Married To The Ruthless Billionaire For Revenge-Chapter 160: The Signal No One Expected
Chapter 158: The Signal No One Expected
The city had finally begun to breathe again.
For two full days, the rotational recovery schedule held the system in balance. Construction slowed slightly but remained steady. Infrastructure inspections returned to safer pacing. Logistics routes moved without major delays.
From the outside, everything looked stable.
Even the numbers in the operations center confirmed it.
Workforce strain held at seventy-four percent.
Supply delivery reliability climbed back above ninety percent.
Housing construction progress remained ahead of the original timeline.
For the first time in nearly two weeks, the system looked healthy.
And that was exactly why Marcus felt uneasy.
He sat in front of the main system console early that morning, staring at the smooth trend lines flowing across the display.
Smooth graphs made people comfortable.
But Marcus knew better.
In complex systems, smooth graphs sometimes meant something was being hidden beneath the surface.
He opened a deeper analytics layer.
And the moment he did, the quiet feeling in his stomach tightened.
"...That’s strange."
He leaned forward.
At 7:12 a.m., Elena entered the operations center carrying the daily briefing folder.
Marcus didn’t look up.
"You should see this."
She placed the folder on the table and walked over to the screen.
"What is it?"
Marcus expanded a hidden dataset.
"This is the public performance dashboard."
The chart appeared almost perfect.
Balanced growth.
Steady construction.
No anomalies.
Elena nodded.
"Yes."
Marcus tapped another command.
"This is the raw system feed."
The new chart appeared beside the first one.
And it looked completely different.
Elena’s eyes narrowed slightly.
Small irregular spikes dotted the data.
They were subtle.
Almost invisible unless someone knew exactly where to look.
"What are those?" she asked.
Marcus exhaled slowly.
"That’s what I’m trying to figure out."
Just then Adrian walked in.
"Morning. Please tell me nothing is on fire."
Marcus gestured toward the screen.
"Not on fire."
Adrian stepped closer.
"But?"
Marcus pointed at the irregular spikes.
"Unaccounted signals."
Adrian frowned.
"From where?"
Marcus shook his head.
"I don’t know yet."
Across the city, construction continued as usual.
Workers at the Delta housing site poured concrete into foundation molds while engineers measured structural alignment.
The foreman walked along the edge of the site reviewing the daily schedule.
Everything seemed normal.
But one of the younger engineers approached him with a tablet.
"Sir... can you look at this?"
The foreman glanced at the screen.
"What am I looking at?"
"Material inventory."
The numbers didn’t match the delivery schedule.
Several shipments appeared as "delivered" in the system.
But they hadn’t actually arrived.
The foreman frowned.
"That’s a system error."
The engineer hesitated.
"It’s the third one today."
The foreman looked back at the half-finished foundation grid.
Three inventory errors in one morning?
That was unusual.
Back in the operations center, Marcus was digging deeper into the anomalies.
He opened the logistics tracking layer.
A map of the city appeared on the screen, with hundreds of tiny icons representing delivery trucks and supply convoys. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Elena watched silently.
"Anything?"
Marcus zoomed into the western corridor.
"Most signals look normal."
Adrian crossed his arms.
"Most?"
Marcus zoomed again.
One icon flickered.
Just once.
Then returned to normal.
Marcus stared at it.
"There."
Elena leaned closer.
"What did it do?"
Marcus replayed the data.
The truck’s signal briefly vanished for five seconds before reconnecting.
Adrian shrugged.
"That could be a GPS glitch."
Marcus nodded.
"Yes."
Then he opened another signal log.
The same thing had happened again.
And again.
And again.
Over fifty times.
Adrian’s expression hardened.
"Okay... that’s not a glitch."
Elena spoke quietly.
"Someone is interrupting the signal."
At 9:00 a.m., Marcus expanded the investigation.
He pulled records from construction inventory logs, logistics tracking, and contractor communication channels.
The pattern slowly emerged.
Small disruptions.
Tiny inconsistencies.
Missing delivery confirmations.
Signal interruptions.
Data mismatches.
Individually they meant nothing.
Together they formed something much more troubling.
Adrian stared at the screen.
"Someone’s interfering with the system."
Marcus nodded slowly.
"Yes."
Elena remained calm.
"But why?"
Marcus highlighted a section of the housing acceleration map.
The disruptions were clustered around three specific districts.
All three districts were part of the highest priority housing expansion zones.
Adrian’s voice dropped.
"Sabotage?"
Marcus didn’t answer immediately.
"It’s possible."
Elena looked thoughtful.
"Or testing."
Adrian turned toward her.
"Testing what?"
Elena looked at the flickering signals.
"The system’s response."
Meanwhile, across the city, something else was happening.
Inside a small warehouse near the old industrial district, several computer monitors glowed in the dim light.
A man sat quietly at a desk filled with network equipment.
Lines of code scrolled across his screens.
City logistics data.
Construction tracking feeds.
Infrastructure monitoring signals.
All streaming through modified software.
He tapped a key.
One delivery truck signal blinked off.
Five seconds later it returned.
The man smiled faintly.
"Still invisible."
Behind him, another voice spoke.
"How long until they notice?"
The man didn’t turn around.
"They already have."
The second voice chuckled softly.
"Good."
Back at the operations center, Marcus ran another deep scan.
This time he found something worse.
The signal disruptions weren’t random.
They followed a pattern.
A very precise pattern.
Marcus felt a chill run through him.
"Elena."
She stepped closer.
"What did you find?"
Marcus highlighted the disruption timeline.
Each signal interruption occurred exactly eleven minutes apart.
Adrian frowned.
"That’s deliberate."
Marcus nodded.
"Yes."
Elena stared at the data.
"Whoever is doing this wants us to notice."
Marcus whispered.
"Or wants to see how fast we react."
At 12:15 p.m., the first real consequence appeared.
The operations center received an alert from the Delta housing site.
Concrete delivery delayed.
Inventory mismatch.
Construction halted temporarily.
Marcus stared at the notification.
"That’s the first operational impact."
Adrian clenched his jaw.
"If someone is interfering with supply signals, they can disrupt the entire construction schedule."
Elena nodded slowly.
"Which means this isn’t random interference."
Marcus looked at her.
"You think it’s targeted?"
She answered quietly.
"Yes."
Outside the window, the city looked exactly the same as it had that morning.
Traffic moved.
Construction cranes turned slowly.
Workers continued building new foundations.
But beneath the surface of the system, something had begun moving.
Something deliberate.
Something intelligent.
And whoever was behind it clearly understood the city’s reform program better than they should.
Late that afternoon, Marcus finally traced one of the signal interruptions back to its origin.
The signal came from inside the city.
Not from outside hackers.
Not from external networks.
From within the infrastructure grid itself.
Marcus felt his pulse quicken.
"Elena... you need to see this."
She walked over.
"What is it?"
Marcus zoomed the digital map toward the industrial district.
The interference signal originated from a small cluster of warehouses near the abandoned rail yards.
Adrian stared at the location.
"That area isn’t part of the logistics network."
Marcus shook his head.
"No."
Elena’s voice dropped slightly.
"Then why does it have direct access to our system?"
For a long moment, no one spoke.
Because the implication was clear.
Whoever was behind the signal wasn’t just observing the system.
They were connected to it.
Deeply connected.
Which meant one thing.
The city’s reform program had a breach.
And the breach had been there long before anyone noticed.
Marcus slowly leaned back in his chair.
"There’s something else."
Adrian sighed.
"Of course there is."
Marcus opened the final signal log.
The most recent disruption had occurred only minutes earlier.
But this one was different.
The interruption lasted longer.
Not five seconds.
Twenty.
And when the signal returned...
The delivery truck’s route had changed.
It was now heading toward a completely different district.
A district that wasn’t even part of the housing acceleration plan.
Adrian stared at the screen.
"That truck is carrying reinforced steel beams."
Marcus nodded slowly.
"And it’s now going somewhere it shouldn’t."
Elena’s eyes darkened slightly.
"Track it."
Marcus tried.
But the signal flickered again.
And then disappeared completely.
Adrian looked toward Elena.
"Did we just lose it?"
Marcus swallowed.
"Yes."
Elena turned toward the massive city map glowing across the operations center wall.
Somewhere in the city, a truck full of construction materials had just vanished from their system.
And someone out there was controlling the signals.
Watching.
Testing.
Waiting.
But the most disturbing part wasn’t the disappearance.
It was the message that appeared on Marcus’s screen seconds later.
A single line of text.
No sender.
No traceable origin.
Just five words blinking on the monitor.
"Now the real test begins."
Marcus slowly looked up.
And for the first time since the reform program began...
The operations center felt truly silent.
End of Chapter 158







