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Chapter 69 - Chapter 68: I Won't Be Defeated

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Before long, the Morrison family driver arrived at Stormwind Studios. The man had been with the family for fifteen years, watching Alex grow from a rebellious teenager into a successful entrepreneur. Today, his weathered face showed deep concern as Sarah Morrison had sent him to bring her son home safely.

Alex understood that being with family right now was the best choice, so he agreed to go with the driver, though part of him wanted to stay barricaded in his office forever.

But just as the black town car pulled out of the office complex's security gates, chaos erupted. A mob of thirty or forty people suddenly rushed from where they'd been waiting behind parked cars and landscaping. They surrounded the vehicle in seconds, pounding on windows with frightening intensity, pointing at Alex through the glass, faces contorted with rage as they screamed obscenities and actually spit at the windows.

The driver, a former military man, immediately locked all doors and reached for his phone to call 911, but the crowd pressed so close he couldn't move without hitting someone.

Jake and Danny, following in their own car as protective escort, immediately jumped out to help. But two men against forty-plus enraged parents was hopeless. Jake's face darkened with fury as someone shoved him hard, his fists clenching and unclenching. Every muscle in his body screamed to fight back, to protect his friend, but he forced himself to stay calm. Any violence now would only make things worse for Alex—the headlines would write themselves.

Danny tried reasoning with the crowd, but his words were drowned in the cacophony of hatred. Someone threw a coffee cup at their car, brown liquid splashing across the windshield.

Thankfully, building security rushed out, having seen the commotion on their cameras. Six guards formed a protective barrier, professionally but firmly pushing the crowd back, creating just enough space for the car to inch forward.

Through the car window, Alex watched the distorted faces—suburban moms who probably volunteered at bake sales, middle-aged fathers who coached little league, ordinary people transformed into something ugly and primitive by manufactured rage. Their curses followed the car like a physical presence, words meant to wound and destroy. For the first time in either life, he truly understood how terrifying mob mentality could be, how gossip could destroy lives, how public opinion could become a weapon sharper than any blade.

"Murderer!" someone screamed. "Child killer!"

"You destroyed my son!"

"Blood on your hands!"

People hear what they want to hear, believe what fits their worldview. They lack critical thinking, can't distinguish truth from lies, and unknowingly become tools for those who manipulate them. Each person thinks they're just one voice, one snowflake in the avalanche, never realizing they're part of the disaster crushing innocent lives beneath its weight.

The car finally broke free, accelerating quickly but safely away. In the side mirror, Alex could see the crowd giving chase like zombies in some apocalyptic movie, still screaming, still gesturing violently with raised fists and twisted faces. Their hatred followed like a curse, making his skin crawl and his stomach churn.

He sat in absolute silence, watching pedestrians through tinted windows as they drove through the city. Every glance felt hostile now. A woman walking her dog seemed to stare too long. A man at a crosswalk appeared to recognize the car. Every casual look seemed to carry judgment, disgust, the potential for violence. Alex closed his eyes, wishing he could disappear, shrink into nothingness, hide somewhere nobody could find him, escape all the stares and whispers that followed him like ghosts.

"You alright back there, Mr. Alex?" the driver asked gently, meeting his eyes in the rearview mirror with concern.

"I'm fine, George," Alex lied, his voice barely above a whisper.

The car took several deliberate wrong turns, ensuring they weren't followed, before finally reaching the Morrison estate twenty minutes later. The ornate gates opened automatically, closing firmly behind them with a clang. Inside the walls, surrounded by manicured gardens and familiar sights, Alex suddenly felt he could breathe again. This was the power of home—a sanctuary from the world's cruelty, a fortress where hatred couldn't reach.

His parents and Victoria were waiting in the living room, arranged on the sofas but clearly too anxious to sit properly. They'd obviously been pacing until they heard the car arrive. His mother's eyes were red-rimmed, his father's jaw set in that way that meant he'd been making angry phone calls, and Victoria looked ready to personally fight anyone who hurt her little brother.

"Mom, Dad, Vic—you're all here," Alex managed a weak smile that fooled nobody.

Sarah immediately pulled him into a fierce hug that nearly crushed his ribs. She didn't speak for a long moment, just held him like she had when he was small and scared of thunderstorms. The embrace said everything—a mother's primal need to protect her child from harm, her fury at those causing him pain, her desperate wish to somehow make everything better with love alone.

But some wounds couldn't be healed by a mother's love. Cyberbullying left scars that went deeper than physical injuries, marks on the soul that wouldn't fade easily. Since the incident began, Sarah and Marcus had mobilized every resource—the best lawyers money could buy, PR firms with sterling reputations, political connections made over decades. Sarah especially worried about Alex's mental state, remembering with crystal clarity how close they'd come to losing him during his gaming addiction phase. That trauma still haunted her dreams.

"Son," Marcus stepped forward as Sarah finally released him, placing a firm hand on Alex's shoulder with the weight of absolute certainty. "Remember—no matter what happens, your mother and I will always stand behind you. Always. They'd have to go through us to get to you, and that's not happening."

"And me," Victoria added fiercely, her usual teenage self-absorption replaced by protective fury. "We're family. We face this together. The Morrisons don't break easily. All these lies and rumors will be exposed eventually. Stay true to yourself. Keep your conscience clear. 

Hearing his family's support, Alex felt warmth cutting through the cold that had settled in his chest like ice. Today had been brutal beyond description—every cruel comment another wound, every accusation another scar.

But here, surrounded by family who loved him unconditionally, he remembered who he was beneath the public persona. He was a transmigrator, chosen by the system itself for reasons still unclear. He'd built an empire from nothing but knowledge and determination. He'd revolutionized gaming, changed lives, created art that moved millions. Was he really going to let some paid trolls and manipulated parents destroy everything he'd built?

Since arriving in this world, everything had gone smoothly—perhaps too smoothly. If he couldn't handle this setback, what kind of person was he? What had all his advantages been for if not to weather storms like this?

"Mom, Dad, Vic—don't worry. I won't be defeated." Steel entered his voice, the core of who he was reasserting itself. "Someone's trying to frame me, but the truth always surfaces. I'll find evidence. I'll clear my name. And I'll come out of this stronger."

Marcus nodded approvingly. "That's my boy. Now, your mother's made your favorite dinner. Let's eat and talk about anything except this mess for a while."

Across the city, in the Reeves mansion, Isabella sat cross-legged on her bed, laptop balanced on her knees, furiously typing responses to anti-Alex posts. Her fingers flew across the keyboard with passionate intensity.

"Why blame Stormwind instead of addressing the real issues with gaming addiction?"

"Every Stormwind game follows regulations perfectly. By your logic, romantic movies cause teen pregnancy and action films cause violence. Ban those too?"

"How can you blame a single studio for all gaming's problems? There are thousands of gaming companies making billions. Why target the one creating innovative content?"

"You fail as parents then blame others for your kids' behavior. Take some responsibility!"

"Stormwind brought prestige to American gaming. Major car manufacturers partner with them. They're creating jobs, generating billions in revenue, making our country a gaming powerhouse. And you attack them? Shameful!"

Isabella had tried staying quiet at first, not wanting to draw more attention to the situation or make herself a target. But reading the vicious attacks, the obvious lies, the coordinated hate campaign—she couldn't stand it anymore. Her protective instincts overrode her caution.

She knew many comments came from paid trolls, digital mercenaries spreading poison for pennies per post. But some were real parents who'd been deceived, people genuinely believing their children were at risk. They needed to hear the truth, even if they wouldn't listen. Most importantly, she needed to do something, anything, to help Alex. Even if it was just fighting trolls online until her fingers cramped and her eyes burned.

"Isabella?" Her mother knocked softly. "Dinner's ready."

"Not hungry!" Isabella called back, already engaging with another thread of lies.

In San Francisco, tech billionaire David answered his daughter's unexpected call with a fond smile. His daughter rarely asked for anything, being independently wealthy from her own AI startup.

"Of course, sweetheart. If the Morrison boy is your friend, I'll help. The tech community remembers who supported us when nobody else would. Marcus Morrison was one of the first traditional industry leaders to invest in Silicon Valley. Time to return the favor."

After hanging up, David made several calls to fellow tech giants. Social media algorithms could be adjusted. Trending topics could be influenced. The digital battlefield had its own weapons.

In an old-money estate in Boston, Margaret Worthington made her own call, her weathered hand steady on the antique phone despite her seventy years.

"Charles, you've heard about Sarah Morrison's son? The Sterling boy has overstepped dramatically. Help handle this situation. Discretely, of course."

Plz Throw Powerstones.

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