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Now reading: Chapter 546: Strange Behaviour from From A Producer To A Global Superstar, a Fantasy novel by RajiSadiq4494.

Wendy Brooks hated uncertainty.

For most of her career, uncertainty had belonged to other people.

The executive wondering whether their marriage was about to collapse.

The politician wondering who had leaked a conversation.

The CEO wondering why a trusted employee suddenly knew things they shouldn’t know.

Those people lived with uncertainty.

Wendy created it.

She manipulated it.

She profited from it.

Yet for the past week she had been staring at her phone and feeling sothing she hadn’t experienced in years.

Doubt.

She sat inside a small café near the river, a half-finished coffee cooling beside her laptop. Outside, people drifted past the windows beneath gray afternoon skies. Inside, soft music played through hidden speakers.

None of it held her attention.

Her eyes remained fixed on Alice’s profile.

Their ssage history stretched back months.

Conversations.

Advice.

Long discussions.

Trust.

The kind of relationship Wendy specialized in building.

The kind that usually took years.

She had managed it in less than six months.

Which was why the sudden change bothered her so much.

She scrolled upward.

Old ssages.

Alice asking questions.

Alice venting.

Alice discussing work frustrations.

Alice discussing loneliness.

Alice discussing uncertainty.

Then she scrolled down.

The recent ssages looked different.

Shorter.

Controlled.

Polite.

Cold.

The difference was impossible to miss.

Wendy leaned back slowly.

Sothing had changed.

The question was what.

Her phone vibrated.

A secure ssage.

Silas.

She imdiately opened it.

The instructions were brief.

No greetings.

Acceleration authorized. Increase integration efforts imdiately. Priority elevated.

Wendy stared at the screen.

Her jaw tightened.

That was unusual.

Silas never rushed.

Patience was practically a religion to him.

Every operative understood the rule.

Move slowly.

Build trust.

Wait for openings.

Never force anything.

Yet now he was telling them to speed up.

That ant he wanted results.

Fast.

And if Silas wanted results fast, sothing had happened.

Wendy closed the ssage.

Her eyes drifted back toward Alice’s contact information.

For a mont she hesitated.

Then she made a decision.

Maybe subtlety wasn’t working anymore.

Maybe it was ti to push.

She picked up her phone and typed.

It’s been a while. I’d love to catch up if you’re free. I think our last conversation ended before we got to finish discussing everything.

The ssage sent.

A tiny gray checkmark appeared.

Wendy waited.

Five minutes passed.

Ten.

Fifteen.

Nothing.

Her coffee had gone completely cold by the ti the reply arrived.

Thanks Wendy. Things have been busy recently. Not really available right now. Hope you’re doing well though.

Wendy read it twice.

Then a third ti.

Not available.

No alternative date.

No suggestion.

No enthusiasm.

No emotional hook.

Nothing.

The response felt professionally polite.

The kind of ssage soone sends when they want distance without creating conflict.

A muscle twitched in her jaw.

Months of work.

Months.

And suddenly it felt like she was talking to a stranger.

She closed the conversation and stared through the café window.

Sothing was definitely wrong.

The problem was she had no idea what.

Across the city, Marcus Hale adjusted his tie while studying his reflection in the mirror of a hotel restroom.

Everything about him looked ordinary.

That was intentional.

The best operatives rarely stood out.

People rembered beautiful won.

People rembered powerful n.

People rembered celebrities.

Nobody rembered the quiet financial consultant who blended into every room he entered.

Marcus had built an entire career around being forgettable.

Today, however, he needed to be rembered.

At least briefly.

His target was Valerie.

For seven months he had studied her routines.

He knew her favorite restaurants.

Her travel schedules.

Her speaking engagents.

The type of wine she preferred.

The hotels she booked most frequently.

He knew everything except one thing.

How to get close.

The opportunity finally arrived at an entertainnt industry networking event.

Nothing glamorous.

Nothing televised.

Just executives drinking expensive alcohol while pretending to discuss business.

Marcus spotted her almost imdiately.

Valerie stood near a small group of investors, speaking with the effortless confidence of soone who had spent years commanding rooms.

She laughed.

Gestured.

Moved naturally between conversations.

Marcus waited.

Patience first.

Approach second.

Eventually the opening appeared.

A mutual contact made introductions.

The conversation began smoothly.

Valerie smiled.

Shook his hand.

Asked about his work.

Marcus answered comfortably.

Years of training made this part easy.

Within minutes they were discussing market trends and international distribution models.

Everything looked perfect.

Yet sothing felt off.

Valerie remained friendly.

Professional.

Engaged.

But every attempt Marcus made to steer the discussion toward personal territory died imdiately.

Not aggressively.

Not suspiciously.

Simply redirected.

He asked about travel.

She answered with company expansion plans.

He asked about hobbies.

She transitioned into artist developnt strategies.

He ntioned mutual acquaintances.

She sohow turned the conversation back toward business.

Marcus left fifteen minutes later with a polite goodbye and absolutely nothing useful.

As he walked toward the parking structure, frustration settled into his chest.

Seven months of observation.

Fifteen minutes of conversation.

Zero progress.

It didn’t make sense.

Valerie should have been easier than this.

Rebecca Lin discovered sothing similar two days later.

Unlike Marcus, she had already t her target before.

Wayne had always seed approachable.

Friendly.

Relaxed.

The kind of executive who could spend twenty minutes discussing music with a complete stranger.

Which made him ideal.

Rebecca approached him during a conference held for producers while they took a break.

The introduction happened naturally.

Almost effortlessly.

Wayne greeted her with genuine warmth.

They talked about music.

Production techniques.

Classic records.

Industry stories.

Artists they admired.

The conversation flowed so smoothly Rebecca almost forgot she was working.

Wayne laughed often.

Asked questions.

Told stories.

Shared experiences.

From the outside it looked perfect.

Exactly the kind of interaction she specialized in creating.

Yet twenty-five minutes later, Rebecca found herself sitting in her car staring at her notes.

The page was nearly empty.

She knew nothing new.

Nothing important.

Nothing personal.

The realization annoyed her.

She replayed the conversation ntally.

Every opening she attempted.

Every question.

Every angle.

Each ti Wayne sohow answered without revealing anything aningful.

Not because he was defensive.

Not because he was suspicious.

Because he simply never stepped beyond surface-level conversation.

The result was infuriating.

The conversation had felt intimate.

Yet she learned absolutely nothing.

Rebecca looked at the notes again.

Then closed the notebook.

Sothing was happening.

She could feel it.

The question was whether the others were experiencing it too.

Nathan Cole already knew the answer.

Because unlike Rebecca, he wasn’t confused.

He was suffering.

Nathan hated Urich.

Not personally.

Professionally.

The man was impossible.

Nathan had spent weeks attempting to create an opening.

Weeks.

Every interaction felt like trying to grab smoke.

The latest eting had been arranged through a mutual business contact.

Simple lunch.

Simple conversation.

Simple objective.

At least that was the theory.

The reality looked different.

Very different.

By the end of the first ten minutes Nathan realized the conversation was moving in the wrong direction.

Again.

Every question he asked sohow bounced back.

Every attempt to gather information resulted in Urich gathering information instead.

Nathan couldn’t even explain how it happened.

The man wasn’t aggressive.

Wasn’t confrontational.

Wasn’t suspicious.

Yet sohow Nathan always left feeling examined.

Like he’d spent an hour sitting beneath interrogation lights.

When lunch finally ended, Nathan sat inside his vehicle gripping the steering wheel.

He looked exhausted.

Not physically.

ntally.

His phone buzzed.

A ssage from Silas requesting updates.

Nathan closed his eyes.

For several seconds he considered throwing the phone through the windshield.

Instead he opened a new report.

Then began typing.

Progress minimal.

Target remains difficult to engage.

Additional efforts required.

He stopped.

Read the sentence.

Then deleted it.

The wording sounded weak.

Yet every stronger version felt dishonest.

Eventually he settled on the truth.

Target behavior appears altered. Building trust is proving significantly more difficult than previous assessnts suggested.

Nathan hit send.

Then leaned back heavily.

For the first ti since accepting the assignnt, he began wondering whether the target was studying him as much as he was studying the target.

Hundreds of miles away, Silas Vane sat alone inside his office.

Evening had settled over London.

The city lights glowed beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows.

Traffic moved below like streams of light flowing through concrete rivers.

Normally Silas enjoyed monts like this.

The quiet.

The distance.

The feeling of being above everything.

Tonight he barely noticed the view.

A series of reports sat open across his desk.

Wendy.

Marcus.

Rebecca.

Nathan.

Four separate updates.

Four separate operatives.

Four separate targets.

Yet all four reports produced the sa uncomfortable feeling.

Silas picked up Wendy’s report first.

He read it carefully.

Then again.

Alice becoming distant.

Communication reduced.

Resistance increasing.

No clear explanation.

Silas placed it aside.

Next ca Marcus.

No progress.

Conversations controlled.

No openings.

No personal access.

Then Rebecca.

The sa pattern.

Friendly interaction.

No aningful information.

No advancent.

Nathan’s report arrived last.

Silas studied it longer than the others.

Sothing about the wording bothered him.

Target behavior appears altered.

Altered.

The word lingered.

He leaned back slowly.

Then opened older reports.

Months of records appeared across multiple screens.

Old observations.

Old assessnts.

Old progress notes.

He began comparing.

Alice.

Valerie.

Wayne.

Urich.

The differences beca obvious almost imdiately.

Before, the targets had been predictable.

Natural.

Accessible.

Not easy.

But accessible.

Now?

Now every path seed blocked.

Not visibly.

Not aggressively.

Subtly.

Almost elegantly.

Silas stood and walked toward the windows.

His hands slipped into his pockets.

The city stretched endlessly beyond the glass.

For several monts he said nothing.

Did nothing.

Simply thought.

The dangerous thing about intelligence work wasn’t the information.

It was pattern recognition.

Knowing when small details stopped being random.

Knowing when separate events beca connected.

Most people ignored patterns.

Silas built empires around them.

Alice suddenly withdrawing.

Valerie becoming inaccessible.

Wayne giving nothing away.

Urich becoming even more difficult than usual.

Individually, none of it ant anything.

Together?

That was different.

A knock interrupted his thoughts.

"Co in."

The door opened.

One of his senior assistants stepped inside.

"Sir."

Silas turned.

"What is it?"

"The latest monitoring package."

The assistant handed over a folder.

Silas accepted it.

Opened it imdiately.

His eyes moved across the pages.

Travel records.

Schedules.

Communications.

Business activities.

Then he stopped.

Slowly.

Very slowly.

His gaze narrowed.

The assistant noticed.

"What is it?"

Silas didn’t answer imdiately.

Instead he continued reading.

The information wasn’t dramatic.

No smoking gun.

No direct evidence.

Just dates.

etings.

Timing.

Tiny details.

Yet together they created sothing interesting.

A tiline.

And inside that tiline sat a coincidence.

A coincidence Silas didn’t believe in.

Several executives had altered their behavior within roughly the sa period.

Not exactly the sa day.

Not exactly the sa week.

Close enough.

Far too close.

Silas closed the folder.

His expression remained calm.

The assistant knew him well enough to recognize the danger anyway.

Whenever Silas beca truly concerned, he grew quieter.

Not louder.

"What would you like us to do?" the assistant asked carefully.

Silas walked back toward his desk.

Then sat down.

His eyes drifted across the reports once more.

Wendy.

Marcus.

Rebecca.

Nathan.

Four experienced operatives.

Four people trained to identify behavioral shifts.

Four people independently reporting similar concerns.

He folded his hands together.

"Increase observation."

The assistant nodded.

"No direct action?"

"Not yet."

The assistant hesitated.

"Do you believe they’ve discovered us?"

Silas looked toward the windows again.

The question lingered.

Discovered us.

Interesting wording.

Because discovery implied certainty.

Silas wasn’t certain.

Not yet.

But instinct had kept him alive longer than most n in his profession.

And instinct was whispering now.

Quietly.

Persistently.

Sothing had changed.

"I believe," Silas said slowly, "that soone may have interfered."

The assistant remained silent.

Silas continued.

"Whether that interference cos from luck, coincidence, or a deliberate investigation remains unclear."

"And if it’s deliberate?"

Silas’s eyes hardened.

The change lasted only a second.

But it was enough.

"Then soone has started a ga they don’t fully understand."

The room fell quiet.

Outside, London continued moving.

Millions of people living ordinary lives.

Completely unaware of the invisible war unfolding around them.

Silas picked up Wendy’s report one final ti.

Then Marcus’s.

Then the others.

Four separate failures.

Four separate warnings.

Four separate indications that sothing was slipping beyond his control.

That bothered him more than he cared to admit.

Not because he feared losing information.

Not because he feared losing operatives.

Because uncertainty ant another player had entered the board.

And Silas Vane hated unknown players.

He lowered the reports onto the desk.

Then looked out across the city lights.

Sowhere out there, soone had either beco very careful or very clever.

Perhaps both.

The difference didn’t matter.

What mattered was finding out who.

And for the first ti in a long while, Silas felt the faint outline of a challenge beginning to erge from the shadows.

The ga was changing.

The question now was whether he had recognized it early enough.

A/N:I am sure majority of my reader would have seen the change in writing style i apologize as i am going through a whole lot this period health wise so bear with the quantity and quality might reduce a bit just for a while bear with .

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