From Idler to Tech Tycoon: Earth-Chapter 140: Battle Royale
Chapter 140: Chapter 140: Battle Royale
One week later, deep within the Amazon rainforest, Nicolau Silva’s compound lay nestled like a hidden scar. It was a sprawling, self-sufficient hub of illicit operations: sturdy wooden cabins housed his men, two large corrugated steel warehouses hummed with activity, and a constant rotation of heavy trucks rumbled in and out. Guerilla armed forces, a mix of hardened young adults and grizzled veterans, patrolled the perimeter and manned watchtowers. Their attire varied, but a unifying splash of crimson—a red hat, a scarlet bandana, or a blood-red T-shirt—marked them as belonging to the formidable Commando Vermelho.
Inside his spartan, yet strategically placed, office on the second floor of the main cabin, Nicolau Silva sat hunched over a cluttered desk. The humid air hung heavy, but his focus was absolute. One of his encrypted phones, a relic of cutting-edge covert communications, vibrated. Simultaneously, his personal phone, buried beneath a stack of ledgers, chimed. He picked up the encrypted device first.
A text message blinked on the screen: [in Brazilian Portuguese: CEM MILHÕES DE DÓLARES AMERICANOS FORAM ENVIADOS. SINAL DE BOA VONTADE. ELE ESTÁ CHEGANDO.]
One hundred million US dollars. A sign of goodwill and future relationship. He is coming.
Nicolau’s mind raced. Months ago, he had received a similar, anonymous text—a terse message of "goodwill"—followed by an undeniable deposit of twenty million clean US dollars into a private, untraceable bank account.
Was it the CIA, trying to turn him? The FBI, playing a long game? Or, a chilling thought, was it somehow connected to those "aliens" his father had spoken of in hushed, haunted tones before his death, tales of beings that manipulated the world from the shadows?
The sheer fact that this money was impeccably clean, unlike the one billion reals of dirty money his organization had pulled in last year from both domestic and international operations, baffled him. And now, another hundred million.
How rich is this guy?!
He had been preparing for this moment for months. Recruitment had ramped up; new blood, loyal to him, swelled Commando Vermelho’s ranks. He had assumed it was one of the rival cartels—perhaps the Italian mob, finally making a play, or a ruthless Mexican cartel expanding their reach. Whatever it was, he was ready. He wouldn’t give an inch without a brutal fight.
Over the past few months, since the PCC (Primeiro Comando da Capital) and other smaller gangs had also received their own anonymous, albeit smaller, sums from an unknown sender, turf wars had exploded across Brazil. São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro had become battlegrounds, rival factions duking it out for territory and influence. Nicolau wondered if the sender’s true intention was to let them fight, then pick up the pieces, consolidate power.
Whatever it was, he had a grim hunch it wasn’t good. So, with cunning foresight, he had already begun storing his refined produce and reserves in a network of deep underground tunnels, particularly in sections designated UG-4 and UG-5, in case an all-out war erupted. Better safe than sorry.
A sharp knock at his office door startled him. Before he could respond, a tall, lean man, clad in a faded red T-shirt and gripping an AK-47, entered. It was one of his most trusted lieutenants.
"Boss," the lieutenant said in rapid Brazilian Portuguese,
"Chefe, nossas cargas para o comboio foram carregadas. / Boss, our stocks for the convoy have been loaded." Nicolau nodded.
"Distribua metade para nossos tenentes nas cidades. A outra metade para armazenamento na UG-4. Não mova nada para a UG-5 a menos que eu dê a ordem direta. / Distribute half to our forward lieutenants in the cities. The other half for storage at UG-4. Don’t move anything to UG-5 unless I give the direct order."
The man nodded, turning to leave.
"What’s the status in the cities?" Nicolau pressed, his eyes still fixed on the data slate.
"Ainda um caos, chefe. Amigos dos Amigos e Terceiro Comando Puro têm se enfrentado implacavelmente. O PCC ainda não fez um grande movimento. / Still chaos, boss. Amigos dos Amigos and Terceiro Comando Puro have been duking it out relentlessly. PCC has still yet to make a major move."
Nicolau grimaced. Commando Vermelho had controlled a significant portion of territory for years, and while their relationship with TCP (Terceiro Comando Puro) was sour—especially since former members of his own had defected to TCP—the PCC was rapidly rising, gaining influence. They had even been working closely with PCC lately, a fragile alliance forged in the urban concrete.
"Liberem lentamente nossos estoques da Subterrânea-4 e Subterrânea-5," Nicolau ordered. "Se os compradores ainda quiserem mais, nós daremos a eles. Mantenha o fluxo constante, mas controlado. / Slowly release our stocks from Underground-4 and Underground-5. If buyers still want more, we’ll give it to them. Keep the flow steady, but controlled." The lieutenant nodded again and walked out.
The next few minutes were eerily quiet. Then, the silence shattered.
The compound erupted. Pickup trucks, their windows blacked out, and armored SUVs and cruisers screeched into view, guns blazing. Their streaking headlights cut through the jungle’s perpetual twilight as they opened fire. Chaos exploded. Most of Nicolau’s armed men, hardened by years of skirmishes, immediately dropped to cover, returning fire with disciplined fury.
Nicolau, his instincts honed by a lifetime of violence, didn’t hesitate. He snatched his Galil from beneath his desk, a familiar weight in his hands, and sprinted to the second-floor window, immediately laying down suppressing fire.
"Esses filhos da puta do TCP! / These fucking TCP bastards!" he roared, a primal rage tearing through him.
"Eles têm sido bastante ousados ultimamente! / They’ve been rather bold lately!"
He saw it then—one of the attackers, a hulking figure, aimed an RPG-7 directly at his office window. Nicolau’s eyes widened. He squeezed the trigger of his Galil, a desperate burst of fire, but it was too late.
The rocket whizzed through the air, a screaming projectile coming straight for him. He dove instinctively, rolling underneath his heavy wooden desk just as the world imploded in a deafening BOOM! The office exploded, shrapnel ripping through the air, plaster and dust raining down.
Outside, enraged by the audacious attack, Nicolau’s men doubled down, their combined fire cutting down the attackers. The tall, lean lieutenant, his face grim, rushed into Nicolau’s ruined office, clearing the smoke with a wave of his hand.
"Chefe! Você está bem?! / Boss! Are you alright?!"
Nicolau coughed, covered in dust, but otherwise unharmed. He slammed his fist on the desk.
"Estou bem, seu idiota! Apenas frustrado! / I’m fine, you idiot! Just frustrated!"
Suddenly, a young man, a runner from the forward observation posts, sprinted into the compound below, his voice hoarse with urgency.
"Chefe! O TCP começou a atacar nossos territórios em São Paulo e Rio de Janeiro! Todas as frentes estão sob forte ataque! / Boss! The TCP has started attacking our territories in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro! All fronts are under heavy assault!"
"Coloque os tenentes na linha! / Get the lieutenants on the line!" Nicolau barked, scrambling from his desk, grabbing a fresh magazine for his Galil. [Reforcem São Paulo e Rio! Agora! / Translation: Reinforce São Paulo and Rio! Now!]
Then, another shout from the perimeter. "Chefe! Um comboio! Está vindo para cá! / Boss! A convoy! It’s coming here!"
The remaining men scrambled, fortifying their positions, preparing for a protracted siege. Nicolau cursed under his breath. The attack had truly begun. Not just a skirmish, but a coordinated offensive. The TCP had found his compound, and worse, his second primary production sites for cocaine and meth. This wasn’t just a turf war; it was an attempt to cripple him. He bellowed,
[Todos os caminhões carregados com produtos! Mova para a UG-4! O resto de vocês, ganhem tempo para os cozinheiros evacuarem! / All trucks loaded with produce! Move to UG-4! The rest of you, buy us some time! Evacuate the cooks and the processing teams to the tunnels!"
The compound transformed into a desperate beehive, the scent of gunpowder mixing with the metallic tang of fear and the acrid smell of burning wood.
High above the chaos, at an unassailable altitude of 30,000 feet, the CRVT - Richie hung in the stratosphere. Inside its command bridge, Richard and Lina watched the unfolding pandemonium on the holographic displays, the real-time feeds from Lina’s newly deployed network of stealth drones painting a grim, yet highly detailed, picture of the battle below. Every bullet trace, every explosive flash, every scrambling figure was visible with startling clarity.
"Is Ciano in position?" Richard asked, his voice calm, almost detached, amidst the digital representation of the firefight.
"Yes, Sir Richard. As per your instructions, he was deployed discreetly in the primary exfil zone fifteen minutes ago." Lina’s eyes, though fixed on the data, seemed to hold a flicker of interest as she observed the escalating conflict.
"Good," Richard said, a slow, predatory smile spreading across his face. "Now we wait. We have to thank the ’traitor’ for giving us this exquisite opportunity."
Lina’s analysis was immediate. "It was predetermined, Sir Richard. The Terceiro Comando Puro had been under increasing pressure from the Primeiro Comando da Capital for territory. The infusion of capital you provided to TCP merely accelerated their inevitable expansion. A conflict of this scale was bound to happen once they had the resources to challenge established powers."
Richard chuckled, a dry, satisfied sound. "I never would’ve thought that sending 100 million each to them instead of just to Commando Vermelho would result in such... immediate and thorough self-cannibalization." He leaned back, observing the digital explosions. "My original plan was to gather them all together under one single banner, consolidate them into a unified force. But I guess this is fine too. A chaotic, bloody proving ground."
"Indeed, Sir Richard," Lina confirmed. "The PCC, however, has proven quite strategically astute. While these factions are duking it out in direct confrontations, they’re secretly gathering their forces and consolidating control over the territories of smaller, less significant gangs. Since those gangs have largely stayed out of the current large-scale turf wars, the PCC assumes they won’t move against them, thus maintaining a crucial element of surprise for their eventual expansion."
Back in the inferno of Nicolau’s compound, the sounds of battle intensified. The second convoy of heavily armed TCP attackers had arrived, lining up along the dirt path that served as the compound’s main access. They took cover amidst the dense trees, a formidable firing line. Nicolau’s remaining men were pinned, trapped within the compound, fighting a desperate holding action.
The trucks, laden with precious produce, had already vanished down the opposite road, a cloud of dust marking their escape. One of the enemy’s pickup trucks from the second convoy, heavily armored with makeshift panel covers, blazed with a mounted Pecheneg machine gun, laying down suppressive fire.
Nicolau, still firing his Galil from his blown-out office, aimed at the head of a TCP gunner who foolishly peeked over the armored plate of the machine gun. He fired. The enemy gunner dropped, and the heavy machine gun fire from the convoy momentarily ceased before his men fired back with renewed vigor.
Below, amidst the frantic exchange of gunfire, the tall, lean man, Jose—Nicolau’s close, loyal lieutenant—grabbed a grenade launcher. He was taking cover behind an empty supply truck, meticulously poking out from behind its chassis to fire explosive rounds back at the convoy. Explosions erupted, concussive blasts tearing through the jungle, adding to the cacophony of the firefight.
Jose sprinted up to Nicolau’s shattered office, his face grim.
"Chefe, temos que ir! Mais comboios chegarão, será tarde demais! / Boss, we have to go! More convoys will arrive, it will be too late!"
Nicolau nodded, his jaw tight. "Eu sei! / Translation: I know!"
He turned to one of the remaining, dazed men.
"Diga aos tenentes para recuar se ficar muito pesado! Protejam a evacuação! / Tell the lieutenants to retreat if it’s too much! Protect the evacuation!"
Then, Nicolau and Jose turned and rushed towards the back of the cabin, disappearing into the dense, encroaching jungle. Jose was behind him, a shadow in the dim light, constantly watching their back, anticipating any flanking enemies. They ran deeper into the forest, the sounds of gunfire slowly fading behind them, becoming distant echoes of the battle.
The silence of the jungle began to close in, broken only by their heavy breathing and the rustle of leaves. They pushed through thick undergrowth, the air thick with humidity. Then, without warning, a sudden, ƒгeewebnovёl_com
BANG!
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