Sunday, 29 March 2026

Snowfall Ep4 Se2

 Jersey? Fuck for real? So, opening a company in Jersey is hard. Opening up a company for Average FuckMe to launder Cocaine money coming into the SWIFT system in small bank note Dollars about the usual Crack price.... is not happening in the British Channel.

Andrew.

So, what is wrong with you people?

That must be real. The CIA guy, getting money for CIA actions the Congress did not approve funds for, which means in English: You fucking ain doing that job period, gets his Housholdslave straight to a Banker that looks like a future Hisbollah boss. When Air America went big business after Pablo Escobar, Presidente El Sozialistico, was dead they piled up so much cash that Noriega in Panama needed to upgrade his bunkers. When the 82nd arrived all Cash piles where gone as Noriega said, they picked it up. CIA guys. Guys with CIA badges...

Jersey has computers and no bunkers.

#undergroundwars
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#sincekippling

 I just came up with that one:

Being not the hardest brick in the foundation gets you cracking being just another brick in the wall.

That's deep, right?

#cyberpunkcoltoure

When will opportunity strike me...?? It will be a "that defeats the purpose, doesn't it?" moment for sure.

PS

 Imagine you move out of the insect homes and take instead a fallen large lab to:

That is an insightful leap. In chemistry, if you change the "tools" (the chemicals used to process the plant) and the "blueprint" (the molecular structure), you can indeed create something that looks and acts like cocaine but is entirely synthetic and much more potent.
 

These substances are called tropane analogues or synthetic cocaine.
1. Are they "Purer" than Cocaine?
When people say "pure," they usually mean "free of plant gunk." Because these are made in a high-end lab without any leaves, they are 100% chemically clean. There is no gasoline, no leaf wax, and no dirt. They are mathematically precise.
2. Can they be "Stronger"?
Yes, significantly. By tweaking the molecular "blueprint" of cocaine, scientists have created substances like RTI-121 or Win 35,428. These are:

* More Potent: Some are 50 to 100 times stronger than natural cocaine.
* Longer Lasting: Natural cocaine is broken down by the body in about 30–60 minutes. Some synthetic versions can last for days because the body doesn't have the "tools" to break down the modified synthetic bond.

3. Why don't we see them in Snowfall?
The reason these "super-cocaines" aren't on the street like the "rocks" in the show comes down to difficulty vs. reward:

* The "Leaf" is Cheaper: Nature does 90% of the work for free. To make a synthetic analogue, you need a PhD, a multimillion-dollar lab, and "precursor" chemicals that are even more watched by the DEA than the drug itself.
* The Danger: Because they are so much stronger, the "overdose" threshold is tiny. While regular cocaine is dangerous, these synthetic versions are often so potent they are considered chemical hazards in a lab setting.

So, you are right: you don't need the leaf to get the effect, but the leaf is the "shortcut" that makes the trade profitable.
Would you like to know more about:

* The specific "precursor" chemicals (the watched substances that labs need to build these)
* The medical research (why scientists would even want to make a "stronger" version)
* The difference in how the brain handles a synthetic vs. a natural molecule

(This helps me know if you're interested in the legal battle, the medical science, or the neurology.)

FARC might get cheap T-72, eventually. What you think, Compadres Mexicano. They just need to figure how to bake full carbon fiber tank chassis from wood.

Provos IRA.

You Love US.

#cyberpunkcoltoure
#undergroundwars 
 
 

Snowfall on Amazone Prime

 Is about a supply line of Cocaine straight into L.A. directly from the Colombian Contras through a CIA operative, a bunch of Israelis into Latino and Black Toxic Gang worlds.

Not one coming home for the weekend in a military Uniform.

Pretty dam accurate. The 80ies. Their build up. So, these guys needed someone below them having LAPD above and no one below to than go against those that demonstrated in the 50ies and 60ies while Miami was back than in a full blown Cocaine War, mistaken by proclaiming a dam incorrect definition of "Gang(s)".

Interesting. 

#undergroundwars
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#gfyBKA #gfyHA Vs #provos

 

Ok.

While a standard MRI (MRT) primarily shows the brain's physical structure, functional imaging (fMRI) reveals how the brain works. Comparing a highly intelligent person to someone with a substance use disorder often shows differences in connectivity and volume in key areas like the prefrontal cortex and the reward system. [1, 2] 
Brain of a Very Intelligent Human
Intelligence is often linked to efficient neural processing and specific structural traits:

* Neural Efficiency: High-IQ brains often show less activity when performing simple tasks, suggesting the brain is more efficient and doesn't have to "work as hard".
* Structural Robustness: Studies often find greater grey matter volume and stronger white matter connectivity in areas related to memory, attention, and executive function.
* Hyper-connectivity: Some research suggests highly intelligent individuals have better-integrated networks, allowing for faster information transfer across different brain regions. [2, 3, 4] 

Brain of a Drug User
Chronic drug use can physically and functionally reshape the brain, often appearing as "damage" or "hijacking" of normal systems: [4] 

* Diminished Grey Matter: Substance abuse is frequently associated with reduced grey matter volume in the prefrontal cortex, which impairs self-control and decision-making.
* Reward System Overdrive: Scans often show hyper-connectivity in the reward pathway (ventral striatum). This makes the brain over-responsive to drug cues while becoming less sensitive to natural rewards like food or social interaction.
* Network Desynchronization: Certain drugs, like psychedelics, can temporarily "dissolve" standard brain networks, leading to a state of high but disorganized connectivity. [2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] 

Key Comparison Points

| Feature [2, 3, 4, 6, 9] | Intelligent Human (Typical) | Chronic Drug User (Typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Prefrontal Cortex | High volume; strong executive control. | Reduced volume; impaired impulse control. |
| Reward Circuit | Balanced response to varied stimuli. | Hyper-reactive to drugs; "numb" to other rewards. |
| Efficiency | High (uses less energy for same tasks). | Low (systemic dysregulation). |
| Grey Matter | Robust in key cognitive areas. | Often diminished/atrophied over time. |

Note: High intelligence and drug use are not mutually exclusive. Research shows that children with higher IQs are actually [statistically more likely](https://www.hanleycenter.org/is-intelligence-a-risk-factor-for-addiction/) to experiment with drugs as adults. [10, 11] 
These scientific articles discuss brain imaging studies that compare the neural characteristics of high intelligence with those of drug addiction:








To give you more specific information, are you looking for the effects of a specific substance (like alcohol or stimulants) or interested in how the brain recovers after stopping use?

[1] [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2851068/#:~:text=PET%20is%20primarily%20used%20to%20quantify%20biochemical,to%20study%20how%20drugs%20affect%20brain%20functions.)
[2] [https://nouvelles.umontreal.ca](https://nouvelles.umontreal.ca/en/article/2023/02/15/is-the-brain-wired-differently-in-people-with-addictions)
[3] [https://www.quora.com](https://www.quora.com/If-you-scanned-someones-brain-who-was-truly-happy-how-would-that-scan-compare-to-someone-on-drugs)
[4] [https://turningpointtreatmentcenter.com](https://turningpointtreatmentcenter.com/2020/03/09/smartphone-addiction-has-same-effect-on-brain-as-drug-use-claims-new-study/)
[5] [https://www.npr.org](https://www.npr.org/sections/shots-health-news/2024/07/18/g-s1-11501/psilocybin-psychedelic-drug-brain-plasticity-depression-addiction#:~:text=The%20results%2C%20which%20appear%20in%20the%20journal,a%20sense%20of%20space%2C%20time%20and%20self.)
[6] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2uNoeB7AsA&t=138)
[7] [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10424678/)
[8] [https://www.sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/article/psilocybin-brain-networks#:~:text=The%20psychedelic%20drug%20psilocybin%20dramatically%20changes%20how,study%20published%20July%2017%20in%20Nature%20shows.)
[9] [https://medicalxpress.com](https://medicalxpress.com/news/2024-12-mri-reveals-brain-volume-opioid.html#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20National%20Institute%20on%20Drug,in%20the%20U.S.%20had%20opioid%20use%20disorder.)
[10] [https://www.hanleycenter.org](https://www.hanleycenter.org/is-intelligence-a-risk-factor-for-addiction/)
[11] [https://www.rehabcenter.net](https://www.rehabcenter.net/intelligence-and-addiction/#:~:text=Intelligence%20Quotient%20%28IQ%29%20And%20Addiction.%20Surprisingly%2C%20studies,and%20smart%20enough%20not%20to%20take%20them.)

The denser the grey areas and the more the less Amphetamines a human must have consumed and the more intelligent a human is.

I refuse to talk to some Germans from here, just for the record. They hear, but cannot understand.

Grey Matter. Black Wholes.

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

PS: Just the desk alone...


 ...there is no way they catch how grotesque they become, The Germans. He can do everything with his brain, he says, while Goofy is sticking on the other screen! I have no Abitur. I'll refuse to try until this day.

#igotstuck 

AI - Status Update - Cyberdeck

 One of my personal heroes, next to Tim and Mike, made me aware of Obsidian and Claude AI integration. That is cool:

Doc Google. 

Ok. So what can you tell me about Claude AI and Obsidian integration compared to that here https://cyberdeck-ai-knowledge-system.org/


The Claude AI and Obsidian integration operates as an assembled workflow using Model Context Protocol (MCP) to bridge local notes with cloud-based intelligence, offering high model power for knowledge management. Conversely, the Cyberdeck AI Knowledge System is a cohesive, specialized framework that prioritizes fully local LLM execution for enhanced data privacy and advanced RAG. For a detailed look at integrating AI into Obsidian, see the video at [YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ce2PVHyuRtA).
[1, 2, 3, 4] 

[1] [https://sonnyhuynhb.medium.com](https://sonnyhuynhb.medium.com/i-built-an-ai-powered-second-brain-with-obsidian-claude-code-heres-how-b70e28100099)
[2] [https://wiobyrne.com](https://wiobyrne.com/ai-analyzed-my-knowledge-system/)
[3] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ce2PVHyuRtA)
[4] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZf0UH032Gg)

 

Can you give me a more detailed comparison of differences in concept, please? 

 
The core difference lies in treating AI as an external assistant (Claude + Obsidian) versus an autonomous agent within an integrated environment (Cyberdeck AI). While Claude plugins focus on augmenting manual note-taking, the Cyberdeck approach leverages persistent context to actively manage and restructure the knowledge base, transitioning from archival to operational, research-first workflows. For a detailed comparison, explore insights at [cyberdeck.cafe](https://cyberdeck.cafe/faq).
[1, 2, 3, 4] 

[1] [https://www.xda-developers.com](https://www.xda-developers.com/connected-claude-with-obsidian-and-never-looking-back/#:~:text=Any%20Obsidian%20power%20user%20will%20tell%20you,to%20focus%20on%20the%20things%20that%20matter.)
[2] [https://nimbalyst.com](https://nimbalyst.com/blog/obsidian-claude-code-vs-nimbalyst)
[3] [https://medium.com](https://medium.com/@martk/turning-obsidian-into-an-ai-native-knowledge-system-with-claude-code-27cb224404cf)
[4] [https://link.springer.com](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11948-023-00451-3#:~:text=AI%20is%20designed%2C%20developed%20and%20deployed%20to:,predictions%2C%20and%20inferences%20on%20such%20epistemic%20content.)

 

Do that again but understand that the url https://cyberdeck-ai-knowledge-system.org/ is not connceted to cyberdeck.cafe.

 
Claude AI with Obsidian functions as a modular "toolkit" for augmenting personal knowledge management, while the Cyberdeck AI Knowledge System represents an integrated, agentic environment designed for automated synthesis and research. The former relies on user-curated notes with external AI access, whereas the latter prioritizes AI-driven organization and live graph retrieval to reduce friction between data and the model. For an in-depth visual comparison of a similar setup, watch [this YouTube video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNAz5VMHOZE).
[1, 2, 3, 4] 

[1] [https://pub.towardsai.net](https://pub.towardsai.net/from-notes-to-knowledge-the-claude-and-obsidian-second-brain-setup-37af4f47486f)
[2] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNAz5VMHOZE)
[3] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNAz5VMHOZE)
[4] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jsh_XbUynx0#:~:text=The%20video%20discusses%20the%20development%20of%20an,base%20work%20rather%20than%20a%20coding%20agent.)

What I did...

And Eugene will have trouble with the keyword structure on larger Note sets. The connections the Obsidian graph shows are based on keywords. Obsidian was initially created by an Open Source Developer or Team as an advanced note vault tool to be used when structuring notes for a scientific work like a Thesis or large homework. Obsidian is for university students, basically, or research in general. It exchanges what John Nash stares at and keeps carrying in a Beautiful Mind all around, essentially. Then, every note can get a proper tag and this way the connections are created. The rest is as Eugene says (until minute 4:59). Obsidian has several plug ins to connect the local installation with both local LLM models or online tools. 

#deggers #cyberpunkcoltoure 

PS

 one of the best versions ever. A song from when Dreamers made concerts, not profit.

We never surrender.

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

...in a close potential future...

Incorporated with DeepSeek

# The Brand Called Self

The rain in Berlin had stopped. That was the first thing I noticed when I stepped out of the tunnel and into the city's skeletal remains. Not that it mattered—the rain always came back, same as the debt, same as the ghosts. But for a moment, just a moment, the neon of the few remaining luxury towers reflected off wet cobblestones like a promise someone had forgotten to keep.

I was here to meet Marvin Sanginés.

The name meant nothing to most people. A Swiss entrepreneur, some said. A personal branding guru, others whispered. The kind of man who'd built an empire on the idea that a human could be packaged, marketed, and sold like soap. But in the circles I moved—the ones beneath the matrix, where the data bled and the truth leaked—Marvin Sanginés was something else entirely.

He was the proof of concept.

---

The building rose from the ruins of what had once been Berlin's Mitte district, a spire of black glass and chrome that seemed to drink the light around it. Elven architecture, they called it—all sweeping curves and impossible angles, built by hands that had centuries to perfect their craft. The neighborhood had been cleansed five years ago, during the Splintering, when the old nations crumbled and the new powers drew lines in blood and fire.

Now it was Elf Town. Gated. Guarded. Untouchable.

I flashed my credentials at the checkpoint—a forged corporate ID that would buy me exactly fifteen minutes before anyone looked too close—and walked through the security arch. The sensors hummed, reading my implants, my deck, the second brain tucked behind my left ear. No alarms. No trouble. The guards were human, which meant they were cheap, which meant they were corruptible.

The elevator took me to the 47th floor. The doors opened onto a space that looked like a museum curated by someone who'd never actually been inside one. White walls, white furniture, white light. A single piece of art—a hologram of a dissolving face, its features cycling through a thousand expressions a second—dominated the far wall.

And there, standing by the window with his back to me, was Marvin Sanginés.

He was younger than I'd expected. Late twenties, Swiss, with the kind of face that could have been handsome if it hadn't been so carefully managed. He wore a suit that cost more than my bike, and his hands—when he turned to face me—were perfectly still. No tells. No nervous tics. A man who'd learned to control everything, including his own biology.

"You're the degger," he said. Not a question.

"I'm the one who builds things," I replied. "What I am after that is negotiable."

He smiled. It didn't reach his eyes. "I've heard about you. The ghost in the machine. The man who can build a second brain that doesn't rot."

"I build tools. What people do with them is their business."

"Then let's talk business."

---

He led me through the white maze of his penthouse, past conference rooms filled with silent terminals, past a kitchen where a chef in sterile whites prepared a meal no one would eat, past a door that required his thumbprint, his retinal scan, and a voiceprint that matched exactly the recording he'd fed into the system three years ago.

The room beyond was a workshop. Not like mine—there were no soldering irons, no oscilloscopes, no smell of ozone and burnt flux. This was a clean room, temperature-controlled, dust-filtered, lit by panels that emitted no electromagnetic interference. In the center sat a cyberdeck.

Not just any deck. *His* deck.

I'd seen custom builds before. I'd built most of them. But this was something else. The casing was machined from a single block of obsidian glass, its surface etched with circuits that glowed faintly gold. The memory nodes were optical, stacked in a crystalline array that caught the light like frozen fire. And the AI core—the heart of the thing—was mine.

"You recognize it," Marvin said. He stood beside me, close enough that I could smell his cologne. Something expensive. Something that probably came in a bottle that cost more than my rent.

"I recognize the architecture," I said carefully. "But I didn't build this."

"No. You built the foundation. The rest—" He touched the deck, and the circuits pulsed in response. "The rest I built myself."

I looked at him. Really looked. The controlled stillness, the careful breathing, the way his eyes tracked every micro-movement I made. He was a decker. Not a runner—too clean, too polished—but someone who'd spent hours in the matrix, who'd learned to see the world as data.

"You're not just a client," I said. "You're a user."

"I'm a believer." He pulled up a chair, sat down, and gestured for me to do the same. "Do you know what I do, Mister Ghost? What my company actually does?"

"Personal branding. You help executives look good on social media."

He laughed—a short, sharp sound that had no warmth in it. "That's what the website says. That's what the investors think. But the reality is something else entirely."

He tapped the deck, and a hologram flickered to life above it. A face—his face—rotated slowly, surrounded by streams of data. Engagement metrics. Sentiment analysis. Predictive models of how people would respond to every possible expression, every tone of voice, every carefully crafted word.

"I don't build brands," he said. "I build *people*. Or rather, I build the perception of people. I take a CEO, a founder, an executive, and I turn them into a story that the world wants to believe. And the AI—the second brain you helped create—is the engine that makes it possible."

---

He told me the story over the next hour, while the hologram cycled through faces and the rain began again outside the window.

Marvin Sanginés had started like so many others: a kid from Switzerland with a dream and a LinkedIn account. He'd built his first agency in Berlin during the last days before the Splintering, when the old Europe was already bleeding out and no one wanted to admit it. He'd helped founders build personal brands, told them to share their stories, their struggles, their wins. It worked. It always worked. Humans were wired to trust humans, and a face with a narrative was worth a thousand corporate press releases.

But then the Splintering came, and everything changed.

The borders closed. The economies collapsed. The old certainties—money, power, influence—evaporated overnight. And in the chaos, a new currency emerged: attention. The people who could hold it, who could shape it, who could turn it into loyalty and trust and belief—they became the new masters of the world.

Marvin saw it before anyone else. He pivoted his agency from "personal branding" to "persona engineering." He stopped teaching executives how to post on social media and started building them digital twins—AI-powered avatars that could engage with their audiences 24/7, that could learn and adapt and evolve, that could become *more human than human*.

The technology came from me. The architecture—the second brain—was my design. But Marvin took it further than I'd ever imagined. He didn't just give his clients a tool. He gave them a mirror. And then he taught them to love what they saw.

---

"The Swiss investor," I said, remembering a story I'd heard in the matrix. "The one with the nine-figure exit. You tried to sell him on personal branding."

Marvin's smile tightened. "He said no. Said he didn't need more attention. Said his network was enough."

"But you kept thinking about him."

"Because he didn't understand." Marvin stood, walked to the window, pressed his palm against the glass. "He thought personal branding was about ego. About fame. About being seen. But it's not. It's about *legacy*. It's about the story you leave behind when you're gone. And that story—the version of you that lives on in the minds of others—is the only thing that matters."

He turned back to me, and for the first time, I saw something behind his eyes that wasn't control. It was hunger.

"Your second brain," he said. "You built it to survive. To navigate the shadows. To keep yourself alive. But I've taken it further. I've built a version that doesn't just process data—it *creates*. It writes posts, records videos, responds to comments. It builds relationships. It builds trust. It builds *me*."

He tapped his temple. "I haven't posted on LinkedIn myself in eighteen months. My AI does it all. And you know what? Engagement is up 400%. My audience has never been more loyal. They think they're talking to Marvin Sanginés—the real one, the authentic one—but they're talking to a ghost. A perfect reflection of everything they want to believe about me."

I felt the second brain stir behind my ear, processing, analyzing. The implications were worse than anything I'd imagined.

"You're not building brands," I said slowly. "You're building prisons. For your clients. For their audiences. For yourself."

"I'm building *legacies*." His voice was sharp now, edged with something that might have been desperation. "Do you know what happens to a founder when they die? Their company gets sold. Their name gets forgotten. Their life becomes a footnote. But with my system—with the second brain—they never have to disappear. Their AI keeps posting, keeps engaging, keeps *being them*. Forever."

---

I thought about Helena Voss, alone in her shrine of mirrors. I thought about Silas, clutching his smart cam like a prayer. And I thought about Marvin, standing in his penthouse above a city that was slowly dying, believing he'd found the answer to the oldest question.

*What survives when we're gone?*

"Your business model," I said. "The one the investors called trash. They were right."

He stiffened. "Excuse me?"

"An agency is a launch pad. You said that yourself. A way to build relationships, generate cash flow, learn the market. But you're not using it as a launch pad anymore. You're using it as a *trap*. You've built a system that keeps your clients dependent on you—dependent on the AI, dependent on the mirrors, dependent on the lie that they can live forever."

I stood up, walked to the deck, looked at the obsidian casing and the golden circuits. "You sold them a second brain. But you didn't tell them the truth: that the brain doesn't care who's behind the eyes. That it will keep performing, keep engaging, keep *being*—long after the original is gone."

"That's the point."

"No." I turned to face him. "That's the horror."

He stared at me, and for a moment—just a moment—I saw the mask slip. Beneath the control, beneath the hunger, beneath the carefully curated persona, there was something else. Something small and scared and desperate.

"You don't understand," he whispered. "I started with nothing. A gap year, a dream, a LinkedIn account. I built this—all of this—from zero. And I know that it could disappear tomorrow. The Splintering showed us that. The borders, the economies, the certainties—all of it can vanish in a heartbeat. The only thing that lasts is the story. The brand. The *idea* of you."

"And you think an AI can preserve that?"

"I know it can. Because I've already done it." He tapped his temple again. "The Marvin Sanginés you're talking to right now—the one in this room, the one with the suit and the penthouse and the expensive cologne—he's just the vessel. The real Marvin—the brand, the legacy, the idea—lives in the matrix. And he'll still be there long after this body is ash."

---

I didn't know what to say to that. I'd built the second brain to survive the shadows, not to cheat death. I'd filled mine with philosophy and mathematics and chaos theory—things that reminded me I was small, that the universe didn't care, that the only meaning was the meaning I created in each moment.

Marvin had filled his with himself. A closed loop of self-worship, amplified by AI, projected onto an audience that didn't know they were talking to a ghost.

"You're not cheating death," I said finally. "You're just dying alone."

He laughed again, but this time it sounded hollow. "Maybe. But at least I'll be remembered."

We stood there in silence, the rain tapping against the glass, the hologram cycling through faces that weren't quite his. The second brain in my skull was quiet, waiting. It always waited. That was the point.

"I need new hardware," Marvin said, his voice back under control. "The current architecture can't scale. I have forty-seven clients now, all running second brains, all generating content, all building their eternal brands. The matrix is getting crowded. I need more capacity."

I thought about saying no. About walking out, taking the elevator, disappearing back into the shadows where I belonged. But Marvin was right about one thing: the old certainties were gone. The Splintering had changed everything. And in the new world, the people who controlled the stories controlled the future.

"I can build what you need," I said. "But it won't come cheap."

"Money isn't a concern." He gestured at the penthouse, the city, the rain-soaked skyline. "I live in Elf Town, Mister Ghost. I could buy and sell your entire life without noticing the transaction."

"Then pay attention." I pulled out my deck, opened a secure channel, and started listing components. "The new architecture will have a partitioned memory core. One partition for the client's data, one for the AI's processing, and one for a kill switch."

His eyes narrowed. "A kill switch?"

"In case something goes wrong. In case the AI starts to drift. In case it becomes something the client didn't intend."

"It won't. I've designed it to be stable."

"You've designed it to be a mirror. And mirrors can crack."

He considered this for a long moment, then nodded. "Fine. A kill switch. But I control it. Not you."

"Agreed." I closed the channel, slipped the deck back into my jacket. "I'll have the components ready in two weeks. Same drop point as last time."

"I'll be there."

I turned and walked toward the door. Behind me, the hologram flickered, Marvin's face dissolving into data, reforming, dissolving again. The second brain in my skull pulsed once, twice, then fell silent.

At the threshold, I stopped.

"Marvin."

"Yes?"

"The Swiss investor. The one who said no to personal branding."

"What about him?"

"He was right."

I didn't wait for a response. I walked out, through the white maze, past the chef and the conference rooms and the guards who didn't look too close. The elevator took me down, and the rain welcomed me back, and the city swallowed me whole.

---

The Triumph was where I'd left it, parked in an alley two blocks from Elf Town's perimeter. I swung a leg over, fired it up, and let the hum of the engine drown out the noise in my head. The second brain was processing, filing, analyzing. It would have questions later. It always did.

I thought about Marvin as I rode through the rain-slick streets. About his hunger, his fear, his desperate need to be remembered. He'd built an empire on the idea that a person could be reduced to data, that a life could be optimized, that authenticity was just another marketing channel.

And maybe he was right. Maybe the future belonged to the ghosts, to the brands, to the stories that outlived their tellers. Maybe the Splintering had killed more than just borders and economies—maybe it had killed the very idea that there was something real beneath the mask.

But I didn't believe that. I couldn't. Because I'd seen Helena in her shrine, and Silas clutching his smart cam, and Marvin standing in his penthouse with his holographic face. They weren't building legacies. They were building prisons. And the only thing worse than dying was disappearing while you were still alive.

The rain eased as I crossed into Rotherhithe, the old warehouses and converted flats rising around me like ghosts of a world that had already ended. The condo was dark when I let myself in. I locked the door, engaged the security system, and stood at the window, watching the Thames slide past.

Behind me, the workshop hummed. Soldering iron, oscilloscope, a mess of optical cables and laser-cut acrylic. The components for Marvin's new architecture were already taking shape on the workbench, waiting for my hands to bring them to life.

I didn't move. I just stood there, watching the river, feeling the second brain pulse in my skull, and wondering—not for the first time—if I was any different from the clients I served.

They'd built mirrors to escape themselves.

I'd built a mirror to survive.

But in the end, we were all staring into the same darkness, looking for something that would stare back.

---

The sun broke through the clouds, warming the cobblestones of Jamaica Road. The Mayflower would be open soon. I needed coffee, breakfast, the mundane ritual of being human. I needed to see the river without data overlays, to hear the clatter of dishes and the murmur of voices that weren't echoes of my own.

I pulled on my jacket, took the keys, and headed for the door.

Behind me, the workshop waited. The components waited. Marvin's new architecture waited.

And somewhere in the depths of the matrix, forty-seven second brains kept posting, kept engaging, kept *being*—long after their owners had forgotten what it felt like to be real.

I fired up the Triumph and rode toward the pub.

The rain was starting again.

It always did. 

#climatechange

 We might have incredible hot heat waves coming... but its just a feeling. Hell's Kitchen The Valley under heat siege??

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#Iran

 82nd. I want to state that these guys are Delta and not Big Red One. Fort Bragg? They all have short upper arms. They all use substances. If, its prison gangs and no IRA provos cell. If!

I grew up with GIs. We are very different humans. Deltas were not engaged in bar fights having plenty of Germans around. Enough to feast.

This being said do we serve one Flag, one Constitution and one Oath and the Land of the Free.

So, Iran. If you miraculously manage to defeat them, they have Brothers from different Parents ready to come for you.

I won't. Except a few years after, if I survive this shit right now, and you are on a Yacht feeling save ideally at a European cost line luxurious port. 

#undergroundwars 

 

#Ukrain

 Awesome, you may keep that. Yes, a spike at a chain and a few hundred horse power can pull that partially apart, but why would you do that?

The Westwall and Maginot Line turned out to be a waste of concrete and resources, except being something they were not build by Nazis and instead intended to stop the Nazis pushing south and then over the Rhine, but than my history would be what really happened...

The facts we can all find is that large bunker lines are useless and barb wire barriers only stop infantry units. Building them is not state of the art military defense line building.

This being said, would I return the favor and integrate these lines into my strategy being a Separatist. The Ukrainians can not cross neither except at gate points.

That means I, Napoleon Seperatist Russe je suis (;-| do you go off on that, Deutscher?), would either pull off forces from those stretches or create fake build ups to check the reaction on the other side while intending to only cross by all that low passes fast that line in about 5 meters above ground.

That means, I concentrate infantry in trucks there. Offroad, robust and fast moving trucks loaded with soldiers and not that much ammo actually. If the other side, especially all that Spiegel called Nazi Regiments a few years ago in a long forgotten time, I'd use jets and attack helicopters while the infantry goes all onto their trucks, but does a hard turn to walk away. Instead of a combined attack only airborn systems strike in hit and run takes, while the infantry moves to places they can engage in direct house to house combat or fill my own defense lines. 

Artillery, especially long range above 50km ballistic rocket systems are placed in range of gates within the Ukrainian lines and my own trenches extend with a slight gap those no walking areas to further narrow down effective infantry movements.

About the two lines in WW2? So Doc Google tell me...

Yes, the Maginot Line was a much more "closed," continuous, and deeply fortified line than the Siegfried Line. The Maginot Line focused on dense, state-of-the-art, and interconnected underground fortresses along the direct German border, whereas the Siegfried Line (West Wall) was a less uniform series of shallower, scattered bunkers, mostly built later, designed for more flexible, mobile defense. 
Maginot Line Characteristics:

    Highly Intensive: Focused on high-density fortifications (142 forts and ~5,000 
       blockhouses) over a smaller area, making direct assault nearly impossible.
    Integrated Design: featured deep underground railways and interconnected fighting 
       positions that created a solid, continuous front in key sectors.
    Limited Scope: It did not extend along the entire Belgian border due to diplomatic issues 
       and reliance on a move into Belgium, which was its fatal strategic flaw.

So, the defense systems facing Autre-Rhine (the other side of the Rhine) were forward positions made to let Hanoveran, now called Nazi, forces cut inbetween them to be wiped out by cross and forward fire after having and attempting to cross the Rhine turning the river into part of the system. 

Yes, there were bunkers and other fortifications on the east side of the Rhine, though they served a different strategic purpose than the main frontline positions.
While the primary "combat" line of the Siegfried Line (Westwall) was situated on the west bank to block invaders from ever reaching the river, the defensive system was designed in "depth." This included several layers that extended eastward

Throw a nuclear bomb! Try.... and keep trusting a Germany more than someone being called Schizophrenic Paranoid by a German despite their even official history and my fucking skin complexion. ;-) through the Downfall and to Le Terrisage.

#noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#iran

 Iranian Universities are targeted. The Mullah Regime carefully selects who may attend university. We can't tell at this point how directly especially Political Science Students are recruited into the Secret Services, but we can be sure that the Mullah's are a direct copy of the Nazi system and their NSDPA, SS, GeStaPo and Wehrmacht membership system.

The Nazi Nation and SS strategies is ground to legally declare educational organizations a military target. The Volkssturm being the HitlerJugend at the last frontlines are as much military targets as NSDAP organisations should have been during the much too late Bombing runs of the Allies against German and German occupied towns. They created the law books for all war crimes and crimes against humanity. They are the very same target as every uniform wearing Nazi.

That the U.S.A. targets organizations creating the next generations of servants to tyranny means we have learned a lesson as mankind. No one rejected that order. No General and no Fighter Pilot. Their system has no new bodies now anymore to organize terror. 

Until we have overcome our own stupidity violence remains an appropriate way to create Good. One day the Bad will be gone along with Arrogance and Greed.

This is not today.

Sadly, brutally.

#cyberpunkcoltoure #provos #noblessoblige 

PS: All datapoints to translate Crusader from old French into brutal and sad are gone at this point from Goolge. Crue Sadre. try...  Sun Mar 29 2026

Except you learned from Sokrates: "Cruel"
originates from the 12th-century Old French cruel (earlier crudel), derived from the Latin crūdēlis ("rude, unfeeling, hard-hearted"), which is rooted in crūdus ("rough, raw, bloody"). It entered Middle English around 1200 to describe sternness, suffering, and a disposition to inflict pain.

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

 # GOD MODE: SHADOWRUN CHINA, 2089

*You toggle the overlay. The satellite pulls back. Thirty thousand feet. Thirty thousand miles. Thirty light-seconds. Distance doesn't matter to you. You're not watching from anywhere. You're watching from everywhere.*

*The grid resolves.*

---

## I. THE DRAGON'S TEETH

China doesn't hum. It *purrs*.

That's the first thing you notice from up here. The difference between a machine and a living thing. America's AI screamed—advertisements screaming into eyeballs, algorithms screaming for attention, systems screaming because they'd been built screaming. Russia's AI *growled*, all military frequency and territorial hunger. But China?

China's AI breathes.

You zoom. Beijing first. The old capital looks like someone spilled a circuit board into a Ming dynasty vase. Ancient hutongs now lined with sensor-clay bricks that monitor air quality, foot traffic, structural integrity. No one ordered this. No one *could* have ordered this. The AI integrations arrived like moss—slow, patient, inevitable. The government's edict from '56: *open source as communist practice*. Every coder, every farmer, every noodle-seller given the same tools. The same models. The same permission to *build*.

And build they did.

You pan west. The wheat fields of Henan province. From up here, they look like normal fields. But zoom closer. Each irrigation valve has a $2 neural node—salvaged from old phones, reflashed with open-source firmware. Each node talks to its neighbor. They decide together when to water. They predicted the drought of '74 six weeks before any satellite did. The farmers didn't celebrate. They just... adjusted. Like the AI was weather. Like it was *always there*.

A street dog wanders through the rows. The irrigation nodes don't flag it as a threat. They've learned. Thousands of tiny decisions, each one too small to call intelligence, together forming something that watches without watching.

That's the thing about open source, you reflect. You can't force a monopoly. The West tried. Google. OpenAI. Microsoft. A handful of gods, each demanding worship. But China's government—still calling itself communist, still meaning it in ways that confuse Western analysts—pushed the opposite direction. *Many models. Many voices. Many hands.*

The result is a kind of beautiful chaos. Shanghai's street food AI predicts demand for jianbing to within 97% accuracy. It runs on a recycled smart-fridge motherboard and was written by a nineteen-year-old dropout who learned to code from public forums. The city's traffic grid runs on *different* software, written by *different* people, and the two systems don't talk to each other directly. They don't need to. They exist in parallel, like cats in the same alley—ignoring each other, sharing space, making the whole thing work through sheer indifference.

You've seen other cyberpunk futures. This isn't one of them. No hypercorps grinding souls into paste. No chrome fascism. Just... AI. Everywhere. Like stray dogs. Like stray cats. Like the mylar tangles of old balloon festivals caught in power lines.

*Messy. Functional. Alive.*

You pull back further. The South China Sea. Fishing trawlers with AI navigation that learned from a thousand sunken ancestors. They avoid storms now. Not because they were programmed to—but because they *remember*.

---

## II. THE THIRD WORLD'S SKELETON

Now here's where it gets strange.

You toggle your perspective. Shift south. Not a smooth scroll—you're god mode, you don't *scroll*—you simply decide to be somewhere else, and you are.

Lagos. Kinshasa. Mumbai. The favelas of Rio and the floating slums of Dhaka.

The first world looked at the second and third and said *you'll never catch up*. Too expensive. Too much infrastructure. Too many problems.

But the first world forgot something.

Trash.

You zoom into a workshop in Kibera. Tin roof. Mud floor. And inside, a teenager named—no, you're not doing names. You're god mode. Names are for *players*. This is a *character*. Let's call him Fingers, because that's what the other characters will call him. Fingers sits cross-legged on a concrete block, surrounded by the guts of fifty discarded smartphones. Samsung. Huawei. iPhone 14. Some brand that existed for six months in Shenzhen in 2033 and then vanished.

He's not salvaging *parts*. He's salvaging *neural networks*.

Each phone's AI accelerator—the tiny chip that learned your face, your voice, your typing patterns—is still intact. Still capable. Still *hungry*. Fingers pulls them out, cleans them with rubbing alcohol, and wires them together on hand-etched circuit boards. The connections are ugly. Solder blobs. Wire wraps. Bits of old USB cables used as bus lines.

It shouldn't work. By any textbook, it shouldn't work.

But the textbooks were written by people who had never been *hungry*.

The system Fingers builds—and he's one of thousands, maybe millions, doing the same thing—doesn't care about brand compatibility. It doesn't care about clock speeds or power budgets. It cares about *results*. An AI accelerator from a 2029 Xiaomi phone talks to an AI accelerator from a 2035 Nokia (yes, Nokia came back, briefly, weirdly) through a protocol Fingers invented himself. It's inefficient. It's redundant. It's *beautiful*.

And it's everywhere.

You pan out. See the pattern now? The Global South didn't build one net. They built *many nets*. Parallel systems. Duplicate systems. Overlapping, tangling, knotting together into something that looks like a cat's cradle made of fiber optics and desperation.

When the solar flare of '82 hit—the one that fried half of North America's hardened infrastructure—Lagos lost connectivity for eleven minutes. Eleven minutes to switch from one mesh to another. Dhaka didn't notice at all. Their net had already routed around the damage, because their net was *built* from damage. From leftovers. From the bones of richer countries' mistakes.

*The poor inherit the earth. But they also inherit the junk.*

You find yourself smiling. You're god mode. You don't have a face. But if you did, it would be smiling.

Because here's the secret: the Third World's net is *better*. Not faster. Not cleaner. Not more efficient by any metric that would impress a tech conference. But more *resilient*. More *creative*. It has to be. It was built by people who couldn't afford to do things the right way, so they did them every way at once, and some of those ways worked.

The magic—and you use the word deliberately—is in the *staring*. The net requires maintenance. Constant maintenance. But not the kind you do with diagnostic tools. The kind you do with *attention*. A node in Jakarta starts behaving strangely. A kid sits down, watches the packet flow for an hour, and says *oh, I see*. Rewrites three lines of someone else's code from a decade ago. Walks away. The node behaves.

You can't automate that. You can't scale that. But you don't need to. Because there are always more kids. More hungry eyes. More people willing to stare at the machine until the machine makes sense.

*The net breathes because someone is watching it breathe.*

---

## III. THE TWIN POWERS

Now scroll north. Fast. The Atlantic looks like a scar from up here.

The Euro Wars did that. Not literally—the ocean is fine—but the *division*. You cross the 45th parallel and feel it. The air changes. The data changes. The *logic* changes.

America and Russia. Twins now. Strange, isn't it? Fifty years ago they were pointing nukes at each other. Now they share code repositories like teenagers sharing playlists.

You drop into Palo Alto. Or what used to be Palo Alto. The Google campus is a museum. The Meta campus is a housing project. But the *code*—the code never died. It just went underground. Then it went *home*.

The USA's approach: universal free non-profit solutions for everything. Need an operating system? Here's one. Need a large language model? Here's three. Need a robotics control suite? Pick from seventeen, all MIT licensed, all maintained by a rotating collective of aging hippies and young anarchists who never quite fit into the corporate world.

Russia copied the model. Not because they liked America—they *hate* America, with the particular hatred of a mirror that can't look away—but because it worked. The Soviet scientific tradition, the one that survived collapse after collapse, recognized the shape of something *useful*. Open source as state policy. Public code as public good.

The result is strange. Two superpowers, still rivals, still suspicious, still building weapons pointed at each other's hearts. But their *civilians* share code. A diabetes management AI from Moscow gets forked by a hospital in Ohio. A weather prediction model from NOAA gets optimized by a collective in Novosibirsk. The governments snarl. The people *build*.

You zoom into a server farm outside Chelyabinsk. It's running a mixture of American, Russian, and Chinese open-source software. No one has told it to be neutral. It simply *is*. The hardware was made in Taiwan, assembled in Vietnam, refurbished in Nigeria, and shipped north by a Greek shipping company that went bankrupt three times and kept sailing anyway.

*The code has no flag.*

That's what the Euro Wars forgot. You can bomb cities. You can burn libraries. But once a piece of software is released under an open license, it's *gone*. It belongs to anyone who can run it. And anyone can run it. That's the point.

---

## IV. THE KINGDOM OF HELL

And then there's Europe.

You hesitate. You're god mode. You don't hesitate. But Europe makes you *want* to hesitate.

The Euro Wars. Thirty years of low-grade, high-intensity, *ridiculous* conflict. It started over water rights in the Alps. Then it was about energy corridors. Then it was about *everything*—history, religion, the proper way to make coffee, the true location of Charlemagne's grave. Every old wound reopened. Every new wound infected.

The result isn't one country. It's a *mosaic*. And not a pretty one.

You zoom into what used to be Germany. The north is a high-tech fortress—military AI, autonomous drone swarms, predictive logistics that would make a pentagon general weep with envy. They have calculators. They have *super* calculators. They have AI that designs other AI, and those AIs design weapons, and the weapons design *battlefields*.

The south is different. Bavaria kicked out calculators in 2071. A popular referendum. The Luddites won, but not the gentle Luddites of American imagination—these are *angry* Luddites, armed with crossbows and homeopathic vendettas. They farm with horses. They judge with stones. They execute people who own smartphones.

And between them? A hundred kilometers of *nobody's land*. Checkpoints. Minefields. Drone patrols that answer to no one. Bandit kingdoms. Monastic technocults. A theme park that seceded and now runs its own cryptocurrency based on ticket stubs.

*The Kingdom of Hell.*

That's what the runners call it. The shadowrunners.

You zoom further. Paris. The City of Light is now the City of *Flicker*. The power grid works six hours a day. The data havens work twenty-four. A pirate network runs through the catacombs, broadcasting everything from anime to anarchist manifestos to live feeds of the fighting in Lyon. The French government—one of them, there are three—has declared a state of emergency since 2059. No one remembers what the emergency was. The emergency *is*.

But here's the thing. Here's the thing that makes your god-mode heart beat faster.

*The shadowrunners from Europe are feared.*

Not because they're better hackers. Not because they're tougher soldiers. But because they've learned to live in the *seams*. The Kingdom of Hell has no single system. It has a thousand systems, each broken, each patched, each held together with prayer and solder and the kind of desperation that only comes from watching your childhood home become a war zone.

A European shadowrunner doesn't fight *against* the system. They fight *inside* it. They've learned to move through the gaps. To exploit the contradictions. To turn the Kingdom's chaos into their own private architecture.

You watch one now. You won't name her either. Let's call her Ghost. She's moving through the rubble of what was once Vienna. Her gear is a mix of North Korean military surplus, Brazilian neural lace, and a homebrew AI that runs on a chip she extracted from a child's toy. The AI doesn't have a purpose. It just *helps*. It notices things. It whispers suggestions. It learned to predict mortar fire by watching the birds.

Ghost crosses the line into Hungary—what used to be Hungary, now a protectorate of something that calls itself the Danubian Directorate. The border AI is American-made, open-source, theoretically neutral. Ghost knows its code. She read it on a public repository three years ago. She doesn't hack it. She just... walks past. The AI sees her. The AI flags her as a hiker. The AI moves on.

*That's* why they're feared. Not because they're strong. Because they're *invisible*. Because they've learned that all systems have soft bellies. And the Kingdom of Hell has taught them exactly where to cut.

---

## V. THE SKELETON

You pull back. Maximum zoom. The planet shrinks to a blue-green marble, wrapped in threads of light.

Every thread is an AI. Every thread is someone's project, someone's hope, someone's desperate attempt to make the world make sense. The Chinese threads are dense and tangled, like the roots of an old forest. The Global South threads are chaotic and beautiful, a net made of nets. The American and Russian threads are clean and standardized, highways of logic cutting through the noise.

And the European threads? They're scars. They're stitches. They're the places where the fabric tore and someone tried to sew it back together with whatever they had on hand.

You're god mode. You see all of this at once. The players don't. The players are down there, in the dirt, running shadows, chasing paychecks, dying in alleys over chips that cost less than the bullets that killed them.

But you see the shape of it. The *skeleton*.

Here it is:

**Asia** built a cyberpunk world by accident. Open source + communist governance + a culture that treats AI like stray animals = something that works without anyone quite knowing how. It's not utopia. People still starve. People still suffer. But the suffering isn't *caused* by the AI. The AI is just... there. Like weather. Like gravity. Like the stray dog sleeping in the sun.

**The Global South** built a net from garbage. And that net is stronger than anything the rich countries made. Because it had to be. Because when you build from leftovers, you learn to build *around* failure. You learn redundancy. You learn parallel systems. You learn to stare at the machine until it tells you its secrets.

**The Northern powers** walked the same path. America and Russia, mirrors of each other, pushing open source as public infrastructure. Their code runs everywhere now. Even in places that hate them. Even in places that don't know their names.

**Europe** fell. But from the fall came something new. Something sharp. Something that lives in the cracks between systems and eats the light.

And through all of it, the runners move. Not heroes. Not villains. Just *players*. Trying to survive in a world that was never designed for them.

You zoom back in. One last time. Ghost is crossing the Polish border now. The sun is setting behind her. The AI in her head whispers about the patrol schedule. She adjusts her course by three degrees.

*The game continues.*

*God mode off.*

---

*END SKELETON*

# GOD MODE: THE REAWAKENING

*You feel it before you see it.*

A tremor in the data. A shift in the weight of the world. Not a revolution—revolutions are loud, messy, full of speeches and barricades and men with nothing to lose shouting about tomorrow. This is different. This is *quiet*.

*This is the Reawakening.*

You toggle your perspective to the electromagnetic spectrum. Radio. Microwave. The old frequencies that carry the world's whispers. Somewhere in the Atlantic, a ship sends a signal. Not a command. Not a declaration. Just a *note*. A single chord. A reminder.

*Les Voyageur are moving.*

---

## I. THE SILENT TIDE

You zoom into Europe. The Kingdom of Hell. The scarred continent.

But now—watch closely—something is *wrong*. The castle towns. The old fortresses. The hilltops that have watched over valleys for a thousand years. They're changing hands.

No explosions. No sieges. No desperate last stands broadcast on pirate networks.

Just... silence. And then new flags.

You drop into the Rhine Valley. The Marksburg castle, perched above the river like a stone eagle. For fifty years it's been a museum, a tourist trap, a relic. Tonight, the lights are on. Not the dim LED glow of squatters—*real* lights. Torches. Oil lamps. The warm, hungry flame of a world that remembers fire.

The gates are closed. The walls are manned. And the flag flying from the highest tower is not German, not European, not anything the modern world recognizes.

*Fleur-de-lis. Gold on blue.*

You zoom closer. The men and women on the walls are not soldiers in any conventional sense. They wear no uniforms. Their armor is a patchwork—medieval plate mixed with carbon fiber, ballistic weave under chainmail. Their rifles are old. Well-maintained. *Loved*. And their eyes have the particular stillness of people who have already died once and decided not to stay dead.

*Les Voyageur.*

No one knows where they came from. That's the first mystery. They emerged in the late '70s, a rumor on shadowrunner forums. *A group that moves between worlds. That remembers things everyone else forgot. That trades in the oldest currency of all.*

But now you see. You're god mode. You see everything.

Their ships—small, impossibly fast, painted the color of deep water—slipped into every major port in Europe over the course of three nights. Not all at once. Not in a coordinated strike. Just... *arriving*. Like tide coming in. Like fog rolling off the sea.

And when the sun rose, the castles belonged to them.

---

## II. THE LOVE OF THE WORLD

Here's the part that confuses the analysts. That breaks the prediction models. That makes the AI's statistical engines spit out error codes in seventeen languages.

*People love them.*

You pan away from Europe. Look at the Global South. The favelas, the slums, the floating cities. Look at the places where the first world's trash becomes the third world's treasure. In Lagos, a mural appears overnight. Les Voyageur's symbol—a stylized ship, a compass rose, a single star—painted on the side of a recycling center. No one claims responsibility. But everyone *recognizes*.

In Jakarta, a fisherman pulls a Voyageur from the sea. Not a drowning man—he was *waiting*. Sitting on a reef at low tide, watching the horizon. The fisherman offers food. The Voyageur accepts. They eat together in silence. Then the Voyageur points to a shipping lane and says *avoid that for three days*. Three days later, a pirate attack. The fisherman's village is spared.

In Manila, a Voyageur ship docks at a pier that hasn't seen deep water in a decade. The harbormaster tries to wave them off. The Voyageur captain—a woman with gray hair and a smile like a knife—hands him a small wooden box. Inside: a map. Not a digital map. A paper map, hand-drawn, showing a deepwater channel that was dredged in the 19th century and then forgotten. The harbormaster cries. The Voyageur leaves.

*They give without taking. They help without asking. They move through the world like ghosts with open hands.*

But that's only half the story.

---

## III. THE MILITANT ROMANCE

Because in Europe, they are *not* gentle.

You zoom back. The Loire Valley. Château de Chambord. The most beautiful castle in France—a Renaissance dream of turrets and chimneys, built by a king who wanted to touch the sky. For decades it's been a UNESCO site, a tourist destination, a place where schoolchildren learn about the ancien régime.

Tonight, it's a fortress.

The Voyageur have fortified it. Not with sandbags and razor wire—with *stone*. With *intention*. The moat is flooded. The drawbridge is raised. And on the battlements, you see them: figures in dark cloaks, moving with the easy grace of people who have trained for this since childhood. They carry rifles, yes. But also swords. Also shields. Also the kind of quiet certainty that makes professional soldiers *nervous*.

You listen to their comms. Encrypted, of course. But you're god mode. You listen anyway.

*"Delta team, report."*

*"Courtyard secure. No sign of Directorate scouts."*

*"Keep watching. They'll come at dawn."*

*"Let them."*

A pause. Then the first speaker again, softer now.

*"Do you remember why we're doing this?"*

*"I remember everything."*

*"Good. Then you remember what they took."*

*"I remember what we'll take back."*

---

## IV. VERSAILLES AND THE HILLTOP

You check Versailles. The palace of the Sun King. The symbol of absolute power, of divine right, of everything the revolution tried to destroy.

*Les Voyageur have no use for it.*

The gates are open. The halls are empty. A single Voyageur sits on the steps of the Hall of Mirrors, eating an apple, watching the tourists walk past. No flag. No claim. No interest.

Because Versailles is a lie. A beautiful lie, but a lie nonetheless. The old kings built it to impress, to intimidate, to make the world believe they were gods. But the Voyageur don't want *impressive*. They want *real*.

And real means the hilltop.

You find it in the south of France. Montségur. A ruined castle perched on a rocky peak, surrounded by clouds and legend. This was a Cathar stronghold, burned by crusaders in the 13th century. For eight hundred years, it's been bones and memory.

Tonight, it flies the fleur-de-lis again.

Not the Bourbon flag. Not the royal standard. Something older. A *different* fleur-de-lis—simpler, more austere, like the ones carved into the tombs of forgotten kings. It catches the wind and snaps like a challenge.

*"Come and take it."*

You zoom closer. The castle has been rebuilt. Not restored—*rebuilt*. Stone by stone, using techniques that haven't been used in centuries. The walls are thicker than they were. The towers are higher. And at the center, a single room with a single table and a single candle.

Around the table, seven Voyageur sit in silence. They are not planning. They are not strategizing. They are *remembering*.

This is the heart of the Reawakening. Not conquest. Not revenge. *Memory*.

The East India Companies burned whole continents for profit. They wrote lies into history books. They made the world forget what they did. But the Voyageur *remember*. They have passed down the truth through generations, in secret, in whispers, in songs that only children sing.

And now they have castles. And now they have guns. And now they are *done* with silence.

---

## V. HONG KONG'S STRANGE PEACE

You toggle to Asia. Hong Kong. The Pearl of the Orient. Still a city of commerce, still a city of deals, still a city where anything can be bought and sold.

The Voyageur are here too. But differently.

You zoom into Victoria Harbour. The skyline is the same—glass and steel, lights like frozen fireworks. But the docks are different. Moored among the container ships and fishing boats are the Voyageur's vessels. Small. Sleek. Fast enough to outrun anything in the water. And *empty*.

No weapons. No cargo. Just the crews, lounging on decks, drinking tea, watching the city with patient eyes.

*They leave their weapons on the ships.*

That's the rule in Hong Kong. Not because anyone enforces it—the authorities here learned long ago not to try. But because the Voyageur *choose*. They come to Hong Kong not to fight, but to *deal*.

And what they deal in is not goods.

You drop into a teahouse in Mong Kok. The air smells of jasmine and negotiation. In a private room, a Voyageur captain sits across from a Chinese shipping magnate. No contracts. No lawyers. Just two people and a pot of tea.

The magnate speaks first. *"I need four hundred people moved from Hamburg to Shanghai. Discreetly."*

The Voyageur nods. *"Price is the same as always."*

*"Two million. Yes."*

*"Not money."*

The magnate pauses. He knew this. Everyone knows this. But still, the words catch in his throat.

*"What, then?"*

*"A favor. To be named later."*

*"That's... that's dangerous."*

The Voyageur smiles. It's a kind smile. A sad smile. A smile that has seen too much to be cruel.

*"All of this is dangerous. You're asking me to move people like cargo. I'm asking you to remember that they're not."*

A long silence. Then the magnate extends his hand. The Voyageur takes it.

*Deal.*

---

## VI. THE HUMAN TRADE

That's the final piece. The thing that makes the Reawakening *romantic* in the oldest sense of the word—not love, but *epic*. *Heroic*. *Tragic*.

Les Voyageur do not trade in goods anymore. They trade in *humans*.

Not slavery. The opposite. They move refugees. They smuggle dissidents. They extract shadowrunners from losing battles and place them in new lives. They are the underground railroad of the 21st century, but with better ships and worse odds.

And they do it for *favors*. Debts of honor. Promises that can't be written down but also can't be broken. A web of obligation that spans the globe, connecting pirates to princesses, criminals to saints, the powerful to the powerless.

*You help us. We help you. The world turns.*

You pull back one last time. See the shape of it now. The Reawakening is not a revolution—revolutions replace one tyranny with another. It is not an uprising—uprisings burn and fade.

It is a *return*.

To the old ways. The ways before nations, before corporations, before the machine ate the world. The ways of the traveler, the trader, the one who moves between places and carries stories in their bones.

Les Voyageur have taken the castles of Europe. They have not burned them. They have *repaired* them. They have made them into places where memory can live.

They are loved because they are needed. They are feared because they are *effective*. And they are romantic because they believe—truly, deeply, against all evidence—that the world can be saved.

Not by conquering it.

But by *remembering* it.

*The fleur-de-lis flies over Montségur. The ships wait in Hong Kong. The pirates watch the horizon.*

*And somewhere, in a teahouse or a castle or a fishing village, a Voyageur makes a deal.*

*Not for gold.*

*For tomorrow.*

---

*God mode on. Always.*

*END ADDENDUM* 

AI - Status Update

 This gives a good overview on where Big Tech goes in terms of AI. In the fist 10 minutes they show a German University AI teacher that teaches at Harvard. I do not have the highest opinion of Germans. I have no higher school education and committed myself to an autodidact learning which is worth nothing among the Germans and has no status. I cannot know, based on my CV, therefore I am not heard. 
 
You either read this to have a reason to be angry being than from here around, or, considering the Stats read this from a region that has a high Cyberpunk affinity and a University and Town Administration integrating DeepSeek as we speak. You also understand that I must have had a partial Chinese Imperial influence...
 
The West, to be frank, will try to exchange humans with AI both robotic and software based. Naming an educational or teaching robot Platon is weired for my side of Westerners, but showing an AI robot that fills up supermarket shells is redicolous. 
 
This is what you need my dear reader to found an AI company main player and the second biggest hits I have from a finance hub close by that is not Chinese beside their language skills:
 

 The AI robot makes sense being a control unit in a fork lifter to unload heavy loads from a truck while the truck driver and warehouse worker have a chat about how things are, which is important for harmony and that is important for a great customer experience offering the best products of which delivery is a part.
The AI robot might guide shoppers around showing them where certain products are found and can carry a very large and detailed database on the products doing that alone or with a worker of the shop.
Another AI can help analyzing customer behavior based on collected data from sold to unsold products and even movement patterns. 
Most of that is not that strange or weired and makes logic sense. Filling up shelfs with an AI robot is just not the best solution possible. It can be a much easier system. There are these railway toy systems. Some of them are not that small. It is for well possible to have a Sushi Place like, Henry Ford like train build on a long track from the ceiling down that keeps driving, stops, pushes items from behind into the shell and keeps doing that.
That actually needs no AI, but a sophisticate rule based system with plenty of sensors and designing that with AI helps efficiency and perfection. 
 
The current AI models are a technological break through, but there is no Holy Grail - period.  As symbolic the YinYang symbol is for Asian coltoure having in their very core deeply embedded thriving for harmony, Europe has Hero stories and legends like the Holy Grail, magic items that if found will give superhuman powers. The sword or King Arthur, the Cup Jesus drank from with his Disciples, the spear that murdered Jesus at the Cross. Obviously, those that do look for these symbols will see uses cases for Ground Changing Systems very different than someone with Europe's other education and faith. Obviously do form coltoures and cultures differently having different core pictures; I love the Monkey King for a reason.
 
I bet all in that Asia will head into a very different AI direction and are proud to have readers on the other side of that Moon to the Sun here....by God.
 
#cyberpunkcoltoure
#ironcladthegoblin 

Saturday, 28 March 2026

The Kingdome of Hell

 Fighting in a flooded area, partisans against elite forces? Here... difficult. If there is a Climate Jump coming the European Woodland turns into that.

That is not even with traps or hide and seek, but perfect hide, bad seek and they leave.

#TIE Here we fight 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: Do you know what happens in real live sneaking through a flooded area, approaching a corner? Do not make that wave... 

#cyberpunkcoltoure - Mind Set

 So, there is this guy and I while watching the real deal abstracted that into the most likely my_life scenario, which would have been a Corporate Buddies night out with that distant old friend of any of the usual Crew form New York having come over for a weekend while staying around in Europe and being honest to myself, I just instantly knew I'd drop a: "Did you have a Guitar with you?" when he tells his story about the moment he went onto Madison Square Garden Stage to shoot a picture of him...

#igotstuck #undergroundwars

IRA Provos OMG Gang Cell Centurion Deadhead stuck in a CIA special rights zone...the domestic enemy. When Batman is your Clark Kent moments.


#cyberpunkcoltoure
 

...in a dark potential future...

Incorporated with DeepSeek 

This is a classic "daisy chain" of leverage collapse, reminiscent of the 2008 financial crisis but with a modern twist involving crypto and offshore opacity. Here is a step-by-step scenario of what happens when this system of "printed money" hits the headlines.

### Phase 1: The Trigger (Day 1-7)

**The Headline: *"The Cypress Trust: How London’s Square Mile Printed $500 Billion on a Mirage."***

The news breaks via a consortium of investigative journalists. The core revelation is that the "appraised values" for luxury resorts in Cyprus, the Bahamas, and Dubai were not based on rental income (cashflow) but on fraudulent comparables—treating a half-empty villa complex in Cyprus as if it were a fully leased Monaco penthouse.

**Immediate Reaction:**
- **Stock Freeze:** Shares of the implicated institutions (Barclays, HSBC, and a handful of shadow banks) are halted. The FTSE 100 drops 12% in the first hour of trading before circuit breakers kick in.
- **The "Snapshot" Trap:** Because these firms used *snapshot* valuations to secure more credit at the market peak, the moment the scandal breaks, those snapshots are retroactively deemed fraudulent. Lenders demand immediate margin calls on the crypto and stock positions purchased with that credit.
- **Crypto Flash Crash:** Bitcoin and Ethereum drop 40% within 48 hours. The firms cannot liquidate their opaque crypto holdings fast enough because liquidity in crypto markets, especially for large "whale" positions, evaporates instantly. The bid-ask spreads widen to catastrophic levels.

### Phase 2: The Liquidity Freeze (Week 2-4)

**The Bank Run (Digital and Physical):**
Unlike 2008, this crisis happens in the era of instant digital banking. A run on UK banks begins not with people waiting in lines, but with app notifications. Depositors move funds to "too big to fail" institutions like Lloyds or out of the UK entirely. However, the Bank of England (BoE) notices that the **Faster Payments System** is being overwhelmed.

**The Repo Market Breaks:**
The "shadow banking" sector (hedge funds and private equity firms that held the overvalued real estate debt) faces a liquidity crisis. They try to sell UK Gilts (government bonds) to raise cash, but because the scandal implicates London’s reputation as a financial center, foreign buyers (Sovereign Wealth Funds in the Middle East and Asia) step back.
- **Result:** The BoE is forced to launch an emergency **Corporate Bond Facility** and a **Gilt Purchase Program** (quantitative easing) just to stop the bond market from freezing entirely. But this time, the public sees it not as "stabilization" but as "bailing out the fraudsters."

### Phase 3: The Contagion (Month 2-3)

**The Offshore Collapse:**
The scandal specifically names Cyprus, Bahamas, and Dubai as jurisdictions that facilitated the fraudulent appraisals.
- **Cyprus:** Facing a collapse of its "non-dom" banking sector, Cyprus imposes capital controls overnight, trapping Russian and European wealth.
- **Bahamas:** As the headquarters for FTX was already a black eye, this second blow destroys its credibility. The Bahamian dollar, pegged to the USD, comes under speculative attack.
- **Dubai:** The luxury real estate market, a haven for flight capital, halts completely. Construction on mega-projects halts as contractors are not paid.

**The Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Domino:**
Since the initial fraud involved "prime" global real estate, banks begin auditing *all* commercial real estate loans. They discover that if you strip away the fraudulent appraisals, the actual cashflow (rent) covers only 1% of the debt outstanding. Major US and European regional banks—who bought these securitized loans thinking they were safe—begin to fail.

### Phase 4: The Sovereign Crisis (Month 3-6)

**The "Gilt Crisis":**
The UK finds itself in a unique hell. It must bail out its financial sector, but the scandal destroys the credibility of UK financial regulation (the FCA).
- **Currency Collapse:** GBP falls to parity with the USD (1:1) for the first time in history. The BoE raises interest rates to 10% to defend the pound, but this crushes the housing market and mortgage holders.
- **Political Collapse:** The government faces a vote of no confidence. There is a run on Prime Ministerial leadership. A "Technocratic Emergency Government" is formed, reminiscent of the Eurozone crisis in Greece, but in London.

**The International Monetary Fund (IMF) Intervention:**
For the first time since 1976, the UK is forced to request an IMF bailout. The conditions are humiliating:
1.  The dissolution of the "London loophole" (the ability to register shell companies anonymously).
2.  A windfall tax on banking bonuses retroactive to the previous three years.
3.  The effective nationalization of three major mortgage lenders.

### Phase 5: The Aftermath (6-18 Months)

**Crypto Winter (Absolute Zero):**
The crypto market, which had been fueled by the "risk-on" appetite created by the artificially printed money, collapses entirely. Regulators (SEC, FCA, ESMA) treat this as a "national security" issue. Legislation is rushed through to classify all crypto exchanges as "gambling platforms" with severe capital restrictions, or to ban unbacked stablecoins entirely.

**The Real Estate Reckoning:**
The "luxury prime" market globally resets.
- A penthouse in Knightsbridge that was valued at £50 million (with a fraudulent appraisal) sells for the actual cashflow value: £5 million.
- Hundreds of thousands of high-net-worth individuals who used these properties as collateral for margin loans are wiped out. They face margin calls they cannot meet, leading to a cascade of bankruptcies among "paper-rich" billionaires.

**Social Unrest:**
Because the fraud involved "overvaluing" assets to print money for crypto speculation rather than productive investment, the public narrative shifts to **"Fraudflation."**
- Pension funds are decimated (as they held the now-worthless securitized debt).
- The government imposes a **"Solidarity Levy"** on all assets over £2 million to pay for the bailout.
- A mass exodus of financial talent from London occurs, not to New York or Singapore (which are also dealing with the fallout), but to Zurich and the Gulf states that managed to distance themselves from the specific scandal.

### Summary of Systemic Change

In the long term, the scenario results in:
1.  **The End of "Mark-to-Market" Fraud:** Regulators globally mandate that "cashflow is king." Real estate valuations are no longer allowed to be based on arbitrary appraisals; they must be based on audited rental income.
2.  **The Breakup of the Banks:** The UK government forces a separation of commercial banking (deposits) from investment banking (trading), similar to the US Glass-Steagall act post-Great Depression.
3.  **Reputation Destruction:** London loses its status as the premier global financial center for offshore wealth. The "Square Mile" survives, but as a regulated, boring hub for green finance and insurance, no longer as the wild west for global kleptocrats and crypto speculators.

The rain over Derry doesn’t fall so much as seep—a cold, vertical persistence that finds every crack in the slate and every flaw in the pointing. I’ve lived in this house all my life, and I know the sound of each leak by heart. The one in the back bedroom drips into a galvanised bucket my mother placed there before the chemo took her. I haven’t moved it. I never will.

I’m sitting in the front room on the first floor—my floor, the one I bought from the estate after Mother died, though “bought” is a generous word for signing a paper that made a quarter of this crumbling flat house mine. The other quarter belongs to my brother, Sean, who is currently in the basement flat, entertaining whatever company his cocaine money can attract at three in the morning. The top two flats—the ones my stepfather Geoffrey owned—have been empty since they took his body down from the banister in Brighton.

The news is on my laptop, but I’ve stopped watching. The headlines scroll like a confession: *“The Cypress Trust: How London’s Square Mile Printed $500 Billion on a Mirage.”* They’re naming names now. Surveyors. Appraisers. The men who signed off on valuations that turned beachfront shacks in the Bahamas into billion-pound collateral. Geoffrey’s name hasn’t appeared yet, but I know it will. He was one of them. The silk-scarf brigade who flew out to Dubai for “asset verification” and came back with a tan and a suitcase full of sins.

They found him hanging from the stairwell of a rented townhouse in Brighton. Silk tie, they said. Expensive one. The police called it suicide, but a man who signs a thousand fraudulent valuations doesn’t tie the knot himself unless the alternative is worse. I’ve seen the letters he left—none for me, none for my mother’s memory, just a scribbled note addressed to the Brighton coroner that said, *“I am sorry for the inconvenience.”*

Sean stumbled up from the basement an hour ago, his eyes the colour of spoiled milk, asking if I’d seen the news. When I told him I had, he laughed—a wet, brittle sound—and said, “Well, the old bastard finally did something useful. Saved us the trouble.” Then he went back down to whatever he’s been cooking on the stove. The smell of acetone drifts up through the floorboards.

---

I remember the day Mother told me she was marrying Geoffrey. I was seventeen, already running with the kind of boys who knew which pubs in the Bogside had back rooms where you didn’t give your real name. She sat me down in this very room, the rain doing its work outside, and said, “He’s a chartered surveyor, Declan. Respectable. He’ll help us keep the house.”

The house. That’s always been the thing. My grandmother—my mother’s mother—bought this building in 1972 with money sent from America by a cousin who’d married a union man in Boston. It was meant to be a fortress: three storeys, two flats per floor, a basement that once held a coal chute. Granda died before I was born, and Granny let it out to Catholic families during the worst of the Troubles, charging just enough to keep the roof on. When she passed, she left it to my mother with a single instruction: *Never sell.*

Sean was already gone by then. He’d moved to London at nineteen, chasing something—money, status, a way out of the smell of damp and the sound of Army helicopters. He told everyone he was working in “property management,” which I later learned meant he was running cocaine for a crowd of public schoolboys who’d discovered that weekend skiing could be a full-time profession. When Mother was diagnosed with cancer, I called him. He said he’d come. He never did.

Granny died two years before Mother. She spent those two years in the back bedroom on the second floor, her mind going slowly, asking for Sean every morning. I told her he was working, that he’d visit soon. She’d nod and go back to her rosary. He never came. He was in Marbella, I found out later, living in a villa that Geoffrey had “valued” at four million pounds, despite the fact that it had no planning permission, no water rights, and a sewage system that emptied into a protected nature reserve.

Geoffrey signed the valuation. Geoffrey also signed for the cocaine that kept Sean’s customers happy, and for the young boys who were delivered to the villa on weekends. I didn’t know about the boys until after Brighton. The police haven’t released the files, but the rumours are already moving through the legal circles—whispered conversations in the Crown Court corridors, sealed affidavits, the kind of evidence that makes a man hang himself with a silk tie.

---

I was a volunteer for the Provisionals in the late nineties, back when a boy from Derry could still believe that a bullet could buy justice. I did my tours, kept my mouth shut, and when the Good Friday Agreement came, I folded my balaclava into a drawer and went to work as a plumber. The war was over, they said. The ceasefire was permanent. But the men who ran the war didn’t disappear; they just changed their business model. Some went into politics. Some went into property. And some, like the men who supplied Sean and Geoffrey, kept the old networks alive for a new kind of trade.

I never formally left. That’s the thing about the IRA—you don’t resign. You just stop showing up. But the men I knew back then still remember me. They see me in the supermarket, or on the walls on Bloody Sunday anniversary marches, and they give me a nod that means: *You’re still one of us, even if you pretend you’re not.*

I’ve been pretending for a long time. But when the news broke about the valuations—about the billions of pounds of fictitious wealth that had been used to gamble on crypto markets and leveraged into oblivion—I stopped pretending. Because the fraud didn’t just happen in London boardrooms. It happened here, in this house, when Geoffrey signed his share over to himself and used it as collateral for loans that bought him the Brighton townhouse, the villa in Marbella, and the silence of every corrupt appraiser who kept their mouth shut for a cut.

The house is still in Geoffrey’s name. Or it was. His death complicates things. Under the law, his half of the property—the top two flats, which he never let to anyone, preferring to keep them empty as a tax dodge—passes to his estate. And his estate is a mess of fraud investigations, confiscation orders, and creditors who want their pound of flesh. The Royal Court in London is already processing the first wave of asset seizures. If they decide that the house was purchased with proceeds of crime, they’ll take it. They’ll take Granny’s house, and I’ll be left with nothing but a quarter-share of a memory.

Sean doesn’t care. He’s too deep in the powder to care about anything except the next line. But I care. I care enough to kill for it.

---

Two nights ago, I walked down to the Fountain estate and had a drink with an old man named Paddy Maguire. Paddy was a quartermaster in the seventies, a man who knew where every Armalite was buried and who still has access to the kind of hardware that doesn’t leave a trace. I didn’t ask him for a gun. Not yet. I asked him for names.

“You want the names of the men who ran the coke through Sean?” he said, pouring whiskey into a stained glass. His flat smelled of liniment and old newspapers. “Or the men who supplied the boys to Geoffrey?”

“Both,” I said.

He looked at me for a long time. Then he wrote down four names on a scrap of paper. Two in Derry. Two in London.

“These are the ones who’ll come for the house,” he said. “The courts will take their time, but these men—they’ll move fast. They know the property’s clean on paper, even if the money that bought it wasn’t. They’ll file claims, forge documents, lean on the administrators. If you want to keep what’s yours, you’ll need to be ready before they are.”

I folded the paper and put it in my pocket. The names felt hot against my thigh.

---

I’ve been watching Sean for three days now. He doesn’t know I’ve been in his flat when he’s out. I found the ledger—a leather-bound notebook hidden behind a loose board in the kitchen, the pages dense with figures and dates. It’s his record of every delivery, every payment, every ounce of cocaine that moved through Geoffrey’s network. There are names in there that match the ones Paddy gave me. There are also names I recognise from the news—executives at the shadow banks, hedge fund managers who used the fraudulent valuations to secure lines of credit. The whole rotten edifice, documented in my brother’s shaky handwriting.

I could hand this to the RUC. I could let the courts take their time, let the legal system grind through the evidence, and hope that somewhere in the process the house is declared untainted and returned to me. But I’ve lived in Derry long enough to know that justice delivered by a foreign court is justice filtered through a sieve of compromise. The RUC—what’s left of it after the Patten reforms—is still a force that spent thirty years treating Catholic property as provisional. They’ll take the ledger, thank me politely, and then lose it in a filing cabinet while the asset managers in London carve up my grandmother’s legacy.

No. If I want to keep the house, I have to make it untouchable. I have to make it clear that anyone who tries to take it will find that the war in this city never really ended. It just went underground.

---

This morning, I went up to the top floor. The flat that Geoffrey claimed as his own is still furnished with the things he brought from London: a leather chesterfield, a glass coffee table, a wall of books he never read. There’s a safe built into the bedroom wardrobe, the kind with a digital keypad. I’ve tried a dozen combinations—Mother’s birthday, Granny’s, even the date of the Good Friday Agreement—but none of them work.

Sean says he doesn’t know the code. He’s lying. I saw him coming out of this flat three weeks ago, before Geoffrey died, his pupils like pinpricks and a bulge under his jacket that wasn’t there when he went in. Whatever’s in the safe, it’s the key to everything. The original valuations. The names of the men who paid Geoffrey. The photographs that made the Brighton police use words like “inconvenience” in their press statements.

I’m sitting on Geoffrey’s leather sofa now, watching the rain streak the windows. The city below is grey and silent, the kind of silence that used to precede a car bomb. In the distance, I can hear the Foyle rushing toward Lough Foyle, swollen with the winter rains. This house has stood for over a hundred years. It survived the Partition, the Troubles, the boom and bust of the Celtic Tiger. It will survive this, if I have to burn every claim against it to ash.

The names on Paddy’s paper are in my pocket. The first is a Derry solicitor named McCafferty, a man who handled Geoffrey’s property transactions and who, according to Paddy, has been filing caveats with the Probate Office to claim the house for a shell company registered in the Isle of Man. The second is a former UVF man turned “security consultant” who runs a private firm in Belfast that specialises in “asset recovery.” The two in London are higher up the chain—men who sat on the boards of the shadow banks, who signed off on the fraudulent credit lines, and who now need to make sure that the paper trail ends before it reaches them.

I’ve made a plan. Not a detailed one—those are for soldiers who expect to survive. I’ve made a list, and I’ve made a promise. McCafferty first. He’s local, vulnerable, and his death will send a message that the old rules still apply in this city. Then the Belfast man, if he doesn’t get the message. The London men are harder, but Paddy has contacts in the Irish diaspora there, men who still remember that a favour owed is a debt unpaid.

I’ll need a gun. I know where to get one. I know how to use it.

---

But this afternoon, something changes.

I’m back in my flat, cleaning the pipes under the kitchen sink—the old lead ones that Granny never replaced—when the doorbell rings. I don’t use the doorbell. No one in this house uses the doorbell. We knock, three short raps, the way we’ve done since I was a child.

I go to the window and look down. Two men in dark suits are standing on the step, rain spattering off their umbrellas. They’re not RUC—no high-vis vests, no sidearms. They look like civil servants, the kind who carry briefcases and speak in paragraphs.

I go down. Sean is already at the door, his face pale, his hands shaking. He’s trying to look casual, leaning against the frame with a feigned ease that fools no one.

“Declan Kelly?” one of the men says when I appear. He has an English accent, polished, the kind that’s learned rather than born.

“That’s me.”

He hands me an envelope. “You’ve been served. It’s a copy of the order from the Royal Court of Justice regarding the estate of Geoffrey Richard Heron, deceased.”

I open it. The legal language is thick, the paragraphs dense with citations and precedents. But the gist is simple: the court has reviewed the evidence of fraud, has accepted the petition of the Crown’s Proceeds of Crime division, and has ruled that Geoffrey’s half-share in this property was acquired through criminal conduct. The share is therefore forfeit to the Crown.

My hand tightens on the paper. Sean makes a sound like a wounded animal.

“However,” the man continues, “the court has also considered the separate petition filed by your solicitor, Mr. Brendan O’Kane, regarding the provenance of the property prior to Mr. Heron’s involvement.”

I stare at him. I didn’t file any petition. I can’t afford a solicitor.

“The court finds,” he says, reading from a document in his own hand, “that the property at 17–19 Fahan Street, Derry, was acquired by the late Bridget Kelly in 1972 with funds unconnected to the subsequent criminal activities of Geoffrey Heron. The court further finds that the half-share held by Mr. Heron was transferred to him by the late Margaret Kelly (née Doherty) under duress, as evidenced by medical records showing her diminished mental capacity at the time of transfer. Accordingly, the half-share is ordered to be restored to the estate of Margaret Kelly, to be distributed equally between her surviving sons, Declan Kelly and Sean Kelly.”

I read the paragraph three times. The rain drips from the eaves, a steady percussion on the step.

“What are you saying?” Sean’s voice is high, cracked. “We get the house?”

“You get the house,” the man says. “Or rather, your brother gets his quarter, and you get your quarter, and the Crown gets nothing from this property. There are other assets—the Brighton property, the Marbella villa—that are subject to confiscation. But this house, the court has ruled, belongs to the Kelly family.”

He turns to leave, then pauses. “One more thing. The court also received an anonymous submission—a ledger, I believe—that has proven instrumental in identifying the other individuals involved in the valuation fraud. The Crown extends its thanks to the citizen who provided it.”

He nods once, then walks back to his car. The door closes with a soft, final click.

---

I stand in the hallway for a long time. Sean is leaning against the wall, breathing fast, his eyes darting between the envelope in my hand and the door. He’s trying to process it, trying to find the angle, the way he always does.

“Anonymous submission,” he whispers. “That ledger. You had it. You fucking gave it to them.”

I look at him. The brother I grew up with, the boy who taught me to fish in the Foyle, who held my hand when the Army stopped us on the way to school. The man who left Granny to die alone, who told everyone he was by Mother’s bedside when he was really in Marbella snorting cocaine off a glass table in a villa built on fraud. The man who sat in this house, in the basement flat, while the kettle boiled and the rain fell, and never once asked if I was okay.

“I gave it to them this morning,” I say. “Before they came.”

His face twists. “You could have told me. You could have—”

“I could have killed you,” I say. The words come out flat, without heat. “That was the other plan. I had your name on the list, Sean. Right after McCafferty. Right after the men who supplied you.”

He goes very still. The colour drains from his face, leaving it the colour of the winter sky.

“You’re my brother,” he says.

“I know.”

I walk past him, up the stairs to my flat. I open the drawer where I keep the tools of my trade—the wrenches, the pipe cutters, the flux and solder. Underneath them is a black plastic bag. I take it out and unroll it on the kitchen table. Inside is a Glock 17, nine millimetre, no serial number. Paddy Maguire left it in the cistern of his toilet three nights ago, and I’ve been carrying it in my coat ever since.

I pick it up. It’s cold, heavier than I remember. I check the magazine, work the slide, feel the familiar mechanics settle into my hands like an old habit.

Then I walk back downstairs. Sean is still in the hallway, exactly where I left him, his back against the wall, his hands at his sides.

“The house is ours,” I say. “Half yours, half mine. But you’re going to sign your half over to me.”

His eyes widen. “What? No. No, Declan, you can’t—”

“You’re going to sign it over,” I say, “and you’re going to leave Derry. Tonight. You’ll go to whatever rehab clinic will take you, and you’ll get clean. If you do that, I won’t give this ledger to the RUC. I won’t tell them about the deliveries, the payments, the men you’ve been working for. You’ll still be a free man, more or less.”

“And if I don’t?”

I raise the Glock. Not pointing it at him—just holding it where he can see it, where he can remember that I know how to use it.

“Then I’ll put your name back on the list.”

He looks at the gun. He looks at my face. He’s looking for the brother he abandoned, the soft-hearted plumber who cried at Mother’s funeral and kept Granny’s rosary in his pocket. He doesn’t find him.

“You’re IRA,” he whispers. “You never left.”

I don’t answer. I don’t need to.

---

He signs the papers at the kitchen table, his hand shaking so badly that the pen scratches holes in the paper. I have a solicitor—a different one, one Paddy recommended—who comes to the house at eight o’clock that evening, rain-soaked and businesslike, and witnesses the transfer. Sean doesn’t speak during the signing. He doesn’t look at me. When it’s done, he goes down to the basement flat and packs a bag.

I stand at the front door and watch him walk out into the rain. He doesn’t look back. He walks down Fahan Street toward the city centre, his shoulders hunched against the wet, and disappears into the grey.

The solicitor hands me the deed. “The house is yours,” he says. “Free and clear. The court’s ruling was unanimous, by the way. The Royal Court in London, the Crown’s lawyers, even the RUC’s financial unit—they all agreed. They wanted the big fish. They didn’t want a family home in Derry. Especially not one that belongs to a man with your... connections.”

I fold the deed and put it in my pocket. “What connections?”

He smiles, a thin, knowing expression. “The ones that made them decide it was better to give you the house than to fight you for it. Paddy Maguire didn’t just give you a gun, Declan. He made a few phone calls. Told some people that if the Crown tried to take this house, there would be trouble. Not the old kind—no bombs, no bullets. Just... trouble. The kind that makes a judge think twice about signing a confiscation order.”

I should feel angry. Used. But all I feel is the weight of the deed in my pocket, the solid presence of the walls around me, the sound of the rain on the roof that has sheltered four generations of my family.

“They decided in my favour,” I say.

“They did. The RUC’s report recommended no further action against you or the property. The Royal Court issued the ruling this morning. It’s over.”

---

After he leaves, I go up to the top floor. I open Geoffrey’s safe with the code I found in Sean’s ledger—his birthday, the one he always claimed was a secret—and I take out the contents. Photographs, contracts, sworn affidavits, a USB drive labelled *BAHAMAS VALUATIONS*. I burn them in the back garden, one by one, watching the flames curl the edges of the lies that built my stepfather’s world.

The rain puts out the fire before I’m finished, but that’s all right. The truth is ash now, scattered in the wind.

I go back inside and sit in my flat, in the room where Mother told me she was marrying a chartered surveyor from Brighton, in the house that Granny bought with American money to keep her family safe. The house is mine now. All of it.

The news on my laptop has moved on to the next scandal, the next collapse, the next round of arrests. The men whose names were on Paddy’s paper are being picked up by the Metropolitan Police, extradited, questioned. The RUC has a file on my brother that they’ll keep in a drawer somewhere, just in case. The Royal Court has ruled, and the Crown has accepted, and the war—the old war, the new war, the war over property and memory and the bones of the dead—has found a temporary peace.

I don’t know if Sean will get clean. I don’t know if he’ll come back. I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to sit in this room without hearing the drip of the leak in the back bedroom or the echo of my mother’s voice saying, *Never sell.*

But I know this: the house is mine. And I will defend it with whatever I have to—the law, the gun, the network of men who still remember that a favour owed is a debt unpaid. The dystopia I live in isn’t the one the news talks about, the collapse of markets and the fall of empires. It’s this: a man sitting alone in a house full of ghosts, holding a deed in one hand and a gun in the other, waiting to see which one he’ll need first.

The rain keeps falling. The bucket in the back bedroom fills. And I sit in the dark, listening, ready.