PART 3

Things didn’t explode right away.

That would’ve been easier. Cleaner. You see the blast coming, brace yourself, pick through the wreckage afterward. What followed instead was quieter. Meaner. The kind of danger that crept in sideways and smiled while doing it.

Gu Chenzhou didn’t sleep that night.

Lin Xia knew because neither did she. The apartment felt too small, the walls too thin, every sound stretched sharp. Bao, meanwhile, slept like a rock—one arm flung over a pillow, mouth open, dreaming of things far more interesting than extortion threats and hostile board members.

“Do you think it’s Su Man?” Lin Xia asked softly, standing by the window.

Gu Chenzhou shook his head. “She doesn’t have the reach. Or the subtlety.”

“Then who?”

He hesitated. That bothered her more than if he’d answered immediately.

“There’s a man,” he said finally, “named Victor Hale.”

Lin Xia frowned. “I don’t know him.”

“You wouldn’t,” Gu Chenzhou said. “He stays behind the curtain. Venture capital, defense contracts, data aggregation firms that pretend to be harmless. He wanted Starlight three years ago.”

“And you said no.”

“I destroyed his bid,” Gu Chenzhou corrected. “Politely.”

Lin Xia snorted. “You don’t do anything politely.”

A corner of his mouth twitched. Briefly.

“Hale doesn’t lose,” Gu Chenzhou continued. “He just… waits. And now he thinks Bao is leverage.”

As if summoned by his name, Bao wandered in, rubbing his eyes.

“Mom,” he mumbled, “someone tried to brute-force your router at 3:12 a.m.”

Lin Xia stared. “I’m sorry—what?”

“I blocked it,” Bao said, yawning. “Amateurs.”

Gu Chenzhou closed his eyes and laughed under his breath. Not humor. Resignation.

“Okay,” he said. “That’s our cue.”


They moved Bao to a secure townhouse outside the city by noon.

Gu Chenzhou called it temporary. Lin Xia called it a fortress pretending to be a home. Private security. Shielded networks. Windows that didn’t open. Bao called it cool but poorly optimized.

“You kidnapped yourself,” Bao informed his father cheerfully.

Gu Chenzhou crouched to Bao’s level. “I’m protecting you.”

Bao considered this. “Then you should let me help.”

“No.”

“That’s inefficient.”

“Still no.”

Lin Xia watched the exchange with mixed feelings—fear braided tightly with something warmer. Hope, maybe. Or relief. She wasn’t doing this alone anymore. That mattered.

The second message arrived two days later.

Not a threat this time.

An invitation.

A secure video call. One time only.

Against every instinct she had, Lin Xia sat beside Gu Chenzhou as the screen flickered on.

Victor Hale appeared smiling.

Silver-haired. Relaxed. The kind of man who looked like he smelled faintly of expensive soap and entitlement.

“Gu,” Hale said pleasantly. “Still collecting brilliant minds, I see.”

“You’re trespassing,” Gu Chenzhou replied coolly.

Hale chuckled. “We’re past formalities. I want the boy.”

“No.”

“Careful,” Hale said. “You’re emotional.”

Lin Xia leaned forward. “You don’t get to talk about my son like he’s an asset.”

Hale’s eyes flicked to her. Appraising. Dismissive. “You’re the variable I didn’t anticipate.”

Bao’s voice piped up from off-screen. “That’s because your predictive model sucks.”

There was a pause.

Hale blinked. “Is that the child?”

Bao leaned into frame, grinning. “Hi. You should know—I already found your offshore servers.”

Gu Chenzhou spun toward him. “Bao!”

“What?” Bao said. “He was rude.”

Hale’s smile vanished.

Static crackled. The screen went dark.

Lin Xia’s heart slammed. “What did he just do?”

Gu Chenzhou exhaled slowly. “Declared war.”


The fallout was immediate.

Hale struck fast—regulatory pressure, phantom lawsuits, media hit pieces resurrecting every ugly rumor about Gu Chenzhou’s past. Starlight’s stock dipped. The board panicked.

“Give him the kid,” one member suggested behind closed doors. “Make this go away.”

Gu Chenzhou stood.

“If anyone mentions my son again,” he said quietly, “you’ll be negotiating your exit by morning.”

No one tested him.

Behind the scenes, Bao worked.

Not recklessly. Not loudly. He mapped Hale’s empire like a puzzle, humming to himself, correcting Lin Xia’s code with gentle patience that was frankly insulting.

“He’s laundering data through shell nonprofits,” Bao explained one afternoon, juice box in hand. “That’s sloppy.”

Lin Xia stared at the screen. “Bao… this is criminal evidence.”

“Yep.”

“You can’t just—”

“Mom,” Bao said, “bad guys don’t stop because you ask nicely.”

Gu Chenzhou listened. Then nodded once.

“Do it,” he said.

Lin Xia looked at him. Really looked.

“You’re okay with this?” she asked. “Burning him down?”

Gu Chenzhou’s voice was steady. “He threatened my family.”

That was it. No drama. No speech.

Family.


Victor Hale was arrested on a Thursday.

Financial crimes. Espionage. Conspiracy. The kind of charges that stacked until bail wasn’t even a conversation.

The news cycle went feral.

SECRET CHILD EXPOSES TECH KINGPIN
SIX-YEAR-OLD PRODIGY AIDS FEDERAL INVESTIGATION

Lin Xia turned off the TV.

Bao was sprawled on the floor, building something out of spare parts and ambition.

“Am I grounded?” he asked without looking up.

“Yes,” Lin Xia and Gu Chenzhou said together.

Bao sighed. “Worth it.”


Life didn’t snap back to normal. It bent. Reformed.

Lin Xia was reinstated—then promoted. She turned it down twice before accepting a role she could live with. Not because of Gu Chenzhou. In spite of him.

Bao started school. Hated it. Improved the school’s computer lab anyway.

Gu Chenzhou learned how to pack lunches. Badly. Peanut butter everywhere.

One evening, months later, they sat on the townhouse steps watching the city glow.

“You know,” Lin Xia said, “if you ever regret this—us—you’re allowed to say so.”

Gu Chenzhou shook his head. “I regret the years I missed.”

Bao leaned against his side. “You’re here now. That’s statistically significant.”

Gu Chenzhou smiled. Soft. Real.

“Yeah,” he said. “It is.”

The world hadn’t become safer.

But it had become theirs.

And for the first time in a long while, that felt like enough.


THE END