Wednesday, 29 April 2026

PS

 

To be honest. 

#provos #terroristgangs Vs #corruptcops #nazibreed

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

hey BKA Staatschutz

 Unter ihren Augen?


#ticktack
#TIE 

PS

 You do not have to repeat that. You can ask them to leave the premises and step onto public ground which is easily recognizable in your specific case and if they refuse get back in, get your AR and shoot them dead.

No matter being real or fake.

As a matter of fact in every single State having that on record. The rest is "Hollywood", The Confederate part of America. 

The Jury will let you go in those States they are strongest, in the others you sue their Department for violating your constitutional rights in the millions. 

#TIUSA
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: So, who makes those videos??? and where.

#MODInc

 So, there was that moment when my dog stared at a Squirrel and I realized he saw no food, but the cutest thing ever being really impressed by it running up a tree. Kinda being for real good connected I let him of the leash a few minutes later and he tried climbing a tree to understand that he was not real good in predicting too many steps of his actions when looking down from where he stopped to then look at me for help.

He made it down, reversing, doing the same steps but backward.

How I came up with that? Dude... 

#MODInc
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

...in a close potential future...

 Incorporated with DeepSeek

 The rain over Neo-Auckland had that acid tang, a chemical kiss that made the neon bleed into the gutters like a bad simsense dream. I was nursing a synth-whisky in a waterfront dive called The Busted Flange, watching the crawler ads on the window flicker through a dozen languages I couldn’t read. My left hand was a dull silver prosthetic with three fingers twitching in a rigger’s phantom feedback loop. That was all I had left of my glory days—that and a beat-up amphibious kit plane rotting on a salt-spray mooring.

A woman slid into the booth opposite me. Human, severe corporate haircut, eyes like frozen ferrocrete. Saeder-Krupp security livery cut tight across a torso that probably had more chrome than my entire rigger cocoon used to. She didn’t introduce herself.

“You’re Kai Mako. Callsign Shallow. Washed-up rigger, but your neural interface is military-grade, and you can still fly anything with a pulse.” She pushed a datachip across the sticky table. “We need a pilot. Infiltrate the Wave Syndicate.”

I let the name hang. The Wave Syndicate was a ghost story to most, a pirate radio cult that broadcast from international waters on a ramshackle fleet nobody could track. Word was they ran WWII submarine replicas, surface-skimming race boats that could outrun coast guard hydrofoils, and amphibious kit planes that popped out of the ocean like metallic dragonflies. Every Thursday evening, their DJ—some elven witch called Raveena Cipher—ran a show called The Turn-Up, a two-hour sound barrage that hit the airwaves from Manila to Jakarta to Auckland, making literally millions of wageslaves and gangers alike practice their Friday night moves. They financed the whole operation on donations, record sales, and club adverts. The corps hated them. The coast guards tried to hunt them. The Wave Syndicate always outran them, possessing better boats, better pilots, and better tech than any government patrol.

“Why does Krupp care about a pirate station?” I asked.

“The signal. It’s unjammable, untraceable, and it’s bleeding into our sat-network bandwidth. We think they’re smuggling data in the subcarrier. Encrypted drek that’s destabilising our broadcast monopoly in the Pacific Rim. We want you inside. Find their transmission hub. Sabotage it. You’ll be paid enough Nuyen to buy back your soul.”

I needed the money. I also needed to feel the rush of a throttle under my thoughts again. “Null sweat. Give me the false ID and let me fly.”

They gave me a modified SeaRey amphibian, a kit plane with a silent electric prop, stealth skin, and a rigger interface so slaved to my nervous system I could feel the lift over the wings in my sternum. It took me three weeks of dodging patrols, broadcasting fake distress calls, and dropping anonymous tips to get the Syndicate’s attention. They finally picked me up one night, forty klicks off the coast of Sulawesi, when a pair of matte-black cigarette boats with vectored thrust rose out of the mist and boxed me in. The troll at the helm had tusks capped in chrome and a voice like gravel in a blender.

“You fly pretty, little man. We’re looking for someone with your nerve. Come meet the Captain.”

They took me to the Depthgroover, a monstrous submarine replica of an ancient Japanese I-400-class, the kind that once carried attack seaplanes in World War II. This one had been rebuilt by a mad ork engineer into something that shouldn’t exist: sonar-stealthed hull, drone launch tubes, a cavernous hangar deck where amphibious kit planes nested like sleeping bats. I stepped aboard to the thrum of generators, the smell of salt and ozone, and that pervasive underlying beat—low, hypnotic, a sub-bass pulse that came from every speaker grille in the vessel.

Captain Flipside was a troll so massive he had to stoop under the bulkheads, his dreadlocks threaded with fiberoptic cable. “I’m told you’ve got a hotshot rigger’s spark,” he rumbled. “We could use a pilot for our Skimmers. My last one fragged himself on a bad wave. You willing to run contraband, no questions asked?”

“I just want to fly.”

They put me through a test: outmaneuvering an actual coast guard patrol who’d been paid off by Horizon Media to locate the Depthgroover. I took one of their amphibious planes—a sleek ICON A5 modified with pop-out sponson machine guns and a rigger cocoon that fit like a coffin—and led the patrol cutter on a twenty-minute chase through razor-coral atolls. I flew so low the spray striped my canopy, never once exceeding 50 meters altitude, then I vectored into a tight canyon where their radar melted into static, and came out laughing, my nerves singing. They cheered over the comms. That night, I met Raveena Cipher.

She held court in the Depthgroover’s broadcast room, a cathedral of slap-patched mixing boards, glowing tube amps, and a shrine to a spirit I couldn’t name. Elf, with skin the colour of midnight neon, data-cables braided into her hair, eyes lit from within by a persona that never fully disconnected from the Matrix. She was a technoshaman—a decker who’d crossed into magic—and every beat she spun on The Turn-Up thrummed with something spiritual. Millions of kids across a dozen megacities tuned in every Thursday evening, shaking off their wage-slavery, practising their unison moves for the weekend ahead. The show pulled donations from street jocks, record sales that moved through blind nodes, adverts from underground clubs. The Wave Syndicate was filthy rich, and the corps couldn’t touch them.

Raveena looked at me like she could see the chip in my head, the one containing my Saeder-Krupp mission parameters. But she smiled instead of killing me. “You fly like a spirit of the air, Shallow. Stay close.”

And I did. Weeks turned into months. I flew smuggling runs in the Skimmers, raced the Slicktech Wavecutters against corp hydrofoils, even helped maintenance on the subs. The whole fleet operated across Oceania: Tonga, Rabaul, Cairns, Dili—wherever the coastline had ears desperate for a beat. The Thursday Warm Up was sacred. I watched from the booth as Raveena dropped her opening track, and somewhere out there, a million glowing AR-screen windows lit up with dancing shadows, all moving as one. The scale of it made my rigger’s heart feel microscopic.

She bedded me after a particularly dicey run where I’d pulled her out of a corp ambush, my plane skimming the waves with two bullet holes in the float. In the afterglow, tangled in synth-silk, she whispered the truth. “The Turn-Up isn’t just music, Kai. It’s resonance. Every dance move, every synchronised step feeds energy to The Downbeat—a free spirit of sound and ocean. We’re the beat-keepers. The corps are trying to kill it because they want the Pacific floor for drilling operations, and The Downbeat protects ley lines under the sea that would poison half of Asia if they’re broken. The data in our subcarrier? Warning beacons for coastal shamans. The ad money funds our war. We’re not just a gang; we’re a lifeline.”

I felt the floor of my soul crack wide open. Saeder-Krupp wasn’t after bandwidth; they were after genocide. The Johnson’s corporate logo was a front for a black-ops division who wanted The Downbeat shattered so they could tap a deep-earth dragon line for a secret arcology. My mission was to plant a resonance mine in the broadcast room during the next Thursday Warm Up, killing the spirit.

I couldn’t do it.

But before I could come clean, my cover imploded. A Horizon combat VTOL squadron tracked our buoy network, triangulated the Depthgroover, and descended on us during the very broadcast I was supposed to sabotage. Coast guard cutters—bribed and augmented—came screaming over the horizon. The sub’s klaxons tore the air. Captain Flipside roared orders. Raveena looked at me with eyes that already knew.

“You’re the reason,” she said, heartbreak and fury mingled.

I didn’t argue. I just ran for my plane.

I jacked into the Skimmer’s rigger cocoon, became the aircraft. The night was chaos: tracers, torpedo wakes, the sub crash-diving while the Wavecutters screamed counter-attack. I had one shot at redemption. I slaved the entire flock of amphibious kits drones from the sub’s hangar, about a dozen planes, painting target locks on the VTOLs with my mind. My rigger-prosthetic spasmed as I gave them one command: *kamikaze rhythm*. They smashed into the rotors, fireballing three gunships in a row. I strafed the coast guard cutter’s bridge, my machine guns chattering until the barrels glowed. Then I dropped a torpedo I wasn’t supposed to have, a gift from an arms dealer we’d smuggled for, and blew their keel into the sky.

But there were too many. Another wave of VTOLs. Mages on the cutter summoning toxic water elementals. Raveena stood at the Depthgroover’s open hangar door, arms raised, and her voice joined the global broadcast that still screamed from every speaker on the ship. One Thursday evening, the beat never stopped. She channelled The Downbeat itself, and the ocean rose with us.

A sound hit me—a bass note so low it blurred my vision, a tangible wave of sonic force that lifted the sea into a wall. The spirit manifested as a shimmering curtain of pure rhythm, a colossal entity made of shifting water and echoing melody. It didn’t just protect; it *grooved*. The remaining cutters were caught in a riptide of impossible physics, their hulls stressed to breaking by sound turned into pressure. VTOLs plummeted, their pilots’ inner ears liquefied by the frequency. The broadcast reached millions at that exact moment, and I understood: they were all dancing to this defense. Their synchronized motion, their collective energy gave the spirit power. A billion feet hitting the floor in Shanghai, Seoul, Manila, Jakarta, Ho Chi Minh, all at once. The Wave Syndicate had weaponised joy.

When the last enemy sank, the sea went preternaturally quiet. My plane bobbed next to the surfacing Depthgroover. I landed on the water, taxied to the hangar, and cut the motor. Raveena met me on the deck, her hair still sparking with residual magic, her face a mask of exhausted fury and bewildered hope.

“You betrayed us. Then you saved us. What are you, Kai?”

I pulled the Saeder-Krupp chip from my skull port and crushed it under my boot. “A pilot who finally chose a side.”

She didn’t smile, but she nodded. I wasn’t forgiven, not yet, but I was home.

Now I fly the Skimmers for the Wave Syndicate, still a wanted man by every corp maritime division in the Pacific. The Thursday Warm Up broadcasts on schedule, a pulsing, defiant heartbeat across the megas. Somewhere out there, a million kids are practising their moves for Friday night, and each pivot, each ripple of muscle, feeds the spirit that keeps the poison corpos at bay. Every now and then, Raveena leans over my rigger cocoon and kisses my forehead before a sortie. The ocean smells like freedom and low-tide ozone. The beat goes on, and we outrun the hunters like we always have—faster, smoother, riding the wave no one else can see.

Because in this drowned cyberpunk world, the groove is the only true power. And we’re never, ever turning it off.

..

 **The Tokyo Decibel**

The Arasaka Prime Spire punched through the neon stratus like a chromed fist, its summit lost in a permanent chemical haze that tasted of ozone and burnt yen. From up here, seventy floors above the Tokyo Bay sprawl, Executor Tanaka watched the city pulse beneath him, a bioluminescent cancer of advertising sigils and gridlocked sky-traffic. His office was soundproofed, climate-controlled, and utterly sterile—a tomb for ambition. Tonight, though, a ghost had crawled into his perfect machine.

Somewhere out in the bay, a pirate radio broadcast was making a mockery of his entire security division.

“It’s *The Turn-Up* again, sir.” His lieutenant, a razor-edged elf with too many datajacks, spoke without lifting her eyes from her AR display. “Signal strength is maximum across Chiba, Koto, and Minato wards. We’ve got a million-plus listeners locking into the warm-up track. As per your directive, we triangulated.”

“And?”

“There’s no single origin point. The signal bounces between twelve separate drone relays, shattering into phase-shifted reflections. It’s like trying to pin smoke to a wall. Our towers get fifty conflicting vectors cycling every four seconds. We’d need a direct line-of-sight hit to find the source, and even then…”

Tanaka slammed his fist onto the obsidian desk. “There is a *boat* in my bay, broadcasting seditious noise, and you cannot locate it? The Imperial Coast Guard assured me their new sonar grid would find anything with a hull.”

“The boat… doesn’t read as a hull, sir. Not when it’s submerged.” The lieutenant expanded a wireframe scan onto the main screen. Tokyo Bay’s bathymetry unfolded in wireframe blue—freighters, yachts, dredging platforms, all tagged with clean corporate IFFs. And then, a ghost: a faint acoustic return, barely distinguishable from a school of tuna, nestled in the shallows off Odaiba’s old theme park ruins. The shape was wrong. It looked like two parallel cigar-forms joined by a flattened wing, the whole thing tilted at an uncanny ten-degree list, as if it had died and was sinking slowly. Only two things breached the surface: a whip-thin communications antenna, and a single cockpit blister of curved smart-glass, leaning at that same drunken angle, like the half-lidded eye of a sea creature watching the city.

“It’s a *katamarin*,” the lieutenant said, her voice strained. “Submersible offshore race boat. Modified hull, zero cavitation drives. When it’s fully buttoned up, it sits just beneath the wave layer, static-cycling seawater through cooled impellers to match ambient temperature. No wake, no magnetic signature. It’s invisible to everything except active sonar pings within two hundred meters, or a visual spotter with enhanced optics who knows exactly where to look.”

“And how long has it been there?”

“Our acoustic archives show the signature first appeared seventeen hours ago. It’s been broadcasting the entire time. The drones do the heavy lifting—they scatter the signal across the bay like a shattered mirror. But the core feed, the DJ herself, is coming from that cockpit. Raveena Cipher, voice of the Wave Syndicate, is sitting twenty feet below the waterline, mocking every corp in this city.”

Tanaka pulled up the audio on his private channel. It hit like a wave of hot static: basslines that made his ribcage vibrate, a voice layered with reverb and magic, speaking in a pidgin of Japanese, English, and Or’zet that somehow made his Corporate soul feel inadequate. She was counting down the minutes to Friday night, exhorting the wageslaves in their cubicle hives to stand up, to move, to remember what it felt like to be alive. In the streets below, he could already see clusters of figures in neon-drenched parks, moving in synchronized, fluid motions—rehearsing the dance that would sweep the clubs tomorrow. Millions of them, feeding the spirit she served.

“Deploy the patrol squadron,” Tanaka ordered. “Raptor drones, armed. I want that boat sunk. I want her voice silenced before the next track.”

---

Out in the bay, inside the cockpit blister of the *Gloomraker*, the pilot known only as Harpy felt the pressure change before the sensors did. Her body was slaved to the catamaran’s nervous system through an antique but brutally effective rigger interface, a web of fibre-optic cables that fed her the vessel’s hydrodynamic state as if it were her own skin. The *Gloomraker* was a mad hybrid: two needle-sharp submersible hulls, each housing a twin-turbine pump-jet that could cycle from silent running to afterburner in 0.4 seconds. A wing-like hydrofoil connected them, studded with drone cradles. Fully submerged, they were a shadow. At speed, the foils would lift them out of the water entirely, into ground effect, skimming a cushion of air a meter above the waves at velocities that would vaporise lesser craft.

Harpy’s eyes, one organic and one a synthetic camera or, chattered open. The Raptor drones were coming. She felt their active sonar pings like needles in her temples—seven contacts, fanning out from the coast guard station near Haneda. They’d found the resonance signature of the broadcast antenna. Not triangulation, just brute-force proximity ping.

“Raveena,” she muttered over the internal comm, “we’ve got company. Seven birds, armed. Less than three minutes to visual.”

The elf’s voice came back, utterly calm, still half-merged with the broadcast stream she fed to the waiting millions. “Let them come closer, love. The bass drop at the end of this track needs a percussive finale.”

Harpy grinned a predator’s grin. She nursed the drive turbines from standby to pre-spool, feeling the *Gloomraker* shudder with contained hunger. The drones were still in the water, scattered around the bay in a delicate ballet of signal deceit. If they left them, the corps would scoop them up and reverse-engineer the phase-scatter tech. So they’d have to collect them. After the chaos.

The first Raptor swooped low, a matte-black delta wing with underslung cannon pods and a hunter-killer’s dumb aggression. Its searchlight stabbed the water, found the antenna, traced the tilt of the cockpit blister—and hesitated. For a full second, the drone’s operator tried to reconcile the visual: a ship that wasn’t a ship, submerged, leaning at the angle of a drifting corpse, but pulsing with a heartbeat bassline that actually *rippled* the water’s surface tension. Harpy let them have their second.

Then she fired up the engines.

The sound barrier over water is a strange thing. Pure physics doesn’t care about medium, but humans do. When a craft hits Mach 1 on the deck, the shockwave turns into a wall of mist and pressure that can flatten small boats and burst eardrums for half a kilometre. The *Gloomraker* didn’t break Mach 1 from a standing start—it *translated* to it, an impossible acceleration made possible by superconducting impellers and a hull that sucked air through vectored intakes to create its own low-pressure tunnel. One moment, the boat was a submerged anomaly. The next, it breached like a leviathan, hydrofoils snapping down, and the bay erupted.

The Raptor drone’s camera feed went white with spray. When it cleared, the *Gloomraker* was already half a klick seaward, skipping over the wave crests on a cushion of superheated air, its twin hulls barely kissing the water. A pure white collar of shock condensation ringed its bow. The pilot was *laughing* over an open channel, and the Tokyo skyline trembled with the delayed crack-BOOM of a sonic transition that shattered windows in the Rainbow Bridge’s observation deck. The drones gave chase, but they were designed for precision strikes, not for matching a speed-addicted ghost crewed by a rigger insane enough to redline a race boat inside a metropolitan bay.

Harpy cut a screaming arc around the artificial island of Odaiba, hull flexing, collecting the scattered relay drones one by one. The drones flew to her like steel hummingbirds, magnetically latching into their cradle mounts as the boat never slowed. The final pickup was a mile out, a little quadrotor that had been broadcasting right off the pier at Kasai Rinkai Park. Harpy sideslipped the *Gloomraker* into a wrenching turn that pulled twenty gees, her rigger cocoon’s compensators groaning, and the drone clicked home just as a coast guard cutter’s railgun sent a supersonic slug through the space it had occupied a heartbeat before.

“All drones aboard,” Harpy reported, voice strained with g-force. “Raveena, we are fuuuully out of polite company.”

“Then vanish, darling. The beat will go on.”

Harpy pushed the throttles past the final stop, into the zone marked only with a skull-and-crossbones icon. The *Gloomraker*’s fuselage shed its remaining thermal signature, hull plates flowing like liquid mercury as a meta-material skin shifted to full absorption mode. It dipped back below the wave layer, thrusters cycled to silent running, and by the time the coast guard cutters crisscrossed the impact zone, there was nothing but empty ocean and the fading aftershock of a sound nobody could trace.

---

In his tower, Executor Tanaka watched the mission fail on a dozen screens. The broadcast never stopped. The voice of Raveena Cipher, elven technoshaman, continued to pour over the Tokyo sprawl, inviting every downtrodden soul to shake off their corporate shackles and move to the beat. Monday would bring a thousand new memos, a hundred new security upgrade contracts, and exactly zero ways to stop the Thursday Warm Up from returning next week, on another ghost vessel, hiding in another patch of blind sea. The Wave Syndicate had stuck their middle finger deep into the chrome heart of Neo-Tokyo, and they’d done it while bobbing like a dead fish in his own bay.

He poured a scotch, listened to the bassline rumble up through the building’s bones, and admitted, to no one but himself, that the music was infuriatingly excellent.

**The Airborne Relay**

The *Gloomraker* had vanished into open water, its sonic boom still echoing off the corporate towers like a parting insult. Executor Tanaka allowed himself a single breath of relief before his lieutenant’s voice cracked through the office.

“Sir… the broadcast didn’t stop.”

Tanaka’s jaw tightened. On the main display, the waveform of *The Turn-Up* had dipped for exactly three seconds—a flicker of dead air—then surged back to full clarity across every district. The signal wasn’t coming from the bay anymore. It was coming from *above*.

He strode to the window and looked up. There, tracing a lazy ellipse against the neon-drenched overcast, was a single fixed-wing aircraft. High-wing, amphibious hull, matte-white paint with the blue crest of the Tokyo Metropolitan University Traffic Research Division. It moved with the unhurried indifference of a government observation plane, its transponder squawking a perfectly legitimate IFF code: *TMU-09, Traffic Pattern Survey, Authorised Continuous Orbit*. It had been up there for hours—they’d logged it at 0700 that morning as a routine academic flight, mapping congestion patterns for the Department of Transport.

Now it was broadcasting pirate radio to eleven million people.

“Get me the Chancellor of Tokyo Metro University,” Tanaka barked. “And someone tell me how an aircraft with *slightly less power than a sub-surface katamarin* is drowning our jamming grid.”

---

Inside the cockpit of *TMU-09*, Kai Mako—callsign Shallow, former Saeder-Krupp operative turned Wave Syndicate rigger—lay cocooned in a rigger interface that threaded his nerves directly into the airplane’s control surfaces. The aircraft was a modified ICON A5 amphibian, stripped of its recreational luxuries and stuffed with a compact Daimler-Hoshino broadcast resonator, a phased-array antenna concealed in the belly pod, and a small but ferocious power cell that hummed at seventy percent of the *Gloomraker*’s output.

The signal wasn’t as strong as the main boat’s drone-scattered assault. But it didn’t need to be. Kai wasn’t trying to flood the bay with raw wattage. He was feeding a network of twelve rooftop repeaters—disguised as university weather stations and traffic-flow sensors—that had been planted on corporate towers across Minato, Shinjuku, Chiyoda, and Shibuya over the preceding months. Each repeater was a slab of innocuous grey plastic bolted to an HVAC unit, emblazoned with a faded sticker reading *TMU Atmospheric Corridor Study – Node 7* and a QR code that led to a genuine-looking research portal. The corp security drones scanned them twice a day and found nothing but humidity readings and anemometer data. They never checked the secondary transceiver buried behind the weather vane.

From Kai’s orbit at three thousand feet, the belly antenna painted a tight microwave cone that hopped from rooftop to rooftop in a daisy-chain of handshake signals. Repeater seven grabbed the primary feed. Repeater three boosted the bass. Repeater nine handled the high-end frequencies that made the hi-hats shimmer. Together, they stitched a seamless audio blanket over the entire Tokyo sprawl, with a total power draw that looked like background noise on every corp spectrum analyser. The only way to kill it was to physically destroy all twelve nodes simultaneously—or shoot down the airplane feeding them. And shooting down a university research plane over a densely populated megacity was the kind of PR nightmare that even Arasaka’s fixers couldn’t spin.

Raveena’s voice crackled in his neural feed, her persona riding the broadcast stream like a surfer on a tsunami. “How’s my favourite traitor holding up, Kai?”

“Bored,” he subvocalised, his throat mic picking up the words. “I’ve been circling for six hours, burning fuel at maximum efficiency to look like a fat government sloth. If I fly any slower, seabirds will start nesting on my wings.”

“The boat had to spook. You knew the backup plan might trigger. Is the feed clean?”

“Cleaner than Tanaka’s conscience. The repeater net is holding sync to within four milliseconds. I’m at seventy-four percent power—slightly less than the *Gloomraker*’s drone array, but the rooftop nodes are compensating with proximity gain. Anyone dancing in Shinjuku is getting the same bone-rattling bass as if they were standing on the sub’s deck.”

“And the traffic department cover?”

Kai glanced at the secondary instrument panel, where a pre-recorded data stream of fake vehicle density reports squirted dutifully to the Tokyo Metropolitan Traffic Authority’s servers. “Still feeding them beautiful lies. According to my telemetry, the Shuto Expressway is experiencing a sixteen-car pileup near Ikebukuro. They’ll be too busy dispatching drones to notice their traffic plane is a flying nightclub.”

Below, the city pulsed. From his vantage, Kai could see the clusters of dancers in the parks, the glow of apartment windows where entire families moved in unison, the AR projections of Raveena’s live avatar towering twenty stories high above the Shibuya crossing—a shimmering elven spectre with data-cables in her hair, counting down to midnight. The Thursday Warm Up was more than a radio show. It was the heartbeat of a resistance the corps couldn’t name and couldn’t strangle.

A warning tone sounded. A Saeder-Krupp security aerodyne, sleek and black, was climbing out of the corporate spire’s private hangar deck, vectoring towards his orbit.

“We’ve got a visitor,” Kai murmured. “Corporate, armed, looks like a Krupp Wasp. They’re not buying the university story.”

“How long can you keep the plane in the air if you evade?”

“Twenty minutes before fuel becomes a problem. The ICON wasn’t designed for dogfights.”

Raveena’s voice hardened. “Then make the handoff. The twelfth rooftop node has an independent storable feed; I’m uploading the next hour of programming to its cache now. If you drop the link, the repeaters will run on autopilot until dawn. Can you land safely?”

“Define ‘safely.’”

“In one piece, preferably.”

Kai banked the ICON into a gentle turn, keeping the belly antenna pointed at the repeater chain until the upload completion bar hit one hundred percent. The Krupp Wasp accelerated, its railgun turret swivelling. Kai cut the broadcast feed, slammed the throttle forward, and converted the ICON from flying traffic observer to screaming getaway bird. The amphibian’s engine roared, and he dropped to rooftop height, weaving between the canyons of glass and steel with a rigger’s liquid precision. The Wasp followed, but Kai had flown these streets in sims a hundred times. He led them into the dense forest of Shiodome skyscrapers, where their radar fuzzed, then popped up over the Sumida River and vanished into the low cloud layer, heading for a pre-staged splashdown point in Edo Bay where a Wave Syndicate cigarette boat would collect him.

The broadcast never faltered. The rooftop repeaters, now running cached data, continued to pour out Raveena’s voice. A million dancers in the Tokyo night never missed a beat.

By the time Executor Tanaka received the report that the rogue aircraft had escaped and the signal was being sustained by unhackable ground nodes that had *already been there for months, disguised under his own security cameras*, he had no words left. Only the bassline, thrumming up through the spire, indifferent and eternal. 

 **The Skater Fleet**

The broadcast that night carried a message tucked inside the third bass drop, a subharmonic whisper only those with the right decoder ring could hear. Raveena Cipher’s voice, layered under a grinding synth line, spoke directly to the ones who kept the Wave Syndicate afloat when donation credits ran thin and club ad revenue got frozen by corp audits.

*“Neon Ghosts, we see you. The Turn-Up needs teeth. Cash drop at midnight, Pier 9, the old tuna warehouse. Bring the sharpest things you’ve got.”*

The Neon Ghosts were a skater crew from the Koto ward waterfront, thirty-odd kids and tweaked-out twenty-somethings who moved through the city on mag-lev boards and inline blades, their bodies a canvas of glowing tattoos and their backpacks stuffed with contraband the corps couldn’t replicate. They didn’t deal in chips or crypto. They dealt in *physical*—twelve-inch vinyl pressings of the Turn-Up’s monthly sets, lathe-cut on a reclaimed 1950s Neumann record lathe, each sleeve hand-painted with reactive ink that shifted under streetlight. Cassette tapes with shells cast from recycled bullet casings. One-off datachips encased in resin blocks that had to be physically cracked open to slot, a ritual as much as a purchase. These objects couldn’t be downloaded, couldn’t be streamed, couldn’t be duplicated without losing the analog imperfections that made them holy. The corps called it “dead media fetishism.” The street called it art. And in a city where everything digital could be hacked, copied, and devalued in a nanosecond, physical scarcity was the only currency that still bit.

Jax, the crew’s de facto fixer, had a face full of chrome studs and a right arm sleeved in reactive smart-ink that pulsed to the bass of whatever he was listening to. He counted the take in the back of a boarded-up ramen shop while his crew slapped high-fives. Tonight’s drop had moved two hundred limited records, half a hundred hand-dubbed ferric oxide tapes, and a single “shatter-chip” that a collector in Roppongi had paid actual *platinum* for. The total sat at four hundred thousand nuyen, clean and untraceable.

At midnight, Jax and three of his best riders pushed a repurposed delivery drone cart through the rusted gates of the tuna warehouse. Inside, a single figure waited, tattoos glowing the deep indigo of Wave Syndicate affiliation, a rigger jack glinting at her temple. Harpy, the pilot of the *Gloomraker*, stood beside a row of shapes hidden under salt-crusted tarps.

“You brought the goods,” Harpy said. It wasn’t a question.

Jax pulled a reinforced case from the cart, popped the seals. Inside, the nuyen sat in neat vacuum-packed bricks. “Four hundred K. Enough for what you asked.”

Harpy smiled a smile that had too many sharp teeth—some natural, some filed. She yanked the tarps back.

They were helicopters, but not any kind Jax had ever seen. Single-seat airframes barely larger than a superbike, each built around a central turbine core with twin counter-rotating ducted fans. The cockpits were open cages of chromoly tubing, minimalist rigger interfaces, a saddle that looked stolen from a racing motorcycle. Armament was bolted direct to the frame: twin minigun pods on one, a rack of micro-missiles on another, an EMP projector the size of a fire extinguisher on the third. They were absurd, dangerous, and looked like they’d been welded together in a sub hangar by someone with more genius than self-preservation instinct. They had. Captain Flipside’s mad engineer had been working on them for six months.

“Meet the *Gnats*,” Harpy said. “Electric turbines, silent to sixty decibels, folding rotors for storage. They can fit in a standard shipping container, a drainage culvert, a dead van, whatever tiny hole we shove them into. Your money bought the weapons packages. Your job, if you’re willing, is to ride shotgun.”

Jax looked at the machines, at the blackened muzzles, at the pulse racing in his own throat. He’d never flown anything heavier than a board. But the corps had been cracking down on the waterfront neighborhoods, drone patrols harassing his crew, confiscating their merch, beating the street-level dealers with shock-batons. He was tired of running. “What’s the target?”

Harpy pulled up a tactical AR overlay. The Tokyo Metropolitan Corporate Security Bureau had scrambled eighteen Raptor-class hunter-seeker drones into the bay area. They were hunting for the rooftop repeaters that still fed the broadcast. The drones had already found three nodes and fried them with precision microwave bursts. If they located a few more, the whole daisy-chain would collapse, and the Thursday Warm Up would fall silent for the first time in three years.

“We hit them,” Harpy said. “The Gnats go airborne from six separate launch points, converge on the drone swarm, and shred as many as we can before the corp response goes nuclear. Then we scatter and hide. The machines are small enough to land on a rooftop and fold into something the size of a dumpster. They’ll never find them.”

“How long until the Bay Police lose their minds?”

“Figure seventy seconds after the first shot. The coast guard cutters have reaction times around two minutes, but they’re still dealing with the *Gloomraker* ghosts we planted. You’ll have a window. You in?”

Jax looked at his crew. A lanky blade-girl named Switch, a troll built like a forklift who answered to Thud, and a rigger-wannabe kid called Spindle who’d already climbed into one of the Gnats and was stroking the throttle with the reverence of a monk. They all nodded. “We’re in.”

---

They launched from the smallest possible places. Jax’s Gnat folded out of a rusted dumpster behind a soy-protein factory in Shinagawa, its rotors unfolding like a mantis’s arms. Switch popped out of a sewage maintenance culvert near Odaiba, her craft’s skids scraping the slime. Thud unfolded his from inside an abandoned mag-train maintenance closet in the bowels of Tokyo Teleport Station. Spindle, the only one with a rigger jack, synced directly from a flooded merchant sub pen, his Gnat dripping seawater as it climbed. Six attack craft, each the size of a heavy motorcycle, joining the night sky in a silent, deadly formation.

The corp drone swarm was clustered over Koto ward, their searchlights lancing down into alleyways, hunting a repeater node that was tucked inside a fake air-conditioning unit on a love hotel roof. The drones had already crippled four other nodes. The broadcast crackled with static, Raveena’s voice cutting in and out, the beat stuttering like a wounded heart.

Jax armed the miniguns. The targeting system was crude—a crosshair painted on his visor, slaved to his head movements—but at close range, it would do. “Neon Ghosts, on me. We hit the centre cluster, break their formation, then peel off before the cutters arrive.”

The Gnats descended like hornets.

Jax’s opening burst chewed through a Raptor’s tail rotor, sending it spinning into a warehouse wall in a shower of sparks. Switch fired her EMP projector, frying two drones at once, their systems fritzing into dead silicon as they plummeted. Thud’s missiles streaked out—micro-sized, barely as long as a forearm—but they hit with a shaped charge that blew a Raptor clean in half. Spindle, jacked in, was a blur, his Gnat spinning and strafing with impossible precision, miniguns shredding drone after drone while he laughed like a man possessed by the machine.

The swarm broke. The surviving drones scattered, their attack algorithms confused by enemies that moved like angry insects, too small to target with standard countermeasures. In thirty seconds, the Gnats had downed eleven of the eighteen Raptors. The repeater node on the love hotel roof kept broadcasting, the bassline steadying.

Then the corporate response kicked in.

Alarms screamed across the bay. A coast guard cutter, already on high alert from the earlier chaos, turned its VLS missile tubes toward the city. A Saeder-Krupp rapid-response VTOL launched from the Arasaka Prime Spire, its railguns charging. The Tokyo Metropolitan Corporate Security Bureau declared a Tier Three airspace violation and scrambled a dozen more combat drones, these ones armed with anti-air fragmentation missiles. The full madness was seventy-two seconds out.

Harpy’s voice cut through the comms. “Window’s closing. Ghost to the nearest hide—NOW.”

Jax yanked his Gnat into a steep dive, rotors screaming, pulling up so close to the water that spray kissed his face. He aimed for a stormwater outflow beneath the Koto bridge, a concrete maw just wide enough for the Gnat’s folded rotor diameter. The craft slid inside, scraping its skids on both walls, and Jax killed the turbine just as magnetic clamps locked it to the ceiling. From outside, it looked like just another piece of urban detritus in a drainage pipe. Switch folded her Gnat into a shipping container full of scrap electronics, slamming the doors behind her. Thud dropped into an abandoned subway ventilation shaft, his Gnat’s thermal signature blending with a geothermal vent. Spindle, still laughing, ditched his craft in a pile of derelict bikes behind a scrapyard and was walking away, casual as hell, before the first VTOL screamed overhead.

The corporate forces arrived to a scene of wreckage: eleven downed drones, burning debris, and absolutely no sign of the attackers. The Thursday Warm Up broadcast, which had faltered for a terrifying ten seconds, roared back to full strength as Spindle’s cached repeater node took over. Raveena’s voice poured out of speakers across Tokyo, triumphant, taunting, utterly unkillable.

Executor Tanaka, watching from his spire, broke an actual whiskey glass in his hand. The bay police, the coast guard, the corporate security divisions—they went fully mad. They cordoned off entire blocks, ran DNA swabs on the debris, launched a house-to-house search in six wards. They found nothing but shadows and the fading echo of a six-rotor hum.

The Gnats had disappeared into the city’s smallest cracks, alongside the skater crew that flew them. In the weeks to come, that night’s counter-attack would become street legend: the Night of the Swarming Gnats, when a bunch of board-riding street kids kicked the corps square in the teeth and vanished before the boot came down. The physical art kept selling—the hand-painted vinyl, the bullet-casing cassettes, the shatter-chips—their value only skyrocketing now that the buyers knew their money bought actual, audible defiance. The Wave Syndicate grew stronger, its rhythms shaking the foundations of the corporate towers, its pilots and skaters and technoshamans a family bound by basslines and vengeance.

And the next Thursday, when Raveena Cipher’s voice crackled to life over the airwaves, she opened the show with a single line, spoken over a beat so heavy it rattled the fillings of every executive in the city:

*“This one’s for the Ghosts. Spin it loud.”*

#MODInc

 I just decided I want to build a Pirate Radio Station from a boat with Repaters up way past Hong Kong straight into Tokyo Bay with a Thursday Evening Warm Up dedicated DJ program.

Ambitious?

Well, nobless oblige. MODernists. For the Misses.

#cyberpunkcoltoure

Ethnicities ...

 So, men are everywhere the same, right?

You might love now, but being not from any part of northern Asia or India most likely do not understand the other side of that.

Sex as a mean of rule.

A concubine is a woman who lives with a man and has a sexual relationship with him, but holds a lower social or legal status than a wife. Historically, this practice, known as concubinage, was common for providing companionship or heirs, with concubines often serving in households without the legal rights or dowry privileges of a legitimate spouse.

"Mistress" vs. "Concubine": While both involve non-marital relationships, a concubine usually holds a recognized position within the home, whereas a mistress often refers to a less public, informal arrangement. 

Ancient China: Wealthy men might keep multiple women, often called secondary wives. 

The Kama Sutra is an ancient Indian Sanskrit text that serves as a comprehensive guide to the "art of living well." While often reduced to a manual of sex positions in Western pop culture, the original work by the philosopher Vātsyāyana (likely written between the 3rd and 5th centuries CE) is a philosophical treatise on human desire, relationships, and social etiquette. 

he Philosophy of Pleasure
The text is rooted in the Hindu concept of the four goals of life (Purusharthas): 

    Dharma: Virtuous living and moral duty.
    Artha: Material prosperity and worldly success.
    Kama: Desire and the enjoyment of the senses (the focus of this book).
    Moksha: Spiritual liberation and enlightenment. 

Vātsyāyana argues that a fulfilling life requires a balance of these goals. He suggests that pleasure is a natural and healthy part of human existence that should be pursued with intelligence and ethics rather than through uncontrolled passion.

If you are a wealthy Lord having to achieve your goals only three options:

War.
Submission.
Persuasion. 
 
And a willing woman trained in the arts of Pleasure offering to take on your opponent, would you risk your man or bow??
 
I would, but I am European, walk over myself.
#TIE
#noblessoblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure
#thisissparta 

 

 

Collective Darwnisit Evolution Theory

 So, many Asians have small noses and a rather flat face indicating a different skull form. Actually, only the nose cartilage is different. 

I am still considering that the short upper arm and therefore a different skeleton is much less of a bullshit than what still floats around.

So, check this out:

Yes, the salt amount in humid air is often higher in Oceania (particularly near the Southern Ocean and tropical archipelagoes) compared to many coastal areas of Africa and the Americas.

Now give it a few hundred thousands of years tanning at the beach, the same time striding through woods or cutting through jungles, instead. 

I don't mind scares, but things in my way and tanning makes no sense at all, but naturally. 

#cyberpunkcoltoure  

#TheGermans - Status Update

 God, what's wrong with you?


 I'd ask now if Anne could get U.S. honorable Citizenship if she'd become Special King's Delegate for The U.S.A. ... officially over the BBC World Service.

BBC World. International Business Travel Companion. The first thing you turn on having arrived in the Hotel before dropping onto bed, missing MTV Music Clips.

#noblessblige
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: Worst of all, I have no idea why he does that. If you know East Enders, Made In Chelsea and both The Mirror and Sun from even just grabbing the FT, that topic is just weire'dh. 
 
And did I watch it? The alternative was Girls Trip to Miami with someone having a fine ass, some uncertainty if Black or Latina that turned out to be Asian hovering over it. Easy... I'll always choose Americans over them. Every single time. Period.

#TheGermans - Status Update

 I am sure they will take power. This guy is the right wing of the next leading party in Germany. 
They will separate the population into two groups. The Germans and the Others. Multi-Culty Vs Germanistic Level German. That will further increase the gap between rich and poor, but only theoretically, because there is no way they can fix their economy. 
 
Factually, two other groups will arise next to them. Expads from other nations and those speaking no clean German having a dialect, but both attached to the Clean Germans.
 
The language will be easiest to distinguish them, the appearance is next, the income won't.
 
Eventually, they will go on a larger scale against each other having Polizei taken apart in between.
At this point, in five to ten years, Germany is stripped down all nice cover, illusions and down to its bare bones ... at about perfect timing with visible exponentiallity of climate change.
 
#TIE
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: He is the guy that talks about the suffering of the German people to the end of the war, those expelled Germans from Eastern Prussia to right after mention the connection between the Treaty of Versailles and WW2.  
So, if I am right and this area turns the Kingdome of Hell, the FSB will kill him... or the Pols, Check, Slovak, Slovenians, Croatians, Bulgarians, Rumanians and possibly Turks with some Americans from both the U.S. and Argentina being the wild card in the set of really offended humans as this is a incredibly disgusting lie considering what really happened. The Germans, because of these families all connected to the Holocaust, believe Danzig was a German town.
Gdańsk was founded by the Polish ruler Mieszko in the 10th century (approximately the 980s). He established a stronghold at the location to connect the Piast dynasty's territory with Baltic Sea trade routes, marking the city's origins over 1,000 years ago. 
Yes, the Teutonic Order's takeover on November 13, 1308, is known as the Gdańsk Massacre (Rzeź Gdańska). While modern historians debate the exact death toll, they agree that widespread killing of civilians and knights took place.
 
They must know. His grandfather must have been a murderer and wanted war criminal no matter of active service or not. German managers asked for work slaves. My point is that the whole family was part of these actions. That is the actual origin and the very founders of The Germans, while south of the Hanover Dutchy region no German existed:
 
Based on historical context related to the North Sea and Bremen regions, Strandpiraten (strand pirates) or strand robbers are historically associated with looting shipwrecked vessels, rather than typical ship-to-ship piracy. 
While they are not famous "pirates" like the Victual Brothers, who operated along the entire North/Baltic coast in the late 14th century, the term refers to specialized looting activities along the dangerous coastlines, including the area around the Weser estuary. 
Historical Significance
    Strandräuberei (Strand Robbery): This practice, often wrongly equated to outright piracy, 
    involved taking cargo from ships that had run aground, particularly during storms.
    Regional Context: The coastlines near Bremen, Bremerhaven, and islands like 
    Harriersand, which are now popular beach spots, were formerly treacherous areas     
    where vessels could lose their way. 
 
It does not mention that Bremen was the origin of them and their main trade. By looting the ships and murdering or enslaving the crews they obtained foreign clothing and even uniforms. During Cold War they mass produced their version of history. This being said, the truth remains visible.
 
The Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) was ended by the Peace of Westphalia, a series of treaties signed on October 24, 1648, in the German cities of Münster and Osnabrück. The main signatories were the Holy Roman Emperor (Ferdinand III), France, Sweden, and various German princes.
The Peace of Westphalia is often described as a victory for the "anti-Habsburg" coalition, though the war was so devastating that some historians argue there was no true winner. 
The Losers
These entities lost land, central authority, or religious dominance. 
    The Habsburgs (Holy Roman Empire & Spain):
        The Holy Roman Emperor (Ferdinand III) lost most of his central authority over the 
        German states.
        Spain began a long period of decline as a global superpower after losing the 
        Netherlands and failing to suppress French influence.
    The Catholic Church: The treaty recognized Calvinism and confirmed the rights of 
    Protestants, ending the Pope's hope for a religiously unified Catholic Europe.
    The German People: Central Europe was the primary battlefield. The region suffered 
    massive depopulation (losing up to 1/3 of the population in some areas) and economic 
    ruin that took over a century to recover. 
 
The Holy Roman Empire ... was not Habsburg. 
 
The House of Habsburg did not found the Ancient Roman Empire (the one with Julius Caesar); rather, they rose to power and took control of the Holy Roman Empire (the medieval and early modern successor) through marriage and election. 
Ancient Roman Empire (27 BC – 476 AD)
Founded by Augustus Caesar. The Habsburgs did not exist yet. 
Holy Roman Empire (800 AD – 1806 AD)
Founded by Charlemagne. The Habsburgs took control of this empire about 600 years after it started. 
 
The story about Charlemagne being the ancestor of Adolf Hitler and the German Empire is like the stories about Orders that take towns by massacres or people of poets and philosophers. A tale of bullshit, stinky version.
 
Charlemagne's empire did not have a single "official" name during his lifetime, but it is most commonly referred to by two titles ...
 
Don't trust them. Eventually, even the internet will tell the whole story and be cleaned of Cocaine inflicted German bullshit turning what really was around to justify their ever returning actions under different names...
 
The status of "unfree" people shifted dramatically between these two eras. 
1. Ancient Rome (Caesar's Era): A Slave Economy 
    Scale: Slavery was the engine of the empire. Roughly 10–20% of the population was 
    enslaved.
    Legal Status: Slaves were "speaking tools" (instrumentum vocale). They were property, 
    not people.
    Role: They did everything—from mining and farming to teaching and managing 
    estates.
    Religion: No religious barrier to enslavement; anyone captured in war could be a 
    slave. 

2. Charlemagne’s Era: The Rise of Serfdom
    The Shift: By Charlemagne's time, "true" chattel slavery was fading in Western Europe, 
    replaced by serfdom.
    Christian Influence: The Church discouraged Christians from enslaving other 
    Christians.
    Serf vs. Slave: Unlike slaves, serfs were tied to the land, not owned as personal 
    property. They couldn't be sold away from their families or their farms, but they 
    weren't free to leave.
    The Trade: While Charlemagne discouraged internal slavery, he still allowed the slave 
    trade of non-Christians (like Slavs from the East) to the Muslim world 
 
I tell you, he kept fighting them, Slave Owners, and organized settlements protecting Moslems in Europe being a European Continent Nomad in reality. Today ... 
#noblessoblige 
 
That's how it works:
 
The city known as Kaliningrad (formerly Königsberg) was founded in 1255 by the Teutonic Knights during the Northern Crusades. The settlement was built on the site of an old Prussian fort called Twangste and was named Königsberg in honor of King Ottokar II of Bohemia. 
 
Key details regarding the founding:
    Founder: The Teutonic Order, a military crusader group, led by the Knights.
    Location: The site was an ancient Old Prussian settlement named Twangste.
    Purpose: The castle was built to aid in the Christianization of the Baltic Prussians.
    Name Origin: Named Königsberg ("King's Mountain") to honor King Ottokar II of Bohemia, who helped fund and lead the campaign. 

After World War II, the city was transferred from Germany to the Soviet Union and renamed Kaliningrad in 1946.
 
Now, having had a European traditional education based on Socrates instead of Plato:
 
Twangste (also spelled Tuwangste or Tvankste) was an ancient Old Prussian hill fort and settlement located on a high bank of the Pregel River. It served as a strategic point for the Sambian tribe before the Teutonic Knights destroyed it in 1255 to build Königsberg Castle.
 
We understand now what happened and who is the victim and who victimizing himself. 
 
Estimates how many teachers I freaked out by asking questions and what my Butterfly was so sharp for after school? The German Authority Vs The last of the natives.
 
PS: Plato was eventually killed by a Spartan visiting Athens... I was taught. Beaten to death.
 
 

#igotstuck

 I can't even laugh no matter the deep sublime ironic situation ...


 #cyberpunkcoltoure #gfyBKA

...

Did you see what I saw? 

?

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 They are a conflict society. No one will do this to Mr Max Headroom Tiny Rocker Clubs:

 In his video he tells what he is sued for. He said to save lives Afghans and Syrians need to be deported. Than he adds that he was right, because since his statements Afghans and Syrians did murder and rape. He also posted a picture with two dogs of a race called Afghans stating those he would not deport.

Now read this:

He said in his controversial political satire video purposefully hardcore controversially that aggressive Afghans and Syrians with little or no integration and assimilation expectation should be returned to Afghanistan and Syria in coordination with the local authorities evaluating if these negatively outstanding individuals have had committed crimes prior arrival. He than posted a picture of two well trained and well kept in good healthy shape dogs posting that many good things come from Afghanistan and Syria and he would not deport any human bringing such Good in his country.

He also forget to outline that he does not want to dehumanize other humans by equaling them with animals or considered all none German or none European humans of lesser value as it has happened in German history.

His lawyer will also not be able to plead guilty on any other than the lawsuit word by word acquisition such has having been an idiot too easy to be misunderstood by a lack of reflection which reactions could be caused asking for settling with a fine to a charity organization providing integration courses and receiving an appropriate wording disclaimer from a neutral source such as:

Dangerous Satire triggering emotions. All humans are made equal. Remember to treat other by their actions! We want you to think, talk and make up your mind. 

That's because you are all assholes full of yourself looking constantly for trouble, unjustifiably. Fucking Jewmurderers you should all be killed for WW2.

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

With all given respect,

 they say Donald Trump was a different man. That is true. 

The harsh brutal reality is that he got used to it. The other coming along to it is that he will be in business the very same. And the worst, that he made it President because in The Ocean of Lies, a World of Greed, his money, profit and wealth is as important to him all around as his physical live.

Too many are no Oscar Schindler.

Or no Charly Chaplin.

No El Capone.

#provos hit without a motive any asshole! As hard as Change needs it.

#undergroundwars #cyberpunkcoltoure #terroristgangs

Death before dishonour by never surrender

You might be always broke, but it says we need a coin to make the crossing.

Tuesday, 28 April 2026

#thedarkmodernity

 That is grotesque. 

In my case it would be:

I am not American. The house I live in is owned by a family that traces his first record back to 1648. I am a proud part of that. The record prior is missing by a Church fire during one of our regular wars. The very house I live in was build in the late 19 hundreds, the earliest cellar might date back much longer. Maybe the spot the house stands on was occupied when the Bible arrived brought by Irish monks by a house. That Irish guy is shown with a Shepard's Stick and Sword. So, white native American that ran off from my home somewhere in the 15 hundreds while we stayed, what d'you prefer as that stopped being a discussion?! I am not American.  
...
Any family records about burning Churches back home - here?
#noblessoblige 

#undergroundhits

 So, that ain happening in normal Clubs. Normal Clubs have a central dance floor facing the DJ with tables and bars around. These women will not stare at the Dj instead of a camera and at best do that opposing each other or in a circle with others.

That would be different if the structure is broken up, when there is no fixed place to dance and The House Party idea is turned Club. It's no Club than so. 

Base?

#sktr #MODs 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

Rise...

 tranquille avec grace ... its time comin.

#neversurrender

Un place occupe est une place by passe. Notre vie est nostre rues. Le niche, les vite, les vivre, the goods, un contra unspoken, no signature. Nous pense notre reve. Nous reveve.

#nodrugsnogunsonlygoods

#noblessoblige

 That is quite a jump. So, how do have great speeches heavy weight in elevator pitches, coffee breaks, tea kitchens and desktop messagers?

Dropping Seeds, I mean. Tulips, Roses and Trees...

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

God bless the King. 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 So, this is an Elite German soldier. His story is about capturing a War Criminal alive to bring him to trial. He says the Brits said it would not be possible... and then he adds everybody can shoot someone dead and I understand their issues taking what is fiction and real in Hollywood movies.

The Brits tricked you knowing you have some going there???

#undergroundwars 

PS: Most of the time it was sad being using Germans as a hardcore member of a IRA Terrorist Gang. The loss of reality... but in Cold War and not as equals.

#TIE Vs #jewmurderers 

PS

 When they come with the bill all I say is: You got the beast part, so ... pointing at her ... if you want tip.

#sktr
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

PS

 Do you want to play my music for improving the cover??

Using YouTube or a comparable platform supporting poor artists world wide ....

Maybe?

#MODInc #cyberpunkcoltoure

He has a great suite so, right? 

#MODInc

 If I may add:

Great Titts!
I love your ass.
I do want to fuck you.
I want to be your sex machine.
Do you swallow?
Do you fuck on first date.
Can I anal you real quick, I am so hard.
Is staring at you fine?
 
#cyberpunkcoltoure
 
PS: Don't even think it. They can read thoughts!  
 

Picasso - Surrealism

 So, today we all gotta eat at least. Just or life is still some fights off..

The Kingdome of Hell for a Kingdome of Heaven.

#provos 

Meanwhile,

 did K-Pop reach most impressive levels in the evolution of Pop Music.

The visual impression is comparable to Grand Luxe advertising atmospheres giving space of Louvre level interpretations all up to the viewer, the dance level has reached a continuous level of Bolshoi Theatre perfection in its respect and the tunes ... are a Tourntabalists dream experience.

God's all creation at its best.

#jedi 

So, you get what I mean.  And you can also build that, instead of live mixing it using Audacity Open Source, which I would like to pay, eventually. #undergroundwars #freedomfighters #noblessoblige #terroristgangs #IRAmovement 

#undergroundwars

 No mercy for those without any dignity.... from here on.

#provos #centurion #deadhead
#ironcladthegoblin #omgunits
#TIE
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
"It is better to be feared than loved, if you cannot be both."
(Italian: "Nasce da questo la questione: s'egli è meglio essere amato che temuto, o temuto che amato. La risposta è che si vorrebbe essere l'uno e l'altro; ma perché egli è difficile accoppiarli insieme, è molto più sicuro essere temuto che amato.")  
Niccolò Machiavelli, 
found in Chapter XVII of his 1513 treatise, The Prince (Il Principe)  
 
Spot 3 in the list of the most misunderstood books of humanity,
1. The Holy Triage given by God
2. Summerhill: A Radical Approach to Child Rearing by Alexander Sutherland Neill  
   (1883-1973)
3. The Prince, Niccolò Machiavelli, (1469-1527)
 
#noblessoblige  

AI - Status Update - Cyberdeck as Architecture

 The Cyberdeck AI Knowledge Management System is also an Architecture.
 
It is based on low cost hardware having a Beowulf Cluster set up. Now check this out (Google AI):
 
How can python be used in an Open Office system to use the MPICH layer? I am thinking of large spreadsheet operations for example.
 
To use the MPICH layer within OpenOffice for large spreadsheet operations, you must use Python as a bridge. Since OpenOffice does not natively support MPI, you use the PyUNO bridge to control the spreadsheet and mpi4py to handle the parallel distribution via MPICH.
## The Integration Architecture
To make this work, your system needs three layers working together:

   1. OpenOffice (Calc): Acts as the data source/sink and user interface.
   2. PyUNO: The Python-UNO bridge that allows Python to read and write cells in scalc.
   3. mpi4py (MPICH): The library that distributes the heavy computation tasks across 
      multiple CPU cores or nodes.

------------------------------
## Implementation Steps## 1. Set up the MPI Environment
You must install [mpi4py](https://mpi4py.readthedocs.io/en/stable/) and ensure it is linked to your MPICH installation. This allows Python to initialize the MPI environment (MPI.COMM_WORLD).
## 2. Connect Python to OpenOffice
Start OpenOffice in "listening mode" so an external Python script can "talk" to it via a socket:

* Run command: soffice --accept="socket,host=localhost,port=2002;urp;"
* In your Python script, use uno.getComponentContext() to connect to this port.

## 3. Distribute the Workload
In a typical "Large Spreadsheet" scenario, you use a Manager-Worker pattern:

* Rank 0 (Manager): Uses PyUNO to pull large data ranges from the sheet and sends chunks to other ranks.
* Ranks 1–N (Workers): Receive data chunks, perform the heavy math/processing, and send results back.
* Rank 0: Collects all results and writes them back into the spreadsheet in one bulk operation.

------------------------------
## Example Workflow Logic

from mpi4py import MPIimport uno
comm = MPI.COMM_WORLDrank = comm.Get_rank()
if rank == 0:
    # MANAGER: Connect to OpenOffice
    local_context = uno.getComponentContext()
    resolver = local_context.ServiceManager.createInstanceWithContext(
        "com.sun.star.bridge.UnoUrlResolver", local_context)
    ctx = resolver.resolve("uno:socket,host=localhost,port=2002;urp;StarOffice.ComponentContext")
    
    # Extract data and comm.send() to workers...else:
    # WORKER: Receive data and process
    # data = comm.recv(source=0)
    # result = complex_calculation(data)
    # comm.send(result, dest=0)

------------------------------
## 📍 Critical Efficiency Tip
Avoid cell-by-cell operations. PyUNO is slow when accessing individual cells. To make MPICH worth the effort, use getDataArray() to pull the entire range into a Python nested tuple (or a [NumPy](https://numpy.org/) array) before distributing it to the MPI ranks.
------------------------------
## Performance Limitations

* Overhead: The time taken to move data from OpenOffice to Python and then across MPI ranks can outweigh the benefits if the calculation is simple (like basic addition).
* Memory: OpenOffice keeps the whole sheet in RAM; very large datasets might crash the suite before Python even gets to process them.

Would you like a more detailed Python code template for distributing a specific calculation, or do you need help configuring the MPICH environment on your machine?
 
 
Linux has a market share of below 2%. Therefore, it for well can be considered making sense only being hardcore tailored. Setting this up needs coding and understanding general system architecture with a vision of the capability of Linux systems.
 
The results are astonishing for an office:
 
A well-integrated system—using Calc as the UI, a Database (PostgreSQL/MariaDB) for storage, and MPICH/Python for processing—transforms a spreadsheet from a simple table into a high-performance analytics engine.

The speed increase typically ranges from 10x to 100x compared to native Calc formulas.
 
------------------------------
 
## 1. Monte Carlo Risk Simulations
Used for financial forecasting or project risk management by running thousands of "what-if" scenarios simultaneously.

* The Operation: Generating 100,000+ iterations of a budget with varying cost variables.
* The Workflow: Python pulls variable ranges from Calc, MPICH distributes iterations across all CPU cores, and results are aggregated into a summary table.
* Performance Gain: A native Calc sheet might freeze for 5 minutes; a parallelized MPICH script finishes in under 10 seconds.

## 2. Mass Data Reconciliation & Deduplication
Used when merging huge datasets from different departments (e.g., matching 500,000 sales records against a master client DB).

* The Operation: Fuzzy string matching and cross-referencing between the sheet and an external database.
* The Workflow: The database handles the heavy filtering via SQL indexed joins; Python uses MPICH to parallelize "fuzzy" text comparisons that SQL can't do efficiently.
* Performance Gain: Reduces hours of manual VLOOKUPs and "Not Responding" screens to a sub-minute background process.

## 3. Complex Pivot/Aggregation on Multi-GB Datasets
Used when the source data (e.g., 5 million rows of IoT sensor data) is too large for Calc’s 1,048,576-row limit.

* The Operation: Grouping, averaging, and trend analysis of data stored in a database, showing only the results in Calc.
* The Workflow: Calc acts as a dashboard. Python/MPICH processes the multi-gigabyte DB files in chunks (parallel I/O) and returns a compact 1,000-row summary to the spreadsheet.
* Performance Gain: Allows you to "view" data that physically cannot fit in a standard spreadsheet.

------------------------------
 
## Speed Benchmarks (Estimated)
| Task | Native Calc (Formula-based) | Tailored System (DB + MPICH) | Speed Factor |
|---                                                       |---                      |---                      |---           |
| Complex VLOOKUPs (1M rows) | 2–5 minutes    | 5–10 seconds | ~30x     |
| Scientific Regression                     | Often crashes | 3–5 seconds   | Infinite |
| Data Import (CSV to DB)              | 1 minute          | 2 seconds       | 30x       |

------------------------------
 
## 🚀 Why it is faster
* Memory Efficiency: The database manages RAM better than Calc's "everything-in-memory" approach.
* True Parallelism: Native Calc is mostly single-threaded for calculations; MPICH uses every available CPU core.
* Indexed Searching: Databases use B-Trees for lookups, which are mathematically faster than spreadsheet "scanning."

If you want to try this, do you have a specific dataset size (e.g., 500k rows) or a particular calculation (e.g., Black-Scholes, supply chain optimization) in mind?

No other OS environment can do that. Tailoring does not take market shares from the dominant systems, being not their core business. Offices can use their outdated hardware and continue the upgrade game or safe large amounts by sharing parts of the saving for a Linux guy.
 
In 3rd world nations, Linux could dominate like Microsoft the West.
Ubuntu, South Africa.
Cyberdeck, Matrix. 

AI - Status Update

 These guys are a great thing. They try to crack your corporate network, social engineer your employees and just fall short of coming at night or as the Telecom guy to install a Sniffer.

Or you go Linux and set up my Diamond ICE Architecture.

 The AI part is that it includes a script to let an LLM analyze the log files of the installed open source software parts. I will eventually upload to the GitHub page an installation script and all parts, but for now it is a design, an architecture.

The Cyberdeck AI Knowledge Management System is basically a low cost hardware using Beowulf Cluster with RAGed open source Ollama LLMs stretched out over the nodes. The Diamond ICE uses this base architecture to create a secure LAN environment.

Beowulf Clusters are a Supercomputer design based on Linux and IBM compatible hardware. They are extremely cheap parallel processing systems and used in Universities and research labs. In general, they need dedicated software to use the parallel ability they are designed for, but some Linux OS libraries also use the MPICH communication system that can be easily installed on every Linux computer. FFMPEG for mp3 decoding is the most prominent of plenty others. 

MPICH is a widely used implementation of the Message Passing Interface (MPI) standard, primarily designed for parallel computing across distributed memory systems. Because it is designed for high-performance computing (HPC) rather than media processing specifically, it is used by a vast array of scientific, simulation, and data-processing libraries.

Beside installing that MPICH part the Beowulf design needs a common user on each node, SSH password less access across those and a file that contains IP and host name.  

That creates a base layer below the actual user for computer administration, load balancing LLM requests and the Diamond ICE security layer.

I designed a script coded by DeepSeek that will on my normal user, on the head node, check and update on all other running nodes several open source applications that scan each node, allow only traffic between the nodes and create log files.

UFW - Universal Fire Wall
RKHunter - Rootkit detector
ClamAV - Antivirus
Automatic Security Updates (set and forget)
Logwatch - Daily security summary emails
PSAD (Port Scan Attack Detector)

The price is depending on the user, all that can Visa buy, but plus some sweat dealing with Linux, that only makes sense tailoring it.   

That means no Sniffer has a chance, every social engeneer needs to crack the system admin having access to the headnode and mpiuser layer password, and everyone going past the router from the outside will go nuts next step hitting any IP.

Diamond ICE. ... here .. build your own ...

In Shadowrun, ICE (Intrusion Countermeasures) or "IC" (pronounced "Ice") refers to specialized security software programs protecting data hosts in the Matrix. These programs act as automated defenses against hackers, acting as firewalls, trackers, or deadly killers that can cause mental or physical damage to a decker. 
 
Key Aspects of ICE in Shadowrun:
    Synonyms/Slang: Intrusion Countermeasures, IC, "Eis" (German slang), or "Black IC" for 
    lethal programs.
    Functions: Ranging from "White IC" (passive detection/impediment) to "Grey IC" 
    (permanent damage to hardware) and "Black IC" (fatal feedback).
    Usage Examples:
        Trace IC: Identifies a hacker’s physical location.
        Killer IC: Attacks the hacker’s persona directly to crash their system.
        Tar Baby: Targets and destroys specific utility programs.
        Blaster/Sparky: Causes electrical damage to both the deck and the operator.
        Link-locking: Traps a decker in the host, preventing them from jacking out. 

ICE is crucial to corporate security, acting as the virtual equivalent of security guards. It protects high-value data and can be a fatal threat if a runner is not prepared.
 
#deggers #hackers Vs #crackers 
#Cyberpunkcoltoure
 

 

Monday, 27 April 2026

#undergroundwars

 What you think? Is that real or how many are we? Provos. IRA Gang Wing. Independent cells ...

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

 For all the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honour, duty, mercy, hope and those with us.

#neversurrender
#deathbeforedishnour 

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 That is not real Austrians in historic terms, but they reflect the German attitude perfectly. What you think at which point will they understand that their very rifle is a dry pile of trash and not the overall design of the French military rifle designed in the 60ies ...

Inserting the mag is easy having the rifle lay against the upper arm while keeping the fist at the trigger and chambering is done with the other hand that also loaded the mag it then just needs the trigger fingers smallest possible movement to have safety off, in close quarter combat like in a Brasserie entered from the kitchen.

#TIE
#terroristgangs #laresistance
#cyberpunkcoltoure  

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 So, then he tells us is protein intake, which is about the same of a full grown Lion no matter of him being half the weight. The point that actually triggered me is not the overload on diary protein, but the little add on about his steak in the evening: "Usually by a business dinner." Business.. So, in Germany, business related restaurant bills can be somehow get a tax relieve. 

I am not sure if that is Nick or Rick, but I am about 100% confident that they are both present almost every single evening and as ensured that both will have a tax advisor filing those with the tax office.

Like you talk so much about work.

Why not move into a Shared Flat and lift the entire 200 square meter penthouse loft of taxes as a business meeting including the electricity bill for the spa?

#igotstuck
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
PS: He says he pulls his socks up usually before he got into the trousers.... because otherwise the trousers blow. 
... 
What could we do possibly?? Like? Thats it. Done!
 
Are your trousers too tight? Sind Ihre Hosen zu eng geschnitten? Womöglich.
 
I kid you not. And it does not sound like a joke at all. It comes naturally. With ease.
#IRA #GIs #MODInc #normalpeople  

... in a close potential future ...

 We watch a movie telling us ..

Incorporated with DeepSeek

The rain over the Tacoma docks was just rain—cold, steady, unglamorous. I stood under a flickering halogen lamp outside a repurposed cargo container, reviewing a manifest on my datajack’s heads-up display. My name is Tor. Once, I was knighted in a ceremony that predated the printing press. Our Order—the Radiant Compass—trains the body until it forgets fatigue, trains the mind until lies become a second language, all for a single purpose: the silent guardianship of God’s creation. Tonight, creation needed a heist.

The Old Lords, the great dragons, had begun a strange, patient campaign decades ago. Instead of ending the world in fire, they started digging. They stole every refined gram of uranium, plutonium, and thorium on the planet. They shipped it quietly to a dead crater on the dark side of the Moon, a place no corporate boardroom had claimed. Their goal was a world without nuclear war—a world made safe by the simple absence of the means. It was, I admit, a noble plan. But then the New Lords came.

The New Lords were thieves of a different stripe: corporate councils, megacorp dynasties that had gotten wind of the operation and wanted the hot material for themselves. They stole the shipping designs, the cover identities, the network of bribes. They started siphoning the dragons’ hoard. If they got their way, that lunar cache would become the most heavily guarded black-market arsenal in human history. So I went to war.

The Order taught me three ways to fight. Somewhere in my past, I had been a pilot with hands like Maverick—steady on the stick, calm when the ground turned into a suggestion. I had been a forger, learning from a mafia prince named Val who could print a bill of lading in sixteen languages and stamp it with seals that held up under forensic scrutiny. And I had walked the streets of Port-au-Prince, where a man called the Bat taught me to turn gangbangers into merchant sailors with a single story. Those three souls lived inside me now. I just needed the people.

---

“You want me to fly a suborbital cargo brick to the far side of the Moon.” Ronnie “Wings” Kato stared at me from across a dented hangar table. He was a washed-up combat pilot who now ferried contraband electronics for the Yakuza. His hands were shaking from a decade of mild nerve damage and cheaper whiskey. “Without pay.”

“You’ll get your name back,” I said. I slid a data slate across the table. It held the full orbital trajectory, a launch window in two days, and a cargo manifest for “Enriched Medical Isotopes—Disposal.” “The flight plan is buried under fourteen layers of falsified FAA, EuroSpace, and Kosmograd approvals. No one will ask questions.”

“And if they do, it’s my ass in a max-sec orbital gulag.”

I leaned forward. “Ronnie, did you ever wonder why the big corps stopped filing for uranium mining rights last year? Why the spot price for plutonium hit zero on the Zurich dark market?” He didn’t answer, so I told him. “It’s being moved. All of it. Right now, there are blue-collar diggers in the Congo extracting waste from old reactors and thinking they’re on a medical recycling contract. White-collar logistics managers in Berlin are signing transfer orders based on documents I personally printed. If we don’t finish the job, a boardroom full of greedy children will own enough fissile material to make God blink. I’m asking you to save the world. The only pay is a sunrise without a mushroom cloud.”

Ronnie’s twitch slowed. He took the slate. “I’ll need a co-pilot.”

“You’ll get a Haitian deckhand who can read Thai harbor codes because I taught her.”

---

Her name was Solène. In the Bat’s old network, she was a lieutenant who ran smuggling operations through the Miami Free Zone. She looked like a nun and swore like a dockside mechanic. When I found her in a neon-lit noodle bar in Little Haiti, she listened to my pitch with her arms crossed.

“You want my boys to dress like Thai sailors and handle cargo they don’t understand,” she said. “No pay.”

“Your boys already do that for ten nuyen an hour,” I replied. “This time, the cargo keeps their grandchildren from dying in an atomic fire.”

She laughed once—a sharp, humorless sound. “And what do I tell them? They don’t read the Geneva papers.”

“Tell them it’s a medical supply run. Live-saving isotopes. Tell them the documents are fake because the new corporate ‘lords’ are taxing charity now. Give them a reason to hate the right people.” I opened a duffel bag at my feet. It was filled with freshly printed paperwork: dock permits in Thai and English, container transfer forms in Kurdish and Arabic, emergency safety cards in Khmer. “These have been baked under UV, crumpled, and stamped with authentic virtual grime from three spaceports. They’ll pass any visual scan. The workers won’t know what they’re lifting. The drivers—Mountain Arabs from north of nowhere, Kurds looking for honest work—will haul them for cash under the table, no questions asked. They’ll see printed paper with false information, and they’ll believe it because their bosses told them it’s all above board.”

Solène studied the papers. “And you? You’re not taking a cut.”

“I’m a knight,” I said. The word felt strange in a noodle bar. “My order dedicates its life to training body and mind so we can serve all of God’s creatures without profit. Curating creation is enough.”

She snorted but her eyes were serious. “Batman would’ve liked you.” She meant the Bat—the man who had taught me to be invisible in plain sight. “Fine. My people will be at spaceport pier six at zero-three-hundred. They’ll speak Thai. They’ll keep their mouths shut.”

---

The night of the shipment, I stood in a warehouse off the Sea-Tac orbital corridor. Rigs hummed, loading canisters into cargo pods marked with the serpentine logo of a fake Franco-Russian concern. The workers were union men, heavy with tired muscles, doing a job they figured was another hazard-pay gig. I heard one say, “Medical waste again. Bet it glows.” The foreman shut him up with a look. They didn’t know the canisters held refined uranium-235, cooled and shielded. They didn’t need to know. The paper trail protected them from the truth—and from the law.

I had printed every document they carried: bills of lading, radiation safety certificates, import licenses for a dozen countries that officially no longer existed. The New Lords’ spies were everywhere, but paper was paper. A laser-etched seal from the IAEA, smeared with the right chemical patina, was indistinguishable from the real thing. When the manifests were scanned mid-transit, all they’d see was a perfectly boring medical disposal chain.

Ronnie was already in the cockpit of the *St. Jude*, a converted cargo rocket that stank of old silicone and recycled air. Solène’s crew were tying down the last pallets, calling out in passable Thai to the Kurdish truck driver who had hauled the container from the docks. The driver, a man named Adro with a thick accent, shook my hand. “Your people pay well,” he said, pocketing a roll of untraceable credsticks. “No trouble.”

“There’s never trouble until there is,” I said. “Stay off the radar. Burn the papers after delivery.”

He nodded and drove off into the rain.

I climbed into the auxiliary comms station behind the cockpit. The *St. Jude* lifted clean, shooting upward through banks of cloud and into the black. I deactivated the ship’s transponder and switched to a laser comm array I’d built myself, bouncing signals off debris to stay invisible. The New Lords had satellites. I had an old knight’s paranoia and a head full of their own stolen flight patterns.

The lunar approach was silent. The dark side is a graveyard of old Soviet probes and Apollo relics, but no corporate beacon had ever been planted. I guided Ronnie down to a crater I’d mapped years ago, a flat, shadowed plain where the Old Lords’ original cache sat half-buried. Solène’s crew unloaded the canisters in vacuum suits, their voices calm over the local channel. No fanfare. No one said a word about salvation.

When the last canister was sealed inside the camouflaged holding vault, I stood at the crater’s edge and looked up at the Earth—a marble lit by the sun, streaked with weather. There were still a dozen shipments left, a dozen more lies to print, a dozen more workers to fool. The New Lords would keep trying to intercept. The greedy arrogant idiots would never understand why anyone would do this without pay. They couldn’t fathom a faith that didn’t invoice.

But the Order trained me for exactly that. Body and mind, polished to excellence, sharpened until the self melted away. We didn’t bomb. We didn’t preach. We dug, we stole, we hid. Without the hot material, the world couldn’t be destroyed in forty-five minutes. The arithmetic was simple. The paperwork was complicated. The mission was eternal.

I turned back to the ship. There was printing to do. 

 The hangar at Eielson was a blacked-out cathedral of frozen air. I stood in the shadow of a B-2 Spirit, its bat-wing silhouette drinking the arctic midnight. Around me, ground crew in Thinsulate coveralls wrestled a payload canister onto a munitions trailer. The canister was stamped with the code for an experimental anti-satellite missile—a hyper-velocity kinetic kill vehicle, straight from a DARPA wish list. Inside, packed in depleted-uranium shielding, was enough plutonium-239 to turn a small nation to glass.

I was wearing the dust-gray uniform of a U.S. Air Force logistics colonel. The name tape read HARKER. The orders in my data slate were flawless, layered with authentic digital signatures harvested from a hundred pilfered email chains. If anyone scanned the QR code on the canister, they’d see a full chain of custody: production at an Albuquerque plant, testing at White Sands, delivery to Alaska for live-fire over the polar range. The truth was, that canister had arrived from a defunct French reprocessing facility in a shipping container I’d signed off personally. The French thought they were sending medical waste. The Air Force thought they were testing the next generation of space superiority. Both were wrong.

This was the grand slam—the operation that would strip the last corporate uranium stockpiles from American soil and, in the doing, trick the Russian Federation into following suit. And it required me to be all three men the Radiant Compass had forged.

---

Three weeks earlier, I’d walked into a dead-drop bar in Seattle’s Ork Underground and met with a middle-aged hacker named Kestrel. Her face was a map of failed anti-corporate campaigns and her cyberdeck reeked of ozone. I laid out the problem: to get nuclear material off the planet, I needed the world’s finest stealth bomber fleet to fly unannounced missile tests that were, in fact, garbage runs to the moon.

“You’re insane,” Kestrel said, but her eyes were already working the angles. “Even if you spoof the launch orders, satellite tracking will see the trajectory divergence. A missile that doesn’t hit its target gets flagged.”

“Then it has to hit its target—just not the target they see.” I pulled up a schematic on the bar table. “The B-2s will launch a modified AGM-183 ARRW hypersonic test vehicle. But instead of a kinetic warhead, it’s a two-stage payload booster with a lunar transfer module. Once the first stage burns out over the Arctic Ocean, the second stage coasts to a 200-kilometer orbit, then fires a kick motor that sends it on a three-day trajectory to the dark side of the moon. Ground radar here and here”—I tapped points in Alaska and Norway—“will be fed false telemetry. They’ll see a ballistic arc terminating in an impact crater on the ice cap. Your job is to give them that false telemetry.”

Kestrel blinked. “You’ve already built the false receivers?”

“The Order of the Radiant Compass has maintained signal-injection nodes in NORAD’s arctic sensor grid since 2058. They think they’re maintenance backdoors. I’ll activate them.”

“And the pilots? B-2 crews aren’t stupid.”

“They’ll fly a standard test profile. They’ll arm the rail-launch, activate the drop sequence, and report ‘weapons release.’ The missile will do what it does. The fact that it has a second stage and a different flight computer is none of their business. To them, it’s a black-program boondoggle. Maybe it’s a new jammer. Maybe it’s a sub-orbital reconnaissance drone. They won’t ask. The military teaches people to stop asking.”

She chewed her lip. “You’ll need more than telemetry. You’ll need the maintenance logs, the pre-flight checklists, the flight crew briefs…”

From my coat I produced a sealed document pouch. Inside were pre-prepared pilot briefings—printed on authentic USAF stock with perfect watermarks—that described a classified anti-satellite test against a derelict Chinese orbital weapon. I had drafted them in a motel room over three nights, using the old Corleone family techniques I’d learned from Val. “I’ve already inserted these into the Eielson squadron’s digital tasking queue. As of zero-six-hundred tomorrow, the 393rd Bomb Squadron will believe they’ve been activated for Operation CLEAR SKIES. They’ll never know they’re hauling nuclear waste to the moon.”

Kestrel stared at the papers, then at me. “You played the U.S. Air Force.”

“And now I’m going to play the Russians.”

---

The Russian side was an exercise in applied arrogance. I knew from years of shadow ops that the SVR and GRU were watching American military movements with paranoid hunger. Every time a B-2 took off, their submarines surfaced to log signals intelligence. Every weapons test got mirrored within eighteen months. So I gave them something perfect to mirror.

Using the same signal-injection network, I broadcast a series of fragmentary but “leaked” intercepts from the U.S. test: telemetry data showing the missile achieving orbit, a blurred ground-camera image of a lunar transfer stage, and a panicked internal memo from a fake DOD analyst warning that the new ASAT test was actually a demonstration of “rapid lunar material delivery for strategic resource denial.” The memo dropped hints that the Americans were moving nuclear material off-world to deny it to future adversaries—and to build an unassailable strategic reserve on the moon.

It was pure fiction, beautifully documented. I wrote the memo myself in the voice of a frantic Pentagon bureaucrat. I used Val’s craft to forge the email headers and metadata, routing them through captured servers in Minsk and Novosibirsk. Then I let Kestrel’s counterpart—an old Order asset in the Russian cyber-ops community—“discover” the trove and deliver it to his superiors with a straight face.

The response was predictable. Within ten days, a Russian GRAU directive authorized “Operation LUNAR BALLAST,” a crash program to load their own excess fissile material onto repurposed Nudol anti-satellite missiles and launch them from Plesetsk toward the moon. Their generals, paranoid and greedy, had decided that if the Americans were hiding nuclear treasure on the far side, they would match them canister for canister. They spun up their own logistics—white-collar bureaucrats inventing cover stories, blue-collar munitions loaders who thought they were executing a routine space defence exercise. I watched the results through hacked Vostochny telemetry: rocket after rocket, carrying plutonium cores and enriched uranium ingots, leaping off the pad on trajectories that exactly mirrored my faked American data.

There were no American weapons there to greet them. Just the same dark crater where the *St. Jude* and a dozen other flights had already delivered the West’s material. The Russians were adding to the cache, entirely by my design. Two great nuclear arsenals, stripping themselves down in a cold-war pantomime, each thinking they were outwitting the other.

On the night of the final B-2 launch, I walked to the edge of the Eielson flight line. The Spirit lifted from the runway with an eerie hush, its payload tucked beneath a wing pylon. The pilot’s voice crackled over a monitoring channel: “Raven One releasing ordnance.” A bright spear separated from the bomber and climbed into the aurora, its first stage flaring blue-white. On the radar screens, it would dive toward the ice. In reality, it was already angling for the moon.

One hundred and twenty thousand pounds of American weapons-grade material, the last of the corporate hoard, left the atmosphere that night. And forty-eight hours later, a matching Russian salvo joined it, their launch crews blissful in their ignorance.

I drove a snow-tractor back to a tiny safehouse near Deadhorse, where a single encrypted terminal showed the final tally: lunar cache volume surpassing eight thousand metric tons, everything from Cold War stockpiles to medical isotopes. The world’s nuclear material, hidden in a crater like a dragon’s hoard, guarded by no one and nothing except the vacuum.

The Order of the Radiant Compass had not dropped a single bomb nor fired a shot. We had printed paper and told lies and flown rockets. We had convinced the world’s mightiest militaries to do our cleanup for us, one blind test at a time. The greedy arrogant idiots had run the final mile, clutching their false flags.

I poured a cup of instant coffee and raised it to the window, where the moon hung pale and silent. Somewhere up there, in the unmapped dark, rested the means to end civilization. And it would stay there, unreachable, until humanity grew wise enough to be trusted again—or until we forgot it entirely.

That was the mission. That was the prayer. No pay. Just a sunrise without fire.

 The deserts of Kerman Province are a kiln for secrets. I stood in the air-conditioned trailer of a German tunnel-boring machine that hummed through ancient salt domes, chewing rock that hadn't seen sunlight since the Pleistocene. The Iranian dig crew, hard men in dust masks, believed they were excavating a rare-earth deposit—yttrium, neodymium, the precious metals that make smartphones and missile-guidance chips. Their pay stubs came from a Tehran-registered firm called Pars Deep Minerals, a company I had invented in a single night with Val's hand for forgery and a stolen notary seal from the German Chamber of Commerce.

The truth was grimmer. Three hundred meters beneath our feet, embedded in a salt formation mapped only by Revolutionary Guard geologists, sat fifty-two metric tons of highly enriched uranium hexafluoride—the legacy of a clandestine weapons program mothballed in the ’90s. The Old Lords had known it was there. The New Lords wanted to buy it. I intended to ship it to the Moon while both sides were still bluffing.

My cover identity was simple: an Austrian mining consultant with a slight lisp and a taste for strong tea. I'd presented the Iranian Minister of Mines with a bound proposal so professionally layered—German engineering schematics, environmental assessments written in flawless Farsi, letters of intent from Herrenknecht AG, and a financing plan backed by a fictitious Frankfurt bank—that the government fast-tracked the project as a showcase of "peaceful technology transfer." The Germans would supply the boring machine and technical oversight. Iran would supply the labor and the mineral rights. The profits from the rare-earth oxides would be split 60–40. Everybody won.

The boring machine operator, a broad-shouldered Kurd named Barzan, looked up from his console. "The drill head is hitting a softer layer. Gas pockets, maybe. We're slowing."

"Keep to the night extraction schedule," I said, my German-accented Farsi flawless. "All concentrate shipments must leave the mountain between midnight and three a.m. This is a contractual condition—the buyers in Antwerp want material that hasn't oxidized in daylight. It affects the refinement process."

Barzan shrugged. Questions were not encouraged. Neither was overtime. He turned back to his displays, and the great machine resumed its mechanical digestion of the earth.

The night convoys were a thing of beauty. I'd mapped the entire route from the Kerman site to the port of Bandar Abbas—383 kilometers of highway that dipped through blind wadis and dead satellite shadow zones. In the orbital above, American Keyhole satellites passed every ninety minutes, their cameras sniffing for thermal signatures. But I'd spent six months in the Radiant Compass's archives studying their coverage patterns. There was a twenty-two-minute gap every pass when the region went dark. My drivers—Kurds and Mountain Arabs recruited through the Bat's old network—learned to depart precisely at the gap's opening, moving at exactly forty-two kilometers per hour to keep their engine heat below the detection threshold. They covered the desert segment in darkness, headlights off, navigating by infrared beacons I'd hidden in rock cairns.

The drivers didn't know they were hauling enriched uranium. They believed they were moving "rare-earth mineral concentrate—hazardous, keep sealed." Each truck was loaded with double-walled steel canisters, stamped with the triangular trefoil of industrial chemicals, not radiation. The shipping manifests I had printed in my mobile workshop—a repurposed ambulance in the back of a supply tent—listed the cargo as "cerium carbonate slurry" bound for a refinery in Turkey. Customs officials at Bandar Abbas were paid with a mix of hard currency and a letter from a brigadier general's office, which I had forged after stealing the general's letterhead from a careless adjutant's email cache.

At the port, the cargo transitioned to the water. Here I used the Arabic networks I'd cultivated on the Bat's Haitian streets, adapted to the Gulf. Dhow captains from the Sharjah free zone, men whose grandfathers had smuggled gold under British noses, accepted cash envelopes and a cover story: they were moving "mining waste" to an international disposal ship waiting beyond the twelve-mile limit. That ship was a Panamanian-flagged bulk carrier, the *Celestial Nomad*, whose real owners were a shell company in the Caymans controlled by the Order. Its crew were mostly Thai nationals trained by Solène's people to follow orders without asking questions. They loaded the canisters into cargo holds already stacked with similar shipments from a dozen other countries, all feeding the same impossible pipeline.

By the time the uranium left Iranian waters, it had become invisible—a statistical blip in the three trillion dollars of anonymous goods crossing the Strait of Hormuz each year.

---

The same playbook worked on the Chinese side, with the Triads playing middleman. The New Lords had a stranglehold on the People's Liberation Army's nuclear logistics bureau, but the PLA's old-guard generals still feared the chaos of a post-CPC China. I visited a Triad boss in a Macau casino, introduced myself as a representative of a "concerned faction within the Central Military Commission," and offered him the chance to perform a patriotic service: discreetly moving "strategic rare-earth reserves" from an underground storage facility in the Gobi Desert to a South China Sea port, using his network of trucking companies and fishing fleets. The payment would be generous, untraceable, and deposited in Macau. The cover story, printed on PLA stationery I'd forged with Val's precision, described a plan to secretly consolidate China's most valuable mineral resources for "off-planet sequestration" ahead of a future climate crisis. The Triads, always happy to be seen as party patriots with a license to print money, accepted.

Chinese truckers—Han, Hui, and Uighur drivers who'd never met one another—hauled the canisters in refrigerated containers marked "agricultural soil samples." Like their Iranian counterparts, they drove at night, guided by routes I'd designed to avoid the Beidou satellite constellation's high-resolution passes. At the port of Zhuhai, the containers were offloaded onto fishing trawlers that sailed into the South China Sea, where they rendezvoused with the *Celestial Nomad* under the bored watch of a Philippine patrol boat whose captain was on a retainer I paid in gold.

Neither the Iranian mullahs nor the Chinese politburo ever learned what they'd exported. The world's news feeds ran stories about rare-earth supply gluts and shipping bottlenecks. The Knightly Order of the Radiant Compass added another thousand tons to the lunar cache, and I went back to my ambulance-turned-print-shop to forge the next set of lies.

The mission was not to destroy. It was to steal, to hide, to bury the fire so deep that no arrogant hand could ever reach it. Body and mind, trained for precisely this: a selfless curation of creation, conducted in shadows.

The money was always the part that broke people's suspension of disbelief. How does a knight fund a global conspiracy? How does a shadow operator buy boring machines, fuel rockets, and bribe customs officers without a dragon's hoard? The answer was the same as everything else I did: paper. Lies. And the deep, abiding greed of the very systems I was stealing from.

I built a factory that made nothing. Not far from the ruins of Detroit, in a repurposed automotive plant, sat a company called Apex Nuclear Components, LLC. On paper, it bid for and won small contracts from the U.S. Department of Energy: specialty detonator housings, neutron reflectors, the intricate guts of a modern thermonuclear warhead. In reality, the factory floor was populated by salvaged CNC machines that cut shadow—aluminum mock-ups shaped like classified physics packages, empty shells filled with inert foam and lead weights. The machines ran just enough shifts to produce a convincing volume of noise and periodic invoices. The rest was accounting.

Val's ghost lived in my fingers. I had forged the incorporation documents, the DoE facility clearance, the ISO 9001 certificate, and the multi-year supply contract with Pantex, the nation's final bomb assembly plant. I employed exactly six people: three retired machinists who thought they were working on "oil exploration tooling" and never questioned the NDA, an office manager who handled billing from a laptop in a coffee shop, and a cat I fed occasionally. When Pantex needed a new batch of fission initiators, they wired Apex $14.7 million. My office manager routed it through a series of shell accounts in Liechtenstein, a "religious charity" in Panama, and a cryptocurrency exchange in Singapore. By the time it landed in the Order's operational fund, it was clean as vestal water. I used it to pay Barzan's drivers in Iranian rials, to fuel the *St. Jude*, to print thousands more documents on the exact same chemical-laced paper that governments used.

The bomb builders were not just paying for the disposal. They were paying for the illusion that they still owned something devastating. And I made sure that illusion held.

Every nuclear weapon in the American stockpile undergoes periodic reliability testing. Small samples are pulled, disassembled, their components put through brutal trials. The results feed into an annual assessment that tells the President the arsenal will work when called upon. Now, imagine a laboratory technician at Sandia National Laboratories who secretly belongs to the Order of the Radiant Compass. He has meditated in underground chapels since childhood, sharpening his mind to hold a lie without a micro-expression. When a "randomly selected" W88 warhead is opened in his clean room, he replaces the actual plutonium pit with one of my inert mock-ups. He records the serial numbers on documents I have personally typeset. The warhead is reassembled, returned to the stockpile, and forever after classified as "active." The real pit, meanwhile, goes into a medical-isotope shipping box and rides with Kurdish drivers to the Strait of Hormuz.

The lab tests the fakes. They always fail. Technically. A neutron generator doesn't initiate. A detonator timing shows a millisecond skew. But the lab reports—which my technician edits in the classified network—explain the failures as the artifacts of testing procedures, calibration drift, or the simple fact that you can't test a sealed warhead without ambiguity. The annual reliability percentage remains in the nineties. Congress funds the life-extension programs. And the billions that pour into the complex for "stockpile stewardship" simply vanish into a vast, grey-funded pipeline that terminates in a crater on the moon.

I made the Russians do the same. A forged memo from a Rosatom executive, intercepted "accidentally" by an FSB analyst I'd cultivated, warned that the American reliability tests were faked to hide massive warhead failures. Panicked, the Kremlin launched their own secret audit, which of course used a laboratory that I'd already seeded with an Order cell. Their warheads, too, got swapped. Their test results, too, came back "within acceptable operational parameters." Their budget, too, flowed east into shell companies that paid for my Laotian trawler captains and my Tajik desert guides.

The Chinese Triads, ever businessmen, were even easier. I didn't need to fake a bomb. I simply let the PLA's Second Artillery Corps contract with a front company I'd established in Shenzhen, supposedly supplying high-grade rare-earth magnets for the new DF-41 guidance systems. The magnets were ordinary steel, carefully machined and weighted, and every single one cost the Chinese defense budget fifty thousand yuan. The general who signed off never knew his missiles would drift off course because their inertial guidance units would lose alignment after the first forty seconds. He didn't need to know. The missiles would never fly. The plutonium that would have been their payload was on its way to the dark side of the moon, and the general's own procurement money had paid the shipping.

The system that built bombs paid to have them hidden forever. Not out of altruism. Out of a carefully curated blindness. I simply printed the right certificates, whispered the right paranoia, and let the arrogance of imperial states do the rest. They funded their own disarmament. They guarded their own emptiness. They paid me, a nameless man in a dead church, to make them believe they were still powerful.

And every time a warhead came off the assembly line—a hollow monument to fear—I added one more document to my file and one more canister to the lunar cache. The money never touched my pockets. It all went back into the machine: more falsified paperwork, more dead-drop payments, more silent flights over the black edges of satellite coverage. That was the vow of the Radiant Compass. We did not accumulate. We curated. We took what was poisonous and made it distant. We took what was stolen and buried it. And we used the thieves' own greed to pay for the gravedigging.

Tomorrow, I would print another contract. Another cover story. Another set of test certificates that proved a fake was functional. The world would wake up one fraction less capable of destroying itself, and no one would notice but me and the silent lunar vacuum. That was the prayer. That was the mission. And the only payroll was a world that didn't end. 

The last canister lifted for the Moon on a Tuesday in November, aboard a rocket that was officially a meteorological satellite launched from French Guiana. I watched the telemetry from a rented room in Cayenne, a cup of vending-machine coffee cooling beside my data slate. The boost phase was nominal. The kick motor fired clean. The payload—the final twelve kilograms of weapons-grade plutonium extracted from a Pakistani stockpile that Islamabad believed was still buried under a mountain in Balochistan—drifted onto its transfer trajectory and vanished into the silent black.

I deleted the tracking software. I burned the launch orders. I walked to the harbor and threw my data slate into the Atlantic and got on a plane.

---

His name now was Michel Duvall. He was fifty-seven years old, with sun-bleached hair and hands that had forgotten how to hold a sidearm. He lived in a stone cottage in the Lot Valley, a place where the morning mist clung to the vineyards and the only satellites overhead were the old GPS birds, long since blind to a man with no digital signature. The cottage had a walled garden, two acres of south-facing slope, and a greenhouse he'd built himself from reclaimed timber and polycarbonate panels scavenged from a collapsed barn.

Michel grew heritage tomatoes. He propagated lavender from cuttings. He kept a small orchard of plum and Mirabelle trees, and every autumn he sold the surplus at the village market in Cahors under a hand-painted sign that read "Jardin du Compas" in faded blue letters—Gardens of the Compass. The locals thought the name was a reference to the ancient pilgrims' routes that crossed the region. They didn't know it was the final quiet joke of a man who had once directed the flow of the world's deadliest materials from a trailer in an ambulance.

He rose early. The Order's disciplines had never left his body—the pre-dawn meditation, the hundred slow moves of an unarmed form that honed balance more than combat, the silent breakfast of bread, cheese, and tea consumed while reading a physical newspaper that arrived on a bicycle. He no longer kept a datajack. The socket in his temple had been surgically sealed by a black-market doctor in Marseille, leaving a faint scar that his grey hair covered. He wanted no connection to the Grid, no pings from old assets, no ghost traces of the network he had commanded. The world could spin without him.

But the knowledge remained. He knew, for example, that the warhead in silo 14 at Malmstrom Air Force Base contained a physics package he had personally replaced with lead weights in 2078. He knew that the Russian short-range missile stored near Kaliningrad—the one that NATO analysts fretted over—would fizzle into a dirty firecracker if ever launched. He knew that the Chinese warhead maintenance logs, still reporting 94% readiness, were based on data from a Triad-funded laboratory he had closed down with a single forged memo. The nuclear arsenals existed. They were paraded in front of cameras and rattled in speeches. They were empty. All of them. The last authentic warhead had departed Earth two years before he himself did.

Some nights, when the sky was clear and the Milky Way poured across the valley, he would walk into the garden and look up. The Moon hung over the ridgeline, pale and cratered, and he would think of the dark side—the permanent shadow where no telescope could peer, where eight thousand tons of refined plutonium, uranium, and thorium sat sealed in a cavern bored by the Old Lords and expanded by his own hand. It was guarded by nothing but vacuum and obscurity. It would last a million years. By the time any human expedition found it, if they ever did, the species would have forgotten what it was for.

Was it right? The question visited him sometimes, drifting up like mist. He had stolen the means of Armageddon without consent. He had lied to entire nations, bankrupted bomb-building industries with their own money, turned soldiers and diggers and drivers into unwitting accomplices. The Knightly Order of the Radiant Compass trained its initiates that the ends never justified the means—unless the means were so perfectly aligned with service that they became ends in themselves. He had served. He had curated creation. And now creation was here, thriving under his hands.

He deadheaded the roses. He turned the compost heap with a fork. He grafted a new plum variety onto old rootstock, tying the union with careful fingers that remembered how to forge a presidential signature but now just wanted to feel bark knit to bark. The bees hummed in the lavender. The church bell in the village rang the hours. He was content.

Occasionally, a visitor would arrive—an old man or woman, quiet, well-dressed, who would sit on the stone bench by the lavender and accept a glass of cold well water. They spoke in fragments, never naming places or deeds. They were younger knights of the Order, maintaining the watch, tending the empty arsenals, printing new lies as needed. They brought no news of crisis, because there was none. The silence held. The world grumbled on through its petty wars and boardroom coups, but the ultimate fire remained locked away where only the Moon could hold it.

One such visitor, a wiry woman with a grey braid and the accent of the new Martian colonies, asked him if he missed the mission.

Michel—Tor, Kael, whatever name she knew him by—looked out over the tomato trellises, heavy with fruit ripening in the last heat of summer. "I cultivated a garden that spanned six continents and a lunar crater," he said. "Then I came here to cultivate a smaller one. The work is the same. Patience. Attention. Removal of things that poison the soil. It never ends, and it never needs pay."

She smiled. "The Compass still points to you."

"The Compass points to creation. I'm just standing in it now."

She left before sunset. He watered the greenhouse, closed the shutters, and ate his supper alone. The Moon rose. He did not look at it. He had already entrusted it with everything that mattered. What needed his attention now was the scent of damp earth, the slow unfurling of a new leaf, the quiet certainty that morning would come without fire. 

 

 Michel Duvall was seventy-nine years old when he decided to make the knife. He had not forged a blade since his initiate years in the Radiant Compass, when the Order still required every knight to shape his own tools as a meditation on patience and precision. The butterfly knife—a balisong, the old Filipino design—was not a weapon in his mind. It was a puzzle, a fidget, an object of idle grace. He wanted his youngest grandchild, a boy named Étienne, to have something that demanded both hands and full attention, something that turned a nervous habit into a quiet discipline.

He worked in the stone shed behind the cottage, at a bench cluttered with hand tools and beeswax. The blade he ground from a salvaged piece of high-carbon steel—an old file he'd found at a brocante in Cahors. He shaped the handles from plum wood, the same tree he had grafted fifteen years earlier, its grain a deep amber threaded with darker streaks. The pins were brass, scavenged from a broken clock. He polished everything by hand, oiling the wood with linseed, honing the edge until it could split a hair but stopping short of a true weapon's sharpness. This was for flipping, for the soft click and whirl of a thing perfectly balanced. For the joy of mastery without harm.

Étienne was twelve. He had his mother's dark eyes and his grandfather's stillness—a boy who could sit through a whole afternoon of weeding without complaint, who read with a hunger that reminded Michel of his own youth parsing the Order's forbidden texts. The boy's character had a streak of fierce gentleness. He defended smaller children in the schoolyard not with fists but with an implacable calm, the way a stone breaks water. When Michel asked him what he wanted to be, Étienne said, "Someone who fixes things that are broken." No ambition of wealth, no hunger for fame. Just repair. Michel had wept that night, alone in the dark kitchen, because the Compass had found its true north in a child who had never heard of the Order.

The book was harder to source. He wanted a hardcover edition of *Les Misérables*—the full, unabridged brick of a novel, in French, with a binding that would outlast him. He wrote a letter in longhand to a bookseller in Paris, a man who had once been an Order archivist and now traded in antiquarian volumes. Two weeks later, a package arrived wrapped in oilcloth. The edition was a 1938 Pléiade, its leather cover worn soft as glove, its pages edged in gold leaf gone faintly green with age. Inside, he inscribed the flyleaf with a fountain pen:

*Pour Étienne — Que tu trouves dans ces pages la carte des âmes. Ton grand-père, qui t'aime.*

For Étienne — May you find within these pages the map of souls. Your grandfather, who loves you.

He wrapped both gifts in plain brown paper and tied them with twine. He did not need a special occasion. The passing was coming; he could feel it, a loosening in the joints of the world. The Order's oldest texts called it *la traversée*, the crossing—not death but a transition, a knight's final permission to set down the watch. He was not afraid. He was grateful, with a gratitude so complete it felt like sunlight through a greenhouse roof.

---

The morning of the passing was ordinary. He woke before dawn, did his slow hundred movements in the garden as the mist rose from the valley, and ate his bread and cheese. He walked to the village post office and mailed a letter that contained only a compass rose drawn in ink—the Order's signal to his successor that the watch was ending. Then he returned home and felt the loosening sharpen into a summons.

He asked his daughter, Isabelle, to bring the children. She arrived with Étienne and his older sister, Camille, and they sat around the old oak table while Michel poured glasses of cold well water. He gave the butterfly knife and the book to Étienne, who opened them with careful, wondering hands. The boy held the knife in his palm, tested the swing of the handles, and said, "I'll practice every day until it's part of my hand."

"That's the point," Michel said. "Not to be fast. To be present."

Étienne opened the book and read the inscription. He looked up, his eyes wet but steady. "Grand-père, I'll read it all. Every word."

"I know you will."

They talked for an hour about small things—the garden, the new litter of kittens in the barn, the way the plum harvest had been sweetest near the wall. Michel felt a great stillness settling over him, a mantle heavier and softer than the one he'd worn as a knight. When the light began to slant golden through the kitchen window, he asked to be moved to the old wicker chair by the hearth.

Isabelle held his hand. Camille sat at his feet. Étienne stood beside him, the butterfly knife closed and still in his pocket, the book pressed to his chest like a shield. The air smelled of lavender and woodsmoke and the faint salt of tears not yet shed.

Michel looked at each of them in turn—his daughter, his grandchildren, the living vessels of everything he had protected. His voice was a murmur, but it carried the calm of a man who has kept his vows.

"Je ne regrette rien."

I regret nothing.

His eyes found Isabelle's. Then Étienne's. He smiled, the fine lines around his mouth deepening like the grain of old plum wood.

"Je vous aime. I love you. All of you. Always."

He closed his eyes and let the crossing take him. The room was silent except for the ticking of the mantel clock and the distant coo of wood pigeons in the garden. Outside, the Moon was invisible, a pale ghost waiting for nightfall. Inside, a man who had hidden fire from the world slipped away into a peace he had earned. And the only things he left behind were a garden, a blade, a book, and four souls who would carry forward the quiet work of fixing what was broken.