Chapter 733: $4 Billion Becomes $800 Billion
Chapter 733: $4 Billion Becomes $800 Billion
I kept driving, billboards sliding past like a fever dream curated by my own success, and my brain started doing that thing it did when it got bored—calculating without asking permission. Numbers floated through my head while my hands handled traffic on autopilot, which was great, because apparently my subconscious had decided today was spreadsheet day and I was just along for the ride.
Quantum Tech.
Charlotte’s company. The one I’d funded through Liberation Holdings. The one that was currently making every other tech giant look like they were operating with stone tools, good intentions, and a PowerPoint from 2014.
The numbers assembled themselves whether I wanted them to or not.
Started at an $8.1 billion valuation. I’d put in $4 billion through Liberation Holdings—a collective fund designed to protect my women—which bumped the total valuation to $12.1 billion. Liberation Holdings owned 33% for that investment. Charlotte held 62%. Her mother, Margaret, owned the remaining 5% Charlotte had given back out of sentimentality and unresolved family dynamics.
That was three weeks ago.
Now?
I passed another billboard flashing the stock price—$847 per share—and my brain did the math instantly, without even slowing down, like it had been waiting for this moment its whole life.
Quantum Tech was currently valued at $2.4 trillion.
From $12.1 billion to $2.4 trillion.
In three fucking weeks.
Which meant Liberation Holdings’ 33% stake—the $4 billion investment—was now worth roughly $800 billion.
I had to pull over.
Just... stopped the car on the side of the road because my brain needed a second to not completely shit itself. Because apparently my nervous system treats large numbers like a contact sport and I was losing badly.
Eight hundred billion dollars.
From four billion.
In three weeks.
That was a 19,900% return on investment, which is the kind of number that makes economists cry quietly into their keyboards.
"Master," ARIA said, her voice filling the car, distinctly amused. "Your heart rate just spiked. Should I be concerned?"
"I just realized Liberation Holdings made almost eight hundred billion dollars," I said slowly, like speaking too fast might summon an aneurysm. "In less than a month."
"Technically those are unrealized gains until liquidation," ARIA replied. "But yes. Your four billion dollar investment is currently valued at seven hundred ninety-two billion. I assumed you were aware."
"I was aware in theory," I said. "My body is just now catching up. It’s protesting."
Liberation Holdings. The entity I’d created to make sure my women were financially untouchable, immune to the world’s usual bullshit.
The ownership structure had been deliberate. Charlotte owned 30%. Madison owned 30%. They’d each sold me 5% of their original 35% stakes to fund the initial setup, then we locked those numbers in permanently. The remaining 40% was split evenly among my other twenty-four women—about 1.67% each.
I didn’t own any of it directly. That was the point. Liberation Holdings existed for them, not me. My money came from elsewhere—trading, real estate, personal investments. Liberation Holdings was a firewall, not a vanity project.
And Liberation Holdings owned a lot of shit. Real estate. Portfolios. Equity in multiple ventures.
But the crown jewel—the asset that made everything else look like pocket lint—was Quantum Tech.
When I broke it down the way my brain needed, it was basically real estate math.
Liberation Holdings had bought 33% of Quantum Tech for $4 billion three weeks ago. Think of it like buying a house. A normal house, in a decent neighborhood. You pay $100,000. Good bones. Nothing flashy. Just solid.
Then something happens. A tech giant moves in nearby. A new transit line opens. A celebrity buys the place next door and suddenly your street is hot. Same house. Same walls. Same roof. You didn’t do shit.
Now that house is worth $20 million.
You haven’t sold it. The money isn’t in your bank account. It’s just what the market says someone would pay if you did sell. Paper value. Numbers that make Zillow look like witchcraft.
That was Liberation Holdings and Quantum Tech.
We bought 33% when it was "promising AI startup." Then AR.NuN launched, and the entire tech world realized Charlotte hadn’t built a product—she’d built a paradigm shift. Revolutionary tech. World-altering tech. Contributing one percent to human evolution tech.
Suddenly everyone wanted in. Investors. Hedge funds. Governments. People who’d pretended not to understand AI suddenly speaking fluent buzzword.
The valuation exploded.
And now those same shares we bought for $4 billion were worth $792 billion on paper. Same shares. Same company. Same ownership. Just a world that had finally caught up.
And unlike a house, Quantum Tech generated actual profit.
Monthly profit.
Real money.
Charlotte’s monthly take: 30% of $2.15 billion—about $645 million per month.
Madison’s monthly take: also $645 million per month.
The other twenty-four women split the remaining 40%—$860 million total, roughly $35.8 million each, every month.
That wasn’t paper value. That was cash. Money that hit accounts. The kind of income that made "financial planning" a joke and "budgeting" an insult.
My women were earning more per month than most people earned in their entire lives.
And that was just Quantum Tech.
Charlotte’s cut from Liberation Holdings alone was 30% of $792 billion—$237.6 billion. On top of that, she still owned 62% of Quantum Tech directly as founder shares, another $1.56 trillion on paper.
Combined, Charlotte was worth roughly $1.73 trillion.
The richest person on Earth. By a margin so wide it was almost rude.
Madison’s share was the same $237.6 billion from Liberation Holdings, not counting her family’s real estate empire. Just from Quantum Tech, she was worth a quarter trillion dollars.
"$2.15B in distributable monthly profit after reinvestment and expansion."
I merged back into traffic, letting the engine hum while my brain recalibrated its understanding of reality, dignity, and scale.
Apparently, my body reacts to absurd wealth the same way it reacts to embarrassment—poorly, loudly, and with no regard for my personal comfort.
My other twenty-four women shared the remaining forty percent of Liberation Holdings equally. Forty percent of seven hundred ninety-two billion came out to three hundred sixteen point eight billion total, which divided cleanly into thirteen point two billion each. No tricks. No financial gymnastics. Just math doing what math does when you place the right bet at the right moment.
Every single one of my women was a multi-billionaire. From one investment. From backing Charlotte and AR.NuN before the world caught up and realized she wasn’t building a product—she was building a fault line.
"The month isn’t even over," ARIA added, helpfully and without a trace of irony. "Current projections show Quantum Tech will reach sixteen point eight four billion in revenue by month-end. Net profit after costs is estimated at six point five billion.
Liberation Holdings’ thirty-three percent share of that profit would be approximately two point one five billion in actual cash."
I sat there in the AMG One, hands steady on the steering wheel, staring straight ahead while my brain tried to accept the number without short-circuiting. Two point one five billion per month. Real money. Not paper valuations.
Not theoretical wealth. Actual profit that would be wired, distributed, and quietly normalized.
Charlotte’s monthly take came out to six hundred forty-five million. Madison’s was the same. The remaining forty percent—eight hundred sixty million—was split among the other twenty-four women, landing at roughly thirty-five point eight million each per month.
Monthly. Recurring. Predictable
"And your personal wealth, Master?" ARIA asked, already knowing the answer.
"About 52B," I said. "Trading, real estate, personal investments. None of it tied to Liberation Holdings. I don’t own a single percent of that."
"You gave away hundreds of billions of dollars," ARIA observed.
"I protected the people I care about," I corrected. "There’s a difference. My money is mine. Their money is insulated—from me, from lawsuits, from anyone who might come after me personally. That separation is the whole point."
"Strategically sound," ARIA said. "And emotionally significant. You built an empire and placed it entirely in their hands."
"Not gave," I said. "Invested. They own it. They control it. They’re protected." I shook my head slightly. "Charlotte is worth one point eight trillion. Madison’s worth two hundred thirty-seven billion. Every other woman I care about is a multi-billionaire. That’s not charity. That’s removing vulnerability as a concept."
"Master," ARIA said carefully, "some analysts are calling Quantum Tech’s valuation a bubble. The stock price reflects a $2.4trillion dollar market cap based on projected annual revenue of two hundred two billion. That’s roughly a twelve-times price-to-sales ratio. Tesla trades between eight and ten. Apple at seven and a half."
"So people think we’re overvalued."
"Some do. They argue the rise is too fast, that enthusiasm is outpacing fundamentals." A pause. "However, the revenue numbers are real. Month one is on track for sixteen point eight four billion. If adoption holds—and early indicators suggest it will—Quantum Tech will exceed two hundred billion annually. That makes the valuation aggressive, but not impossible."
"Aggressive but not impossible," I repeated. "That’s basically my entire life in four words."
"Accurate," ARIA agreed. "If growth slows, the stock could correct downward by thirty to forty percent. If AR.NuN maintains current momentum and Version Two performs as projected, the valuation stabilizes."
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