ALPHA 7: MISSION CUSCO — OFFICIAL SUMMARYThe morning light over Cusco carried the thin, metallic clarity of high altitude. On the outskirts of the city, beyond the tourist routes and the reconstructed terraces, a small archaeological team worked in silence around a narrow trench cut into the dry earth. What they had uncovered was not gold, nor pottery, nor the remnants of a forgotten shrine — but something far more unsettling.A stone alignment. Pre‑Inca. Geometrically perfect. And leading deeper into the hillside than any survey had predicted.Local Quechua elders had warned them. This ground was not to be disturbed. It belonged to the old stories — the ones that spoke of Paititi, the hidden refuge of the last Inca, a place of knowledge and power that outsiders were never meant to find.But the warnings had been ignored.Lithium Peru S.A., a mining company registered in Malta but operating aggressively across the Andes, had secured the land under a development licence. Officially, the site was being surveyed for environmental impact. Unofficially, the company's geologists had detected rare‑earth signatures beneath the ridge — the kind that could shift global supply chains.And behind Lithium Peru S.A. stood Eclipse Consortium, hidden behind Maltese holdings, nominee directors and offshore trusts. Enough influence to steer decisions. Enough leverage to silence objections. Enough ambition to see the Andes not as a cultural cradle, but as a resource field waiting to be carved open.The archaeologists worked under pressure. The indigenous councils protested. The Peruvian ministries stalled. And in the shadows, Eclipse waited for the moment the land would be cleared — legally or otherwise.Far from Cusco, on the Pacific coast, the port of Callao stirred awake. A Maltese‑flagged freighter had arrived before dawn, unnoticed among the morning traffic of cranes and container stacks. One of its sealed units had begun its journey in Vladivostok, routed through a web of shell companies and diplomatic exemptions.Inside it lay a compact power core designed by Professor Wolf Schneider — a device capable of sustaining operations in remote, high‑altitude terrain. Exactly the kind of terrain where Lithium Peru S.A. intended to expand. Exactly the kind of terrain where Paititi's legends still lived.The container was already on Peruvian soil. The corridor to Cusco was opening. And deep beneath the DGSE annex in Paris, Alpha 7 remained unaware that a geopolitical faultline in the Andes was about to rupture. This mission is engineered for operations across every terrain — digital included. With universally supported system fonts, each mission reads flawlessly on iPhone, Android, tablet, laptop and all major e‑readers. No apps. No barriers. Immediate access.