For 30+ advance/early chapters : p atreon.com/Ritesh_Jadhav0869
At a charity auction dinner...
"Margaret, I heard your son Dale got into Harvard. Congratulations!"
"Oh yes, we're so thrilled!"
"You must be so proud. I keep hoping my Jennifer will follow in his footsteps!"
Several elegantly dressed women surrounded Margaret Sterling at the exclusive charity gala, their conversation flowing over champagne and canapés.
Though everyone knew the Sterling family had made substantial donations to Harvard's endowment fund over the years, and leveraged every social connection to secure Dale's admission.
"Well, we've always believed in giving our children every advantage," Margaret said with practiced modesty. "Education is such an investment in their future."
"Absolutely. Look at how well Brandon turned out after Wharton. Building Titan Games into such a success - you must be so proud!"
"The company's doing wonderfully. We're seeing tremendous growth in the VR gaming sector," Margaret replied, her tone carrying just the right note of understated pride that marked old money confidence.
"Oh, look who's here," someone murmured, glancing toward the entrance. "Sarah Morrison. Doesn't she usually skip these events?"
"Well, she can hardly refuse Victoria's invitation," Margaret said with a slight edge to her voice, referring to their hostess, one of the city's most prominent philanthropists.
Margaret moved closer as Sarah approached their circle, champagne flute in hand.
"Sarah, darling, how lovely to see you!" Margaret's smile was perfectly calibrated - warm enough to seem genuine, cool enough to maintain social distance.
Sarah returned the greeting politely but without enthusiasm. These weren't her people, and everyone knew it.
"So tell us, what have you been up to lately?" one of the women asked with the kind of bright interest that masked pure gossip hunger.
"Oh, you know, the usual. Volunteer work, some reading, spending time in the garden," Sarah replied diplomatically.
"We were just discussing college plans for our children," another woman chimed in. "It's never too early to start thinking about applications and preparation, don't you think? Though I suppose Alex is already in university, isn't he?"
Sarah nodded. "Yes, he's doing well."
Margaret's smile sharpened slightly. "How wonderful. Though I have to say, we've always found that keeping young people busy with productive activities is so important. Idle time can lead to... unfortunate habits."
The implication hung in the air . Everyone in their social circle knew about Alex's gaming problems, the financial troubles, the family drama. In their world, such scandals spread faster than stock tips.
Sarah's expression remained composed, but her grip on her champagne flute tightened. "Every family has their challenges, Margaret. I'm sure you understand that better than most."
The temperature in their little circle seemed to drop several degrees. Margaret's own family had its share of problems - Brandon's rumored inappropriate relationships with employees, Dale's increasingly violent outbursts that had required expensive legal interventions to suppress.
"Of course," Margaret replied smoothly. "Though I do think structure and discipline are so important for young people. Perhaps that's why we've always been grateful for the character-building aspects of competitive academics and athletics."
"Mmm," Sarah murmured, then delivered her counter-strike with precision. "Though sometimes I worry that too much pressure on young people can lead to... acting out. Especially when they're far from family supervision. But I'm sure Dale is thriving at Harvard."
Margaret's smile became glacial. Everyone present knew Dale's "thriving" involved regular visits from campus security and substantial donations to keep his more violent incidents from becoming public knowledge.
"Well," Sarah continued brightly, "I should go find Victoria and thank her for the invitation. Enjoy your evening, ladies."
She glided away, leaving Margaret fuming behind her social mask and the other women practically vibrating with the thrill of having witnessed a perfectly executed social warfare exchange.
---
"First place, first place, boss, we're in first place!" Alex, sitting through a particularly dull economics lecture, nearly jumped out of his seat when David's excited voice came through his earpiece.
The professor droned on about market equilibrium while Alex's heart raced with adrenaline. He'd known Avatar was climbing the rankings, but actually hitting number one felt surreal.
"I'm in class but I'll be there as soon as I can," Alex whispered, trying not to attract attention from the professor who happened to be one of his father's old colleagues.
He discretely checked his smartwatch, and there it was - Avatar sitting proudly at the top of the New World Competition leaderboard.
The moment class ended, Alex sprinted for the parking garage. Twenty minutes later, he burst through the studio doors to find his entire team celebrating with cheap champagne and pizza.
"We actually did it!" Sophie shouted, throwing confetti that she'd apparently made from shredded printouts.
"Look at these numbers," Tom said, pulling up the analytics dashboard. "We're not just first - we're dominating. Our engagement metrics are through the roof."
Jake appeared from the garage below, motor oil still on his hands. "Holy shit, you guys actually beat the big corporations?"
"Not just beat them," David said gleefully. "We absolutely destroyed them. ET Company is probably having emergency board meetings right now."
Alex felt a strange mix of emotions. Part of him was thrilled to have beaten ET - he'd been a fan of their games for years and never imagined competing with them, let alone winning. But another part of him was terrified. Being number one meant being a target.
His phone buzzed with a video call from Danny, who appeared on screen surrounded by what looked like a party in full swing at his maid cafe.
"Alex! You magnificent bastard!" Danny shouted over the noise. "Jake and I have been telling everyone we know about your game. We basically did all your marketing for you!"
"Sure you did," Alex laughed. "But seriously, thanks for the support. When I get the prize money, dinner's on me. Anywhere you want."
"I'm holding you to that," Danny grinned. "Jake's already picking out the most expensive steakhouse in the city."
While Alex celebrated with his team, crisis meetings were erupting in corporate boardrooms across two continents.
At Titan Games, Brandon Sterling was pacing his office like a caged animal. "How did some nobody startup with a two-month-old account beat us? We've spent millions on this campaign!"
His project managers exchanged nervous glances. Nobody wanted to be the one to explain that sometimes, authentic creative vision trumped corporate marketing budgets.
"Sir," one brave soul ventured, "their content quality is genuinely exceptional. The user reviews are—"
"I don't want to hear about their fucking reviews!" Brandon exploded. "I want solutions! Mobilize everything we have. Buy every available ad slot, hire every available influencer, do whatever it takes to get back on top!"
Meanwhile, at ET Company's headquarters, a similar scene was playing out in their glass-walled conference room.
"Gentlemen," the CEO said quietly, his calm tone somehow more ominous than shouting, "we have a problem. A startup has just made us look like amateurs in front of the entire industry."
The silence stretched until someone finally spoke: "What are your orders, sir?"
"Total war. No holds barred. Avatar dies, or we all look for new jobs."
PLZ THROW POWERSTONES.