Power+1 Chapter 17: Counter-Reviews and Calculated Revenge
Added 2025-05-02 01:15:08 +0000 UTC(Start of Week 23. Theo's Balance: $35,292.00)
Week 23 - Monday
Sleep offered little respite. Theo woke Monday morning feeling gritty and unrested, the fury from Sunday night’s discovery of the review bombing having simmered into a cold, hard knot in his gut. Sabotage. Someone had actively tried to cripple his business just as it was taking flight. The betrayal by Tammy was one thing. Opportunistic theft driven by desperation, perhaps. This felt different. Malicious. Calculated.
He lay in bed for a moment, staring at the water-stained ceiling, forcing down the urge to immediately start digging into potential culprits. Patience, he told himself, though the word felt foreign, ill-fitting. Deal with the immediate fires first. Stabilize. Gather intel. Then act.
First priority: damage control and stabilizing morale. Second priority: identifying the enemy. Third priority: making them pay.
He swung out of bed, the exhaustion momentarily masked by a surge of grim determination. Before even heading to the shop, he pulled out his phone, fingers tapping out a message to Sarah.
Theo: Hey Sarah. Ran into an unexpected… online issue… this weekend. Could really use your expert opinion when you have a moment. Any chance you could swing by the shop later tonight or maybe sometime tomorrow? No rush, but would appreciate your take.
He kept it vague, avoiding details that might cause her undue worry or pull her away from her own work pressures prematurely. He just needed her expertise lined up.
Her reply came quickly.
Sarah: Oh no! Online issue? Sounds ominous lol. Tonight's tricky, slammed with work stuff. How about tomorrow afternoon again? Around 4? Can definitely make time then. Hope it’s nothing too serious!
Theo: Tomorrow at 4 works perfectly. Thanks, Sarah. Appreciate it.
One problem potentially delegated. Now for the shop floor.
He arrived at Maria’s Charcoal Chicken to find Henry and Olivia already prepping, the atmosphere slightly subdued but focused. The previous week’s chaos, the theft, the sabotage discovery, hung unspoken in the air.
"Morning," Theo greeted them, forcing a neutral tone he didn't feel. "Let's aim for one-fifty prep today. See how the start of the week holds up after… everything."
Henry nodded, already loading chickens onto the rotisserie spits (+1 enhanced consistency ensuring even spacing almost wasn't needed with Henry's care, but Theo appreciated the redundancy). "Sounds good, boss. Hey," he added, brightening slightly, "supplier delivered the first batch of Mars bars and the good vanilla ice cream this morning! Ready for dessert launch whenever you give the word." He gestured towards a newly organized section of the dry storage area.
"Good work securing those, Henry," Theo acknowledged. The dessert idea felt like a small point of positive momentum amidst the recent negativity. "Let's get through today, see how traffic looks after those fake reviews. But yeah, let's plan to officially add them to the menu this week. People were asking all weekend." He saw Henry's shoulders straighten with pride at the validation. Good, Theo thought. Keep him motivated.
Olivia, meanwhile, was diligently wiping down the front counter, but Theo noticed her occasionally glancing at her phone, brow furrowed. As Theo passed, she looked up.
"Hey Theo," she began hesitantly, "I was looking at those awful reviews from Sunday night… the ones talking about rats and stuff? Total lies, obviously. But I was wondering… is there a way to report them? Like, tell Google or Yelp they're fake?" She scrolled through a page on her phone. "Their help sections are super confusing, but maybe Sarah would know when she comes?"
Theo felt a flicker of appreciation for Olivia’s proactive thinking. "Good initiative, Olivia. Yeah, it's usually a nightmare dealing with those platforms, but definitely worth asking Sarah. She knows how to navigate that stuff." He paused, looking at both his employees. They looked tired, maybe a little demoralized by the weekend's events, but they were here, working hard. "Listen," he said, his voice firm but quiet. "Last week was rough. The theft… this review bombing… it's bullshit. But it doesn't change the fact that we're making incredible food here." He gestured towards the perfectly roasting chickens, the humming fryer. "We know the truth. Our repeat customers know the truth. We just need to push through this."
His words seemed to land. Henry nodded determinedly. Olivia offered a small, resilient smile. "Yeah! Team Chicken!" she declared, maybe a little too brightly, but Theo appreciated the sentiment.
They prepped the 150 sets. The day unfolded with a tense undercurrent. Every time the bell jangled, Theo found himself bracing slightly, wondering if it was a genuine customer or someone coming to complain based on the fake reviews. But the feared drop-off didn't fully materialize. Business was definitely slower than the peak weekend days, but steadier than expected. They sold 123 chicken and chip sets. Respectable.
And surprisingly, Henry’s dessert experiment, now officially (if quietly) offered when customers asked, proved instantly popular. They sold 50 deep-fried Mars bars and ice cream balls at $8 a pop – an easy $400 in high-margin revenue. Maybe Henry’s onto something big here, Theo conceded internally.
He noticed both Henry and Olivia working with extra diligence all day, double-checking orders, wiping down surfaces constantly, engaging customers with extra warmth. It felt like they were consciously trying to counteract the negativity, to make up for Tammy's betrayal through their own efforts. It didn't go unnoticed. The cynical part of Theo remained wary, but another part felt a grudging respect. Maybe not everyone is out for themselves, the thought flickered, before being quickly suppressed by years of ingrained distrust. Or maybe they just really like their jobs and the bonuses. Either way, their dedication was valuable.
As they closed, they had leftovers again. "Make some friends," Theo instructed, handing Henry and Olivia containers. They spent twenty minutes distributing the perfectly cooked chicken and chips to the nearby late-night workers, another small deposit in the bank of local goodwill.
Week 23 - Tuesday
Tuesday morning. They prepped 150 sets again, falling into a rhythm. Olivia was rapidly mastering the front counter and packing station, her cheerful demeanour infectious. Henry handled the fryers and assisted Theo with the rotisserie and prep, his movements increasingly confident. The sting of Tammy’s theft was fading slightly, replaced by the smooth functioning of this new, smaller team. Olivia’s positive energy was a definite upgrade over Tammy’s quiet intensity and barely concealed dissatisfaction.
Around lunchtime, Theo’s phone pinged.
Sarah: Hey! Still good for 4pm today? Just making sure before I escape the Meta madness!
Theo: Yep, 4pm works. See you then.
He spent the afternoon running the lunch service with Henry and Olivia, his mind partly on the upcoming meeting with Sarah, partly on the lingering question of who was behind the review bombing. The need for information, for certainty, gnawed at him.
At precisely 4 PM, Sarah walked in, looking harassed but offering a determined smile. "Okay, reporting for chicken consulting duty!" she announced.
Henry and Olivia, clearly recognizing her from her previous visit and likely briefed by Theo about her marketing prowess, immediately chimed in. "Hey Sarah!" Henry greeted her warmly. "Boss, why don't you guys head out?" Olivia added brightly. "Take Sarah somewhere to talk properly? We can hold the fort down for an hour, it's usually quiet around now anyway."
Theo hesitated for only a second. He trusted Henry and Olivia more after the past few days, and getting Sarah's focused attention away from the shop environment seemed wise. And honestly? He needed a break himself. The thought of coffee, surprisingly, didn't trigger the same aversion as last week. Maybe the positive momentum, the focus on problem-solving, had overridden the negative association.
"Alright," Theo found himself saying. "Good idea. An hour, max. Keep your phones handy." He turned to Sarah. "There's a decent café nearby I heard about, 'The Three Beans'? My treat this time."
They settled into a booth at the cafe, a quiet spot with comfortable seating and the rich aroma of properly roasted coffee. Theo ordered a cappuccino, Sarah a latte. The familiar ritual felt almost normal.
"Okay," Sarah said, pulling out her tablet as soon as their drinks arrived. "Tell me about the 'online issue'. What happened?"
Theo recounted the events succinctly – Tammy’s theft on Friday night, followed by the coordinated flood of fake one-star reviews hitting Sunday. He showed her the reviews on his phone.
Sarah scrolled through them, her expression shifting from sympathy about the theft to professional outrage at the reviews. "Ugh. Classic review bomb. Nasty stuff. Okay," she went into detective mode, "two main ways to handle this."
She explained Option A: Reporting the reviews to Google/Yelp. "You flag them as fake, provide evidence if you have any, like showing they were all posted in a short time frame from new accounts, using similar language, making verifiable false claims like 'rats' when you just passed a health inspection, etc. But," she warned, "it's a slow, bureaucratic process. These platforms get millions of reports. Getting fake reviews removed from a small business quickly? It’s tough. Sometimes lawyers help, but often it's just a waiting game."
Theo nodded grimly. That sounded frustratingly ineffective. "Option B?"
"Option B," Sarah continued, leaning forward slightly, "is figuring out why. Follow the motive, follow the money. Someone benefits from tanking your reputation right when you're getting popular. Who?" She started tapping rapidly on her tablet, pulling up local map data, searching business listings. "Think local competitors. Who else sells similar food nearby? Who would have seen your weekend lines and felt the pinch?"
She quickly identified three other takeaway places within a ten-block radius – a pizza joint, a burger place, and another fish and chip shop Theo vaguely remembered seeing, called 'Something Fishy'. Sarah started cross-referencing their own recent reviews.
"Pizza place, burger joint… normal review patterns, mix of good and bad, nothing unusual," she murmured, scrolling. "But this one… 'Something Fishy'…" She paused, zooming in. "Okay, this is interesting. Look." She turned the tablet towards Theo. "They've also had a sudden surge in reviews over the past two weeks. But almost all five-stars. Lots of generic praise – 'Great value!', 'Best fish in town!', 'Friendly service!' – posted by accounts with few or no other reviews. And the timing… starts just before your big weekend rush, like they were trying to build hype, maybe got overshadowed, and then your place gets bombed Sunday night?"
Theo stared at the screen, connecting the dots Sarah laid out. The timing was suspicious. The coordinated-looking positive reviews for the rival felt like the flip side of the negative attack on his shop.
"If I were a betting woman," Sarah said, tapping the screen, "I'd say 'Something Fishy' felt threatened by your sudden success and decided to play dirty. Looks suss, as the Aussies say." (Theo mentally corrected her – not looks, definitely is suss!) "But honestly, Theo?" She sighed, putting the tablet down. "Even if you're 99% sure it was them, proving it is basically impossible. And confronting them? Just creates more drama."
She took a sip of her latte. "My advice? Focus on recovery. What we did with that one negative review? Do that for all the fake ones you can. Reply politely, professionally state the claims are false, maybe mention your recent health inspection score if it was good. Then, bury them with genuine positive reviews. Encourage your happy customers, maybe offer a small discount on their next order if they leave an honest review? And keep up the social media Olivia is learning. Good content and genuine engagement will outweigh the fakes over time. This should just be a small blip if the food stays this good."
Theo felt a wave of relief mixed with simmering anger. Sarah’s pragmatic approach settled his nerves about the reviews. Treat it as a manageable problem, not an existential threat. But knowing, with near certainty, who likely did it… that stoked the cold fire of his vindictiveness. Something Fishy. He filed the name away.
"That… makes sense, Sarah. Thanks. Seriously." He paused, then had another thought, prompted by the theft. "On a different note… this whole situation made me realize I need better security at the shop. Any chance you know about installing basic security cameras? Inside and out?"
Sarah’s eyes lit up again, shifting easily from marketing to tech. "Oh yeah, totally! Easy peasy. Tons of great DIY or professionally installed options now, cloud storage, motion alerts, night vision… Definitely a smart move for any small business." She pulled out her phone. "Let me look up a couple of recommended systems, compare features… I can put together some options for you, maybe even help with the setup if you want? We can sort out the cost then."
"That would be incredible," Theo said gratefully. "Just… basic, reliable, covers the counter and the front/back doors."
"Got it. I'll send you some links next week."
They finished their coffees and snacks, the conversation drifting back to Sarah’s work stress and Theo carefully deflecting questions about his own 'consulting' projects. As they left the cafe, Theo felt a renewed sense of purpose. The review bombing was an annoyance to be managed. The theft was a lesson learned. Security cameras were coming. And 'Something Fishy'? They were now firmly on his radar. Revenge, he mused, was a dish best served cold… perhaps with perfectly cooked chips. The coffee, he noted as they parted ways, had been surprisingly good, even without a +1. Wicked, even.
Back at the shop, the evening rush was building. Theo relayed Sarah’s advice on handling the reviews to Olivia, who immediately started drafting polite, professional responses. They pushed through the service, selling 118 chicken sets and, remarkably, 84 orders of Henry’s deep-fried desserts, which were clearly developing a cult following already.
Week 23 - Wednesday
Wednesday. Theo woke with a plan solidifying in his mind. Sarah’s deduction about ‘Something Fishy’ felt right. He needed confirmation, needed to look the owner in the eye. He spent the morning reviewing his notes from Sarah, thinking about security camera placement, and also reflecting on Henry’s performance. The kid was solid gold, hardworking, enthusiastic, full of ideas like the desserts, and showing real leadership potential. He worked seamlessly with Olivia, their positive energies complementing each other. Maybe, Theo thought, once the cameras are in, I can actually start training Henry to manage the day-to-day? Step back a bit? Free up my time, my +1 charges, for… other opportunities? The itch to find the next big play, something beyond the admittedly profitable but labour-intensive chicken shop, was growing stronger. This place was proving the Tool Enhancement model, building capital. But it wasn't the billion-dollar endgame.
They prepped for 150 sets. The day felt smoother, more routine. Olivia handled the counter like a seasoned pro. Henry kept the fryer and rotisserie humming. They sold 130 chicken sets and 81 desserts. Things were definitely recovering from the review bomb dip. The repeat customer rate seemed high. People clearly trusted the taste over anonymous online slander.
As they were closing up, Theo addressed Henry and Olivia. "Listen," he began, "I know last weekend ended rough with the Tammy situation and those fake reviews. But you guys have been incredible this week, really stepped up." He saw them both straighten slightly, looking pleased. "Morale felt a bit low, understandably. How about tomorrow night, after closing, we all grab some proper dinner? Pizza maybe? My treat. To thank you for the hard work, and officially welcome Jenny too."
Henry grinned. "Sounds awesome, boss!" Olivia nodded enthusiastically. Seeing their genuine appreciation, Theo felt another flicker of that unfamiliar warmth. Maybe building a team wasn’t purely transactional after all.
Week 23 - Thursday
Thursday. Jenny arrived for her first official shift in the late afternoon, looking nervous but determined. Theo introduced her properly to Henry and Olivia, who both welcomed her warmly. Theo reiterated his instructions: "Learn the basics tonight, ask questions, don't worry about speed yet. Focus on getting it right."
Around lunchtime, Theo put his reconnaissance plan into action. "Henry, Olivia," he said, taking off his apron. "Need to step out for an hour or two, some business errands. You guys good holding down the fort?"
"No problem, boss!" Henry assured him. "We got this."
Theo nodded, grabbed his keys, and headed out. He drove the few blocks over to where 'Something Fishy', the rival fish and chip shop, was located. It looked… adequate. Less rundown than Maria’s had been under Jono, but nothing special. Standard chippy décor, smell of frying fish hanging heavy in the air. He pushed the door open.
A portly man with thinning hair and shifty eyes looked up from behind the counter, where he was reading a newspaper. His eyes widened almost imperceptibly for a fraction of a second when he saw Theo, then his expression smoothed into one of bland customer service inquiry. Bingo. He recognized me, Theo thought, even though they'd never met. He must have scouted Maria's during its resurgence.
"What can I get for ya?" the owner asked, folding his paper with deliberate slowness.
"Yeah, let me get the standard fish and chips," Theo said, scanning the menu board. "Extra chicken salt on the chips. And uh… add a dim sim and two potato cakes." Classic takeaway order.
As the owner turned to drop the fish and frozen potato cakes into the fryer, Theo leaned casually on the counter. "Man, busy time to be in the food game around here, huh?"
The owner grunted noncommittally. "S'alright. Steady."
"Yeah?" Theo continued, adopting his 'woe is me' act. "Wish I could say the same. Just took over that old chicken place down the street, Maria's? Thought it had potential, you know?" He sighed dramatically. "Been a nightmare. Had an employee rob me blind last week, then got slammed with a ton of fake one-star reviews over the weekend. Talking about bad food, bad service, you name it. Business completely tanked overnight. Might have to shut down already if things don't pick up." He watched the owner's face closely.
He saw it. A tiny, almost invisible smirk playing at the corners of the man's lips as he turned back from the fryer, quickly masked by a look of faux sympathy. "Oof. Yeah, that's rough, mate," the owner said, shaking his head. "Small business is tough. Ups and downs." He started scooping chips. "Heard things were lookin' up for Maria's there for a bit, real busy?"
"Yeah, for like, two days," Theo lied easily. "Then bam. Sabotaged."
"Ah, reviews are killer," the owner said, shaking his head again as he liberally applied chicken salt. "Especially the really nasty ones. Tell ya," he leaned closer conspiratorially, his voice dropping slightly, "any reviews mentioning rat droppings or rancid oil? Forget about it. Kills ya dead. Customers see that stuff, they don't come back, ever. Just gotta hope people realize it's fake, keep putting out good food, show 'em it's not true."
Gotcha, you smug bastard, Theo thought, his internal fury barely contained behind a mask of weary resignation. He hadn't mentioned the specific fake claims about rats or rancid oil. The owner had volunteered them. Either he'd been meticulously studying every fake review targeting his competitor, or… he knew exactly what was in them because he, or someone he knew, had written them. Theo was betting heavily on the latter.
Theo paid for his order ($17.50), took the greasy parcel. "Yeah, well. Guess I'll keep trying. Thanks for the advice." He tried the food back in his car. Greasy, slightly undercooked fish. Generic frozen chips. Salty potato cakes. Entirely mediocre. The five-star reviews were definitely staged. Okay, Fish Man, Theo thought grimly. Game on. You wanted my business? You're about to find out what happens when you piss off the wrong guy. Sweet revenge was definitely on the menu.
He returned to the shop to find Jenny carefully learning how to pack orders under Olivia’s patient guidance. She looked up nervously as Theo entered, but he gave her an encouraging nod. She was trying hard, clearly determined not to waste the opportunity, reminding him again of his desire to help her family situation. He spent the rest of the afternoon overseeing operations, his mind buzzing with various plans for retribution against 'Something Fishy'.
They ended Thursday with 138 chicken sales and a surprising 92 dessert sales. Henry's idea was proving to be a significant secondary income stream already.
As promised, Theo treated the team (Henry, Olivia, and Jenny) to dinner after closing. They went to a popular local pizza place, bustling and noisy. Over large pizzas and sodas, the atmosphere was relaxed, celebratory. Jenny shyly shared more about herself. Second-year nursing student, eldest of four kids, working to help her parents with bills strained by rising costs. She hadn't chosen nursing out of passion, she admitted, but because it felt like a stable career path to provide security. Henry and Olivia listened sympathetically, offering encouragement, sharing their own stories. Theo mostly observed, seeing the easy camaraderie developing, feeling oddly pleased that Jenny seemed to be fitting in. He paid the $300 bill including tip without a second thought, the cost easily absorbed by the day's profits, a worthwhile investment in team morale.
Week 23 – Friday & Saturday
Friday and Saturday settled into a new rhythm of high-volume efficiency. With four people working the peak periods (Theo overseeing, Henry managing fryer/desserts, Olivia handling counter/packing, Jenny assisting with prep and cleaning), they smoothly handled the constant flow. They prepped 200 sets each day. Jenny was still learning but gained confidence rapidly, her initial nervousness replaced by focused diligence. Olivia’s cheerful customer service was clearly winning people over. Henry moved with practiced ease, already suggesting minor tweaks to the workflow.
Online, Olivia proudly showed Theo a couple of new positive reviews that had popped up, specifically calling out the previous fake reviews. One read: "Ignore those crazy 1-star reviews below! This place is CLEAN, the staff are friendly, and the chicken is LEGIT AMAZING! Best it's been in years! Someone's clearly got an axe to grind." Theo felt a grim satisfaction. Customer loyalty, earned through genuine quality, was fighting back.
Friday saw 170 chicken sales and 101 dessert sales. Saturday hit 180 chicken and 109 desserts. The dip from the review bomb seemed to be history. They weren't selling out the full 200 prep, but the numbers were consistently strong, highly profitable.
Before Jenny left Friday night, Theo pulled her aside briefly. "You're doing great, Jenny," he said sincerely. "Picking things up fast. Keep up the good work." He saw the relief flood her face, replaced by a determined smile. Building confidence, he noted, was key for her.
Week 23 - Sunday
Sunday. Another busy day, another 200 sets prepped. The flow was smooth, almost routine now. They ended the day with 191 chicken sales and 111 dessert sales. Definitely back to near sell-out levels.
As they cleaned up Sunday night, Theo gathered the team. "Alright," he said. "Another huge week. You three," he looked at Henry, Olivia, and Jenny, "handled everything incredibly well, especially after last week's… issues."
He handed out the pay envelopes. Henry's contained his $700 base pay plus a $140 bonus (20%). Olivia's had her $700 base plus $140 bonus. Jenny's had her calculated pay for her ~25 hours plus a $50 first-week bonus ($300 total). Then, Theo pulled out another envelope for Henry containing $500 cash.
"Henry," Theo said, handing it over. "That dessert idea? Genius. It's already a significant revenue stream. Consider this a bonus for initiative and execution."
Henry looked stunned, then broke into a huge grin. "Whoa! $500? Thanks, boss! That's awesome!"
"Just want you all to know," Theo continued, addressing the team, "Good ideas are welcome here. If you see a way to improve things, make things better, bring it up. If it works out, there will be rewards. We're building something here." He saw the motivation spark in their eyes.
He thanked them again, locking up after they left. Alone in the quiet shop, he felt a deep sense of satisfaction. The business was stable, growing, profitable. The team, despite Tammy's betrayal, felt solid, reliable. Henry was proving himself manager material. Olivia was a natural front-of-house star. Jenny was eager and hardworking.
His mind, however, was already moving beyond the chicken shop. The steady cash flow was crucial, the foundation. But the itch remained. The desire for bigger plays, higher stakes. The Tool Enhancement strategy needed broader application. And 'Something Fishy'... the simmering anger returned. Revenge was still pending. He thought about Sarah, the cameras she was sourcing, the potential for future collaboration. Things were stabilizing here, freeing up his mental bandwidth. Soon, he'd have the time, the resources, and the focus to plan his next move. And his retribution.
Theodore Sterling - Financial Ledger (End of Week 23)
Starting Balance (Beginning Week 23): $35,292.00 (Carried over from End of Week 22)
Income (Week 23):
Mon Sales (Est. 123 C + 50 D): +$1968 (C) + $400 (D) = +$2368.00
Tues Sales (Est. 118 C + 84 D): +$1888 (C) + $672 (D) = +$2560.00
Wed Sales (Est. 130 C + 81 D): +$2080 (C) + $648 (D) = +$2728.00
Thurs Sales (Est. 138 C + 92 D): +$2208 (C) + $736 (D) = +$2944.00
Fri Sales (Est. 170 C + 101 D): +$2720 (C) + $808 (D) = +$3528.00
Sat Sales (Est. 180 C + 109 D): +$2880 (C) + $872 (D) = +$3752.00
Sun Sales (Est. 191 C + 111 D): +$3056 (C) + $888 (D) = +$3944.00
(Note: C=Chicken Meal @ $16 avg, D=Dessert @ $8 avg)
Total Income (Week 23): +$21,824.00
Expenses (Week 23):
Personal Rent Paid (Week 23): -$450.00
Personal Living Expenses (Week 23): -$500.00
Business Lease Payment (Week 23): -$700.00
Food Stock/Supplies (Est. based on ~1049 C + ~628 D orders): -$4500.00 (Increased estimate for higher volume + dessert ingredients)
Shop Utilities (Est. @ $175/wk): -$175.00
Wages - Henry (Full week + 20% Bonus + $500 Dessert Bonus): -$1340.00
Wages - Olivia (Full week + 20% Bonus): -$840.00
Wages - Jenny (Part-time ~25hrs + $50 bonus): -$300.00
Team Dinner (Pizza Place): -$300.00
Misc Shop Expenses (Fees, etc. Est.): -$150.00
Provision for Estimated Taxes (Est. @ ~30% of Higher Profit): ~$3700.00
Total Expenses: -$12,955.00
Net Change (Week 23): +$21,824.00 (Income) - $12,955.00 (Expenses) = +$8,869.00
Ending Balance (End of Sunday, Week 23): $44,161.00
Assets:
Maria's Charcoal Chicken (Business Purchase Price): $38,000.00
Status: Business Stabilized & Recovered. Successfully navigated theft aftermath and review bombing. Hired Jenny part-time. Confirmed rival shop ('Something Fishy') as likely source of sabotage, revenge pending. Sales recovered strongly, approaching previous peaks, driven by consistent quality and new dessert menu addition (Henry's initiative rewarded). Team morale boosted. Payroll established. Significant weekly profit generated (~$8.9k net gain). Financial reserves recovering well (~$41.3k cash + business asset). Maintained contact with Sarah, security camera installation pending. Focus shifting towards stabilizing operations under Henry's potential lead, freeing Theo for strategic planning (revenge, new ventures).
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Tftc
Stasis
2025-05-05 11:23:51 +0000 UTC