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Chapter 16 - Chapter 16: Danny's Gambit

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Three days later, Danny walked into the executive suite of Meridian Corp with an expression of humble determination that would have shocked anyone who knew him well.

"Dad, got a minute?" he asked, knocking on the open door of the corner office.

Richard Reeves looked up from his quarterly reports with genuine surprise. "Well, I'll be damned. Did hell freeze over, or are you actually visiting me during business hours?"

"Very funny," Danny said, though he was smiling. "Actually, I wanted to talk to you about business strategy. I've been thinking about my restaurants, and I realize I might have been... overly confident about knowing everything."

Richard's eyebrows shot up. In twenty-five years of fatherhood, he'd never heard Danny admit ignorance about anything, let alone ask for business advice.

"You feeling alright, son? Should I call a doctor?"

"I'm serious, Dad. Look, I know we haven't always seen eye to eye on business philosophy, but you built this company from nothing. Maybe I could learn something from your experience."

Richard leaned back in his leather chair, studying his son with new interest. Meridian Corp was indeed his life's work—starting with a single grocery store and growing into a nationwide chain of supermarkets, restaurants, and food processing facilities. Nearly 80,000 employees across the country.

"Alright," Richard said, gesturing to the sitting area. "Tell me about your current situation. What specific challenges are you facing?"

For the next hour, Danny played the role of eager student perfectly. He discussed his restaurants' profit margins, staffing challenges, and customer retention strategies. Richard found himself genuinely enjoying the conversation—his son was actually sharp when he focused.

"The key insight you're missing," Richard explained, "is that successful businesses aren't just about good products. They're about systems, scalability, and understanding your customer acquisition costs versus lifetime value."

A knock interrupted them. "Mr. Reeves? The marketing team is here for the quarterly review."

"Right, I'll be there in five minutes," Richard stood up. "Danny, I hate to cut this short, but duty calls. If you're not in a rush, stick around and we'll grab lunch. Haven't done that in... well, too long."

"Sounds great, Dad. Take your time with your meeting."

After Richard left, Danny waited exactly thirty seconds before moving to his father's computer. The company's internal messaging system was still logged in—exactly what he'd been hoping for.

"Alex, buddy, I really hope this works," Danny muttered as he accessed the executive communications portal.

He crafted a message in his father's typical corporate tone:

TO: All Department Heads FROM: Richard Reeves, CEO RE: Market Research Initiative - Immediate Action Required

Team,

We need comprehensive market intelligence on the gaming industry for a potential expansion opportunity. All employees should immediately create accounts on "Infinite Realms" platform and evaluate the content called "Avatar" - provide detailed user reviews from a consumer perspective.

This is a high-priority competitive analysis. All department heads confirm completion within 24 hours. Employees without VR access should use company-provided facilities or expense café rentals.

Execute immediately.

-RR

The responses came back within minutes:

"Understood, Mr. Reeves." "Will implement immediately." "Confirming receipt - rolling out to all staff." "Marketing team mobilizing now."

Danny grinned as he watched the cascade of confirmations. Meridian Corp's corporate culture was built on rapid execution of executive directives. By tomorrow morning, tens of thousands of employees would be logging into Infinite Realms and reviewing Avatar.

He quickly deleted the sent message from the system logs, cleared the browser history, and slipped out of the office just as his father was returning from his meeting.

"Ready for lunch?" Richard asked.

"Absolutely. And Dad? Thanks for the business advice. Really helpful."

"Anytime, son. Maybe we should do this more often."

Danny smiled, knowing he'd probably be grounded for the rest of the year when his father discovered what had just happened.

24 Hours Later

The "Pandora Defense Force" Discord server was buzzing with activity. What had started as a small group of frustrated Avatar fans had exploded into a grassroots movement with over 5,000 members across multiple platforms.

ModeratorMike: Avatar's back up to 9.2 stars and climbing! We're at #2 on the leaderboard!

PandoraWarrior: Holy shit, we're actually doing it! Power to the people!

AvatarSupporter91: Everyone in my dorm has reviewed it now. Even got my professor to try it - she's obsessed with the environmental themes

GameFightClub: My whole family is playing now. Mom keeps asking me how to tame banshees lol

CorporateWhistle: Guys, something weird is happening at my work. Management suddenly required everyone to play Avatar and write reviews. They're treating it like a KPI. Never seen anything like it

ModeratorMike: What company?

CorporateWhistle: Meridian Corp - the grocery chain. My manager said it came directly from the CEO's office

PandoraWarrior: Wait, MERIDIAN CORP? That's like 80,000 employees nationwide!

AvatarSupporter91: Dude, the CEO must be a hardcore Avatar fan. That's incredible!

GameFightClub: We're not fighting alone! The corporate world is waking up to what Avatar represents

TechIndustryGuy: This is becoming bigger than just a game review war. Avatar is turning into a symbol of creative independence versus corporate conformity

CorporateWhistle: All I know is my whole department spent yesterday playing instead of working and nobody got fired. Best workday ever

ModeratorMike: Keep pushing, everyone. We're proving that authentic passion beats manufactured hype

Back at Stormwind Studios, Alex was experiencing the strangest mix of emotions he'd ever felt. The spontaneous fan support was genuinely moving—thousands of people he'd never met were fighting for his creation purely because they believed in it.

But he was also facing harsh realities about the business side of success.

Alex hadn't been idle during these past few days. He'd contacted multiple investment companies, hoping to secure funding to win this capital war.

It was inconvenient for him to negotiate directly, so he'd asked David to handle the meetings on his behalf. But capital was always greedy, and David wasn't skilled at negotiation. With Avatar's current situation looking precarious, the investors sensed weakness.

The terms they offered were nearly impossible to accept. According to their conditions, Alex would have to hand over most of his future earnings to these capitalists.

"Here's our position," the latest investor had explained with corporate coldness. "Avatar shows promise, but you're in a war you can't win without serious backing. We're prepared to invest, but we'll need majority control and a seventy percent revenue share on all future projects."

Alex felt trapped between impossible choices - accept predatory terms that would essentially make him an employee of his own company, or watch Avatar get destroyed by corporate warfare he couldn't afford to fight.

THROW POWER STONES PLZ.

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