Two weeks had passed since Gabriel's second proposal, and the weight of the decision had been pressing on me with increasing intensity every single day. The restoration work was progressing remarkably well – the mycorrhizal networks were responding to our interventions even faster than my most optimistic projections, and with two thousand gang members working under coordinated direction, we were accomplishing in days what would have taken months with conventional approaches.
But every success, every activated network node, every visible sign of forest regeneration just reminded me that the project timeline was counting down toward the moment when I would have to either accept or refuse Gabriel's offer.
I hadn't told President Santos about the second proposal. That would have compromised both sides of the arrangement – she would be obligated to take action against Gabriel for attempting to corrupt an international consultant, and Gabriel would rightfully consider my disclosure a betrayal of negotiating trust. The entire workforce agreement could collapse, taking with it all the environmental progress we had achieved.
So I had carried the decision alone for two weeks, turning it over in my mind during the day while coordinating restoration work and lying awake at night while weighing moral compromises against strategic opportunities.
Finally, I decided I needed outside perspective from people I trusted completely.
The diplomatic residence had private meeting rooms designed for sensitive conversations, with security measures that ensured no electronic surveillance could penetrate. Late in the evening, after most of the work crews had returned to their various camps and the military personnel had settled into night watch rotations, I asked Anthony and Evelyn to meet me in one of these secure spaces.
"This sounds serious," Anthony observed as he settled into one of the comfortable chairs. "You've had that look all day – the one that means you're processing something complex and probably morally questionable."
"That's accurate," I admitted, waiting for Evelyn to take her seat before continuing. "I need to tell you both about a second deal Gabriel proposed two weeks ago."
I proceeded to explain the entire arrangement in detail – the offer of contact information for an international informant who might have intelligence about the World President's identity, the request for help hiding Gabriel's relocation from Santos, and the implicit threat that refusing the second deal would undermine the workforce agreement that was making our restoration project possible.
The shock on both their faces was immediate and obvious.
"He offered you information about the World President's identity?" Evelyn said, her voice carrying a mixture of disbelief and concern. "That's... that's potentially the most valuable intelligence we could ever acquire."
"I know," I said. "But the price is helping a criminal organization evade justice."
"That's not a small price," Anthony added. "If this gets exposed – if anyone finds out you helped the Jaguars hide from law enforcement – your credibility as an international consultant would be destroyed instantly. Everything you've built, every diplomatic relationship, every bit of political capital would evaporate."
"I know that too," I agreed. "Which is why I've been unable to make a decision for two weeks straight."
Evelyn was quiet for a moment, clearly processing the implications from multiple angles. "What would helping him actually involve? What kind of assistance is he asking for?"
"Consultation on evasion tactics," I explained. "Understanding how governments track and locate criminal organizations, advice on operational security, strategic positioning to avoid detection. Not direct assistance or false information, but expert guidance on how to disappear effectively."
"That's still material support for criminal activity," Anthony pointed out. "Even if it's indirect, you'd be enabling whatever crimes the Jaguars commit after relocation by making it harder for law enforcement to stop them."
"But we'd also potentially get intelligence that could help us identify and stop the World President," Evelyn countered. "Someone who's threatening entire democratic nations, building authoritarian coalitions, and operating with complete anonymity. The scale of that threat might justify compromises we wouldn't normally accept."
I looked at both of them, appreciating that they were engaging with the genuine complexity of the situation rather than giving me easy answers that wouldn't actually help with the decision.
"What would you do?" I asked directly. "If you were in my position, if this decision was yours to make, what would you choose?"
Anthony and Evelyn exchanged glances, both clearly uncomfortable with the question.
"It's a hard decision," Anthony said finally. "Honestly, if the deal gets exposed, everything is over for all of us. Not just you – everyone associated with this mission would be implicated in corruption, conspiracy with criminal organizations, obstruction of justice. We'd be finished as credible international actors."
"But if we don't take the opportunity," Evelyn added, "we might be passing up our only realistic chance to identify the World President. How many people have access to that level of intelligence? How many opportunities like this actually exist?"
"Exactly," I said. "That's the calculation I've been struggling with for two weeks."
I paused, a thought occurring to me that I had been ignorant of for too long. "Evelyn, you know the World President."
She looked confused by the apparent non sequitur. "Why do you believe that?"
"Three years ago," I said, watching her expression carefully, "you were the one who introduced me to the existence of the World President. During one of my re-evaluation visits, I overheard a conversation you were having with him. That's when I first learned that someone called the World President was becoming a significant factor in global politics."
The memory was clear despite the passage of time. I had walked into the room a bit to early and I saw Evelyn on the phone. For once she seemed scared and she had the mysterious individual 'Sir World President'.
"You were eavesdropping," Evelyn said with a slight smile that suggested she wasn't particularly upset about the revelation.
"Unintentionally at first," I admitted. "But once I realized what you were discussing, I couldn't help but listen."
"Fair enough," she said. "Yes, I know of the World President's existence. What's your point?"
"He must have a job title," I continued, the pieces fitting together as I spoke. "Back then, when you mentioned him, his voice alone made me drop to my knees. I was next to the door, not even directly participating in the conversation, and just hearing his voice through the phone you were using had a physical effect that I couldn't resist."
Anthony's eyes widened slightly at this information. "A voice that can physically force people to their knees? That's not a natural skill."
"Exactly," I agreed. "That kind of effect requires System-enhanced capabilities, which means the World President has a job title that grants something along with his skills affecting people physically. I'd be able to resist those effects now , but back then I was vulnerable to whatever compulsion or authority his voice carried."
Evelyn nodded slowly. "You're right about that analysis. The World President would definitely have a job title since he is a key member or benefactor of System experiments. But, I think there's been some confusion, I don't actually know his personal identity."
"You don't know?" I asked, finding that hard to believe. "Even after working with him directly?"
"I've only ever addressed him as Sir World President," Evelyn explained, her voice taking on a careful tone that suggested she was choosing her words precisely. "Even in direct communication, his identity was always concealed through technological means – voice distortion, visual obscuring, communication intermediaries. I have no idea what his actual name is, what he looks like, or where he operates from."
"But you worked for him," I pressed. "You coordinated System evaluations, managed intelligence about all systems, handled sensitive information. You must have had some insight into his operations."
"I did," she confirmed. "But operational insight doesn't necessarily reveal personal identity. The World President's organization is structured specifically to maintain his anonymity even from people working directly under his authority. And after I started helping you publicly, after I clearly joined your side in the international conflict, he stopped all forms of contact with me."
The revelation was both disappointing and informative. If even Evelyn, who had worked closely with the World President's organization, didn't know his true identity, then Gabriel's informant might genuinely be offering unique intelligence that couldn't be obtained through conventional channels.
"That makes the decision even harder," I said. "If legitimate intelligence networks can't identify him, if people who worked for him don't know who he is, then Gabriel's informant might be our best option."
"Or it might be a manipulation," Anthony suggested. "Gabriel could be lying about having an informant, or the informant could have false information, or the whole thing could be a trap designed to compromise you politically."
"All of those are possible," I agreed. "But my Lie Detection suggested he was being genuine when he made the offer. That doesn't eliminate the possibility of him being deceived himself, but it reduces the likelihood that this is a straightforward con."
We sat in silence for a moment, all three of us contemplating the impossible decision and its various implications.
"I might take the deal," I said finally, speaking the possibility aloud for the first time. "The intelligence about the World President's identity is too valuable to pass up, even if acquiring it requires moral compromises I'd prefer to avoid."
"That's your choice to make," Evelyn said, though her tone suggested she understood both the logic and the cost of that decision. "Whatever you choose, we'll support you and deal with the consequences together."
"Same here, boss," Anthony added. "Though I'd recommend being very careful about how you structure any assistance you provide to Gabriel. Make it theoretical consultation rather than specific operational guidance, document everything in case you need to justify your actions later, and maintain plausible deniability wherever possible."
The practical advice was appreciated, even if it didn't make the moral calculus any cleaner.
I was about to respond when Instinct suddenly activated with a subtle warning, accompanied by Observation highlighting something that my conscious awareness had almost missed.
There was a sound outside the room. Not a loud sound, not an obvious intrusion, but a tiny scrape of movement against the wall, the barely perceptible shift of weight distribution that suggested someone was standing very close to our supposedly secure meeting space.
Someone was listening in on our conversation.
Neither Evelyn nor Anthony showed any sign of having noticed. Evelyn's skills were remarkable, but it could be fooled by someone with sufficient skill in remaining silent. Anthony's professional paranoia usually caught potential surveillance, but he had been focused on our conversation rather than actively monitoring for eavesdropping.
I had only detected it because Instinct had flagged the anomaly and Observation had provided the specific sensory details that confirmed someone's presence outside the room.
The realization sent a cold shock through my system. We had been discussing highly sensitive information – Gabriel's proposal, the World President's identity, my potential willingness to assist a criminal organization in evading justice. If the wrong person had been listening to this conversation, the consequences could be catastrophic for our mission, our diplomatic relationships, and potentially our personal safety.
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