From Idler to Tech Tycoon: Earth-Chapter 185: First Strike

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Chapter 185: Chapter 185: First Strike

The city of New York, usually a symphony of honking taxis and distant sirens, had fallen into an unnerving hush. It was 07:47 AM on Day 3, and a collective breath seemed to be held across the globe. The "Black Files" leaks, the frantic 72-hour countdown – it had all led to this. Sarah, clutching her worn coffee mug on her tiny Brooklyn fire escape, watched the eastern sky. Her knuckles were white. Her phone, clutched in her other hand, displayed a dead signal.

Then, it happened.

Not a rumble, not a flash, but a deepening of the blue. A vast, impossible shadow began to creep across the sky, swallowing the nascent morning light. It wasn’t the soft grey of storm clouds; this was a hungry, unnatural blackness, spreading with an terrifying speed that defied meteorology. It started as a smudge on the horizon, then bloomed into an immense, continental-sized eclipse, blotting out the sun. The air grew cold, a sudden, inexplicable chill that sank into Sarah’s bones.

"Oh God," she whispered, the coffee mug slipping from her grasp and shattering on the concrete below. She didn’t even flinch. Her gaze was fixed upwards, where the impossible had become horrifyingly real. The Krill Motherships. They weren’t just in orbit; they were orbit, a silent, terrifying blanket that extinguished the sun.

Below, the city erupted. A single, piercing scream tore through the pre-dawn quiet, followed by another, then a cacophony. Car horns blared, frantic and without direction. People spilled from apartment buildings, their faces pale, eyes wide with a terror that mirrored Sarah’s own. "It’s here... they’re here!" someone shrieked, the words swallowed by the rising tide of panic. "The countdown was real!" A woman in a bathrobe stumbled into the street, fumbling with her phone, trying desperately to reach someone, anyone. The sheer scale of the shadow, the silent, crushing weight of it, felt like the world itself was holding its breath before a final, fatal gasp.

Miles away, nestled in the desolate plains of Nevada, the scene outside the designated DUMB entrance was a maelstrom of human desperation. Sergeant Miller, his face a mask of grim resolve, pushed back against the surging crowd. The barricades, hastily erected and reinforced, groaned under the pressure. Children cried, their wails cutting through the desperate pleas of their parents.

"Let us in! We have a right!" a man screamed, his voice raw, as he shoved against the steel barrier. His wife, tears streaming down her face, held up a small child, its eyes wide and uncomprehending. "My family! Please! Just my baby!"

Miller shook his head, his voice hoarse. "Orders are orders, stand back! There’s no more room! We’re at capacity!" His gaze flickered upwards, where the unnatural shadow of the Krill fleet was growing larger, darker, intensifying the primal fear that fueled the riot. They knew. Everyone knew. Humanity had seen the warnings, had prepared, but the sheer, brutal truth was that the infrastructure, the DUMBs, couldn’t accommodate everyone. The tragic irony hung heavy in the air, a suffocating blanket of abandonment and despair. Each distant, growing shadow overhead was a hammer blow to their fading hope.

Then, the first strike.

It wasn’t a warning shot. It was a declaration.

Across the globe, in a horrifying, synchronized ballet of destruction, high-orbit Krill ships unleashed their terrible power. In Beijing, a beam of incandescent energy, impossibly bright, lanced down from the blackened sky, vaporizing the central military command. In Moscow, a kinetic projectile, a silent, unseen fist, slammed into a nuclear missile silo, not detonating it, but crushing it into a smoking crater. London’s power grid, a sprawling network of arteries, pulsed once, then went dark as an EMP burst washed over it.

In the United States, the Cheyenne Mountain Complex, NORAD’s stoic heart, simply ceased to exist, swallowed by a blinding flash. Power plants across the Midwest exploded in chain reactions, not with the familiar roar of a conventional blast, but with a chilling, almost surgical precision. Data centers, some part of AT&T, Verizon and T-mobile and large Telecommunications’ nascent global network, flickered and died, though Richard’s heavily fortified nodes, buried deep and shielded, hummed on, unnoticed in the chaos.

Communications went dead. The world, moments ago a frantic symphony of fear, was plunged into a terrifying silence, punctuated only by the distant, echoing booms of collapsing infrastructure. The Krill’s initial salvo was overwhelming, efficient, a systematic dismantling of Earth’s defenses. Humanity was blind, deaf, and exposed.

The silence, however, was short-lived.

Smaller Krill ships, sleek and predatory, descended from the immense Motherships, hovering ominously above major cities worldwide. Their undersides emitted a pulsating, eerie light, casting an alien glow on the ruined streets below.

Then, the voice. Synthesized, cold, utterly devoid of emotion, it resonated not just from every remaining radio and emergency broadcast system, but seemed to vibrate through the very air, rattling windows and bones alike.

"Attention: Human species. This is a planetary control declaration from the Krill Empire."

The words hung in the air, a chilling pronouncement of doom. Sarah, huddled in her apartment, her hands clamped over her ears, still felt the vibrations in her teeth.

"Effective immediately, your planet—formerly designated Earth—is now classified as Cradle Territory 917. Sovereignty revoked."

A gasp rippled through the few survivors listening in a bombed-out convenience store in Los Angeles.

"All national governments are dissolved. Civilian control is nullified."

The casualness of it, the utter disregard for millennia of human struggle, was more terrifying than any scream.

"You are required to stand down and comply with deployment and transfer orders."

"Any formation of resistance, organized defense, or unauthorized use of weapons will result in immediate extermination."

The voice paused, a calculated beat of silence that amplified the terror.

"Your airspace, oceans, and underground infrastructures are now Krill military zones."

"Noncompliance is a confirmed death sentence."

"This is not a negotiation. This is not a war. This is an execution in slow order."

The finality of it, the methodical, dehumanizing promise of a drawn-out end, sent a fresh wave of despair through the global populace.

"You will be scanned. You will be sorted. You will be reduced."

"Live in submission or die in—"

The broadcast cut off abruptly. Not with a crackle or a fade, but a sudden, violent silence.

High above Earth, near one of the Krill broadcasting ships, a shimmering distortion appeared. Then, with a silent, impossible grace, a Chrono Aberrant Destroyer, sleek and deadly, materialized. It was the USS Washington, and flanking it, a defiant, almost absurd gesture of human tenacity, were ten F-16s, their engines blazing against the blackness of space.

"Target acquired," a voice crackled on the Washington’s bridge.

"Fire!"

A brilliant lance of energy erupted from the Destroyer’s primary cannon, tearing through the void. It struck the Krill broadcasting ship with devastating force. Simultaneously, across the globe, other newly distributed starships – Chrono Aberrant Destroyers, the formidable Helios Banes, the stealthy Erebus Lances – responded in kind. Explosions blossomed in the upper atmosphere, silent, beautiful, and utterly lethal. One by one, the Krill ships broadcasting their chilling message were obliterated, turning their arrogant pronouncement into a fiery, silent epitaph.

On the bridge of the USS Washington, Captain Eva Rostova gripped the armrests of her command chair, her jaw tight. Her eyes, usually a warm hazel, were now chips of granite, reflecting the defiant explosions outside. Around her, the bridge crew worked with a focused intensity, the tension palpable, but now laced with a fierce, burgeoning pride.

"All clear, Captain," the comms officer reported, his voice trembling slightly with suppressed adrenaline. "Krill broadcast ships neutralized. All frequencies open."

Eva nodded, her gaze sweeping across the faces of her crew. They were scared, yes, but they were also ready. She took a deep breath, her voice clear and strong as she leaned into the comms.

"To the Krill Command. This is USS Washington." Her voice, surprisingly calm, resonated across all frequencies, cutting through the lingering silence left by the alien broadcast.

"Your declaration of planetary claim has been received."

A beat of silence, a pregnant pause that held the weight of humanity’s resolve.

"Response: Denied."

A collective gasp, then a surge of exhilarated murmuring, rippled through the bridge.

"Earth is not a territory. It is not a prize. It is not your graveyard — yet." Her voice hardened, a steel edge creeping in. "You entered our atmosphere without parley. You slaughtered without cause. You marked our soil as if it would not bleed beneath your claws."

She leaned forward, her eyes fixed on the holographic display of the retreating Krill Motherships. "You believe your strength is unmatched. That your ships, your weapons, make you gods."

Another pause, profound and chilling.

"We’ve killed gods before."

The words hung in the air, a declaration, a promise, a threat. On the streets below, in the makeshift bunkers, in the shattered cities, those who heard it felt a jolt of something they hadn’t dared to hope for: defiance.

"This is your only warning. Leave now. Or be buried with the last empire that thought us easy prey."

Her voice swelled, imbued with the collective will of a species pushed to the brink. "We are the United Earth Defense Pact."

"We are Humanity."

"We do not surrender. We do not submit. And we do not die quietly."

Then, a beat of pure, unadulterated human audacity. Her lips curved into a grim, determined smile.

"Fuck around and find out."

In the convenience store in Los Angeles, the ragged group of survivors stared at the old, battery-powered radio, their faces slack with disbelief. Then, a single, choked cheer erupted, followed by another, and then a roar. A wave of renewed hope, raw and visceral, washed over them.

And then, a miracle.

A flicker. The fluorescent lights above them, dead moments ago, buzzed to life. Outside, the streetlights along the boulevard blinked on. Across North America, and implicitly, other targeted regions, power was restored. Screens came alive, televisions in shop windows displayed static, then the familiar logo of an emergency broadcast.

The internet, previously dead, hummed back to life. Phones, previously useless bricks, buzzed with notifications. Messages flooded in, a torrent of relief and confirmation: UEDP confirmed! We’re fighting back! It was Richard’s influence, his hidden ByteCloud Telecommunications network, designed for this very scenario, for planetary defense and communication against the Krill. This was the first tangible sign of his meticulous preparation bearing fruit on a global scale. The roar of human voices, a sound of defiance and hope, filled the air.

High above Earth, within the vast, cavernous expanse of the Krill Motherships, a ripple of confusion, then panic, spread through the War Command. General Xy’lar, his reptilian eyes narrowed, watched the holographic display of Earth. The human ships, those insignificant specks, had just obliterated their broadcast vessels. Unacceptable.

"Send the carriers!" he hissed, his voice a guttural rasp. "Begin planetary deployment. Crush this insolence!"

From the immense Motherships, dozens of carrier ships, sleek and menacing, detached themselves. They descended rapidly into the atmosphere, a swarm of death, their intent clear: ground invasion. Xy’lar watched, a sneer forming on his scaled face. They had shown defiance, yes, but they would learn. They would learn what true power was.

Deep beneath the Amazonian rainforest, in the Command & Ops Nexus, Richard stood before a swirling holographic interface. The room hummed with the quiet thrum of unimaginable power. Lina, her form a shimmering outline of light, moved through the data streams with effortless precision, her voice calm and professional.

Richard’s aura, usually a subtle glow, pulsed with a quiet intensity, a reflection of the immense calculations and strategic decisions unfolding within his mind. He was calm, focused, a conductor orchestrating a symphony of destruction.

"Sir, emergency protocols have been successfully initiated," Lina reported, her voice devoid of any discernible emotion, yet her efficiency was a comfort. "Fifty-one Krill carrier ships are descending fast. Projected atmospheric entry in T-minus three minutes."

Richard’s eyes, luminous within his aura, remained fixed on the descending enemy vessels. His voice was cold, decisive, a blade of ice. "Lock in and activate the planetary defense weapons."

"Yes, sir," Lina confirmed, a cascade of data scrolling across her form. "All hostile vessels have been locked. Cerberus Mass Driver Cannon Arrays, Sky Wall Mark X, and Aetheris PCX-9 are ready to fire."

Richard watched the holographic projections, the tiny red dots representing the Krill carriers, now highlighted with targeting reticles. A grim satisfaction settled over him. He had anticipated this. Every single detail. His hidden empire, the Amazonian base, the advanced weaponry forged from alien tech and human ingenuity – was now Earth’s true shield.

"Fire," he commanded, the single word echoing with the weight of humanity’s future.

General Xy’lar watched, a smug satisfaction beginning to form. The carrier ships were descending perfectly, a flawless spearhead into the primitive human atmosphere. Soon, the ground forces would be deployed, and this annoying little rebellion would be swiftly put down.

Then, the first flash.

It wasn’t an explosion from a human weapon, not a conventional blast. It was as if the very fabric of the Krill carrier ship, descending at immense speed, simply ceased to exist. A silent, blinding implosion, followed by a blossoming fireball that seemed to consume itself.

Then another. And another.

In rapid, impossible succession, all fifty-one Krill carrier ships, spread across the globe, exploded like dominoes. Not a single one reached the lower atmosphere. Massive fireballs erupted, silent and terrible, scattering debris into the blackness of space. The sky, moments ago filled with the dread of descending alien ships, was suddenly, impossibly, clear.

"What just happened?!" Xy’lar shrieked, his voice cracking with disbelief. His reptilian war generals, equally shocked, stammered, unable to comprehend the impossible. "Report! Generals, explain this! How?!"

There was no explanation. Only the lingering image of exploding Krill ships, the stunned silence that followed the impossible barrage, and the dawning, terrifying realization on both sides that this conflict would be unlike anything anticipated. Humanity had just landed the first decisive counter-punch. The true war had just begun.