Marawi City – 7:43 PM
The moon hung high over the skyline, a silver coin in the ink-black sky. The city below was still alive, its narrow streets bustling with tricycles, vendors, and locals wrapping up their day. Despite the hour, construction sites echoed faintly with clanging tools and late-night welding—remnants of a city rebuilding itself.
A white van, unassuming and coated in light road dust, pulled up beside one of the unfinished structures. The engine cut, and a man stepped out.
He wore a casual outdoor outfit—cargo pants, a windbreaker, and a cap pulled low. Slipping a pack of gum from his pocket, he crossed the street with a laid-back gait, the kind that didn't invite attention.
He approached a small sari-sari store, its aluminum shutter half open. A fluorescent light buzzed overhead.
From inside, a woman in her fifties emerged, wiping her hands on her apron. "What do you need?" she asked casually.
"One pack of Marlboro, please," the man replied with a friendly nod, fishing a ₱100 bill from his wallet.
As she turned to get the cigarette pack, he leaned in slightly."Ma'am, is it alright if I leave my van just over there? Someone might, you know... mess with it." He glanced subtly across the street, implying possible theft.
The woman followed his gaze, then chuckled."No problem at all. My son and his friends usually hang around here. I'll make sure they keep an eye on it."
The man smiled, appreciative. He pulled another ₱500 bill from his wallet and extended it."This is just a small gift, ma'am. Thank you."
"Oh no, that's too much. Really, it's okay," she said, trying to hand it back.
But he shook his head and gently pushed her hand away."No, please. Just take it. It's nothing."
She smiled warmly, then pocketed the bill with a quiet nod."Alright, if you say so. Thank you. Take care now."
As he lit a cigarette and walked off into the night, he cast one last, almost indifferent glance back at the white van.
From the second floor of the building, the woman shouted,"Manuel! Keep an eye on that white van outside! Some kids or thieves might mess with it!"
A teenage boy leaned out the window, still absorbed in his phone."Yeah, yeah, I got it, Mom!" he shouted back lazily.
Later That Night...
An eerie silence replaced the city's earlier energy.
Suddenly—BOOM!
A deafening explosion tore through the calm. The white van erupted into a fireball, sending twisted metal and smoke into the air. The surrounding buildings shook violently. The nearby construction scaffolding collapsed like dominoes, falling into sparks and dust.
Screams echoed across the street. Lights flickered. Windows shattered. A second explosion rang out, this one further downtown, near the port.
Then another—this time deeper into the residential zone.
The chaos had begun.
At ground zero, a growing crowd of onlookers surrounded the smoldering remains of the white van. Flames still licked the edges of nearby structures, while smoke billowed upward like a dark flag against the moonlit sky.Whispers turned into full-blown gossip and panic, phones recorded the scene, and speculation ran rampant.
Three minutes in, the wail of sirens pierced the air—red and blue lights bathed the ruined street as fire trucks, ambulances, and police cars descended en masse.
Meanwhile… at the Purnas Mansion, miles away.
In the shroud of darkness, multiple figures in black tactical gear scaled the reinforced steel fence along the perimeter. Moving like shadows, they melted into the gloom of the estate's outer boundary—their faces hidden behind balaclavas, infrared visors glinting faintly under the security lights.
Only a few guards remained on patrol, pacing idly with flashlights in hand—unaware they were being watched by predators.
As the last infiltrator slipped over the fence, the squad leader—identified only by a red-taped magazine—gestured a closed fist, signaling a silent advance.
The team split immediately into three fireteams—each composed of three men.
Team Alpha hugged the western wall of the mansion, approaching from the garden pathway.
Team Bravo moved along the rear, crouching low between construction debris and scaffolding.
Team Charlie positioned themselves on the eastern blind spot, eyes trained on the driveway, ensuring no reinforcements arrived unnoticed.
Team Bravo halted at a darkened portion of the mansion, crouching in the shadows near the utility entrance. The moonlight flickered on their silenced rifles.
From inside, the sound of glass breaking was barely audible as Team Alpha used window punch tools to shatter a side entrance pane. They slipped inside one by one—quiet, efficient, surgical.
Inside, they began clearing the mansion room by room, weapons raised, sweeping corners with practiced precision.
Back outside, a figure climbed out of the breached window and crouched next to Mario, the leader of Team Bravo.
"Sir," the operative whispered. "Linkman needs reinforcements. There's too much ground inside. We can't sweep the entire structure with just one team."
Mario gave a curt nod and silently tapped two fingers on his forearm—his signal. His men rose and followed him inside without a word.
On the opposite side, Team Charlie remained positioned in a flanking overwatch. One of their scouts caught a slight movement near the garden path and radioed quietly,"Possible guard movement, sector seven. Keep sharp."
The team leader scanned with night vision, then motioned to two of his men."Split off. Cover the right wing. We can't risk them flanking us or raising the alarm."
They nodded and broke formation, moving swiftly across the dark lawn like ghosts.
The back of the mansion was now fully covered—a net of lethal professionals silently watching all escape routes. They were ready to buy time for their objective: to find and extract the AI system housed within Richard's secret servers.
Unaware of the trap ahead.
Somewhere in the forest hills, overlooking the cityscape of Marawi, the night sky flickered with the dull orange glow of three rising plumes of smoke and flame. The chaos below had lit up the city like a war zone. Sirens echoed faintly in the distance.
Perched on the side of an old mountain road, a black van was parked under a broken-down signpost that read Bismillah View Deck. Two men knelt beside the vehicle, pretending to change a flat tire. They moved with casual ease, the perfect decoy.
Inside the van, however, was another story.
The rear compartment had been converted into a mobile surveillance hub. Multiple monitors glowed softly in the dark, casting flickers of blue light over the faces of three American operatives, each focused on their roles.
One was typing rapidly, another was toggling through camera feeds from the Purnas Mansion, and the third—clearly the mission commander—stood over them with arms crossed, eyes locked on the screen.
"Sir," one of the operators reported, "we've successfully hijacked the mansion's CCTV network. The system's feeding us clean visuals from all angles."
Another operator leaned forward, squinting. "Everything looks quiet. Too quiet. There are only three guys inside… in the basement. Rest of the place looks abandoned."
The commander frowned.
"Could be a trap," the second man muttered, adjusting his headset.
The commander, calm and assured, shook his head.
"No. Not a trap. Just a lucky break. The earlier chaos must've forced a full evac. That's our advantage. Our priority remains: extract the AI framework from the servers. Nothing else matters."
A moment later, a third operator chimed in.
"Sir, I've located the server rack. It's in the garage basement. Camera 09—pan right. There."
The commander leaned closer. "Confirmed."He turned toward the communications rig. "Patch through to Alpha and Bravo. Instruct both teams to proceed immediately to the basement. Remind them: you have fifteen minutes before local reinforcements swarm the grid."
"And notify the extraction team," he added. "Boat leaves on schedule. No delays."
Outside the van, the two decoy mechanics continued their act. Their heads stayed down. A pair of Philippine National Police cruisers roared past without slowing—too focused on the firebombed city below to notice anything strange.
Back at the Purnas Mansion…
Team Alpha and Bravo received the command. The order was clear: move to the garage basement and secure the asset.
They advanced quickly, clearing halls with tight formations. Within moments, they reached the access stairwell leading to the lower levels.
At the base of the stairs—just outside a steel-reinforced studio room—they found three men sitting around a makeshift table. Empty beer bottles clinked near their feet. The men were off-duty security, clearly unaware of the breach.
There was no hesitation.
Pop. Pop. Pop.Three suppressed rounds. Three bodies down.One fell backward in his chair, blood blooming from his forehead. Another was shot through the chest before he could even speak. The third tried to reach for a pistol—but a clean shot to the neck ended that thought.
No noise. No alarms. Just silence and blood.
Linkman, the leader of Team Alpha, moved quickly to the server terminals. He yanked a portable encrypted hard drive from his vest pouch and plugged it into one of the three running PCs. Lights on the drive flashed to life.
"Download initialized," he muttered. "Keep an eye on the temps."
Jeremy, the Bravo squad leader, held position at the top of the stairwell and checked his watch.
"How long do we have?"
Linkman glanced at the transfer status bar.
"Five minutes. Maybe less."
Jeremy nodded grimly. "We'll hold them."He turned to his men. "Cover the living room and north hallway. Use suppressors. No heroics. We're ghosts."
They moved like clockwork, settling into overwatch positions—unaware that they were being watched by something far smarter than they realized.
Inside a sleek, dark SUV parked on a narrow dirt road overlooking the distant cityscape of Marawi, the moonlight cast faint shadows across the windshield. The only illumination came from the soft, flickering glow of a laptop screen in the backseat, its display filled with live surveillance feeds from various parts of the Purnas mansion.
The SUV had been modified—internally reinforced, windows tinted, with a discreet satellite uplink rigged into the back compartment. This was no ordinary vehicle. It was a mobile command post, cobbled together in a rush but executed with precision. Inside, Richard sat hunched over his laptop, his fingers moving with cold purpose across the keyboard as he monitored the feeds pouring in from hidden cameras and redirected security nodes.
Next to him, Jack lay slumped in the seat, arms crossed, head tilted against the window. He had drifted into a light sleep during the long, tense drive from the outskirts of Iligan. The stress had caught up with him. But the soft, mechanical clicks and subtle flicker of the screens stirred him back to consciousness.
Jack blinked, his eyes adjusting to the dim light. When he glanced at Richard's screen, his breath caught. The video feed showed three armed intruders—clad in matte black combat gear—moving with brutal efficiency through the mansion's lower halls. The bodies of three guards lay sprawled in the hallway outside the server room, lifeless. Their weapons still holstered. No chance to react. No chance to scream.
Jack straightened up, a silent grimace pulling at his features.
"They're inside already?" he whispered.
Richard didn't take his eyes off the screen. "Three minutes ahead of schedule."
Jack looked again at the bodies. His tone lowered. "They're dead. Those were our guys."
Still calm, Richard lifted a hand slightly and gestured for quiet, pointing toward the front of the vehicle. In the passenger seat, Estello Purnas, their grandfather, lay sleeping, his head tilted against the seatbelt, breathing slow and steady. He had been up for 36 hours straight managing the corporate shutdown and extraction of key staff. He'd finally dozed off just minutes earlier.
Jack glanced back at Richard. "We should've pulled them out sooner. Gave them a hard evac. You said they were warned, but—"
Richard cut in, quiet but firm. "They were briefed. Everyone else followed orders. Those three didn't." He let the words hang heavy in the air. "They chose to stay. And now they've paid the price."
Jack swallowed hard and looked away, jaw clenching.
"You could've told me it was going down tonight."
Richard finally turned to face him, eyes sharp beneath the screen's glow.
"Jack, you've known for weeks this was going to happen. We didn't set this in motion overnight." His voice was controlled, but edged with urgency. "Every minute we let them believe they've won is a minute closer to seeing who's really behind this. Letting them win the battle—that was always part of the plan."
He tapped a key. The view changed to another camera—one showing the masked operatives moving equipment, plugging hard drives into decoy terminals, working fast.
"They think they're stealing our crown jewel," Richard said, narrowing his eyes. "They don't realize we've handed them a virus wrapped in a masterpiece. They're not taking the AI—we're delivering it to them, on our terms."
Jack stared at the screen, then nodded, slowly.
"It's still hard to watch. They're executing people like it's a training drill."
"Because to them, it is a training drill. Mercenaries, most likely. Not the masterminds. Just paid professionals."
Jack leaned back, exhaling. "And what about the AI they're lifting? Lina's backup?"
Richard gave a faint smirk. "What they're extracting is a skeleton. An elegant, surgically coded clone of Lina's old framework—embedded with a self-modifying zero-day, tracking protocols, data siphons, behavioral pattern mirroring, and the cherry on top—a staged vulnerability. They'll integrate it into whatever system they're using. Eventually, it'll call home."
Jack gave a quiet whistle, impressed despite himself.
"You made it traceable?"
"Not directly," Richard replied. "It's subtle. It watches, learns how they operate, then adjusts its signals. By the time they notice anything, we'll already have backdoors into their infrastructure. Maybe even full admin rights if they try to reverse-engineer it carelessly."
Jack glanced back toward the road behind them.
"So we're watching the intruders. But who's watching the watchers?"
Richard's eyes didn't move from the screen. "We are. That's the entire point."
A moment of silence passed. Outside, the forest was still, except for the occasional rustle of leaves and the faint hum of generators in the van's trunk.
Jack eventually leaned forward again.
"Changing gears—Microsoft pushed another bid. More than Tencent and the EuroTech Consortium combined. They're serious about locking us in."
Richard scoffed quietly.
"Of course they are. But it's not a partnership they're offering. It's chains. The moment we take their offer, they'll push for executive oversight, IP consolidation, and relocation of our infrastructure to U.S. soil. It's a long-term assimilation play. Classic."
"Still, it's hard to ignore that kind of money," Jack admitted. "Especially when they're throwing in tech support, infrastructure subsidies, even government lobbying."
Richard shut the laptop gently and looked over at him.
"That's the price of independence, Jack. As long as we don't belong to either side—East or West—they'll keep each other in check. The moment we align with one, the other becomes an enemy."
Jack tapped his fingers on the door frame, thoughtful.
"And how long do you think we can keep walking that line?"
"As long as we can remain useful to both."
"That's a dangerous tightrope," Jack said.
"We're not a country. We're a company. And companies don't survive by being patriotic—they survive by being indispensable. Right now, both sides need us more than we need them. That won't last forever, but it's long enough to solidify our place."
Jack nodded, then remembered.
"Oh—and the law firm got back to us. Everything's ready. Grandpa handled most of the paperwork himself. And... my father's flying in this week. Says he's bringing full support for our expansion."
Richard tilted his head. "Support's good. But let me guess—he wants discounted shares in return."
Jack grimaced. "Yeah."
"He already got in early. He's lucky we even let family buy equity." Richard gave a tight smile. "He gets market value like everyone else. No favors. He knows better."
Jack looked offended. "He's my father, you know."
"Exactly why this is a test," Richard said, locking eyes with him. "He's testing you. Testing how you make decisions when family and business collide. And if you fail that test—he'll never respect your leadership again."
Jack stared at him for a long second, then slowly nodded.
Richard opened his laptop again.
Outside the SUV, the road remained empty, the forest eerily quiet—yet below, in the city and deep inside the mansion's walls, a digital war had just begun.