Three days later, the silence broke. It started with a "Security Alert" from his bank. Then his email. Then a notification that his GPU was running at 98% capacity while he was just staring at his desktop.
The installation was suspiciously fast. No registration key prompt appeared, despite the file name's promise. A small box popped up: “System Optimizing... Please wait.” Then, nothing. The Ardamax interface never opened. Elias clicked the icon again. Dead.
As his screen flickered and a remote desktop session initiated without his permission, Elias watched his own mouse cursor move toward his "Work" folder. The hunter had become the most visible prey on the network.
Elias stared at the blinking cursor. He knew better. As a junior sysadmin, he’d spent his days patching the very holes he was about to rip open in his own system. But curiosity—and a desperate need to see if his roommate was actually the one "borrowing" his expensive espresso pods—overrode his training.
Elias opened his process manager. Tucked deep inside the System32 folder was a process he didn’t recognize: svc_reg_2022.exe . He tried to kill it. It reappeared instantly.