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Chapter 17 - The Cost of It All

The sun was barely up when Alex arrived at Raymond's place. The Gatehouse stood quiet at the city's edge, like a man who had seen too much and learned to say too little. Alex had never quite gotten used to how peaceful it was here like time slowed down around Raymond.

He knocked once. The door opened almost immediately. Raymond didn't smile, but his eyes lit up the way only someone who liked your company but wouldn't admit it could.

"You're early," he said, stepping aside.

"You said come before nine," Alex replied.

"That was just to test your discipline." Raymond shut the door behind them. "Most people show up at ten and call it nine."

Alex smiled faintly. "So did I pass?"

Raymond gave a short nod. "We'll see."

They walked through the hallway into the study. It wasn't like any classroom Alex had known. There were no desks, no whiteboards. Just deep leather chairs, shelves of old books, a vintage globe in the corner, and the smell of roasted coffee and aged paper.

Raymond motioned for Alex to sit, then poured two glasses of water.

"Today's lesson," he began, "is not about markets or people… It's about power. But not the kind that comes with guns or titles. The kind that moves the world in silence, money."

Alex leaned in slightly.

"You and I know that everyone wants money," Raymond continued. "But very few understand it. They think it's just paper. They think it's just coins or balance alerts. But as I always tell you….. Money is energy. Money is value. It's attention. It's an exchange. It's how people say, 'What you've done matters to me.'"

Raymond stood and picked up a marker. He wrote on the board:

THE MINDSET SHIFT: MONEY = ENERGY + VALUE

"You must shift your mindset, Alex. Money doesn't just land in your hands because you work hard. It flows to those who solve problems and those who position themselves where value is needed. The moment you understand that, you stop chasing money… and start becoming someone it's drawn to."

Alex sat quietly, absorbing each word.

Raymond walked back to the table. "And in this generation, money is evolving. We've entered the Digital Age. Paper is dying. Cards, mobile transfers, cryptocurrencies, digital assets, these are the tools now."

He paused. "You've probably heard of crypto?"

"Yeah. Bitcoin, Ethereum… I've heard of them," Alex said.

"But do you understand them?"

"Not really."

Raymond smiled faintly. "Most don't. But let me simplify it. Crypto is decentralized money. It doesn't need a bank or a government. It moves fast, globally, and it rewards the informed. The early. The bold."

He started listing out ideas on the board:

- Cards

Mobile Money

Crypto

NFTs

Digital Businesses

Online Assets

"In this age, a 17-year-old can make $10,000 from a laptop, while a professor still waits for his paycheck."

Alex raised an eyebrow.

Raymond went on. "You can own real estate, virtually. Sell designs, knowledge, art, and influence digitally. You can build without owning land, without buying a shop, without begging anyone."

He looked directly at Alex. "The world has changed. But has your mind changed with it?"

Alex was quiet for a long time. Then finally, he nodded.

"I think I get it. Money isn't about working long hours. It's about understanding how the system flows."

Raymond smiled, genuinely this time. "Exactly. This same system that the circle controls"

There was a brief pause. Then Raymond leaned back in his chair and studied Alex.

"I've taught you a lot," he said. "You've listened well. You've learned. But now…" he paused. "Now, I want to see you in action. It's time to build."

Alex blinked. "Build?"

"Yes," Raymond said. "It's one thing to know. It's another to do. Start something. Use what I've taught you…"

Alex hesitated. "I thought the lessons from now on would be about preparing me for the Circle. The real threat."

Raymond looked at him with a sharpened expression. "And that's exactly what we're doing. You don't face the Circle with fists or fear, Alex. You face them with strategy. With influence. With value. When you build something powerful, you become harder to erase."

Alex was quiet for a moment. "What if I fail?"

Raymond turned to him. "Then fail loud, learn fast, and try again. That's how the real players rise."

Alex looked thoughtful. "That's a little scary."

Raymond gave a small chuckle. "Good. If it's not scary, it's probably not worth doing."

"..."

Then Alex did something he rarely did, he leaned forward with a low voice. "Can I ask you something?"

Raymond raised a brow, sipping from his glass. "Go on."

"You've taught me a lot… about people, money, survival. But I barely know you."

Raymond let out a dry chuckle. "What are you getting at?"

Alex held his gaze. "I want to understand the man behind all this. You once said you lost a lot. What did you mean?"

Raymond's expression shifted, subtle, but unmistakable. He leaned back slowly. "You've never asked me something this personal before."

"Exactly," Alex said quietly. "That's why I'm asking you now. I need to know who is shaping me."

Raymond stared out the window as if sifting through years. The room seemed to be still.

"My wife died seventeen years ago," he said finally. "Cancer."

Alex's eyes dropped. "I'm sorry."

"She was my calm in the storm. While I was out chasing power, she was at home… fighting for her life. I didn't see it, not in time. I was too busy winning battles out there, to realize I was losing the war inside my own walls."

Alex swallowed hard.

"I have a daughter, Celine. Brilliant girl. She's a surgeon now, in the States. Saving lives. Changing the world." He paused. "But she hasn't spoken to me in years."

"Why?"

"She blames me. Thinks I chose ambition over love. That I cared more about influence than presence. And the truth?" He looked down. "She's probably right."

Raymond's voice dropped to a whisper. "I was building an empire… when all she wanted was a father who'd come home early and hold her mother's hand."

Alex looked away for a moment, his throat tightening. "That's heavy."

Raymond gave a faint smile. "Power is always heavy. If it ever feels light, you're probably holding it wrong."

The silence pressed between them, thick and meaningful.

Then Raymond looked at Alex, something tired but determined in his eyes. "That's why I do this. That's why I teach. Maybe if I help someone else rise the right way, it won't all be for nothing."

Alex nodded slowly. "It's not for nothing. You've changed me."

Raymond's smile returned, worn, but real. "Then don't waste it."

Alex stood up, feeling taller somehow. He extended his hand, and Raymond took it, firm, strong, certain.

"I'll build something," Alex said. "I promise."

"I know you will," Raymond replied. "Now go. The world's waiting."

Alex turned to leave, but for a split second, his mind flashed back.

Elliott's voice echoed in the silence of his memory: "Even Raymond can't protect you forever."

His head was full of wisdom and a heart full of questions. He was ready to build. But he couldn't shake the feeling… that someone was already preparing to tear it all down.

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