[Jake’s POV]
The first thing I noticed was the silence inside my head. For two years, the Oracle had been a constant pressure behind my eyes, turning every room into a map and every person into a calculation. Even when I slept, if what I did during those two years could be called sleep, there had always been movent inside my skull. Numbers shifted. Patterns ford. Routes opened and collapsed. But now, sitting on the observation deck of the Vanguard with the diterranean stretching black and silver beneath the moonlight, there was nothing.
No calculations. No cold voice. No perfect route through the next five seconds of my life. Just the ocean breeze brushing against my face, the distant sound of music drifting from so billionaire’s party yacht, and the two people standing in front of like they were afraid I might vanish if they blinked. Ethan looked half dead, one arm hanging stiffly at his side, his face bruised and his shirt stained with old blood. Claire stood beside him, her hands pressed against her mouth, her eyes shining with tears she was fighting very hard not to let fall.
I lowered my head and adjusted the cuffs of my rolled up sleeves. It was a stupid gesture, calm and polished and useless, but it gave one more second to make sure my voice would not crack. Ethan took one step forward, then stopped, his eyes searching my face. Claire’s briefcase slipped from her fingers and hit the deck with a soft thud. Neither of them spoke. After everything they had survived to reach , they looked like they did not know whether they had found Jake Hart or just the thing that had been wearing his face.
"I’m back," I said.
The words ca out smooth, deeper than I expected, and for one brief second I almost believed them. Then a pale blue screen flickered in front of my eyes, and my entire body went still. I thought the silence was about to shatter and the numbers would co flooding back into my skull like ice water. But the interface was not silver and black. It was not layered with impossible predictive lines or crawling maps of the world. It was simple. Plain. Almost cheap.
[Ding!]
[Penalty Period Complete!]
I stared at the screen, my fingers tightening slowly against the edge of the seat beside .
[Two-Year Exile has ended.]
[Madness Induction has been lifted.]
Madness Induction. That was what the System called it. Not punishnt. Not torture. Not two years of waking up in cities I did not rember entering, with blood under my nails and shipping routes written across motel walls in stolen marker ink. Madness Induction. The words sat there politely, as if the System had rely given a mild fever and not dragged through hell with my eyes open.
[Ultimate System Upgrade has been revoked.]
My throat went dry.
[Oracle Link has been severed.]
That one hit like a knife between the ribs. There was no pain at first, only absence. Sothing enormous had been removed from inside , and the space it left behind felt too wide, too quiet, too exposed. The Oracle had been a sickness, but it had also been the thing keeping alive when my mind had shattered. It had turned into a monster, but monsters survived. Now the monster was gone, and I was standing there with nothing but mory, instinct, and a body that felt like it had been held together by spite.
[All Advanced Skills have been locked.]
[Charisma Enhancent: Locked.]
[Emotional Perception: Locked.]
[Persuasion Techniques: Locked.]
[Strategic Dominance: Locked.]
[Oracle Market Prediction: Deleted.]
Deleted. The word stayed on the screen for a mont longer than the others, as if the System wanted to make sure I felt it properly. Then the final notification appeared.
[Core System restored.]
[Host Status Updated.]
Na: Jake Hart
Title: Recovering Conqueror
Active Skills: None
Locked Skills: All Skills
I stared at the last line.
All Skills.
The System could have written a list. It could have pretended there was dignity left in this situation. Instead, it simply looked at the ruins of everything I had beco and wrote all skills like it was closing a shop for maintenance.
Then another ssage appeared.
[Penalty Applied!]
Reason: Host has maintained dramatic silence for too long.
Penalty: Left eyebrow will twitch during emotional monts for 6 hours.
I blinked.
My left eyebrow twitched.
Ethan frowned. "Are you okay?"
"No," I said before I could stop myself.
Claire moved toward imdiately, but I raised one hand. She stopped, though I saw how much it cost her. Her eyes were locked on mine, and for a mont I could not look away. There was fear there, but not the fear I saw in bankers or soldiers or n who realized too late that they had miscalculated. Claire was afraid for . That was sohow worse.
Ethan stared at , then looked up and down with the careful suspicion of a man who had been betrayed by too many miracles. "You look terrible."
I glanced at his bruised jaw, the torn sleeve near his shoulder, and the way he was leaning his weight away from his ribs. "So do you."
"I fought Varga," he said.
"I noticed."
"Twice."
"That sounds excessive."
Claire let out a shaky breath that almost beca a laugh. Ethan looked at for another mont, then shook his head like he wanted to punch and hug at the sa ti, but his ribs had voted against both. Behind them, Monaco glittered beneath the night sky. Port Hercules was full of floating palaces and sleeping monsters, all polished glass, ard guards, and quiet money. A few years ago, I would have looked at that city and seen a ladder. Then i rged with the e Oracle and I saw only pressure points. Now I saw lights on water, and I did not know if that made weaker or back to being human.
"We need to go ho," I said.
"To New York?" Claire asked softly.
I looked at her, then at Ethan, then at the dark city beyond them. "To everything."
The flight back to New York left before sunrise. Ethan fell asleep twenty minutes after takeoff despite clearly trying to remain alert. He sat across from with his jaw clenched and one hand pressed against his ribs, glaring at the cabin wall like he could intimidate exhaustion by making eye contact with it. Then his head tipped back against the leather seat, and he let out one ugly snore. Claire looked at him, then back at , her face softening for half a second before she forced it under control again.
"He fought for you," she said quietly.
"I know."
"He did not stop, Jake. Not in Bucharest. Not in Odesa. Not in Vienna. Not in Zurich."
I looked at Ethan’s bruised knuckles. The Ethan I rembered from the early days back when it all started had worried about his grades and the young man at our campus. This Ethan had crossed Europe injured, fought a professional killer, and still found his way to . Sowhere in the ss I left behind, my friend had beco dangerous, and I hated that I was proud of it.
"He should have stayed ho," I said.
"He couldn’t."
"That sounds like him."
"It sounds like all of us."
I turned toward her. Claire was watching carefully, too carefully, like she was trying to find the line between the man she rembered and whatever the Oracle had left behind. She had always been good at reading numbers, but now she was reading , and I did not like how much I wanted her to find sothing worth saving.
The cabin screen chid before either of us could say anything else. Claire tapped the console, and Nia’s face filled the display a second later. She was in the server room, surrounded by monitors and blue light, her hair tied ssily behind her head and dark circles beneath her eyes. For one full second, she said nothing. Then her face hardened.
"You dramatic bastard."
I smiled before I could stop myself. "Hello, Nia."
"No. Do not hello . Do not smile. Do not use that voice. Do you have any idea what your ghost protocols did to my systems?"
"They worked?"
"They fried two sandbox environnts, locked out of my own server room for eleven minutes, triggered a false dead man cascade, and made Cassandra Locke call at three in the morning to ask if your neural architecture had achieved divinity."
I frowned. "She said that?"
"She said it seriously."
"That is unfortunate."
"It was horrifying."
Claire lowered her head, hiding a tired smile. Nia leaned closer to the cara, and the anger on her face cracked just enough for sothing raw to show through. "You’re really alive," she said.
"I am."
"The Oracle?" she asked.
The cabin went still. Claire looked away. Ethan kept sleeping, completely useless in a way that was almost comforting. I held Nia’s gaze through the screen. She did not know about the System. None of them did. To Nia, the story was simple enough to survive. Jake Hart had rged with Oracle, beca sothing too powerful to control, disappeared for two years, and ca back with the connection gone. That lie was cleaner than the truth.
"It’s gone," I said.
Nia’s expression changed. "Gone how?"
"Severed."
"Any residual signal?"
"No."
"Any active handshake?"
"No."
"Predictive bleed?"
"Nothing."
Nia sat back slowly, and for once, she looked lost. "That’s impossible."
"It is possible."
"Jake, if the Oracle link collapsed inside your brain, there could be damage. Serious damage. mory gaps. Seizures. Personality shifts. Neural scarring. You need scans imdiately."
"I missed you too."
"I am not joking."
"I know."
"When you land, you go to dical."
"No."
Her eyes narrowed. "Jake."
"I go to Apex Tower."
"You just ca back from a shitty two year vacation."
"And my companies have been bleeding for two years."
"You are not a company, and your health is more important."
"No I am not," I said quietly. "But I do have companies that requiremy imdiate attention."
Nia stared at for a long mont, then cursed under her breath. dical first. Then Tower. And if you argue with , I will kindly ask Darius to carry you."
"That sounds wrong and unnecessary."
"But it will be emotionally satisfying to watch it happen."
The call ended with Nia threatening three more tis and Claire quietly agreeing with her once. After that, the cabin fell into a heavy silence. I leaned back against the leather seat and closed my eyes, but sleep did not co. Every ti I drifted too close to it, I saw white hospital lights, wet pavent, Isabella’s smile behind bulletproof glass, and System windows counting down days I could not afford to rember.
New York was gray when we landed. The car took us through the city in silence, past glass towers, crowded sidewalks, and people carrying coffee like the world had not nearly ended in several expensive European locations. Apex Tower appeared through the tinted window, rising above the street like a blade of black glass. I expected to feel triumphant when I saw it. Instead, I felt the weight of every floor I had abandoned.
The car entered the private underground entrance. Security was heavier than before. New caras watched the ramp. New guards stood near the elevator bank. New scanners had been installed beside the access doors. I noticed all of it without Oracle whispering in my skull, which was both comforting and irritating. Apparently, trauma ca with so free features.
The elevator opened into the private lobby, and every conversation died at once. Receptionists, guards, junior analysts, assistants, a legal courier with a sealed envelope, and two executives near the coffee bar all froze as if soone had cut the power to the room. So looked relieved. So looked afraid. One young receptionist went pale before her eyes even reached my face.
That was interesting.
I stepped out of the elevator and looked around the lobby. "Morning," I said.
Nobody answered.
I looked down at the marble beneath my shoes and frowned. "They changed the tiles."
The receptionist blinked. "Sir?"
" It’s nothing"
Behind , Ethan gave a tired laugh. Claire exhaled softly, and the room finally started breathing again. Soone whispered my na. A pen clattered onto the floor. One of the guards straightened so fast I thought he might injure himself.
Then I saw Victoria Sterling waiting beside the private elevator to the executive floors. She wore a charcoal suit sharp enough to make weaker n confess cris they had not committed. Her ice-blonde hair had grown longer and was pulled back, her expression cold and controlled, but the exhaustion was there if you knew where to look. Victoria had always treated emotion like a hostile takeover attempt, but two years of holding my empire together had left marks even she could not hide.
"You’re late," she said.
I walked toward her. "Traffic was terrible."
"You disappeared for two f***king years Jake."
"I took the scenic route."
"You went quiet for two f***king years, and you return looking like shit."
"You noticed I was gone?" I said trying to ease the situation.
"You act as if I have a choice in the matter, I an who wouldn’t notice Mr Hart."
That landed harder than I expected. The lobby was pretending not to listen, but the silence sharpened anyway. I looked at Victoria properly. She had held the line while I was gone. Vanguard had survived because she had refused to let it collapse. I had known that in theory. Seeing her in front of made it feel like a debt.
"I’m sorry," I said.
Her expression shifted by the smallest amount. Then the mask returned. "Apology noted. The good news is, your office is intact. And the bad news is that your empire is not."
"Sounds like everything is set for ," I said. "I hate having nothing to do."
Her mouth twitched. Almost a smile. Almost.
We took the private elevator up. Ethan leaned against the wall, pretending his ribs were not trying to kill him. Claire stood beside him with her tablet already open. Victoria faced the doors like she was escorting a dangerous criminal to his own board eting. I watched the floor numbers climb, and for a mont the elevator lights flickered.
The mory hit without warning. A brass elevator in Geneva. Rain streaking the glass. Blood on my left hand. A dead phone in my pocket. Isabella’s voice coming through a speaker, calm and cruel.
"You cannot buy blood, Mr. Hart."
I blinked, and the mory vanished. My hand was gripping the rail. Claire had seen it. Victoria had seen it. Ethan had sohow fallen asleep standing up and missed the whole thing, which was probably for the best.
The doors opened onto the executive floor. My office waited at the end of the hall, and soone had kept it exactly the sa. Dark walnut desk. Leather chair. City view. The frad first Vanguard acquisition agreent on the wall. On the desk, beside the monitor, sat the stupid mug Ethan had bought years ago.
World’s Okayest Billionaire.
I walked over and picked it up. There was no dust on it.
"Who kept this here?" I asked.
Victoria did not answer imdiately. Then she said, "Claire."
I looked at Claire. She suddenly beca very interested in her tablet.
Of course.
A blue screen appeared in front of my eyes.
[Ding!]
[New Mission Generated!]
Mission: Reassemble Your Court
Objective: Gather your primary allies in one room.
Reward: Social Presence 1
Penalty: Awkward silence during all etings for 24 hours.
I stared at the screen. I had survived assassins, exile, white phosphorus, and Isabella Vane. Now the System was threatening with awkward silence.
Another notification appeared before I could even breathe.
[Penalty Applied!]
Reason: Host questioned System fairness internally.
Penalty: Mild left shoe discomfort for 3 hours.
My left shoe imdiately felt half a size too small.
I closed my eyes.
"What is it?" Ethan asked.
I opened them. "Nothing."
"You have that face."
"What face?"
"The face you make when sothing stupid happens and you are trying to pretend it dis not happen."
Claire looked up. Victoria narrowed her eyes.
I smiled.
"Ergency eting," I said, setting the mug down carefully. "Everyone still in play. Nia. Darius. Cassandra. Evelyn. Hale. Vance. Legal. Security. Finance. Board mbers. Departnt heads."
Victoria’s jaw tightened. "That room will be unstable."
"Good."
"Jake."
I turned toward the window. Manhattan stretched beneath , cold and bright and alive. For two years, I had been a ghost moving through Europe with blood on my hands and a god screaming inside my skull. Now I was standing in my office again with no Oracle, no advanced skills, no safety net, and one shoe that had apparently been personally cursed by the System.
"Isabella has people inside my house," I said.
No one argued. Not Ethan. Not Claire. Not Victoria. They all knew. The silence in the room changed, becoming less like shock and more like the first breath before a storm.
I looked down at the mug again and let out a quiet laugh.
Victoria raised an eyebrow. "Sothing funny?"
"Yeah," I said. "I missed this."
The System chid again.
[Mission Progress: 12%]
Note: Host entered office without collapsing. Bare minimum achieved.
I stared at the screen for a long mont.
Then I smiled.
Back to business.
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