<h3 ss="wp-block-heading">The Novel <strong>The Amazing Son-in-Law</strong> & <strong>Hero of Hearts</strong> by <strong>Lord Leaf</strong> – Free Online Read <strong>Chapter 525</strong>
“No,” Duan Liye rified, “The antidote is delivered at random by the organization each time. asionally, it arrives just a day before it’s needed, while at other times, it can be delivered unexpectedly one or two months early. There’s no consistent pattern; we just receive sudden notifications that the antidote has been sent to a specific location, and we’re responsible for retrieving it ourselves. This is likely to prevent us from discerning any patterns.”
After a brief pause, Duan Liye continued, “Moreover, the quantity delivered varies each time. It could be enough for one month or three. The antidotes are kept in a special safe, and we must request authorization from the organization to open it before the medicine can be delivered to the base. We can only ess the safe after receiving this authorization.”
Charlie looked surprised and asked, “Is the safe connected to the Inte?”
“Exactly,” Duan Liye nodded. “Not only is it Inte-connected, but it also has a self-destruct mechanism. Each time we open a new safe, the previous one self-destructs. If we attempt to force it open, that will also trigger the self-destruct. Therefore, we can only retrieve the antidote inside when authorized by the organization. The safe has an identification feature that urately logs how many antidotes we take out, limiting us to a specific amount. If we take more than allowed, the organization will react immediately, leading to self-destruction.”
Duan Liye exined further, “This applies not only to our safe but also to the safe held by the Cyprus base Jiedushi. Although there’s an emergency solution in his safe for medicine storage, we still need to apply for authorization from the organization to ess it. If anything goes wrong there, the organization will promptly halt the antidote supply and destroy whatever is stored in the safe, resulting in everyone’s death.”<h3 style="background-color:DodgerBlue">
Charlie expressed his concerns, “If such a critical item is managed online, wouldn’t it be vulnerable to hacking?”
“No,” Duan Liye replied, shaking his head. “The organization uses a proprietary satellitemunicationwork rather than the public Inte. Thisworkprises militarymunication satellites that were acquired through special channels from senior Soviet officials during the disintegration of the Soviet Union.”
“Militarymunication satellites?” Charlie eximed, clearly astonished. “Can these even be purchased?”
Duan Liye borated, “Under normal circumstances, no individual or corporation, no matter how wealthy, could buy military satellites. However, during that specific period, the entire Soviet defense system was in disarray. The distribution of power within the Ukrainian government was also chaotic, leading to significant debts. During that time, much of Ukraine’s heavy weaponry was sold off, including the Tu-160 bombers and even nuclear arms. Consequently, many satellites in orbit went unnoticed, as few would care about a handful of missing satellites.”
Duan Liye continued, “These satellites are highly secure, with theirmunication codes reset, making it nearly impossible for anyone, even the original designers, to decrypt the currentmunications. The likelihood of being hacked is extremely low. However, there are certain downsides; primarily, these satellites are outdated and belong to an old generation of narrow-band mobilemunication systems. This results in slower transmission rates, restricting them to transmitting text and bytemands, such as monitoring the status of safes. Commands sent to the satellite are minimal in bytes, making it suitable for alerting about any exceptions or activating the self-destruct device. While it can handle a few crucial voicemunications during emergencies, it cannot support video transmission.”
Charlie nodded, understanding the implications. “So, even if the Cyprus base has monitoring devices, the organization can’t check them in real-time?”
“Exactly,” Duan Liye confirmed. “The monitoring equipment in Cyprus is stored locally. Each time I visit, I bring back a copy of the surveince footage from the past week. This data isn’t connected to the Inte and is only stored in Turkey. Periodically, all the data is forwarded to the Youjun Dudufu. Whether the Youjun Dudufu shares this information with the British Lord is beyond my knowledge.”
Charlie chuckled, “I didn’t expect you to have such extensive knowledge given your age.”
Duan Liye responded respectfully, “I received systematic training during my time at Huben Camp.”
Intrigued, Charlie asked, “So, tell me, has the self-destruct device ever been activated?”<fnad99> Th?s chapter is updated by find?novel</fnad99>
“Yes, it has,” Duan Liye replied without hesitation. “About twenty years ago, a base had its self-destruct device triggered due to a significant failure. The organization acted ruthlessly, only informing the special envoy the day before the scheduled delivery that there would be no need to deliver the medicine due to an incident. They were told to wait half a day, and if the envoy hadn’t arrived by dawn the next day, the organization would authorize them to open the safe and activate the stored antidote.”
“And then?” Charlie asked, frowning. “Did the organization use lies to dy them until they were on the brink of death from poisoning?”
“Yes!” Duan Liye nodded emphatically, his expression one of shock. “The organization failed to deliver the medicine and subsequently destroyed thest remaining spare antidote. Over 5,000 individuals in that base, including Jiedushi, Xiaoqiwei, dead men, and their families, all sumbed to poisoning, with no survivors.”
Charlie wondered aloud, “How do you know this in such detail?”
Duan Liye exined, “This information was dessified internally by the organization. It was made avable to warn all bases about the severe consequences of a major failure.”
Suddenly, Charlie recalled something and eximed, “You just mentioned that this major failure urred twenty years ago?!”
“Yes!” Duan Liye affirmed. “It was indeed twenty years ago, and I remember it vividly.”
Charlie’s expression turned to one of shock. His parents had been killed in Jinling exactly twenty years ago!
The timing felt too coincidental to ignore. Could there be a connection between his parents’ deaths and what Duan Liye had just revealed?<h3 ss="has-text-align-center wp-block-heading" id="chapter-list"><strong></strong><h3 ss="has-text-align-center wp-block-heading" id="chapter-list"><strong>Next Chapter</strong>