Home / Romance / Reborn Beneath The Ice / CHAPTER 3: THE WAREHOUSE MONOLITH
CHAPTER 3: THE WAREHOUSE MONOLITH
Author: L.A. MONROE
last update2026-07-07 07:42:59

​"I do not care if the city structural board throws you in a federal penitentiary, Robert, because in exactly twenty-seven days, there will not be a city left to enforce the law."

​Ethan slammed the heavy roll of architectural blueprints onto the hood of the contractor's pickup truck. The sound echoed like a gunshot through the cavernous, hollow concrete shell of the abandoned industrial warehouse.

​Robert Drake slowly lowered his flashlight, the bright beam cutting through the damp, shadow-drenched air to reveal a face lined with deep skepticism and growing irritation. "You are completely out of your mind, kid. You call me out to the middle of the marshlands at midnight, hand me forty pages of illegal military-grade schematics, and expect me to just risk my license? I have a real business. I do not do black-market survivalist bunkers."

​"Everyone has a price, Robert," Ethan said, his voice flat, dangerously steady. "Name yours."

​"It is not about the money!" Robert yelled back, his voice bouncing off the high, rusted steel beams of the ceiling. "You are asking me to strip the existing concrete, lay down six separate layers of high-density thermal aerogel insulation, and seal the entire perimeter with triple-reinforced hydraulic blast doors. In three weeks? That takes six months and a dozen city permits! The structural load changes alone would flag any building inspector within a fifty-mile radius."

​"Then skip the inspectors," Ethan said, stepping closer until the intense, unblinking glare of his dark eyes forced the older man to shift his footing. "Bring your crews in under the cover of night. Pay them cash. Tell them we are building a secure data storage vault for a private technology conglomerate. If an inspector shows up at the gate, buy him off. If he cannot be bought, let me know and I will handle him."

​Robert let out a sharp, mocking breath, shaking his head as he reached for his jacket pocket. "You think you can just wave a magic wand and erase the system? The city takes weeks just to look at the power requirements for an independent, closed-loop geothermal drilling rig like the one you drew here. You cannot just dig into the bedrock without a geological survey. It is logistically impossible."

​"Nothing is impossible when you realize the alternative is a slow, agonizing death," Ethan whispered, his chest tightening as a sudden, sharp memory of his past execution flashed behind his eyelids. He remembered the feeling of his lungs freezing from the inside out, the smell of his own rotting, frostbitten flesh while his neighbors laughed outside his door. "You think the system protects you, Robert? You think the law matters? Look at the sky. Look at how the humidity is acting. The world is breaking."

​"The only thing breaking here is your sanity," Robert muttered, though his eyes lingered nervously on the raw intensity radiating from Ethan’s posture. "I am leaving. Find some other sucker to build your doomsday cage."

​"Wait," Ethan said, his hand shooting out to grip the contractor’s forearm with a strength that surprised both of them.

​Before Robert could pull away, a sudden, unnatural stillness fell over the massive warehouse. The heavy, suffocating humidity of the July night vanished in a fraction of a second. The air turned brutally, violently sharp.

​Robert gasped, his chest heaving as a thick, white cloud of fog erupted from his lips with every breath. "What... what the hell is that? Is there an ammonia leak in the old cooling lines?"

​Ethan didn't answer. He stared down at his own hands, watching a fine layer of white frost rapidly crystallize across the surface of the metal blueprints. The temperature inside the concrete room had plummeted forty degrees in a single beat of his heart. It was a micro-fluctuation, a bleeding effect from the massive atmospheric anomaly currently tearing its way toward them through the upper stratosphere.

​"Ethan," Robert stammered, his teeth clicking together in a sudden, uncontrollable shiver as he looked at the frost forming on his truck's windshield. "What is... why is it so cold? It is eighty-five degrees outside!"

​"It is a warning," Ethan said, his voice a low, chilling whisper that cut through the contractor’s panic. He watched the white mist drift from his mouth, his mind expanding into the vast, dark void of his spatial storage, using its stabilizing energy to fight back the sudden chill. "It is the future coming for us a little earlier than expected."

​Just as quickly as it had arrived, the freezing draft dissolved. The heavy summer heat rushed back into the room like a tidal wave, melting the frost into long, weeping streaks of water on the metal hood.

​Robert stumbled back, wiping a hand across his wet forehead, his eyes wide with a deep, primal terror that his corporate logic couldn't explain. He looked at the wet blueprints, then back at Ethan, his breath still ragged. "How did you... what did you do?"

​"I didn't do anything," Ethan said, pulling his phone from his pocket and tapping the screen with a steady finger. "But now you know I am not lying. The money is hitting your commercial account right now, Robert. Check your notifications."

​A sharp, digital chime echoed from Robert’s belt. He pulled out his rugged field phone with a trembling hand, his eyes scanning the banking alert that had just flashed across his screen.

​Direct Wire Received: $1,500,000.00. Sender: Vance Private Holdings.

​"That is a million and a half up front," Ethan said, his voice dropping into a seductive, corrupting murmur as he watched the contractor's moral resistance crumble under the weight of pure wealth. "You get another two million the day the geothermal line goes live. You can buy ten new licenses with that money, Robert. You can secure a piece of land far away from here. Or you can walk away right now, leave the cash on the table, and spend the next month wondering why the air turned to ice in the middle of July."

​Robert stared at the numbers on his screen, his jaw working silently. The professional ethics he had spent thirty years building were evaporating, exposed as nothing more than a fragile luxury before a reality he couldn't comprehend. "My guys... they will need premium hazard pay to work these kinds of hours without a union log."

​"Double it," Ethan said instantly, not blinking. "Give them whatever they want. Just bring the heavy equipment in through the rear access road by five o'clock tomorrow morning. The concrete walls need to be reinforced with steel framing before the week ends."

​"We will need a massive amount of diesel fuel for the drilling rigs if we are bypassing the city grid connections," Robert said, his voice transforming, adopting the clinical, cold tone of a man who had just sold his soul to a madman. "The local suppliers are going to ask questions if I order that many gallons to an abandoned site."

​"Tell them it is for a salvage project," Ethan replied, a dark sense of triumph settling deep into his chest. He had bought him. Money was still power, for twenty-seven more days at least. After that, this concrete monolith would be the only currency that mattered. "I will handle the fuel logistics myself if the suppliers get difficult. Just focus on the structural seals."

​Robert rolled up the blueprints, his movements quick, nervous, and full of a new, desperate energy. "I will have the first excavation team on site before dawn. We will start with the deep trenching for the aerogel layers."

​"Good," Ethan said, turning to walk toward the exit. "Do not fail me, Robert. If those doors are not airtight when the pressure drops, the money won't matter."

​"Ethan, wait," Robert called out, his voice hesitant, stopping the younger man just as he reached the shadow of the doorway.

​Ethan paused, not looking back. "What is it?"

​"You need to be careful with who you are dealing with on this lot," Robert said, his tone dropping into a low, cautious warning. "When I ran the deed search on this property yesterday morning to check the old utility lines, the system flagged a concurrent inquiry. A private corporate security firm based out of downtown called Blackwood Tactical. They were pulling the satellite grids for this exact coordinate."

​Ethan’s fingers tightened against the cold metal edge of the doorframe. Blackwood Tactical was the primary mercenary contractor used by Vance Logistics.

​"They weren't just checking the lines, kid," Robert whispered into the dark. "They were looking for the blind spots in the perimeter cameras. Someone is already watching this place."

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