Fighting in a flooded area, partisans against elite forces? Here... difficult. If there is a Climate Jump coming the European Woodland turns into that.
That is not even with traps or hide and seek, but perfect hide, bad seek and they leave.
This blog looks at this real world as, if I was sitting in a cyberpunk pub in a Sci-Fi parallel universe with a super skunk ciggy and a sweet bourbon, and this world was the video game. I am a fully independent artist with no management or distribution contracts. Piracy is a crime and harms artists. Report abuse, theft and piracy to the local authorities to help free, independent artists!
Fighting in a flooded area, partisans against elite forces? Here... difficult. If there is a Climate Jump coming the European Woodland turns into that.
That is not even with traps or hide and seek, but perfect hide, bad seek and they leave.
So, there is this guy and I while watching the real deal abstracted that into the most likely my_life scenario, which would have been a Corporate Buddies night out with that distant old friend of any of the usual Crew form New York having come over for a weekend while staying around in Europe and being honest to myself, I just instantly knew I'd drop a: "Did you have a Guitar with you?" when he tells his story about the moment he went onto Madison Square Garden Stage to shoot a picture of him...
#igotstuck #undergroundwars
IRA Provos OMG Gang Cell Centurion Deadhead stuck in a CIA special rights zone...the domestic enemy. When Batman is your Clark Kent moments.
This is a classic "daisy chain" of leverage collapse, reminiscent of the 2008 financial crisis but with a modern twist involving crypto and offshore opacity. Here is a step-by-step scenario of what happens when this system of "printed money" hits the headlines.
### Phase 1: The Trigger (Day 1-7)
**The Headline: *"The Cypress Trust: How London’s Square Mile Printed $500 Billion on a Mirage."***
The news breaks via a consortium of investigative journalists. The core revelation is that the "appraised values" for luxury resorts in Cyprus, the Bahamas, and Dubai were not based on rental income (cashflow) but on fraudulent comparables—treating a half-empty villa complex in Cyprus as if it were a fully leased Monaco penthouse.
**Immediate Reaction:**
- **Stock Freeze:** Shares of the implicated institutions (Barclays, HSBC, and a handful of shadow banks) are halted. The FTSE 100 drops 12% in the first hour of trading before circuit breakers kick in.
- **The "Snapshot" Trap:** Because these firms used *snapshot* valuations to secure more credit at the market peak, the moment the scandal breaks, those snapshots are retroactively deemed fraudulent. Lenders demand immediate margin calls on the crypto and stock positions purchased with that credit.
- **Crypto Flash Crash:** Bitcoin and Ethereum drop 40% within 48 hours. The firms cannot liquidate their opaque crypto holdings fast enough because liquidity in crypto markets, especially for large "whale" positions, evaporates instantly. The bid-ask spreads widen to catastrophic levels.
### Phase 2: The Liquidity Freeze (Week 2-4)
**The Bank Run (Digital and Physical):**
Unlike 2008, this crisis happens in the era of instant digital banking. A run on UK banks begins not with people waiting in lines, but with app notifications. Depositors move funds to "too big to fail" institutions like Lloyds or out of the UK entirely. However, the Bank of England (BoE) notices that the **Faster Payments System** is being overwhelmed.
**The Repo Market Breaks:**
The "shadow banking" sector (hedge funds and private equity firms that held the overvalued real estate debt) faces a liquidity crisis. They try to sell UK Gilts (government bonds) to raise cash, but because the scandal implicates London’s reputation as a financial center, foreign buyers (Sovereign Wealth Funds in the Middle East and Asia) step back.
- **Result:** The BoE is forced to launch an emergency **Corporate Bond Facility** and a **Gilt Purchase Program** (quantitative easing) just to stop the bond market from freezing entirely. But this time, the public sees it not as "stabilization" but as "bailing out the fraudsters."
### Phase 3: The Contagion (Month 2-3)
**The Offshore Collapse:**
The scandal specifically names Cyprus, Bahamas, and Dubai as jurisdictions that facilitated the fraudulent appraisals.
- **Cyprus:** Facing a collapse of its "non-dom" banking sector, Cyprus imposes capital controls overnight, trapping Russian and European wealth.
- **Bahamas:** As the headquarters for FTX was already a black eye, this second blow destroys its credibility. The Bahamian dollar, pegged to the USD, comes under speculative attack.
- **Dubai:** The luxury real estate market, a haven for flight capital, halts completely. Construction on mega-projects halts as contractors are not paid.
**The Commercial Real Estate (CRE) Domino:**
Since the initial fraud involved "prime" global real estate, banks begin auditing *all* commercial real estate loans. They discover that if you strip away the fraudulent appraisals, the actual cashflow (rent) covers only 1% of the debt outstanding. Major US and European regional banks—who bought these securitized loans thinking they were safe—begin to fail.
### Phase 4: The Sovereign Crisis (Month 3-6)
**The "Gilt Crisis":**
The UK finds itself in a unique hell. It must bail out its financial sector, but the scandal destroys the credibility of UK financial regulation (the FCA).
- **Currency Collapse:** GBP falls to parity with the USD (1:1) for the first time in history. The BoE raises interest rates to 10% to defend the pound, but this crushes the housing market and mortgage holders.
- **Political Collapse:** The government faces a vote of no confidence. There is a run on Prime Ministerial leadership. A "Technocratic Emergency Government" is formed, reminiscent of the Eurozone crisis in Greece, but in London.
**The International Monetary Fund (IMF) Intervention:**
For the first time since 1976, the UK is forced to request an IMF bailout. The conditions are humiliating:
1. The dissolution of the "London loophole" (the ability to register shell companies anonymously).
2. A windfall tax on banking bonuses retroactive to the previous three years.
3. The effective nationalization of three major mortgage lenders.
### Phase 5: The Aftermath (6-18 Months)
**Crypto Winter (Absolute Zero):**
The crypto market, which had been fueled by the "risk-on" appetite created by the artificially printed money, collapses entirely. Regulators (SEC, FCA, ESMA) treat this as a "national security" issue. Legislation is rushed through to classify all crypto exchanges as "gambling platforms" with severe capital restrictions, or to ban unbacked stablecoins entirely.
**The Real Estate Reckoning:**
The "luxury prime" market globally resets.
- A penthouse in Knightsbridge that was valued at £50 million (with a fraudulent appraisal) sells for the actual cashflow value: £5 million.
- Hundreds of thousands of high-net-worth individuals who used these properties as collateral for margin loans are wiped out. They face margin calls they cannot meet, leading to a cascade of bankruptcies among "paper-rich" billionaires.
**Social Unrest:**
Because the fraud involved "overvaluing" assets to print money for crypto speculation rather than productive investment, the public narrative shifts to **"Fraudflation."**
- Pension funds are decimated (as they held the now-worthless securitized debt).
- The government imposes a **"Solidarity Levy"** on all assets over £2 million to pay for the bailout.
- A mass exodus of financial talent from London occurs, not to New York or Singapore (which are also dealing with the fallout), but to Zurich and the Gulf states that managed to distance themselves from the specific scandal.
### Summary of Systemic Change
In the long term, the scenario results in:
1. **The End of "Mark-to-Market" Fraud:** Regulators globally mandate that "cashflow is king." Real estate valuations are no longer allowed to be based on arbitrary appraisals; they must be based on audited rental income.
2. **The Breakup of the Banks:** The UK government forces a separation of commercial banking (deposits) from investment banking (trading), similar to the US Glass-Steagall act post-Great Depression.
3. **Reputation Destruction:** London loses its status as the premier global financial center for offshore wealth. The "Square Mile" survives, but as a regulated, boring hub for green finance and insurance, no longer as the wild west for global kleptocrats and crypto speculators.
The rain over Derry doesn’t fall so much as seep—a cold, vertical persistence that finds every crack in the slate and every flaw in the pointing. I’ve lived in this house all my life, and I know the sound of each leak by heart. The one in the back bedroom drips into a galvanised bucket my mother placed there before the chemo took her. I haven’t moved it. I never will.
I’m sitting in the front room on the first floor—my floor, the one I bought from the estate after Mother died, though “bought” is a generous word for signing a paper that made a quarter of this crumbling flat house mine. The other quarter belongs to my brother, Sean, who is currently in the basement flat, entertaining whatever company his cocaine money can attract at three in the morning. The top two flats—the ones my stepfather Geoffrey owned—have been empty since they took his body down from the banister in Brighton.
The news is on my laptop, but I’ve stopped watching. The headlines scroll like a confession: *“The Cypress Trust: How London’s Square Mile Printed $500 Billion on a Mirage.”* They’re naming names now. Surveyors. Appraisers. The men who signed off on valuations that turned beachfront shacks in the Bahamas into billion-pound collateral. Geoffrey’s name hasn’t appeared yet, but I know it will. He was one of them. The silk-scarf brigade who flew out to Dubai for “asset verification” and came back with a tan and a suitcase full of sins.
They found him hanging from the stairwell of a rented townhouse in Brighton. Silk tie, they said. Expensive one. The police called it suicide, but a man who signs a thousand fraudulent valuations doesn’t tie the knot himself unless the alternative is worse. I’ve seen the letters he left—none for me, none for my mother’s memory, just a scribbled note addressed to the Brighton coroner that said, *“I am sorry for the inconvenience.”*
Sean stumbled up from the basement an hour ago, his eyes the colour of spoiled milk, asking if I’d seen the news. When I told him I had, he laughed—a wet, brittle sound—and said, “Well, the old bastard finally did something useful. Saved us the trouble.” Then he went back down to whatever he’s been cooking on the stove. The smell of acetone drifts up through the floorboards.
---
I remember the day Mother told me she was marrying Geoffrey. I was seventeen, already running with the kind of boys who knew which pubs in the Bogside had back rooms where you didn’t give your real name. She sat me down in this very room, the rain doing its work outside, and said, “He’s a chartered surveyor, Declan. Respectable. He’ll help us keep the house.”
The house. That’s always been the thing. My grandmother—my mother’s mother—bought this building in 1972 with money sent from America by a cousin who’d married a union man in Boston. It was meant to be a fortress: three storeys, two flats per floor, a basement that once held a coal chute. Granda died before I was born, and Granny let it out to Catholic families during the worst of the Troubles, charging just enough to keep the roof on. When she passed, she left it to my mother with a single instruction: *Never sell.*
Sean was already gone by then. He’d moved to London at nineteen, chasing something—money, status, a way out of the smell of damp and the sound of Army helicopters. He told everyone he was working in “property management,” which I later learned meant he was running cocaine for a crowd of public schoolboys who’d discovered that weekend skiing could be a full-time profession. When Mother was diagnosed with cancer, I called him. He said he’d come. He never did.
Granny died two years before Mother. She spent those two years in the back bedroom on the second floor, her mind going slowly, asking for Sean every morning. I told her he was working, that he’d visit soon. She’d nod and go back to her rosary. He never came. He was in Marbella, I found out later, living in a villa that Geoffrey had “valued” at four million pounds, despite the fact that it had no planning permission, no water rights, and a sewage system that emptied into a protected nature reserve.
Geoffrey signed the valuation. Geoffrey also signed for the cocaine that kept Sean’s customers happy, and for the young boys who were delivered to the villa on weekends. I didn’t know about the boys until after Brighton. The police haven’t released the files, but the rumours are already moving through the legal circles—whispered conversations in the Crown Court corridors, sealed affidavits, the kind of evidence that makes a man hang himself with a silk tie.
---
I was a volunteer for the Provisionals in the late nineties, back when a boy from Derry could still believe that a bullet could buy justice. I did my tours, kept my mouth shut, and when the Good Friday Agreement came, I folded my balaclava into a drawer and went to work as a plumber. The war was over, they said. The ceasefire was permanent. But the men who ran the war didn’t disappear; they just changed their business model. Some went into politics. Some went into property. And some, like the men who supplied Sean and Geoffrey, kept the old networks alive for a new kind of trade.
I never formally left. That’s the thing about the IRA—you don’t resign. You just stop showing up. But the men I knew back then still remember me. They see me in the supermarket, or on the walls on Bloody Sunday anniversary marches, and they give me a nod that means: *You’re still one of us, even if you pretend you’re not.*
I’ve been pretending for a long time. But when the news broke about the valuations—about the billions of pounds of fictitious wealth that had been used to gamble on crypto markets and leveraged into oblivion—I stopped pretending. Because the fraud didn’t just happen in London boardrooms. It happened here, in this house, when Geoffrey signed his share over to himself and used it as collateral for loans that bought him the Brighton townhouse, the villa in Marbella, and the silence of every corrupt appraiser who kept their mouth shut for a cut.
The house is still in Geoffrey’s name. Or it was. His death complicates things. Under the law, his half of the property—the top two flats, which he never let to anyone, preferring to keep them empty as a tax dodge—passes to his estate. And his estate is a mess of fraud investigations, confiscation orders, and creditors who want their pound of flesh. The Royal Court in London is already processing the first wave of asset seizures. If they decide that the house was purchased with proceeds of crime, they’ll take it. They’ll take Granny’s house, and I’ll be left with nothing but a quarter-share of a memory.
Sean doesn’t care. He’s too deep in the powder to care about anything except the next line. But I care. I care enough to kill for it.
---
Two nights ago, I walked down to the Fountain estate and had a drink with an old man named Paddy Maguire. Paddy was a quartermaster in the seventies, a man who knew where every Armalite was buried and who still has access to the kind of hardware that doesn’t leave a trace. I didn’t ask him for a gun. Not yet. I asked him for names.
“You want the names of the men who ran the coke through Sean?” he said, pouring whiskey into a stained glass. His flat smelled of liniment and old newspapers. “Or the men who supplied the boys to Geoffrey?”
“Both,” I said.
He looked at me for a long time. Then he wrote down four names on a scrap of paper. Two in Derry. Two in London.
“These are the ones who’ll come for the house,” he said. “The courts will take their time, but these men—they’ll move fast. They know the property’s clean on paper, even if the money that bought it wasn’t. They’ll file claims, forge documents, lean on the administrators. If you want to keep what’s yours, you’ll need to be ready before they are.”
I folded the paper and put it in my pocket. The names felt hot against my thigh.
---
I’ve been watching Sean for three days now. He doesn’t know I’ve been in his flat when he’s out. I found the ledger—a leather-bound notebook hidden behind a loose board in the kitchen, the pages dense with figures and dates. It’s his record of every delivery, every payment, every ounce of cocaine that moved through Geoffrey’s network. There are names in there that match the ones Paddy gave me. There are also names I recognise from the news—executives at the shadow banks, hedge fund managers who used the fraudulent valuations to secure lines of credit. The whole rotten edifice, documented in my brother’s shaky handwriting.
I could hand this to the RUC. I could let the courts take their time, let the legal system grind through the evidence, and hope that somewhere in the process the house is declared untainted and returned to me. But I’ve lived in Derry long enough to know that justice delivered by a foreign court is justice filtered through a sieve of compromise. The RUC—what’s left of it after the Patten reforms—is still a force that spent thirty years treating Catholic property as provisional. They’ll take the ledger, thank me politely, and then lose it in a filing cabinet while the asset managers in London carve up my grandmother’s legacy.
No. If I want to keep the house, I have to make it untouchable. I have to make it clear that anyone who tries to take it will find that the war in this city never really ended. It just went underground.
---
This morning, I went up to the top floor. The flat that Geoffrey claimed as his own is still furnished with the things he brought from London: a leather chesterfield, a glass coffee table, a wall of books he never read. There’s a safe built into the bedroom wardrobe, the kind with a digital keypad. I’ve tried a dozen combinations—Mother’s birthday, Granny’s, even the date of the Good Friday Agreement—but none of them work.
Sean says he doesn’t know the code. He’s lying. I saw him coming out of this flat three weeks ago, before Geoffrey died, his pupils like pinpricks and a bulge under his jacket that wasn’t there when he went in. Whatever’s in the safe, it’s the key to everything. The original valuations. The names of the men who paid Geoffrey. The photographs that made the Brighton police use words like “inconvenience” in their press statements.
I’m sitting on Geoffrey’s leather sofa now, watching the rain streak the windows. The city below is grey and silent, the kind of silence that used to precede a car bomb. In the distance, I can hear the Foyle rushing toward Lough Foyle, swollen with the winter rains. This house has stood for over a hundred years. It survived the Partition, the Troubles, the boom and bust of the Celtic Tiger. It will survive this, if I have to burn every claim against it to ash.
The names on Paddy’s paper are in my pocket. The first is a Derry solicitor named McCafferty, a man who handled Geoffrey’s property transactions and who, according to Paddy, has been filing caveats with the Probate Office to claim the house for a shell company registered in the Isle of Man. The second is a former UVF man turned “security consultant” who runs a private firm in Belfast that specialises in “asset recovery.” The two in London are higher up the chain—men who sat on the boards of the shadow banks, who signed off on the fraudulent credit lines, and who now need to make sure that the paper trail ends before it reaches them.
I’ve made a plan. Not a detailed one—those are for soldiers who expect to survive. I’ve made a list, and I’ve made a promise. McCafferty first. He’s local, vulnerable, and his death will send a message that the old rules still apply in this city. Then the Belfast man, if he doesn’t get the message. The London men are harder, but Paddy has contacts in the Irish diaspora there, men who still remember that a favour owed is a debt unpaid.
I’ll need a gun. I know where to get one. I know how to use it.
---
But this afternoon, something changes.
I’m back in my flat, cleaning the pipes under the kitchen sink—the old lead ones that Granny never replaced—when the doorbell rings. I don’t use the doorbell. No one in this house uses the doorbell. We knock, three short raps, the way we’ve done since I was a child.
I go to the window and look down. Two men in dark suits are standing on the step, rain spattering off their umbrellas. They’re not RUC—no high-vis vests, no sidearms. They look like civil servants, the kind who carry briefcases and speak in paragraphs.
I go down. Sean is already at the door, his face pale, his hands shaking. He’s trying to look casual, leaning against the frame with a feigned ease that fools no one.
“Declan Kelly?” one of the men says when I appear. He has an English accent, polished, the kind that’s learned rather than born.
“That’s me.”
He hands me an envelope. “You’ve been served. It’s a copy of the order from the Royal Court of Justice regarding the estate of Geoffrey Richard Heron, deceased.”
I open it. The legal language is thick, the paragraphs dense with citations and precedents. But the gist is simple: the court has reviewed the evidence of fraud, has accepted the petition of the Crown’s Proceeds of Crime division, and has ruled that Geoffrey’s half-share in this property was acquired through criminal conduct. The share is therefore forfeit to the Crown.
My hand tightens on the paper. Sean makes a sound like a wounded animal.
“However,” the man continues, “the court has also considered the separate petition filed by your solicitor, Mr. Brendan O’Kane, regarding the provenance of the property prior to Mr. Heron’s involvement.”
I stare at him. I didn’t file any petition. I can’t afford a solicitor.
“The court finds,” he says, reading from a document in his own hand, “that the property at 17–19 Fahan Street, Derry, was acquired by the late Bridget Kelly in 1972 with funds unconnected to the subsequent criminal activities of Geoffrey Heron. The court further finds that the half-share held by Mr. Heron was transferred to him by the late Margaret Kelly (née Doherty) under duress, as evidenced by medical records showing her diminished mental capacity at the time of transfer. Accordingly, the half-share is ordered to be restored to the estate of Margaret Kelly, to be distributed equally between her surviving sons, Declan Kelly and Sean Kelly.”
I read the paragraph three times. The rain drips from the eaves, a steady percussion on the step.
“What are you saying?” Sean’s voice is high, cracked. “We get the house?”
“You get the house,” the man says. “Or rather, your brother gets his quarter, and you get your quarter, and the Crown gets nothing from this property. There are other assets—the Brighton property, the Marbella villa—that are subject to confiscation. But this house, the court has ruled, belongs to the Kelly family.”
He turns to leave, then pauses. “One more thing. The court also received an anonymous submission—a ledger, I believe—that has proven instrumental in identifying the other individuals involved in the valuation fraud. The Crown extends its thanks to the citizen who provided it.”
He nods once, then walks back to his car. The door closes with a soft, final click.
---
I stand in the hallway for a long time. Sean is leaning against the wall, breathing fast, his eyes darting between the envelope in my hand and the door. He’s trying to process it, trying to find the angle, the way he always does.
“Anonymous submission,” he whispers. “That ledger. You had it. You fucking gave it to them.”
I look at him. The brother I grew up with, the boy who taught me to fish in the Foyle, who held my hand when the Army stopped us on the way to school. The man who left Granny to die alone, who told everyone he was by Mother’s bedside when he was really in Marbella snorting cocaine off a glass table in a villa built on fraud. The man who sat in this house, in the basement flat, while the kettle boiled and the rain fell, and never once asked if I was okay.
“I gave it to them this morning,” I say. “Before they came.”
His face twists. “You could have told me. You could have—”
“I could have killed you,” I say. The words come out flat, without heat. “That was the other plan. I had your name on the list, Sean. Right after McCafferty. Right after the men who supplied you.”
He goes very still. The colour drains from his face, leaving it the colour of the winter sky.
“You’re my brother,” he says.
“I know.”
I walk past him, up the stairs to my flat. I open the drawer where I keep the tools of my trade—the wrenches, the pipe cutters, the flux and solder. Underneath them is a black plastic bag. I take it out and unroll it on the kitchen table. Inside is a Glock 17, nine millimetre, no serial number. Paddy Maguire left it in the cistern of his toilet three nights ago, and I’ve been carrying it in my coat ever since.
I pick it up. It’s cold, heavier than I remember. I check the magazine, work the slide, feel the familiar mechanics settle into my hands like an old habit.
Then I walk back downstairs. Sean is still in the hallway, exactly where I left him, his back against the wall, his hands at his sides.
“The house is ours,” I say. “Half yours, half mine. But you’re going to sign your half over to me.”
His eyes widen. “What? No. No, Declan, you can’t—”
“You’re going to sign it over,” I say, “and you’re going to leave Derry. Tonight. You’ll go to whatever rehab clinic will take you, and you’ll get clean. If you do that, I won’t give this ledger to the RUC. I won’t tell them about the deliveries, the payments, the men you’ve been working for. You’ll still be a free man, more or less.”
“And if I don’t?”
I raise the Glock. Not pointing it at him—just holding it where he can see it, where he can remember that I know how to use it.
“Then I’ll put your name back on the list.”
He looks at the gun. He looks at my face. He’s looking for the brother he abandoned, the soft-hearted plumber who cried at Mother’s funeral and kept Granny’s rosary in his pocket. He doesn’t find him.
“You’re IRA,” he whispers. “You never left.”
I don’t answer. I don’t need to.
---
He signs the papers at the kitchen table, his hand shaking so badly that the pen scratches holes in the paper. I have a solicitor—a different one, one Paddy recommended—who comes to the house at eight o’clock that evening, rain-soaked and businesslike, and witnesses the transfer. Sean doesn’t speak during the signing. He doesn’t look at me. When it’s done, he goes down to the basement flat and packs a bag.
I stand at the front door and watch him walk out into the rain. He doesn’t look back. He walks down Fahan Street toward the city centre, his shoulders hunched against the wet, and disappears into the grey.
The solicitor hands me the deed. “The house is yours,” he says. “Free and clear. The court’s ruling was unanimous, by the way. The Royal Court in London, the Crown’s lawyers, even the RUC’s financial unit—they all agreed. They wanted the big fish. They didn’t want a family home in Derry. Especially not one that belongs to a man with your... connections.”
I fold the deed and put it in my pocket. “What connections?”
He smiles, a thin, knowing expression. “The ones that made them decide it was better to give you the house than to fight you for it. Paddy Maguire didn’t just give you a gun, Declan. He made a few phone calls. Told some people that if the Crown tried to take this house, there would be trouble. Not the old kind—no bombs, no bullets. Just... trouble. The kind that makes a judge think twice about signing a confiscation order.”
I should feel angry. Used. But all I feel is the weight of the deed in my pocket, the solid presence of the walls around me, the sound of the rain on the roof that has sheltered four generations of my family.
“They decided in my favour,” I say.
“They did. The RUC’s report recommended no further action against you or the property. The Royal Court issued the ruling this morning. It’s over.”
---
After he leaves, I go up to the top floor. I open Geoffrey’s safe with the code I found in Sean’s ledger—his birthday, the one he always claimed was a secret—and I take out the contents. Photographs, contracts, sworn affidavits, a USB drive labelled *BAHAMAS VALUATIONS*. I burn them in the back garden, one by one, watching the flames curl the edges of the lies that built my stepfather’s world.
The rain puts out the fire before I’m finished, but that’s all right. The truth is ash now, scattered in the wind.
I go back inside and sit in my flat, in the room where Mother told me she was marrying a chartered surveyor from Brighton, in the house that Granny bought with American money to keep her family safe. The house is mine now. All of it.
The news on my laptop has moved on to the next scandal, the next collapse, the next round of arrests. The men whose names were on Paddy’s paper are being picked up by the Metropolitan Police, extradited, questioned. The RUC has a file on my brother that they’ll keep in a drawer somewhere, just in case. The Royal Court has ruled, and the Crown has accepted, and the war—the old war, the new war, the war over property and memory and the bones of the dead—has found a temporary peace.
I don’t know if Sean will get clean. I don’t know if he’ll come back. I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to sit in this room without hearing the drip of the leak in the back bedroom or the echo of my mother’s voice saying, *Never sell.*
But I know this: the house is mine. And I will defend it with whatever I have to—the law, the gun, the network of men who still remember that a favour owed is a debt unpaid. The dystopia I live in isn’t the one the news talks about, the collapse of markets and the fall of empires. It’s this: a man sitting alone in a house full of ghosts, holding a deed in one hand and a gun in the other, waiting to see which one he’ll need first.
The rain keeps falling. The bucket in the back bedroom fills. And I sit in the dark, listening, ready.
This man creates the strategy against Russia attacking and that picture is how he sees the Battlefield.
Out there positions are created in clusters. Those are different weapon systems that are coordinated. The War will be exactly like this here.
In military strategy terms speaking are the Germans not the sharpest tool in the shed. On a large scale this form of war against an about equal enemy is more like throwing dices by game changing weapons being in use in an since the antique used field match scenario.
Castles with warehouses turned the men against men obsolete. That started with Masada, when in about 72AD Roman legions sieged a natural castle being a small wall, but build on a steep mountain with no easy access. The Roman's needed incredible efforts to take that castle to then murder everyone.
Since than, Knights and Lords where looking for natural hill tops along trade routes to build markets and towns in every region Roman like mind sets were expected.
Today, by long range Artillery, Airplanes, Rockets and modern explosives, Bunkers are the new Castles and hiding turned again the ultimate strategy.
This is also how Germans lost their wars of which I claim it was a few more than our books teach us. Moscow was only empty of a certain kind of human and France was never beaten by refusing to group up on a field at least for long, no matter what, no matter the caused anger and hate. You can aim longer and better shooting someone from behind from a covered position predicting his movements in a known area.
Russia won't step into a war like they expect most likely. From a Russian perspective they dug in into Ukrainian soil at exactly those areas they claimed to be Russian by Russian population creating an extremely long frontline, but as a wide Kill Zone stretch. They by now became masters of regional surveillance and coordinating long supply lines for tiny units. This is a logic further development of supplying and overlooking a set of clusters placed into a Shire like size system of fields, villages and towns.
This also can be abstracted to Shadowrun like or Clear and Present Danger movie like war fare styles.
There is a great chance that Russia and Putin in his very clear dedicated Love for Russia will again decide to "spare Russian blood" retreating into the winter while Western history books declare 27 million dead Russians to the result of Sowjet strategies and no war crimes by a Death factory building Nation.
The Sowjets with Lenin, that took over from the Zars having had lost power to Rasputin, had invested massively into farming and early industrial products such as loom factories and sewing workshops. They thought also that being a PoW was not that bad for a man not trained in fighting and who would mass murder defenseless humans that surrendered.
So we are all on one page what happened and why mass pardons needed some ink...
This time the Russian Winter will be different. In core regions it will be a time with only darkness and not even shadows. Pure, cold, darkness.
So, that thing about soap and the Germans.
That needs a Kärcher High Preassure peeling, INMHO. What you think? Is that not itchy...
No one minds FOX or CNN for their guest, just saying. This is Europe, you assholes.
#igotstuck #cyberpunkcoltoure
PS: Do you know sterotypes of Slawic Women in Germany? They all dress up like supermodels for just groceries?
That's side effects: Live from Ukraine. A German.
Scratch what itches, Dude!
#MODInc
So, fuel got more expensive and they must have wrecked too many cars.
So, looking at the best and at the best.
The War on Attiude
The Kingdome of Hell
Here we Fight
#cyberpunkcoltoure
PS: They still try. Imagine the bullshit trashtalk coming ahead over us. #provos #IRAmovement #gfyBKA
This man is an AI Start-Up founder and CEO and he has a hard time. When he was close to tears I remembered an IT specific. Doc Google helped me find it:
So, try to imagine what jokes my sick mind comes up with when you hear that this guy is getting into Personal Branding on a multi million Dollar level ...
...building an AI agent that does that branding. His Job is not the brand, the AI agent.
Tim you motherfucking superhero top model!
#cyberpunkcoltoure
That is ambitious. Creating a 30km buffer zone into the Lebanon is a wild military goal. That picture there is about 10 to 15 km from a random hill away from the Bar-David Museum of Art and Judaica, another random place, but on the other side of the Good Fence.
So, his client, she says that she has to leave at 1700 to bring the kids to their tennis coach. She than sits there with her laptop and works a bit to then bring them home and cook.
He says, idiot, for the 800 bugs per hour she can afford a driver.
Yeah. And a webcam to watch them online, plus a desktop UV light in her office. Seriously, what is wrong with you???
Is fear next and who will it be after that dwarf choleric hate will conquer me the world and now the keyboard erotic wanna be pimp here...
#cyberpunkcoltoure #thedarkside
Snake Eye. The water pot test?
So two fighters, one pot of water each. The Apprentice has to take the Masters bowl without spilling his water. He fails three times. Before the last and fourth he recalls that letting the ego go and selflessness lead to harmony. So, he walks over and this times asks kindly if he may exchange his bowl with the master one.
Or, you take a seat, ask for milk and if there was a time limit and when she laughs are just dam quick. They all cover their teeth with the leading hand and therefore place down ...
Anyway. Even so she knew Macao she said.
That is not Cocaine. A woman going against a potential downsyndrome-autist, but for sure ex-husband and actor .... needs a bullet proof vest on a demonstration stage.
Dude. Glass wall next?
A rape trial triggers sniper prevention gear. I am telling you Germans, your are nuts, not me. I might loos it on a High School joke out there...
To keep a long story short, we don't know. He tells that East Africa is the cradle of mankind, confirms that ruling fire separates us from animals and that collecting from open wild fires to make the fire servant was the first step into Energy use.
Who agrees that that wording tells a lot about German Philosophy Students and their Masters, please?
There is another School present in Europe. Sokrates and Aristoteles as two examples. We do consider walking upright the difference next to being able to reason. We observe our surrounding and try to understand.
Being sober and even off gear from a Doctor incredibly helps to remain in that school of thought, beside soap.
The two miss out that beside large animals men had plenty of smaller animals to hunt for a barbecue party.
So, what do you consider more likely?
A group of Homo What_Ever takes a burning stick from a wildfire and keeps it burning through stick over stick and some hey.
Someone has a Newton moment and figures that a specific stone makes a spark or that using both hands makes two sticks create heat and finally fire to from there develop a bow. A kid playing with a stick that is very straight figures he can throw it far and better than a stone at a rabbits head?
... ... ... ?
Is that going on for 10 thousands of years here ????
Boah, Digga!!!
#cyberpunkcoltoure
Imagine my ansisters sitting on a tree staring at a group of other monkeys that beat up each other because one dropped the glim stick!
Incorporated by DeepSeek
The rain over the Puyallup Barrens wasn’t rain. It was a caustic, chemical drizzle that melted paint and made the flesh itch. Elias stood under the corrugated awning of a condemned soy-burger joint, the acrid smell of ozone and rotting seaweed thick in his throat. He was a shadow on a wall of shadows, waiting.
His cybernetic eye, a second-hand Renraku model, flickered with a grainy heads-up display. Time, temperature, the ballistic profile of the Ares Predator digging into his hip. He ignored it all, focusing on the memory of a gold-plated credstick being slid across a polished desk.
*This is most likely only about the users, not about the side effects.*
That’s what he’d told himself, once. A decade ago, when he was a Lone Star detective with a clean record and a wife who still looked at him with something other than weary disappointment. He’d taken the first bribe from a mid-level Mitsuhama exec to look the other way on a shipment of BTL chips. *Only about the users*, he’d rationalized. *Not my problem.*
Then he’d seen the “side effects” in a morgue drawer. A girl, maybe fourteen, her sim-rig burned into her skull, her body a canvas of track marks and self-inflicted wounds because the chips made her believe she was being eaten by bugs. But by then, he was already in too deep. He’d taken another credstick. Then a car. Then he’d met the Filthy Swiss Banker.
He could still see the man’s sneer, a pale, wet thing framed by an immaculate three-piece suit. The man from *The Wolf of Wall Street* holos—the one who handled the offshore accounts for the cartels, the Yakuza, anyone with enough bodies to stack as collateral. Elias had watched him sign off on a transfer that would have paid for a hospital wing, all while sipping a glass of water so pure it cost more than the ‘borg’s monthly rent. *You do the math*, the Banker had said, tapping the credstick. *Your pension, or your life.*
Elias had chosen. He’d become their cleaner, their man on the inside. A corrupt cop. Stupid, he knew. But being connected to corrupt *organized* cops—a network that stretched from Lone Star to Knight Errant, a spider’s web of favors and fear—that was a different kind of stupid. That was the kind of stupid that got you new friends. Friends from the hardcore spots of The War on Drugs.
That’s where Miguel came in.
A sleek, black Mercury Comet with a humming electric engine glided to a stop at the curb. The window rolled down with a hydraulic hiss. Behind the wheel was a ghost from Elias’s past in the DEA joint task force. Miguel’s face was a mask of Aztechnology-sponsored plastic surgery, smooth and expressionless, but his eyes were the same—black, pitiless voids that had stared out over a hundred dead bodies in the Sonoran desert.
“You’re late,” Elias said, not moving from the awning.
“Had to make a detour,” Miguel said, his voice a low, flat monotone. “One of our friends from SAMCRO wanted to talk. He’s got a problem with a shipment.”
“The bikers?” Elias snorted, finally stepping into the chemical rain. “They’re a loose end. A loud, tattooed, loose end.”
“They’re a distribution network,” Miguel corrected, his gaze unwavering. “And their… *presidente* is connected. He has a gavel and a vote. We need their routes until the new pipeline from Bogotá is secure.” He paused, letting the silence hang. “The Villagers?”
Elias felt a cold knot tighten in his gut. “What about them?”
“They’re asking questions. The farmers in the valley, the ones whose land we… *repurposed* for the new airstrip. They went to a community meeting. A woman. She used to be a mage for Aztlan, before she saw what was really in the product. She’s starting to connect dots. Our dots.”
The Villagers. The ones the state was founded to protect. Or at least, that was the lie they sold. The ones who couldn’t be honest with the institutions that had long since been hollowed out by the very corruption men like Elias and Miguel fed. They were the ones who paid the real price. The side effects.
Elias got in the car. The leather seat was cold. “So what’s the play?”
“You’re going to have a very bad experience,” Miguel said, pulling the Comet away from the curb. “You’re going to visit your old friends in SAMCRO. Tell them their cut is being reduced until they find out who’s talking to the Villagers. Make them scared. Make them stupid.”
“And if they get violent?”
Miguel’s lips twitched into something that wasn’t a smile. “Then we introduce them to the new friends. The ones from Sicario. The ones who don’t care about gavels or charters. They just care about making a point.”
---
The SAMCRO clubhouse was a fortified compound in the Redmond Barrens, a monument to faded glory and cheap beer. The roar of a tricked-out Harley with a ghost-rocket booster cut through the hiss of the rain as Elias walked up to the gate. A giant with a bushy beard and a cybernetic arm barred his way, a Mossberg CMDT shotgun cradled in his organic arm.
“You got business, cop?” the giant—Chibs, Elias’s memory supplied—growled.
“I’m here to see the President,” Elias said, flashing a credstick. “Business.”
Inside, the air was thick with synth-ale and testosterone. A Tri-Zone trideo played a classic rock simsense, the music a low, throbbing pulse. At the head of a long table, a man with a SAMCRO tattoo on his neck and the cold, calculating eyes of a predator leaned back in his chair. Clay Morrow. The President.
“Elias,” Clay said, his voice a gravelly rumble. “Haven’t seen you since the Burned Acres job. That went sideways.”
“This is a new direction,” Elias said, taking a seat opposite him. He didn’t sit. He leaned, putting his hands on the table. “The pipeline from the south. The cut’s changing.”
The room went silent. A man with a VP patch—Jax Teller, younger, with a dangerous idealism still flickering behind his eyes—stood up. “The hell it is. We run the routes. We take the risks. Our brothers have died for those roads.”
“And now you’ll die for a smaller percentage,” Elias said, his voice flat. “There’s a leak. Someone’s talking to the locals in the valley. The Villagers. You’ve got twenty-four hours to find it, plug it, and show us you’re still reliable. Or my new friends—the ones who taught the *Narcos* how to make a point—they’re going to come and have a chat. And they don’t speak ‘outlaw biker.’”
Jax’s hand went to the knife on his belt. Clay’s hand shot out, stopping him. The President’s eyes were fixed on Elias, reading him. “This is a shakedown. You’re putting us in the middle to flush out some campesinos for your cartel buddies.”
“I’m giving you a chance,” Elias said, turning to leave. “Find the leak. Or be the lesson.”
---
Twenty-three hours later, Elias stood in the mud of the valley, the chemical rain soaking through his coat. The airstrip was a scar of fresh asphalt cut into the terraced hillsides where coffee and coca once grew in equal measure. The Villagers—a dozen families—huddled in the ruins of their meeting hall, their clothes plastered to them, their faces a mask of defiance and terror.
Miguel was there, along with three men who wore no insignia, whose cyberware was sleek and military-grade. Sicario. They moved with the economy of true predators. In the center of the circle, held by the giant, Chibs, was the source of the leak. Not a mage. A boy. Maybe sixteen. A farmer’s son who’d seen the men with the masks and the guns bulldoze his father’s land. He’d gone to the meeting. He’d talked.
The SAMCRO members were there too, Clay’s face a stone mask, Jax’s a portrait of barely contained fury. They’d found the boy. They’d brought him, thinking it would buy them back in. They didn’t understand the math yet.
“This him?” Miguel asked, not looking at the boy.
“He’s the one,” Clay said.
Miguel nodded to Elias. “Do it.”
Elias felt the weight of every credstick he’d ever taken, every blind eye he’d turned, every life he’d let the system grind down. He looked at the boy, at the terrified Villagers behind him, at the bikers who thought they were predators but were just being herded, and at the Sicario, who were the true wolves.
He thought of the Filthy Swiss Banker, safe in his arcology, counting his gold. He thought of the state, founded on dreams that had curdled into this. And he thought of his own house, the one he hadn’t left in three days, the walls closing in.
He drew his Predator.
The sound of the shot was swallowed by the rain.
The boy collapsed, a hole appearing in his forehead. Elias didn’t see the body hit the mud. He was already walking toward the Comet. Miguel fell in step beside him.
“Good,” Miguel said. “The bikers are reminded of their place. The villagers know the cost. The pipeline stays open.”
Elias got in the car. He didn’t answer. He just stared out the window as the grey, poisoned landscape slid by. He was a corrupt cop. He’d made friends with monsters. He’d betrayed the last honest people left. And he knew, with a certainty that settled into his bones like the cold, that he was the worst kind of stupid.
Because the Villagers had been watching. They had seen his face. And one of them, a woman who used to be a mage for Aztlan, had a very long memory and a very simple magic. The magic of a name on a curse.
He finally made it home. The locks on his apartment door were biometric, keypad, and old-fashioned steel. He engaged them all. He walked to his window, which looked out over a courtyard of grey concrete and dead trees. He stood there, the rain streaking the glass.
He hadn’t left his house. He wasn’t sure he ever would again. Because outside, the rain wasn’t just rain. It was the side effects. And they were coming for him.
*Enjoy. I am still did not leave house, Dude.*
He looked at his reflection in the dark glass. A ghost. A tool. A man who’d done the math and found himself on the losing side of an equation written in blood. He thought about the boy. About the SAMCRO bikers who’d sold him out to save themselves. About Miguel, a man who’d started fighting the war on drugs and had ended up becoming the very thing he’d hunted.
*It is one thing to be a Rocker and steal a Brick. Being a corrupt Cop is stupid.*
He was the stupidest of them all.
A soft chime came from his commlink. A message, no sender ID. He opened it. A single line of text.
*“The Villagers send their regards.”*
His cyber-eye flickered, and for a moment, he saw the reflection in the window change. He saw the girl from the morgue. He saw the farmer, his land a ruin. He saw the boy, the hole in his forehead weeping in the chemical rain. And behind them, he saw the Filthy Swiss Banker, laughing, counting his cred, eternally untouchable.
Elias turned from the window. The room was dark. The locks were secure. He was alone.
But he knew he wasn’t.
The math was done. The story was over. All that was left was the hardcore noir shadow of a man who’d learned too late that in this world, you don’t ride the motorcycle. You don’t make the deal. You don’t fight the war.
You just become the collateral.
And you never, ever leave the house.
## Chapter 17: The Apple and the Arrow
The message arrived at 04:17:03, timestamped to a server farm in Zurich that no longer existed except on paper. The text was simple, the kind of thing you’d scroll past in a public feed:
*Enjoy. I am still did not leave house, Dude.*
Elias had read it three times before his heart caught up to his brain. It wasn’t a taunt. It wasn’t a threat. It was a *signal*.
He’d spent the last six months thinking he was the spider. Then thinking he was the fly. Now, staring at the words, he realized he’d never even been in the room. The web belonged to someone else entirely.
---
The Villagers had not given into fear.
That was the part the Banker never understood. When you take a man’s land, his water, his future, you think you’ve taken everything. You think the fear will keep him in the mud. But the Villagers—the farmers, the *campesinos*, the squatters in the poisoned valleys—they had something the cartels and the corps and the corrupt cops had forgotten existed.
They had *memory*.
They remembered William Tell. Not the trideo version with the swelling orchestra and the handsome lead. The real one. The one who walked through the marketplace in Altdorf, past the Habsburg bailiff’s hat on a pole, and *kept walking*. The one who was forced to shoot an apple off his son’s head not because the tyrant was merciful, but because the tyrant wanted to break him. And the one who, when the crossbow was in his hands, didn’t aim at the apple.
He aimed at the tyrant.
The second shot was the one that mattered.
---
Maria Esperanza had been the mage who walked away from Aztechnology’s magical containment division. She’d seen what was in the product—the awakened BTL formulas that rewired not just the mind but the *aura*, leaving a user spiritually lobotomized, easy to control. The drugged were not just addicts. They were a standing army of hollowed-out vessels, their wills replaced with a single command: *consume*.
She’d watched Elias take the boy’s life in the mud. She’d memorized his face, not for revenge, but for *intelligence*. Because she knew, in that moment, that the corruption wasn’t a flaw in the system. It *was* the system. And the only way to beat a system that ran on fear was to stop being afraid.
So she had gone back to the valley. And she had started talking.
Not about rebellion. About *survival*. About the old ways. About the crossbows that hung above fireplaces, the hunting rifles registered to grandfathers long dead, the compound bows used to keep feral ghouls off the terraces. She talked about the Knights—the ones who’d worn the uniform once, before the uniform became a lie. Veterans of the War on Drugs who’d come home to find their own families being harvested by the same cartels they’d fought. Sober. Clear-eyed. Ready to remember who they’d sworn to protect.
The Knights were seventy-three strong. Mostly ex-military, a handful of Lone Star washouts who’d drawn the line at children, two Shadowrunners who worked for principle instead of nuyen, and one old man who’d kept his service pistol and his Aztech battle-mage certification under a floorboard for twenty years, waiting for a reason.
They found their reason on a Tuesday.
---
The attack came at dawn, which was not a time the drugged understood. The cartel’s sicarios were nocturnal creatures, comfortable with the dark, helpless in the grey light of a Puyallup morning. The bikers were still sleeping off synth-ale and combat stims. The corrupt cops were counting their payouts, safe in the knowledge that the system would always protect them.
The Villagers came down from the hills with crossbows and compound bows, with homemade silencers on bolt-action rifles, with the silence of people who knew every tree, every rock, every furrow of the poisoned earth.
They moved in three columns. The first, led by Maria, hit the airstrip where the new pipeline from Bogotá touched down. The sicarios guarding the perimeter were awake—barely. They had drones, auto-turrets, mil-spec cyberware. They did not have the one thing that mattered: a reason to be there. The Villagers had a reason. They had a hundred reasons, each one a name, a face, a child buried too young.
The crossbows fired first. Silent. Untraceable. The first wave of sicarios died with bolts through their throats before their alarms could trigger. Maria walked through the facility, her hands crackling with the kind of magic Aztechnology had taught her to use on behalf of the state, now turned against the state’s true masters. She unspooled spirits of earth and air, sent them into the comm arrays, the drone control hubs, the encrypted data vaults. The airstrip went dark.
The second column, the Knights, hit the SAMCRO clubhouse. They didn’t come with a gavel or a vote. They came with flashbangs and the kind of overwhelming force that makes outlaw bikers remember they’re just men in leather. Clay Morrow was the first to see the breach, the first to reach for his piece, the first to realize the men storming his fortress weren’t rival gangs or corporate goons.
They were his neighbors.
The ones whose daughters he’d let be harvested. The ones whose land he’d helped pave over. The ones he’d dismissed as *Villagers*—a word that meant *less than*.
Jax Teller had a choice. He made it. He always had been the one with the dangerous idealism, the one who saw the rot and wanted to burn it clean. When the Knights breached his father’s clubhouse, he threw down his weapon and told his men to do the same. “We were the side effects,” he said later, in a statement that would become part of the trial. “We just didn’t know it until the arrow was already in the air.”
The third column—the smallest, the quietest—went for the Filthy Swiss Banker.
---
He was not in his arcology. He was too clever for that, too insulated. He had a bolthole in the Orkish Underground, a subbasement converted into a panic room with enough cred to buy a small nation and enough firepower to hold off a small army. He sat in his three-piece suit, sipping his purified water, watching the feeds from the airstrip and the clubhouse crumble into chaos.
He was already on a secure line to Zurich, arranging his exit, when the door to his panic room slid open.
It should not have been possible. The door was rated for military-grade breaching charges. The lock was a custom biotech seal keyed to his unique genetic signature. The men standing in the doorway were not wearing powered armor. They were not carrying breaching tools.
They were carrying crossbows. Old ones. Wood and steel and synthetic string, the kind you bought at a sporting goods store for hunting deer, not men.
The man at the front was the old battle-mage, the one who’d kept his certification under the floorboard. He had spent twenty years learning how to unpick magical locks, how to find the cracks in corp security that the corps themselves forgot existed because they were too small, too *human*. The Banker’s door had a genetic seal. It also had a latch. And the latch, the old man knew, was connected to a simple mechanical linkage that could be reversed if you knew where to press and had a spirit of earth to whisper the geometry to you.
“You,” the Banker breathed. “You’re just a—”
“A Villager,” the old man said. “Yes.”
He raised the crossbow. The Banker’s hand darted under his desk, reaching for a panic button, a weapon, something. The bolt took him in the shoulder, not the chest. Deliberate.
“You think you can kill me?” the Banker hissed, blood soaking his suit. “I’m a Swiss national. I have diplomatic immunity. I have accounts in seventeen jurisdictions. You touch me, and they will burn this valley to the ground.”
The old man lowered the crossbow. He smiled. It was not a kind smile.
“We’re not going to kill you,” he said. “We’re going to do something much worse. We’re going to show the world what you are.”
He held up a data chip. On it was everything Maria’s spirits had pulled from the airstrip servers. Accounts, transfers, names. The entire architecture of corruption that had turned the War on Drugs into a permanent occupation, a machine for turning fear into nuyen. The Banker’s face went white.
“Enjoy,” the old man said, quoting a message that had been sent to seventy-three Knights, a hundred Villagers, and one corrupt cop who had chosen the wrong side but the right moment. “I am still did not leave house, Dude.”
---
Elias heard the explosions from his apartment. Heard the sirens that followed, but not the kind he expected. Not the wail of Lone Star responding to a cartel raid. The *other* kind. The kind that meant the system was finally, belatedly, trying to catch up.
He watched the trideo feeds with a numbness that slowly, impossibly, began to thaw. The airstrip in flames. The clubhouse in Knight hands. The Banker, in handcuffs, being led past a crowd of Villagers who did not throw stones, did not spit, did not cheer. They just *watched*. They had done what they came to do.
His commlink chimed again. A second message, same unknown sender.
*The apple is on the ground. You can come out now.*
He stood at the window for a long time. The chemical rain had stopped. For the first time in weeks, the sky over Puyallup was a bruised, uncertain grey, but it was *sky*. He could see the terraces in the distance, the ones where the Villagers had grown their coca and their coffee, now being retaken, furrow by furrow.
He thought of the boy he’d killed. He thought of the girl in the morgue. He thought of his wife, who had left him three years ago, taking with her the last clean thing in his life.
He walked to his door. His hand rested on the biometric lock. He could stay. He could become another ghost in the Barrens, another cautionary tale, another footnote in the long, ugly history of the War on Drugs.
Or he could step outside.
He punched in the code. The lock clicked open. The door swung inward, and the air that hit his face was wet and cold and smelled of ozone and wet earth and, faintly, of coffee blossoms.
He took a step. Then another. And another.
He walked down the stairs, out the broken gate, into the courtyard of grey concrete and dead trees. Except the trees weren’t all dead. There, in the corner, a thin shoot of green had pushed up through the cracked pavement. A weed, probably. Or something more.
He heard footsteps. Maria Esperanza stood at the courtyard’s edge, her hands wrapped in bandages, her face tired but whole. Behind her, three Knights in civilian clothes, rifles slung across their backs, watching the perimeter.
“You came out,” she said.
“You sent the message,” he said. “The first one. ‘Enjoy. I am still did not leave house, Dude.’ You wanted me to know you were watching.”
“I wanted you to know we were *here*,” she said. “The house wasn’t your prison. It was your sanctuary. We needed you alive. We needed you to see.”
“See what?”
“That the math changes,” she said. “When the Villagers decide to stop being victims and start being citizens. When the Knights remember their oath. When a corrupt cop opens his door.”
She held out her hand. “We have work to do. The Banker talked. The network is bigger than we thought. But we have names now. We have accounts. We have a chance.”
Elias looked at her hand. He thought of every credstick he’d ever taken. Every blind eye. Every lie he’d told himself. He thought of the boy in the mud, and he knew that nothing would ever wash that clean.
But he also thought of the crossbow bolts, silent in the dawn. Of the old mage who’d kept his honor under a floorboard. Of Jax Teller, throwing down his weapon. Of the Villagers, who had not given into fear, and who had taught him that the only thing more powerful than fear was the refusal to let it win.
He took her hand.
The rain began to fall again, but it was different now. Cleaner. The chem-clouds over the Barrens were breaking up, dissipating in the face of an atmospheric scrubber that had mysteriously been reactivated three days ago—one of the first things the Knights had done, using codes Maria had extracted from Aztechnology’s own servers.
He walked with her toward the terraces, where the Villagers were already at work, rebuilding what had been taken. It would take years. Decades, maybe. Some wounds never fully healed. Some debts could never be repaid.
But for the first time in a very long time, Elias felt something other than the cold weight of his own corruption.
He felt the ground under his feet. Solid. Real. Waiting to be replanted.
*Enjoy*, the message had said. And for the first time, he thought maybe—just maybe—he could learn how.
---
The apple fell. The arrow flew. The tyrant stumbled.
And the man who had not left his house stepped outside to find the world still there, still broken, still worth the fight.
It was a happy ending, in the way that endings are ever happy.
And it was sad, in the way that any story with so many graves will always be sad.
But it was *their* ending.
The Villagers, the Knights, and one corrupt cop who finally learned that the only math that matters is the kind that adds up to a future.
*Fin.*
## Chapter 18: The Clearing
The withdrawal hit him in waves.
The first wave was the eyes. His left eye—the one he’d thought was a second-hand Renraku cybernetic model with the grainy heads-up display—was just his eye. It always had been. The flickering HUD, the ballistic profiles, the time-temperature overlay: none of it had ever existed. What he’d been seeing was the shimmer of a BTL chip slowly frying his optic nerve, feeding him a world that wasn’t there.
He was in a bed. A real bed. White sheets, a window with wooden shutters, a view of mountains. The mattress smelled of lavender, not synth-leather and stale soy-beer. His hands were bandaged, but not because of gunfights or crossbow bolts. The bandages were from picking at his own skin, chasing the ghosts of insects that had never been there.
The second wave was the sound. No gunfire. No scream of rocket-boosted Harleys. Just cowbells. Distant, rhythmic, absurdly peaceful. A church bell tolled the hour. It was not the wail of Lone Star sirens or the hiss of chemical rain. It was *a church bell*. In a valley. With cows.
He tried to sit up. A woman was there, placing a glass of water on the nightstand. Not Maria Esperanza. Not the mage who’d walked away from Aztechnology. Her name was Helene. She was a nurse. She had been for thirty years. Her hands were not crackling with spirits of earth and air; they were steady, warm, the hands of someone who had held a hundred men through a hundred withdrawals.
“You’re in Uri,” she said. “Canton Uri. Switzerland.”
He stared at her. The word *Switzerland* landed in his chest like a stone. He looked out the window again. The mountains were the Alps. The valley below was the Reuss Valley. The terraced hillsides—he’d thought they were coca and coffee, fought over by cartels and bikers—were orchards. Apple orchards.
The apple. William Tell. The arrow.
“The crossbows,” he said. His voice was a rasp. “The Villagers. The Knights.”
Helene sat beside him. “You were brought here three weeks ago. You were found in a barn near Altdorf, dehydrated, malnourished, with a sim-rig welded to your skull. The chips you were running—some kind of black-market Shadowrunner fantasy. Full immersion. You’ve been living inside it for… they think over a year.”
A year. His mind reeled. The Filthy Swiss Banker. The Sicario. SAMCRO. The airstrip in the Puyallup Barrens. None of it had been real.
Or rather, it had been real—to him. The drugs had taken the fragments of his life—the corruption, the guilt, the war, the fear—and built a world around them. A world he could understand. A world where the enemy was obvious, where the Villagers were innocent and the Knights were noble and the corrupt cop could be redeemed by stepping out a door.
“The message,” he said. “ ‘Enjoy. I am still did not leave house, Dude.’ Who sent it?”
Helene shook her head. “You did. You sent it to yourself. It was in your outgoing messages. The clinic thinks it was a kind of anchor. A thread to reality you kept trying to pull.”
He closed his eyes. He saw the boy in the mud. He saw the girl in the morgue. He saw the crossbow bolts in the dawn light. All of it. None of it.
“There was a banker,” he said slowly. “A Swiss banker. Filthy. He was the one—”
He stopped. His hands were shaking. Not from withdrawal.
Helene waited.
“I was a cop,” he said. “In Zurich. Not Lone Star. Not Knight Errant. Just… a cop. And I took money. To look away. From a banker. A real one. There was a pipeline. Not drugs from Bogotá. It was… money. Laundered through accounts. Human trafficking. The girls in the morgue—they were real. I saw them. And I did nothing.”
He was crying. He hadn’t noticed.
“The BTL chip,” Helene said gently. “The fantasy you were running. It took your guilt and built you a war to fight in. A war you could win. The Villagers, the Knights, the redemption—that was you, trying to save yourself. But the corruption, the banker, the girl in the morgue—that was real. That was always real.”
He looked out the window again. The apple trees were in bloom. White blossoms against the grey rock of the mountains. Somewhere down there, in the village of Altdorf, there was a square with a statue of William Tell. A man who’d shot an apple off his son’s head, then killed the tyrant.
The Swiss knew something about tyranny. About standing in a marketplace and refusing to bow. About the second shot.
“The Villagers,” he whispered. “The ones who didn’t give in to fear.”
“The real ones,” Helene said, “are the farmers here. The ones who found you in the barn. They carried you down the mountain. They paid for your treatment. They’ve been asking about you every day.”
He turned to her. “Why?”
“Because,” she said, “they know what happens when the world makes a man forget who he is. And they believe in the second shot.”
---
He stayed in the clinic for another week. The dreams came every night—the airstrip, the clubhouse, the boy in the mud—but each morning the cowbells and the church bell pulled him back. The mountains were immovable. The orchards were patient. The world, it turned out, was not Puyallup. It was not Shadowrun. It was just a valley in Switzerland, with people who grew apples and rang bells and remembered a story about a man with a crossbow.
On his last day, he walked out to the barn where they’d found him. It was a real barn. Hay, tools, the smell of cattle. In the corner, where he’d been lying, there was a faint outline in the dust. He knelt beside it.
His hand found something under a loose board. A chip. Small, black-market, the kind that plugged into a sim-rig. He held it in his palm. The label was worn, but he could still read the handwritten letters: *SHADOWRUNNER: PUYALLUP – COMPLETE IMMERSION*.
He thought about putting it back. About walking away. About pretending he’d never found it.
Instead, he walked outside, found a rock, and smashed the chip into pieces. The fragments scattered in the dirt.
He stood up. The sun was setting behind the Alps, painting the blossoms gold. A farmer was walking up the path, a man about his age, with weathered hands and calm eyes. The farmer stopped, looked at the fragments, looked at Elias.
“You’re the one they found,” the farmer said in Swiss-German.
“I’m the one,” Elias said, in the same language, surprised to find he still remembered.
The farmer nodded. “The apples are good this year. You want to help with the harvest? We pay in food and lodging. And we don’t ask too many questions.”
Elias looked at the man. At the mountains. At the valley where William Tell had once refused to bow.
“The Knights,” Elias said. “The ones who didn’t give in to fear.”
The farmer tilted his head. “I don’t know about knights. But we have a shooting club. Crossbows. Traditional.” He smiled, a little. “We meet on Wednesdays.”
Elias stood there in the gathering dusk, the fragments of his fantasy at his feet, the real world waiting. No cyberware. No cartels. No redemption arc written by a drug. Just a man, a valley, and a choice.
He thought of the corrupt cop he’d been. He thought of the banker who was probably still in Zurich, still counting his money, still untouchable. He thought of the girl in the morgue, and he knew that nothing would ever bring her back.
But he also thought of the Villagers—the *real* Villagers—who had found a stranger in their barn and carried him down the mountain. Who had paid for his treatment. Who asked about him every day.
They had not given into fear. They had not given into cynicism. They had simply opened their door.
“I’d like to help with the harvest,” Elias said.
The farmer nodded. “Good. We start at dawn.”
They walked down the path together, past the apple trees, toward the village. The church bell tolled six times. The cowbells were quiet now, the cattle settling for the night. The mountains stood against the sky, ancient and indifferent and—for the first time in a very long time—*real*.
Elias didn’t know if he deserved a second shot. He didn’t know if he could ever make right what he’d done wrong. But he knew, with a clarity that was not a drug-induced fantasy, that the only way to find out was to stay sober. To stay present. To help with the harvest, to join the shooting club, to be part of a community that chose to be kind.
He thought of the message he’d sent to himself: *Enjoy. I am still did not leave house, Dude.*
He’d thought it was about fear. About hiding.
Now he understood.
It was about knowing when the house was a prison, and when it was a sanctuary. It was about waiting until the time was right. It was about the quiet, stubborn refusal to let the world make you into something you’re not.
He had left the house. He had stepped outside. And the world—the real one, with its cowbells and apple blossoms and ordinary, extraordinary kindness—had been waiting.
It wasn’t a happy ending. The girl was still dead. The banker was still free. The guilt was still there, a stone he’d carry for the rest of his life.
But it was a *sober* ending. Clear-eyed. Grounded in the dirt of a Swiss valley, under the shadow of mountains that had seen a thousand tyrants come and go.
He walked into the village as the lights came on, one by one, in the windows.
Tomorrow, the harvest.
Tomorrow, the second shot.
*Fin. En Réalité*