[HOST INTEGRITY: 9%]
[STATUS: ORGAN FAILURE RISK]
[LOCATION: THE LAST STOP FACTORY – MAIN FLOOR]
[TIME: 11:10 AM]
The factory did not wake up.
No grinders screamed. No conveyor belts rattled. No soul-furnaces coughed smoke.
Silence sat on the production floor like a heavy, suffocating blanket.
Ren Wu stood at the edge of the rusty catwalk, one hand gripping the railing to keep his trembling legs steady. He stared down at a business that, technically, did not exist anymore.
Below him, hundreds of workers waited in the gloom.
Ghosts with broken necks. Former gang members with bruises. Clerks. Packers. Drivers.
They did not talk. They watched the catwalk.
A factory without motion was a dead factory. And in the Underworld, a dead factory meant starvation.
Lian hovered beside the central control panel, tapping frantically at dead runes.
“It isn’t mechanical,” she said, her voice thin with panic. “The power lines are intact. The grid… it just refuses to acknowledge us.”
Jian crouched near an access terminal, cables running from his laptop into an exposed socket. Sparks flew, but the screen remained red.
“It’s administrative,” Jian said, wiping sweat from his forehead. He turned his screen toward Ren.
[POWER GRID ACCESS: SUSPENDED]
[REASON: ASSET FREEZE – CASE #9901]
[AUTHORITY: DEPT. OF SPIRITUAL ADMINISTRATION]
Red Dog crushed an empty metal crate in his massive hand. The sound echoed like a gunshot.
“So they didn’t blow us up,” he growled. “They turned us off.”
Ren exhaled slowly. The breath rattled in his chest.
“In my era,” Ren rasped, “when the Emperor wanted a Minister dead, he sent soldiers with swords.”
He glanced at the frozen machines.
“This generation sends accountants. How efficient.”
No one laughed.
A thin ghost near the front raised its hand. Its jaw was cracked, and its contract badge was bent. It had signed yesterday.
“Boss…” the ghost whispered. “Does this mean… no lunch?”
Ren looked at it.
He felt something stir inside his chest. Not pity.
Pressure.
A wealthy CEO could afford mercy. A starving ruler could only afford discipline.
Ren stepped onto the railing so everyone could see him.
“Listen.”
His voice wasn’t loud, but it carried the weight of Authority.
“The Administration has frozen our grid. They think this will make you panic. They think hunger makes ghosts disloyal.”
Ren’s eyes scanned the sea of fearful faces.
“They are half correct.”
Silence returned. Heavy and cold.
”You will not be paid today,” Ren stated.
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
“You will not be fed today.”
More gasps. Red Dog tensed, ready for a riot.
Ren continued, his voice dropping an octave.
“But nobody leaves.”
The workers stared up at him.
“If you leave,” Ren said, pointing toward the sealed gates, “you become street trash again. You compete with ten million hungry ghosts for scraps in the gutter.”
He pointed downward, at the cold factory floor.
“Inside this fence, you belong to an organization that will exist tomorrow. Outside? You are dust.”
Ren lowered his hand.
“I do not ask for your faith. I ask for your patience.”
A skeletal worker whispered, “What if the factory never comes back?”
Ren answered instantly.
“Then I will burn down the people who turned it off.”
There was no hesitation. No flourish. Just a statement of corporate policy.
The workers did not cheer. They did not bow.
But they stayed.
That was enough.
Ren stepped away from the crowd and entered his office.
The room felt smaller than yesterday. Not physically. Financially.
Jian closed the door and locked it.
“We have inventory,” Jian said, reading from a backup tablet. “Black Label stock: 38 units. Standard incense: 1,140 units.”
Ren nodded, sinking into his leather chair.
“But no power to make more,” Jian added. “And no legal right to sell what we have.”
Ren tapped the desk once. Controlled. Precise.
“How long until the workers start collapsing?”
Jian checked a status panel. “Low-tier ghosts? Twelve hours before they fade. The Security Division (Iron Fist Gang)? Twenty-four.”
”We are bleeding time,” Ren muttered.
“Jian. What do we still own that the Administration cannot freeze?”
Jian hesitated. “Physical assets. Coins in hand. Items in inventory. Non-registered side channels.”
Ren’s eyes sharpened. “Smuggling routes?”
Jian nodded. “The sewer couriers we used before we formalized distribution. The rats.”
Ren leaned back.
Nether-Core had severed the arteries. So Ren would use the veins.
“List all unregistered buyers,” Ren ordered. “The desperate ones. The ones who don’t ask for receipts.”
Jian blinked. “You want me to create a ledger?”
“A handwritten ledger,” Ren corrected. “Ink and paper.”
Jian hesitated. “That’s illegal. The Tax Code requires digital—”
Ren smiled faintly. It was a terrifying expression.
“So is starvation.”
Lian drifted into the office, passing through the closed door.
“Boss… even if we sell the stock, we can’t produce more. The grinders are electric.”
Ren looked at her.
“You will do something the Administration forgot exists.”
Lian waited.
“Manual labor.”
Her expression turned blank. “Manual?”
”You will open Furnace Three,” Ren ordered. “It is soul-fired. It operates without grid power. But it requires constant feeding.”
“We downgrade,” Ren said, standing up. “Luxury production pauses. Black Label becomes rationed.”
Lian stiffened. “But Black Label is our leverage! It’s the only reason the Warlords respect us!”
“And leverage must be conserved,” Ren replied. “We sell three sticks today.”
Lian’s eyes widened. “Only three?”
”Yes,” Ren opened the office door. “To people who can move cash physically. And to people who fear me enough not to ask why the lights are off.”
Twenty minutes later.
A single furnace roared weakly in the center of the factory.
Sweat dripped down spectral faces as workers shoved raw spirit-herbs into the fire by hand. It was ugly. It was slow. It was crude.
But it was production.
Ren walked through the floor.
He saw resentment. He saw fear. He saw hope trying not to die.
A thin ghost collapsed near Furnace Three, its spirit form flickering.
Ren crouched.
He removed a small vial from his pocket. A shard of Black Label. Not a full stick—just a crumb.
He placed it between the ghost’s fingers.
“Breathe,” Ren commanded.
The ghost inhaled. Color flooded its face. It stood up, eyes wide.
“I’m… I’m still working, Boss…”
Ren stood.
“Remember this moment,” Ren said quietly to the watching workers. “When we take over the city, remember who fed you when the lights went out.”
Ren returned to his office.
He sat. His hands trembled violently. He hid them under the desk.
[HOST INTEGRITY: 8%]
He stared at the summons letter on his desk.
High-Inquisitor. Judge Mortis.
Ren whispered to the empty room.
“You think I’m trapped.”
He smiled faintly.
“In my previous life, I built empires with no money. Only laws.”
He stood up.
“Jian.”
“Yes, Boss?”
“Prepare a travel bag.”
”For where?”
Ren adjusted his ruined tuxedo jacket. He wiped a speck of blood from his lapel.
“The Ye Clan.”
Jian swallowed. “You’re really going? With 8% health?”
Ren’s eyes were calm.
“When the bank freezes you… you go to the people who print legitimacy.”
Ren walked toward the exit.
His factory was dark. His people were hungry. The Administration was sharpening a knife.
Ren Wu smiled.
“Good,” he whispered. “When everything is collapsing… that is when the real acquisitions begin.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 96 - 93 — "We Tore Her Soul Apart"
- Chapter 95 - 92 — Every Breath Made the Weapon Heavier
- Chapter 94 - 91 — Gravity Began Obeying the Wrong Man
- Chapter 93 - 90 — He Stepped Out of the Skybox and Fell
- Chapter 92 - 89 — He Crushed Them With Their Own Debt
- Chapter 91 - 88 — Contracts Only Matter If You Survive the Room
- Chapter 90 - 87 — He Wagered an Entire Sector
- Chapter 89 - 86 — Half the Room Went Bankrupt in 12 Seconds
- Chapter 88 - 85 — The Monster They Deployed to Save Their Money
- Chapter 87 - 84 — Their Fortunes Began to Bleed
- Chapter 86 - 83 — The Arena Learned to Fear Iron
- Chapter 85 - 82 — They Bet Billions Against Scrap Metal
- Chapter 84 - 81 — Champagne, Silk… and a Soul in a Glass Cage
- Chapter 83 - 80 — He Bought the Man Who Insulted Him
- Chapter 82 - 79 — Denied Entry by a Man Already Dead
- Chapter 81 - 78 — The River Was Made of Acid and Bones
- Chapter 80 - 77 — We Brought Cash Instead of an Army
- Chapter 79 - 76 — The Eight Traitors & the Clock That Will Kill Me
- Chapter 78 - 75: The New King
- Chapter 77 - 74: The Section Chief Kneels
- Chapter 76 - 73: The Financial Nuke
- Chapter 75 - 72: The Blockade Breaker
- Chapter 74 - 71: The Worship
- Chapter 73 - 70: The Delivery of Rust
- Chapter 72 - 69: The Alchemist’s Wrath
- Chapter 71 - 68: The Declaration
- Chapter 70 - 67: The Iron Baptism
- Chapter 69 - 66: The Heavy Hand
- Chapter 68 - 65: The Floodgate
- Chapter 67 - 64: The Formula of the Yellow Springs
- Chapter 66: SIDE STORY 3: THE FALL
- Chapter 65: SIDE STORY 2: THE HARVEST
- Chapter 64: Side Story 1: The Broken Oath
- Chapter 63 - CHAPTER 63: THE HEADHUNTER
- Chapter 62 - CHAPTER 62: THE DEBT COLLECTOR
- Chapter 61 - CHAPTER 61: ORIENTATION DAY
- Chapter 60: The Merger
- Chapter 59: The Hostile Takeover
- Chapter 58: The Cease and Desist
- Chapter 57: The Supply Chain
- Chapter 56: The Distressed Asset
- Chapter 55: The Cost of Business
- Chapter 54: The Liquidation
- Chapter 53 - 53 — The Hostile Restructuring
- Chapter 52 - 52 — The Walk-In
- Chapter 51 - CHAPTER 51: The Sovereign Reborn
- Chapter 50: The High Court
- Chapter 49: The Hostile Ledger
- Chapter 48 - CHAPTER 48: THE DEAD SHIFT
- Chapter 47: The Bleeding Ledger
- Chapter 46: The Grey Line Launch
- Chapter 45: Administrative Pressure
- Chapter 44: The Supply Switch
- Chapter 43: The Chokepoint Market
- Chapter 42: The Asset Unfreeze
- Chapter 41: The Board of Directors
- Chapter 40: The Audit of the Ice Clan
- Chapter 39: The Blackout
- Chapter 38: The Subpoena
- Chapter 37: The Liquidation
- Chapter 36: The Silent Banquet
- Chapter 35: The Remote CEO
- Chapter 34: The Cartel
- Chapter 33: Supply & Demand
- Chapter 32: The Black Label
- Chapter 31: The Headhunter
- Chapter 30: The Surveyor
- Chapter 29: Shop Level 2
- Chapter 28: The Hostile Takeover
- Chapter 27: The Zoning Dispute
- Chapter 26: Mr. Crow
- Chapter 25: The Spy
- Chapter 24: Withdrawal
- Chapter 23: The First Taste
- Chapter 22: The DMV of Hell
- Chapter 21: Production Line Alpha
- Chapter 20: The Audit
- Chapter 19: The Supply Chain
- Chapter 18: The Decree of 1,000 Ghosts
- Chapter 17: The Ice Queen Cometh
- Chapter 16: The Warden’s Abacus
- Chapter 15: The Warlord’s Ledger
- Chapter 14: The Standoff
- Chapter 13: The Grinder
- Chapter 12: The Last Stop
- Chapter 11: The Warlord vs. Two-Factor Authentication
- Chapter 10: The Midnight Raid
- Chapter 9: The Reaper at the Dinner Table
- Chapter 8: The Safe House
- Chapter 7: The Currency of Violence
- Chapter 6: The Sanctuary of Tiles
- Chapter 5: Blood for Mana
- Chapter 4: The Reaper in the Next Seat
- Chapter 3 - 3 — The Fracture Begins
- Chapter 2: The First Command
- Chapter 1: The Forty-Seven Second Death