The Billionaire's Multiplier System-Chapter 74 - 76 – Echoes Between Powerlines
Chapter 74: Chapter 76 – Echoes Between Powerlines
The fallout came not with a bang, but in the form of data.
At 8:42 a.m., Lin Feng received the investor confidence report. It wasn’t flashy—just a quiet uptick in percentage points and a line of new private messages. One from Yi Group. Another from Weng Investment. A third from a previously neutral party: An Xi International.
Each message echoed the same thing without saying it directly:
"You didn’t break."
And more importantly:
"We’d like to talk."
Lin didn’t smile. He didn’t lean back with smugness. Instead, he calmly forwarded the contacts to Mei Li with a simple instruction.
"Arrange exploratory calls. No binding terms. Just presence."
She nodded, already moving.
His phone buzzed again. This time, it was a photo—a press shot from last night’s Crimson Circle dinner. The image had captured him mid-pour, wine glass tilted, face unreadable. To most, it looked insignificant. But to those within Jinghua’s elite circles, it said everything.
No panic. No defense. Just control.
System Notification:
Current Reputation State: Silent Ascendant
New Tag Active: "Stable During Storm"
Trend Line: +2.8% upward momentum in investor trust for Chengwei Holdings over 72 hours
Side Effect: Opponent unrest increasing. Prediction: Chen Yuan planning next maneuver — louder, riskier.
P.S. He’s chewing glass, Host. Quiet never killed him. You did.
Across the city, Chen Yuan slammed his phone down hard enough to crack the case.
His assistant flinched.
"Sir—"
"Three partners backed off. Zhao Xinyan signed with him. Why?"
"Her team says Chengwei’s position remained ’unshaken during speculative pressure.’ Investors read it as resilience."
Chen exhaled through his nose, hard.
"So being quiet made him strong?"
"No. Being unbothered made him powerful."
Scene – Guo Yuwei’s Studio, Afternoon
Guo Yuwei had watched the coverage too. Unlike the others, she didn’t analyze numbers or speculate on balance sheets. She studied reactions—how people looked at Lin Feng now.
At a meeting with a fashion house director, she overheard a comment:
"He’s unshakable. Like he knew it wouldn’t touch him."
She didn’t join the conversation. But later, when alone, she opened her phone and hovered over Lin Feng’s chat.
Still no message.
Still no explanation from him.
She typed.
Yuwei:
"You handled it."
Seconds later, a reply came.
Lin Feng:
"Was it supposed to be loud?"
She rolled her eyes.
"Sometimes people expect a firework."
"Sometimes silence blinds more."
"Do you always have to win like that?"
"Only when they try to make me lose publicly."
She didn’t know if she was irritated or impressed. Maybe both.
"I still think you’re arrogant."
"And yet you texted first."
No reply from her. But her lips twitched at the corner.
Scene – Private Parking Basement, Crimson Circle Tower
Lin met Xu Shanyue near the elevator—completely coincidental, or so it seemed.
She was dressed in a slate-gray suit, tailored for movement, not fashion. Understated. Calculated. Her eyes met his with the same sharp curiosity from the dinner.
"You didn’t flinch."
"Should I have?"
"Most people do when their name hits a rumor cycle."
"But I’m not most people."
"So you’re the exception?"
"No," he replied. "I just prepared for the inevitable."
They entered the elevator together. She didn’t press the button. Neither did he.
For a moment, they stood in silence, both knowing that even silence had weight.
"You think Chen Yuan’s done?" she asked.
"No. I think he’s started losing."
She glanced sideways at him.
"And you think that makes you safe?"
"No. It makes me ready."
She didn’t respond immediately. Then she reached forward and tapped the panel.
"Floor 39."
"That’s not your office."
"It’s yours."
He raised a brow.
"You’re coming to see my team?"
"No. I want to see what kind of office someone builds when he doesn’t need to speak."
He didn’t answer. But he smiled—faint, unreadable.
Scene – Chengwei Holdings, 39th Floor
The elevator doors slid open.
Xu Shanyue walked through Lin’s domain like a visiting monarch. Silent, sharp-eyed, unhurried. She observed the walls, the spacing, the kind of minimalism that cost more than gaudy wealth.
In the conference lounge, she stopped in front of a framed photo—an aerial shot of a dilapidated block in West Jinghua. At the corner of the frame, in fine script, was a quote.
"Real power rebuilds the forgotten."
She turned.
"You don’t talk about your past."
"Neither do you," he said simply.
They held that space for a few seconds.
Then she smiled—barely there, but real.
"Maybe silence is your weapon."
"Maybe it’s the only one people underestimate."
Scene – Xu Family Courtyard, Evening
Back in her family’s compound, Shanyue sat alone beneath the plum trees, reviewing the silent photos from the surveillance team. Not spying. Just watching the city, watching him.
In one image, Lin Feng was walking near an old bookstore—alone, hands in his coat pockets, eyes scanning nothing. In another, he was buying water from a street vendor.
No entourage. No display. Just presence.
Her grandfather entered quietly and placed a tea tray beside her.
"You’re thinking," he said.
"Observing."
"That’s your mother’s tone."
"She said the loudest ones burn first."
"And Lin Feng?"
"He doesn’t burn," Shanyue said softly. "He waits."
Scene – Golden Chamber Hall, Next Day
An emergency strategy session had been called. Invitations sent to twelve rising elites, including Lin Feng. Everyone knew why. Chen Yuan was losing ground, and new alliances were being formed.
Inside the marble hall, sharp shoes echoed on stone as people took their places. Guo Yuwei arrived in crimson heels. Lin Feng arrived last—again by choice.
This time, no one questioned him. No one joked.
One of the minor tycoons, Song Liang, leaned forward.
"There’s talk of a vote."
"About what?" Guo Yuwei asked.
"About eliminating two names from the Crimson Circle’s candidate list."
"And?" Lin asked.
"Chen Yuan might be one. And if that happens—"
"He’ll retaliate."
Everyone was thinking the same thing.
Then Xu Shanyue entered.
Wearing black. No color. No smile.
"Before we talk politics," she said, "I want to ask Lin Feng a question."
Everyone turned.
"Go on," Lin said calmly.
"Why didn’t you fight him publicly?"
"Because power doesn’t need to prove anything in public. It just needs to exist long enough for everyone else to feel it."
Silence.
Then she nodded once.
"That’s what I needed to hear."
And then she sat—on his side of the table.
System Update:
New Status Achieved: "Line in the Marble"
Xu Shanyue public alignment confirmed: Soft Ally
Crimson Circle Power Realignment In Progress...
P.S. Host, she just moved her entire seat. So did the gameboard.
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