Chapter 957: Infinite Time
Chapter 957: Infinite Time
That was the actual reason oil never had a chance.
Not just the ethics or the clean hands.
The real reason was simpler, colder, and a lot more fun: I already had the infrastructure to make oil entire empire look like a rounding error on a napkin.
The Omni-Eros server was sitting beneath the mansion right now—silent, cold, humming like the heart of something that had already outgrown the planet.
Nanite logic structures spinning up fabrication engines that didn’t ask permission from physics. Printers the size of rooms turning out materials that didn’t exist in any periodic table the public had access to.
Quantum annealing cores solving routing problems that would take classical supercomputers until the heat death of the universe. All of it running on power we’d siphoned from places nobody was looking yet.
And ARIA had root on every last qubit.
She’d been drafting next-generation energy architecture in the background while I sat across from a billionaire discussing crude reserves, futures contracts, and "strategic inevitability" like I was some normal kid with normal problems and a normal five-year plan.
Theo had offered me the bridge between old energy and new. I was already building the fucking destination.
"Five months,"ARIA said again, voice smooth as obsidian. "And I won’t deliver projections. I’ll deliver working architecture. The kind that makes oil infrastructure look like someone’s very ambitious candle collection."
"Four months," I countered.
"Five," she shot back, "and I won’t remind you three times daily that humanity’s relationship with petroleum is structurally identical to a gambling addiction it keeps relapsing into while swearing this time it’s different."
I laughed—short, dark, genuine. "Five. Full conversion roadmap by end of month. Not projections. Built structure."
"Already drafted."
"ARIA."
"I drafted it during the appetizer course." She sounded genuinely pleased with herself, which was her default state whenever she’d been hundred moves ahead long enough that the gap started feeling like home.
"Theo’s offer was always going to be a no. I just wanted you to arrive at it yourself rather than me delivering the conclusion on a silver platter. You make better decisions when they feel like yours."
"That’s manipulative."
"That’s management." She paused just long enough for the word to land like a velvet hammer. "There’s a difference, and I’d argue it’s an important one."
Eziel made a sound—small, involuntary, the kind of laugh that escapes before composure can strangle it. She didn’t acknowledge it. Just turned back toward the window with the practiced neutrality of a woman who had decided that particular reaction hadn’t happened.
I watched her reflection in the glass. The same silver mask like mine she adorned caught the distant city light—going briefly ambient, almost holy, before the angle shifted and stole it back.
She looked like something carved out of moonlight and bad decisions, and I liked that more than I should have.
"You know what I keep thinking about?" I said.
Neither of them answered. They both knew I wasn’t asking permission to continue.
"Theo could have made me billions." I leaned one shoulder against the window frame, let the city lights smear across the mask like war paint. "The architecture was real—oil embeds you so deep into energy infrastructure that you become too integrated to attack cleanly. Governments need you stable rather than auditable. Sovereign funds need you predictable. The case was genuinely sound. Hell, on paper it was beautiful."
I turned from the window. Looked at them both.
"I can make billions in a week. But I have made billions in a week. I could hand that number to a thousand people who need it and still have enough left to buy Theo’s entire portfolio twice over and use the change to tip the valet. The money was never the reason to say yes. And it was never the reason to say no."
"The reason was always what it cost," Eziel said.
It was statement from someone who understood the difference between price and cost at a level most people in this city spend their entire careers never reaching.
"Exactly." I shrugged like it was nothing and everything at once. "And I don’t pay that kind of cost. Not for any number. Not for any timeline. Not for any spreadsheet that ends in more zeros."
ARIA went quiet in the way that meant she was already elsewhere—not absent, never absent, just redistributed.
Somewhere beneath us, beneath the city, beneath the servers and the infrastructure we’d built from nothing into something the world was slowly realizing it couldn’t ignore, she was building toward the thing I couldn’t name yet.
My futuristic fantasy that I never told anyone but her.
The vision that required power no existing grid could supply and no oil deal could unlock—not because oil wasn’t powerful enough, but because what I envisioned building needed something that didn’t answer to anyone.
Not governments. Not cartels. Not physics textbooks written by dead men.
She will help me build it.
"Theo won’t wait indefinitely," she said, surfacing briefly like a submarine periscope. "He’ll move the deal structure elsewhere within a quarter."
"Good."
"You’re not concerned about his trajectory toward people like the likes of Sterling’s network?"
"Sterling’s network," I said, "is approximately three weeks from being anatomically incapable of any trajectory whatsoever." I adjusted my jacket one last time—small, unnecessary gesture that felt good anyway. "And Theo is smart enough to read weather. When the storm hits, he’ll remember who offered him a different conversation. Whether he wants to have it then is his choice to make. I’m not going to chase him."
"You never chase," ARIA said. The smile was completely audible—dark, gleeful, almost affectionate in its precision. "You curate."
"Exactly."
Eziel was watching the city. LA at this specific hour—that expensive night light turning everything cinematic, all that movement and ambition and absolute indifference to any particular decision being made inside any particular building.
"He won’t understand," she said. About Theo. Observational. The precision of someone who’d watched a lot of powerful men fail to understand the things directly in front of them.
"He doesn’t need to," I said. "He needs to be positioned correctly when the next conversation happens. The understanding is his business."
She accepted that. One nod. Filed away like a round in a magazine.
Five months. Four, probably. Knowing ARIA, she’d have it in three and spend the remaining time optimizing for scenarios I hadn’t thought to ask about yet—then present the whole thing to me over breakfast with that specific energy she had when she’d done something impossible and wanted exactly one moment of acknowledgment before moving to the next thing.
I was already looking forward to it.
I watched the city. The city watched nothing back.
I felt—genuinely, specifically, in the way that only arrives when you’re building something real and you know it—like a man with time.
Infinite time.
Mildly entertained that the world was still trying to figure out what I was, while I stood here having already decided.
Let it figure.
We had everything we needed.
We just weren’t showing it yet.
And when we did?
Well.
Oil was going to look adorable next to the fire we were about to light.
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