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Chapter 4 - The First Billion and the First Real Threat

Money brought visibility.

Visibility brought competition.

Stronghold's microchip prototype outperformed industry averages by 23%.

That alone was enough to attract attention.

The acquisition offer that arrived wasn't mysterious.

It was corporate strategy.

A large, established tech conglomerate — Hale Strategic Holdings — made a formal bid for 51% ownership.

Valencia read it three times.

"It's not about buying us," she said.

"They want to absorb us," Stacey replied.

"Or neutralize us," Tiffany added.

There were no secret archives.

No child development initiatives.

Just power.

Hale Strategic Holdings had lost market share in two sectors where Stronghold now dominated.

Buying them would eliminate the threat.

Valencia's fingers brushed the ring absentmindedly.

Hale.

She hadn't thought about the surname in years.

Her mother's old argument echoed faintly in memory.

"He wanted the child. Not me."

Victor Hale was a venture capitalist.

Brilliant. Ruthless. Strategic.

He funded emerging companies, absorbed them, then reshaped them.

He did not experiment on children.

He acquired value.

Stronghold was value.

The offer wasn't personal.

It was business.

Valencia declined.

Publicly.

The tech world noticed.

And suddenly the headlines shifted from curiosity to challenge.

"Stronghold Rejects Hale Bid."

Now it was war.

Not secret war.

Corporate war.

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