristine spread of fine white pepper pencils, various inking pens, and vivid shading crayons lay organized on his tray table.
He wrote and illustrated without a single break for three solid hours.
His hands moved with a speed and flawless precision defying normal human child limits.
The graphite glided over the paper, sketching rough outlines, shading dark alleys, and defining complex character faces in mere fractions of a minute. He didn’t care if anyone woke up and witnessed his unnatural physical speed; the passengers remained dead to the world, and the art demanded to be born right now.
This formed one of the missing, vital pieces of the magazine.
Ever since he first conceived the idea for *Shōnen Blaze*, he knew the magazine required original, flagship IPs to survive the cutthroat, saturated Japanese manga industry. He couldn’t just rely on borrowed future hits; he had to forge new metals.
He successfully purchased the complete, global multimedia rights to a niche, sci-fi tabletop property, securing full legal ownership to shape the lore. Now, suspended thirty thousand feet over the black ocean, he reshaped the bones of that lore into a cultural titan.
The title forming in bold, jagged, bleeding letters on the title page read *Cyberpunk 2047*.
He wasn’t writing a traditional, upbeat manga, or a standard, trope-filled fantasy about magic schools. He built a mature world of chrome, neon, and flesh.
He needed a story feeling inherently Japanese enough for the protective local audience to accept it—incorporating familiar, beloved manga themes of anti-establishment rebellion, intricate, borderline-fetishistic technology, and striking, asymmetrical character designs. Yet, the narrative required a fundamentally different, dark tone to stand out as a fresh, adult experience for older readers tired of formulas.
He drew the oppressive world first. In his life experience, you didn’t start with a character and lazily force a setting to bend around them. You built the environment first, and then you let the character organically emerge, forged and shaped entirely by the city’s harsh rules and crushing economic pressures.
The world taking shape on the paper became Night City.
A sprawling, claustrophobic metropolis of high corporate towers casting long, dark, permanent shadows over rain-slicked, garbage-filled streets. Technology here lacked the clean, utopian dream of flying cars and world peace. It operated as a dirty, atmospheric, survivalist reality. It hung as the polluted air the people breathed.
Instead of traditional magic systems, this dark world ran on forced biological evolution and cybernetic enhancement.
The fragile human body functioned as mere hardware, cheap meat waiting to be surgically upgraded. Weak flesh yielded to polished chrome, brittle bones swapped for unbreakable titanium, neural pathways permanently rewired to interface directly with the digital Net. A grim, mature reality emerged where humanity traded away pieces of itself for raw power and corporate survival.
Marvin’s pencil flew. He sketched a towering, brutalist skyscraper adorned with glowing holographic advertisements selling synthetic skin replacements and military-grade combat implants to civilians.
At the grimy street level below, he drew the forgotten underbelly: heavily tattooed gang members with glowing, targeting optics and reinforced hydraulic limbs, desperate survivors fighting in a city unconcerned if they lived or died in the gutter.
At the very center of this neon-soaked, capitalist purgatory stood the protagonist.
Marvin wrote the name in sharp kanji—*Johnny Silverhand*—on the margin of the page, circling it tight with red ink.
He began to draw him. Not a clean-cut, wide-eyed teenage hero on a journey of friendship and moral discovery. Johnny arrived as an adult. A broken rockerboy, an anarchist, a traumatized veteran of corporate wars carrying a deep, burning, radioactive grudge against the world.
Marvin drew the face: angular, worn down by years of fighting, a cheap cigarette hanging loosely from his scowling lips, mirrored aviator shades permanently hiding his eyes from the neon glare.
Then, he moved to the defining visual feature. Marvin switched to a metallic silver-grey colored pencil, detailing Johnny’s left arm.
From the shoulder joint down to the fingertips, the limb appeared entirely cybernetic.
Gleaming chrome, deeply etched with the wear and tear of a hundred street fights. It stood as the perfect, visual representation of the world’s core thematic conflict—a man merging with a machine to physically fight the mega-corporations like Osaka that originally built the hardware.
His appearance wasn’t truly similar to Keanu’s. If anything, he looked more like a future version of himself — slightly shorter, less broad-shouldered, and not yet fully grown into the powerful build he would possess soon. Black hair framed his striking blue eyes, giving him the kind of presence that already hinted at the man he was destined to become.
Johnny screamed for the streets, armed with a battered electric guitar and a heavy, armor-piercing hand cannon. He served as the seamless bridge between Western, gritty cyberpunk aesthetics and Japanese, brooding anti-hero storytelling.
As the plane soared silently over the ocean, Marvin drafted panel after dense panel. He storyboarded the explosive opening sequence for the first issue of *Shōnen Blaze*: Johnny stepping out of a grimy, thumping nightclub, the flickering neon lights of Night City reflecting off his silver arm, faceless corporate hitmen closing in from the rain-soaked shadows.
The action flowed smoothly across the page, combining cinematic, Eastern-style gunfights with brutal close-quarters combat, where heavy cybernetic enhancements clashed in showers of sparks and synthetic blood.
He mapped out the overarching plot for the first volume. Megacorporations ruling like untouchable gods from the sky.
Desperate data-thieves diving deep into the sprawling, lethal digital void of the Net, leaving their physical bodies vulnerable in ice baths just to steal encrypted corporate secrets.
And Johnny, acting as a ghost in the machine of Night City, methodically preparing to burn the corporate structure to the ground.
Marvin drew until a physical cramp seized his hand. He calmly flexed his stiff fingers, ignored the dull ache, and dove right back into the ink.
By the time twelve hours passed. The tired pilot’s voice crackled over the intercom announcing their initial descent into Tokyo airspace. The thick stack of paper sat completely full. It ceased being a pile of blank pages on a tray table; it became the bleeding foundation of a billion-dollar IP. A fully realized world waited to be unleashed upon an unsuspecting culture.
*****
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