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The phone rang, and Ethan answered before it finished its first tone.
"Director Graves."
On the other end, Graves was quiet for a mont. When he spoke, his voice carried sothing Ethan hadn't heard before: relief so intense it sounded like exhaustion.
"Your uncle has been picked up. He's safe. Don't worry."
The weight that had been sitting on Ethan's chest since the day he'd seen the "academic exchange" article lifted. Not partially. Completely. Like a hand releasing a fist.
Frank was ho.
"Take care of yourself over there."
"Don't worry about , Director. When I get back, you owe a feast. The good stuff. None of that cafeteria slop."
Graves, hearing the casual irreverence from a teenager sitting inside the Aurelian Republic's Departnt of Defense surrounded by ard agents, didn't feel a shred of annoyance.
He knew this situation was the Bureau's failure. The Whitfield family had exploited moles that the Bureau should have caught years ago. Fourteen agents were dead. Frank had been snatched from under their protection. However the kid chose to talk to him right now, Graves would take it.
"Fine. When you get back, I'll personally host the dinner."
Standing nearby, Callister listened to the phone conversation with a tightening jaw.
The kid was talking about going ho for dinner. As if this were a day trip. As if the full weight of the Aurelian Republic's military and intelligence apparatus weren't standing between him and the exit.
The arrogance of it was almost offensive.
"Mr. rcer, you can state your second condition now."
Ethan ended the call and looked at Callister.
"Don't be in such a rush, Mr. Callister. The second condition is simple. But I need two people in the room before I say it."
"Bring Edgar and Conrad Whitfield here."
Callister's eyebrows rose slightly, but he gave the order. Under the Signal Bee's live broadcast, the appearance of the Whitfield brothers on Aurelian soil was a propaganda gift. Proof that a senior Valorian political family had voluntarily chosen the Aurelian Republic over their own country. Every second of their presence on cara was a ssage to the world about which nation people really wanted to live in.
Within minutes, the Whitfield brothers were escorted into the conference room.
Edgar entered with the rigid composure of a man who'd decided to show nothing. Conrad entered with the swagger of a man who still hadn't understood his situation.
Ethan looked at them. The n who'd orchestrated his uncle's kidnapping. Who'd had fourteen Bureau agents killed. Who'd sold their country for green cards and a bank transfer.
"Mr. Callister." Ethan's voice was calm. "My condition is simple."
"Kill these two n. And I'll give you everything you want."
The conference room went very quiet.
Before Callister could respond, Conrad Whitfield laughed.
"You must be Ethan rcer."
He stepped forward, chin raised, the posture of a man who still believed his family na ant sothing.
"I think you've lost your mind. You actually believe you can have us killed?"
"The reason our family fell to this point is entirely because of an ungrateful brat like you!"
Callister looked at Conrad the way a person looks at a fly that's landed on their food. The man had been in the Aurelian Republic for weeks and still hadn't grasped the fundantal shift in his position: he was no longer a political patriarch's brother. He was a refugee with a limited shelf life.
But the condition itself required consideration.
If the Signal Bee hadn't been broadcasting, Callister might have agreed. The Whitfield family's intelligence value was already extracted. Their political connections in Valoria were severed. Killing two spent assets in exchange for fusion and battle armor technology was, by any rational calculation, an excellent trade.
But the broadcast changed the math. Billions of people were watching. If the Aurelian Republic executed two n on cara to acquire foreign technology, the damage would be catastrophic. Every defector in the world would reconsider. Every ally would distance themselves. The Republic's image as a "free and equal nation" would beco a punchline.
"Mr. rcer, I'm afraid I can't agree to this condition."
"The Aurelian Republic is a nation of laws and liberty. We do not permit the killing of anyone under our protection."
"Can't agree? Then there's nothing more to discuss."
Ethan stood up from his chair.
And began stretching.
Neck rolls. Shoulder rotations. Deep knee bends. The kind of warm-up routine you'd see from an athlete preparing for a sprint.
In the conference room of the Aurelian Republic's Departnt of Defense. Surrounded by elite agents. On global live television.
Conrad burst out laughing.
"What are you doing? Planning to perform calisthenics for us?"
"Don't tell you think you can fight your way out of here with your bare hands?"
In the live broadcast, the comnts exploded.
"What is rcer doing?"
"He's not actually going to try to fight his way out of the AURELIAN DEPARTNT OF DEFENSE?"
"It's over. The pressure finally broke him."
"This isn't a movie. One person against trained special forces doesn't happen in reality."
At the Bureau, Graves and the Chancellor stared at the screen with matching expressions of bewildernt.
At the Hargrove residence, Marcus watched with sweat forming on his palms.
Big brother, you can't be this reckless. Making a move in a place like THIS?
Callister nearly laughed out loud. In his entire career, nobody had ever attempted to escape the Departnt of Defense through physical force. It was so absurd it was almost charming.
He glanced at his agents and gave a slight nod.
"Be careful. Don't hurt our distinguished guest."
The four agents cracked their knuckles and stepped forward, spreading into a loose semicircle. Cold smiles. Relaxed postures. The body language of professionals who considered this a minor nuisance, not a threat.
Ethan continued his squats. Didn't look up. Didn't acknowledge them.
But the corner of his mouth curved into sothing that was not quite a smile.
"Mr. Callister, it seems you really weren't listening to earlier."
The agents were three ters away. Closing.
"I believe I ntioned that I've been researching a serum to enhance human physical capabilities."
Two ters.
"You didn't actually think..."
One ter.
"...that was a joke?"
Callister's expression changed.
But before the change could reach his mouth, before he could say "wait" or "stop" or anything at all, the muscles in Ethan's legs contracted with a force that cracked the floor tile beneath his feet.
He vanished.
Not "moved quickly." Vanished. The human eye tracks motion by processing sequential images. When an object moves faster than the eye can generate those images, it doesn't appear to move. It disappears from one location and appears in another.
Ethan appeared between two agents.
His palms hit their chests simultaneously. Not punches. Open-handed strikes, delivered with the controlled precision of soone who understood exactly how much force was needed and didn't want to use more.
The agents flew.
Not stumbled. Not staggered. Flew. Backward, off their feet, across the width of the conference room, and into the far wall with an impact that cracked the plaster and shook the paintings off their hooks.
They hit the floor and didn't get up.
The remaining two agents froze. The three-second engagent had bypassed their training entirely. Their reflexes, their positioning, their years of combat experience — none of it had been relevant. They hadn't even seen the kid move.
In the conference room, nobody breathed.
The live broadcast was nuclear.
"WHAT WAS THAT?!"
"Did I just hallucinate? He sent two two-hundred-pound special forces agents FLYING!"
"That's four hundred pounds of trained muscle launched ten ters into a WALL!"
"The serum. The SERUM IS REAL. The enhancent of human capabilities — it's REAL!"
"Professor rcer is a genius in biology TOO?! Every hater who said he couldn't do it needs to eat their words RIGHT NOW!"
At the Bureau, Director Graves slowly lowered himself into his chair.
"That kid wasn't joking."
"He actually built the serum."
"He actually injected it."
Chancellor Thayer, standing beside him, stared at the screen with an expression that contained the very specific emotion of a man who'd given a teenager three hundred million marks as "an education in humility" and was now watching that teenager throw elite agents across a room with his bare hands.
Three hundred million marks. The best investnt this governnt has ever made.
At the Hargrove residence, Marcus's mouth was open. His phone was in his hand. His entire body was motionless. His brain, trained to analyze human kinetics for thirty years, was running calculations that didn't produce answers that existed in any textbook he'd ever read.
The force required to accelerate two hundred-pound masses to that velocity from a standing position. The reaction ti required to close a three-ter gap faster than trained operatives could react. The muscle density required to generate that kind of power without skeletal damage.
None of it was possible. Not for a human being. Not for any human being who had ever lived.
Unless the human being in question was no longer operating within normal biological paraters.
The serum works. It actually works.
In the conference room, Edgar Whitfield had gone the color of old paper. Conrad had stopped laughing.
Ethan shook his right arm, working out the sting of the impacts, and turned to face the Defense Secretary.
"Still think my work in biology was a joke?"
He tilted his head.
"Mr. Callister?"
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