The Roosevelt Room stayed silent long after the door shut.
No one reached for their papers and no one spoke. Only the faint hum of the air vents and the steady tick of the wall clock broke the silence, continuously.
The Chief of Staff sat back slowly, eyes still fixed on the empty chair Liam had just left.
"Well," he muttered. "That was... sothing."
Across from him, the Treasury Secretary gave a dry laugh and rubbed his temples. "I don’t even know what I just sat through. He didn’t dodge a single question, but I still feel like we got nothing."
The DNI leaned forward, elbows on the table. "No, we got sothing. We just don’t know what to do with it."
A low chuckle escaped the National Security Advisor. "You’re not wrong. He talks like a man who’s already rehearsed both sides of the conversation."
The Chief looked around the room, weary, as he asked, "Alright. Let’s be honest. Who here understood what just happened?"
No one raised a hand.
"He didn’t even blink," the OSTP representative said after a mont. "Not even once. I watched him the whole ti. He was calm as glass."
"Maybe that’s his ga," the NSA Advisor replied. "You try to read him, you get nothing. And that nothing gets in your head."
The Chief leaned forward again, his voice low. "He’s not hiding fear. He’s got none to hide. That’s what bothers ."
The Treasury Secretary sighed, "He’s a kid, for God’s sake. Barely twenties. And we’re sitting here trying to decode him like he’s an entire country."
"That’s the problem," the DNI said quietly. "He’s not acting like a kid. He’s acting like soone who stopped needing permission a long ti ago."
No one argued with that.
The Chief broke the silence again. "Alright. Next steps. Keep it quiet. No statents, no press leaks. He ca, we talked, that’s it. I want a discreet interagency review. Quiet eyes, no paper trail."
"What do we call it?" the Treasury Secretary asked.
The Chief paused. "Nothing official. Just... keep it between us." He stood, gathering his notes. "And soone call Treasury’s OIA. If this man sneezes near a bank, I want to know before he exhales."
***
Langley, Virginia — CIA Headquarters.
The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead. Screens glowed with reports and still fras pulled from surveillance caras at Joint Andrew Base.
A young analyst scrolled through a file labeled Scott, Liam — Behavioral Observation (White House eting).
"Speech tempo normal. No stress markers. No defensive micro-expressions. No deception indicators," she read aloud.
Her supervisor glanced over. "No tells at all?"
"None," she said. "Either he’s got nerves of steel, or he’s so used to scrutiny that he’s immune to it."
The supervisor looked at the photo on the screen — Liam stepping out of the A380, rain on his jacket, no umbrella, eyes calm.
"He doesn’t look like soone impressed by the White House. There’s no awe in his eyes."
"He didn’t even slow down," the analyst said. "You know how most people get when they step through those doors. Caras, history, power. They feel it. He didn’t."
The supervisor muttered, "Then maybe he’s seen bigger rooms."
They both stared at the monitor for a long mont.
"Should we tag him as a risk?" the analyst asked finally.
"No," the supervisor said. "Tag him as an anomaly."
***
Departnt of Treasury — Office of Intelligence and Analysis.
Three analysts sat crowded around one screen.
"As always, every transaction checks out," the first one said. "Every fund, every movent. He’s cleaner than a federal audit."
"Too clean," the second muttered. "Nobody at that scale is this transparent. Not even the saints at the Vatican."
The third scrolled farther down the report. "The unknown Family Office behind him — not Bellere Family Office — runs like a sovereign fund. Multiple subsidiaries, but all under the sa umbrella. No shell companies, no hidden flows."
"So what’s the risk?"
The first analyst shrugged. "He doesn’t owe anyone money. He never borrowed against his fortune. He’s debt free, which should be impossible for soone with so much wealth. That’s the risk."
They went quiet for a mont, as they quickly realized what made Liam’s financial structure so unsettling.
It wasn’t what they found—it was what they didn’t. He owed nothing. No loans, no leveraged assets, no outstanding credit lines. His entire empire was self-funded, moving like a closed circuit outside the reach of any bank or governnt.
That kind of freedom, they knew, was dangerous. Debt usually creates leverage, and leverage creates control. When soone borrows, the system can see, asure, and restrain them. But a man with no debt has no leash. He can move billions without warning, unaffected by sanctions, interest rates, or market crashes.
To the financial world, that made Liam an anomaly. To regulators, it made him a risk. In a global economy built on interdependence, soone who owes nothing to anyone stands outside the system entirely. And in their eyes, independence like that was the most dangerous form of power.
They sighed when they thought of this and one of them typed into the summary file:
No evidence of misconduct. Potential systemic dependency. If he moves, the markets follow.
***
The White House — Evening Brief.
Rain drumd against the windows again. The Chief of Staff stood at the end of the long table, sleeves rolled up, a half-empty coffee mug beside him.
The National Security Advisor sat across from him, flipping through notes.
"He’s not a threat," he said finally. "Not in the traditional sense."
"No," the Chief agreed. "But he’s a problem."
The Advisor looked up. "How so?"
The Chief leaned forward, voice low. "We deal with billionaires, oligarchs, lobbyists. They all want sothing — access, power, a favor. He doesn’t. And that makes him unpredictable."
The Advisor exhaled. "You think he’s dangerous?"
"I think he’s untouchable. That’s worse."
They sat there in silence, the sound of the rain filling the room.
"You ever et soone," the Chief said quietly, "and halfway through, you realize you’re not the one in control of the conversation?"
The Advisor gave a faint, tired smile. "Yeah. Today."
***
The Pentagon — Internal Briefing
A colonel read from a thin report, his voice echoing in the conference room.
"Airbus confirms the aircraft is a private commission. Fully compliant. All chanical certifications intact. No modifications outside civil limits."
"So it’s just a plane," a general said.
"Yes, sir."
"Then why are we reading about it?"
The colonel hesitated. "Because everyone who sees it stops talking. That’s not just a jet. It’s a statent."
The general frowned. "A statent of what?"
The colonel flipped the page. "That he doesn’t need anyone to fly him."
The general didn’t reply. He just nodded once. "Close the file."
***
The Oval Office — Late Night.
The city was quiet, wrapped in mist. The President stood by the window, looking out toward the Washington Monunt.
The Chief of Staff entered, tired but composed, carrying a single folder.
"Everything we’ve got so far," he said.
The President didn’t turn around. "Tell ."
"He’s clean. No foreign ties. No political funding. The man’s record is spotless."
"Spotless n don’t exist."
"Apparently, this one does."
The President turned finally, studying the folder. "He remind you of anyone?"
The Chief shook his head. "No. He’s not like the rich we deal with. He’s not performing."
"He’s not trying to prove anything," the President said quietly. "That’s what makes him different."
The Chief hesitated. "What do we do, sir?"
The President looked back out the window. "We stop treating him like a problem and start treating him like gravity. We stay close enough not to get pulled apart."
The Chief nodded slowly. "And if the rest of the world doesn’t play along?"
The President smiled faintly. "Then they’ll learn what we just did — you can’t own soone who doesn’t need anything from you."
***
Before dawn, encrypted cables began to move quietly across the world. The ssage was short. There was no details or agenda, and it read, "The White House t with Liam Scott. Privately."
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