Francisca and her guests enjoyed a simple welcome cocktail on the wooden terrace under the large eaves. Half an hour later, conversation had begun around her.
“The cabin and the valley are beautiful,” Victoria said to Francisca. With her round belly and her diamond tetrahedron resting against her chest, she radiated an undeniable, quiet maternal power. She was expecting her first child the following month. “The water is the same colour as your eyes. I can’t believe it!”
“Is it very cold?” Arturo asked.
“It depends on who bathes,” Francisca answered.
“Oh! You Vikings like the cold,” Arturo said. “Are we going to sail on that sailboat at the end of the dock?”
“Of course, the time will come,” Francisca said.
“This place is perfect to finish the book,” Alexandre said. “But what’s the surprise?”
“Wait and see,” Francisca said. Seconds later, a helicopter hummed far above. Her phone vibrated. She read a message. Then she said “Follow me!” and moved to the centre of the terrace, eyes on the sky. She raised her hand and pointed at a black dot falling at high speed.
“There it comes the surprise,” Francisca said. They exchanged glances, silent. As the dot grew larger, a parachute opened. Only its silhouette appeared, the sun shining on their faces.
Since he and Francisca had prepared the meeting of Villa Ascolassi the previous year, he felt safe. The last months he had strengthened the valley’s surveillance network. No guest could be tracked. More than thirty radars could detect aerial attacks. They had a range of 200 kilometres. Electromagnetic pulse cannons covered the mountaintops, creating an invisible network. It hacked satellite cameras, replacing real images with virtual ones, erasing the cabin and any events. The same with drones and airplane cameras.
Everything ran through an AI he programmed. The year before, he had launched a private satellite, accessible only to him. Complete security. He could ethically hack anything without The Family noticing.
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