Jessie turned around and walked back to the low table. She grabbed the sleek laptop resting on the edge of Kenneth's desk and pushed it toward him. She nodded at the USB drive.
Kenneth picked it up, plugged it into the port, and typed in the password Jessie dictated. A spreadsheet with dozens of tabs popped up on the screen.
He scrolled down the first page. His bored expression slowly morphed into a deep, intense frown.
"Military-grade MREs. High-frequency water filtration units. Arctic survival gear. Solar matrix panels," Kenneth read aloud, his voice tight.
He clicked to the next tab. "Ten tons of specialized steel. Ballistic glass. Heavy engineering machinery."
He clicked the final tab, and his breath hitched. His eyes darted up to meet hers. "C4 explosives? Armor-piercing rounds? Are you building a private army to start a war, Jessie?"
Jessie pulled a chair close and sat down. "A global, apocalyptic storm is going to hit in exactly thirty days. It will last for two months. Everything you know will be wiped out."
Kenneth let out a harsh, mocking laugh. "That is the most ridiculous doomsday scam I have ever heard."
Jessie didn't argue. Instead, she rattled off a series of numbers. "Ramsey Tech will drop twelve percent tomorrow at 10 AM. Ramsey Shipping will lose a major contract at noon on Thursday, causing a twenty percent plunge."
Kenneth's fingers stopped tapping his armrest. His muscles tensed. Those were highly classified internal metrics. He had only received the briefing an hour ago.
"Next week," Jessie continued, her voice relentless, "there will be a massive geological anomaly in Alaska. The government will cover it up as a minor earthquake. It's the precursor to the storm."
She leaned in, her eyes locking onto his. "When the grid fails, your billions are just paper. Supplies are the only currency that will matter."
Kenneth stared at her. He searched her face for a twitch, a lie, a sign of madness. He found nothing. Only an absolute, terrifying certainty.
He slammed his hand down on the intercom button. "Arthur. Get in here."
The heavy oak doors opened instantly. Arthur stepped in, bowing his head.
Kenneth spun the laptop around so Arthur could see the screen. "Use the underground channels. I want everything on this list acquired and moved within a week. Blank check."
Arthur's eyes widened slightly as he saw the munitions list, but his training held. "Yes, sir." He turned and left the room.
Jessie nodded in approval. "You won't regret this investment."
Kenneth rolled his wheelchair forward until his knees almost touched hers. The proximity was suffocating, thick with tension. "If you are playing me," he growled, "I will bury you under those mountains along with your supplies."
Jessie smiled, a small, cold curve of her lips. "You won't get the chance."
She stood up. "I need to go to the Appalachian estate to oversee the security retrofitting."
Kenneth reached into his jacket pocket, pulled out a solid black, limitless credit card, and held it out to her. "If you need more capital, use this."
Jessie took the card, sliding it into her pocket. It was a tangible sign of their new, dangerous alliance.
She walked to the door, but stopped just before opening it. She looked over her shoulder.
"Stop taking those physical therapy pills your doctor gives you," Jessie said quietly. "They're laced with a slow-acting neurotoxin."
Kenneth's hands gripped the armrests of his wheelchair so hard his knuckles turned bone-white. The veins in his neck bulged.
Jessie didn't explain further. She opened the door and walked out into the hallway.
Kenneth sat in the dark, staring at the empty doorway, a violent storm brewing in his eyes.
The yellow cab pulled into the long, curving driveway of the Aguilar estate. The air was thick with the smell of wet cement and dust from the ongoing renovations near the massive front fountain.
Jessie stepped out of the cab. She needed to get to the backyard storage shed to retrieve her adoptive mother's old farming journals before heading to the mountains.
A deafening engine roar shattered the quiet. A bright red Ferrari sped up the driveway, slamming on its brakes and skidding to a halt just a few feet from Jessie.
The driver's side door swung open. Dax Vance stepped out. He wore a custom-tailored suit and designer sunglasses, reeking of arrogance and expensive cologne.
Harley sat in the passenger seat, watching the scene through the tinted glass with calculating eyes.
Dax walked around the front of the car, opened Harley's door like a chivalrous knight, and then turned his head to glare at Jessie.
He marched right up to her, blocking her path to the backyard. He looked her up and down, his lip curling in disgust.
"Look at you," Dax sneered loudly, making sure the nearby construction workers could hear. "You can put a Rust Belt rat in Manhattan, but you still smell like cow shit and cheap denim."
The workers paused their mixing, leaning on their shovels to watch the drama unfold.
Seeing the audience gathered, Harley hurried over, her face suddenly etched with worry. She gently grabbed Dax's forearm. "Dax, please don't," she whispered, casting a fearful glance at Jessie. "My sister is just... different."
Dax puffed out his chest, emboldened by Harley's touch. He pointed a finger inches from Jessie's nose. "You stay the hell away from Harley. If you ever try to bully her again, I'll ruin you."
Jessie stood perfectly still. Her face was a blank canvas. She looked at Dax the way one might look at a buzzing mosquito.
Her total lack of reaction infuriated Dax. He felt his ego bruising in front of his goddess.
"Are you deaf, bitch?" Dax snarled, stepping into her personal space. He raised his hand, aiming to shove her hard in the shoulder.
The moment his hand moved, Jessie shifted her weight. Her eyes, previously dull, suddenly sharpened into twin blades of ice.
It wasn't a magical aura, but the cold, predatory stillness of a survivor who had looked death in the eye a thousand times. It was a look that promised violence without a single word, and Dax's primal instincts screamed at him to retreat.
Dax felt it physically. His heart seized in his chest. His lungs forgot how to pull in air. It was as if a massive, apex predator had just locked its jaws around his throat.
His raised hand froze in mid-air. A violent tremor started in his knees, shaking his tailored pants.
"Take your dirty hand away," Jessie said. Her voice wasn't loud, but it vibrated with a dark, lethal promise.
Dax stumbled backward, his face draining of all color. He couldn't breathe.
Harley didn't feel the killing intent. She only saw Dax backing down from a country girl. She pinched the back of Dax's arm, a silent, angry demand for him to act like a man.
The pinch snapped Dax out of his terror. Realizing he had just cowered in front of Harley and the construction crew, a hot, humiliating rage boiled over.
"I'll kill you!" Dax roared. He pulled his arm back and swung a heavy, uncoordinated punch right at Jessie's face.
The workers gasped. Harley's lips curved into a wicked, satisfied smile.
Jessie didn't flinch. She stepped into his guard. Her left hand shot up, her fingers wrapping around Dax's wrist with bone-crushing force.
She pivoted on her heel, using his own momentum against him. As she twisted his arm down, she drove her right boot hard into the back of his knee.
Dax screamed as his leg buckled. His balance vanished entirely.
Jessie let go of his wrist and watched with cold, detached eyes as his body launched forward, completely out of control.
He was falling directly toward the massive, shallow mixing tub filled to the brim with wet, thick cement.
With a wet, sickening smack, Dax's face planted directly into the center of the cement tub.
Thick, gray sludge exploded outward. A heavy glob of wet cement splattered across Harley's expensive Jimmy Choo heels.
Dax thrashed wildly in the tub. His hands clawed at the slippery edges, his muffled, panicked screams bubbling up through the thick mud.
Harley shrieked, stumbling backward. She didn't reach out to help him; she just stared in horror at her ruined designer shoes.
Two construction workers dropped their tools and sprinted over. They grabbed Dax by the shoulders and hauled him out of the muck.
Dax was a monster made of gray sludge. Cement coated his hair, filled his nose, and plastered his eyes shut. He fell to his knees, coughing violently, spitting out gritty mouthfuls of mud.
"I'll kill her! I'll sue her!" Dax gagged, wiping blindly at his burning eyes.
Jessie reached into her pocket and pulled out a wet wipe. She slowly, methodically cleaned the fingers that had touched Dax's wrist.
She walked over to Harley. She stood tall, casting a shadow over the trembling fake heiress.
"Keep your dog on a leash," Jessie whispered, her voice dropping to a chilling register. "If he barks at me again, he won't be eating cement. He'll be eating dirt. Six feet under."
Harley's entire body went rigid. The raw, unfiltered murder in Jessie's eyes paralyzed her vocal cords. She could only nod, her face pale with genuine terror.
Jessie tossed the used wet wipe. It landed perfectly on top of Dax's cement-covered head.
She turned and walked to the backyard shed, retrieved the small wooden box containing the farming journals, and walked right out the front gates without looking back.
Jessie got back into the waiting cab. "Appalachian Mountains. Drive."
As the cab merged onto the highway, Jessie pulled out her phone. She dialed the number of a premier industrial contractor.
"I need twenty military-grade, heavy-duty shipping containers," Jessie ordered the moment the line connected. "Billed to the black card I'm providing."
The contractor paused. "Ma'am, that takes weeks to source-"
"I am paying triple your rush fee," Jessie cut him off. "I need them retrofitted with thermal insulation, anti-corrosion coating, and concealed ventilation systems. Delivered in three days."
"Yes, ma'am. Consider it done."
She hung up and immediately dialed a modular housing supplier, ordering dozens of rapid-assembly wooden cabin kits.
She stared out the window as the city skyline faded into rolling hills. Her Personal Biome was massive, but it was just raw, black earth. She needed the containers and cabins to build a structured, secure base inside her spatial dimension.
Hours later, the cab dropped her off at the rusted iron gates of the Appalachian estate.
Jessie unlocked the gate and walked through the overgrown weeds. The main stone house was old but built like a fortress. She stepped inside and saw that the dust had been cleared. Kenneth's men had already prepped the staging area.
Her phone buzzed. It was Arthur.
"Miss Rhodes, the first batch of supplies has arrived at a discreet warehouse five miles from your location."
Jessie's pulse quickened. "Send me the coordinates. And pull all your security personnel out of the perimeter. I want the site completely empty."
"Understood."
Jessie went to the master bedroom, changed into a set of black tactical clothes, and grabbed the keys to an old, beat-up pickup truck left in the garage.
The sun dipped below the horizon as Jessie drove the truck down the winding mountain road, heading straight for her first massive haul of survival gear.