Monday, 18 May 2026

#MODInc

 So, watching this. All pretty, all sweet, all moving like Greek Goddesses, it must be that they are very distant.. How I conclu...?

Soooh, I had that buddy that made career in corporate world already back than who asked me which was my most favorite star around and I still can't tell. However, he said Kate Perry, because she is so girl next door.

MIKE!! HOW!!! SHOW ME ONE AROUND!!!! AND YOU LIVE NEXT DOOR TO A HALF YOUR SIZE FAT FAGGOT, EARNING DOUBLE AS YOU!!! LATTERLY.

I made a mistake their and ruined the evening. Anyway. I did not speak to me for no matter the others showing up.

#hellskitchenthevalley
#igotstuck
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#undergroundwars

I told you. I did... So, who ever tried to tell an Autistic on Cocaine he was doing something wrong having to end it?

Well.... 

#provos #terroristgangs #undergroundwars 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

Did you ever

took a seat in your car and quickly checked after turning the key, system lights, turn indicators left and right, lights and turned on the radio??

Do you know what I mean? 

#MODInc
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

Knight Thieves, IMHO?

 

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

I have to share that with you....

 In the beginning. Before my humor decreased into darkness a long long time ago...


 Thank you. Unknown Artist, krackO.

#cyberpunkcoltoure 

#TIE

 Those that keep coming back no matter their destiny here in Europe.

Lords by Title and Birth. Not ability, character and actions...

 Maximilien Robespierre didn't directly kill any "lords." As the leading member of the Committee of Public Safety, he oversaw the Reign of Terror. During this time (1793–1794), the French revolutionary government officially condemned and executed over 17,000 individuals as enemies of the Revolution.The total number of victims who actually held aristocratic or noble titles is estimated to be relatively small—under 30 nobles were among the first 1,500 people executed. The vast majority of the victims were commoners, peasants, and ordinary workers 

What you think really happened, and why no one noted Titles. 

Historically, he is also widely known by the famous nickname "The Incorruptible" (L'Incorruptible) due to his total refusal to take bribes or personal profit from his political power. You can learn more about his political career and positions on his Britannica Biography Page. 

The "de" Misconception: His birth name was Maximilien de Robespierre. While the particle "de" often indicated nobility in France, in his family's case, it was merely an old regional naming tradition. His ancestors were not lords or knights; they had been local legal clerks, notaries, and artisans for generations. 

Aha.

#noblessoblige #TIE
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
And this is how it works:
The full official name of the Royal Society is The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge 
 
Because:
 
The Encyclopædia Britannica is written by a global network of thousands of outside expert contributors and an in-house team of over 100 specialized content editors. Unlike user-generated platforms like Wikipedia, Britannica relies strictly on invited professionals to write and vet its material.
 
What is the full name of the Royal Society in charge, please 
 
Since three Pyramids.  
 
#neversurrender
 
PS: His entire family was like that. That's why the real nobleman were called "de", meaning "of the" clan_name. We train, learn and act to achieve.

Jim & Joe

 Ok. If that is your approach. 
And your attitude that brought you here.
Which it is
Which it is
And the girls pay a lot for this
And the girls pay a lot for this
You want to stare at her Dekolote.
The Titts, note that word. Its French.
-Ahm. How do you... ah ... we spell that?
...
...
You know, but you never write that down anywhere.
Oh. One of these words.
Aha
Aha
So. You stare at her Dekolote and in a confirming and acknowledging tone say
You don't want to cover that.
You shake your head while saying that.
You may bite your tonge.
She'll confirm.
She'll confirm.
Than you smile and say:
This is because of me?
You may fake any southern European accent.
-Okaaayyyy
She'll confirm. She'll take the plate.
You spare doing the dishes 
And get sucked into coma.
-OH WOW!
-OH WOW!
-OH WOW!
-OH WOW!
-OH WOW!
...busy making notes... 
#MODInc
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

AI - Status Update

 The Pipe-builders and a use case....here....

Both have a company that each publishes a News Letter. The content is created using online AIs and partially automated. Based on a link to a YouTube video their pipeline lets a large online LLM create an article for their News Letter.

No one knows how to let an AI arrange the blocks better than a human for that news letter.

It is called CSS. 
CSS stands for "Cascading Style Sheets.” CSS is used to style the content of a web page by adding design elements like colors, fonts, and spacing. You can use CSS to change the look and feel of any element on a web page, from the overall layout to individual HTML tags. 
 
In short do they need to have a clear formatting of the News Letter. The more they specify the word count or better the amount of letters per Block, the less the CSS defined layout will change by stretching the layout defined blocks larger or smaller.
During the creation process, they also need to define the importance of the content and have in the CSS these positions defined.
 
In newspapers the headline and center take the most important story. The right holds important shorts refereeing to other pagers and the left secondary ones.  The lower part of a newspaper, only becoming visible when unfolded has an eye catcher to make the sale sealed.
 
That's about the core for every news carrying publication, based on where the eye falls.
 
In theory, the system can be automated to an extend that the human only gives a phrase such as: "Make today's newsletter about AI Agents used in the Microsoft Office Suite"
 
But than below that a rather complex system of rules must be placed that is only partially run by LLMs. It would need core definitions to let an LLM that searches the web understand how to sort priorities and give importance, such as by Clicks or New York Post over Washington Post articles. Basically, it would need an algorithm...    
 
Open Source can do that. This here can be a base for such a system, but it is in need for major tailoring. The system can in parallel create content for such blocks.
 
#cyberpunkcoltoure          

#Autism - Mind Set

 Wow. Now that you are done with it, what you gonna do?
...
Ah. I got you covered.
?
So, this is a Camera with stand. To make one second of movie, you need 30 pictures. Now, you arrange the figures per picture.
!
See you! Like the last few years.
...
I love rich kids! 
#MODInc 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
 
...a few years later...
And here is the wall mount for the sky shots! Top Down? 

Sunday, 17 May 2026

So, #provitional

 How can we all make sure this man's worst problem is to having being continuously nice every day?

By all means necessary.

#noblessoblige
#provos  
 
Like we'd know anyone better for that job, Assholes World Wide. Looking forward to meeting you.
#terroristgangs 

PS

 So, what is all infotainment around??

#undergroundwars
#cyberpunkcoltoure 

What really happend?

 All resources are limited.

 The steam engine was first turned into a highly practical and fuel-efficient machine by Scottish inventor James Watt in 1765. By adding a separate condenser, Watt prevented the engine from wasting massive amounts of heat, cutting coal consumption by up to 75% compared to the earlier Newcomen engines.
 
The development of steam power efficiency occurred in several key historical phases:
1. The Early Atmospheric Engine (1712)
Thomas Newcomen built the first practical steam engine to pump water out of flooded coal mines. It was incredibly inefficient, converting less than 1% of the fuel's thermal energy into work because it constantly cooled and reheated the main cylinder.
2. The Watt Steam Engine (1765–1776)
James Watt patented a design that featured a separate condenser in 1769. This allowed the main cylinder to remain hot while the steam condensed elsewhere, vastly reducing heat loss. In 1781, Watt further modified the engine to produce rotary motion, which allowed it to power entire factories and mills.
3. High-Pressure Engines (Early 1800s)
Engineers like Richard Trevithick (in the UK) and Oliver Evans (in the US) developed high-pressure steam engines. By eliminating the condenser altogether, these engines were smaller, lighter, and powerful enough to propel locomotives and steamboats.
4. The Steam Turbine (1884)
British engineer Sir Charles Parsons invented the modern steam turbine, which revolutionized electrical power generation and marine propulsion. By directing steam continuously through a series of blades rather than using pistons, turbines extracted much more kinetic energy, increasing engine efficiency dramatically and making cheap electricity possible.
 
Information spreads exponentially. 
 
The first steam engine to directly drive factory-like machinery was introduced in 1781. It was used to power a forge (hammer mill / iron manufactory), not a textile loom.
While early steam engines (like the 1712 Newcomen engine) were used exclusively as pumps to lift water out of mines, the transition to driving industrial factory machinery required a major breakthrough in engineering:
The Shift to Rotary Motion (1781)In 1781, James Watt patented the "sun and planet" gear system. This mechanism converted the traditional up-and-down pumping motion of a steam piston into continuous rotary motion. This breakthrough allowed a steam engine to turn wheels, gears, and driveshafts, making it capable of powering factory equipment for the first time.
Forges vs. LoomsThe Winner — The Forge / Hammer Mill (1781–1782): The very first rotary steam engines built by Boulton & Watt were sold to industrial ironmasters. In 1782, a Watt engine was installed at John Wilkinson’s Bradley Ironworks to drive a massive forge hammer (a mechanized hammer mill) and blowers.
The Runner-Up — The Loom (1785–1789): Textile mills were slightly slower to adopt direct steam power. Edmund Cartwright patented the first power loom in 1785, and steam engines began driving spinning mills around the same time (such as Papplewick Mill in 1785 and the famous Albion Mills in 1786). However, truly successful and widespread steam-driven weaving looms didn't fully dominate factories until the 1820s 
 
All growth is exponential, but limited by the available resources.
 
The growth of mechanized factory systems exploded worldwide between 1781 and 1939, evolving from a slow trickle into an exponential global boom. This transformation occurred in three distinct historical waves.
 
1. The Slow Ignition (1780s–1830s)
The adoption of mechanized factory systems started remarkably slowly. Building early mills required immense capital, and many business owners preferred cheap, traditional waterwheels.
Early Constraints: Steam engines were expensive, heavy, and prone to breaking. At the turn of the 19th century (1800), the entire United Kingdom had only a few hundred operational industrial steam engines.
Concentration: For the first fifty years, automated factories were almost exclusively found in Great Britain, localized heavily in coal-mining regions and textile hubs like Manchester.
 
2. The Exponential Explosion (1840s–1890s)
By the mid-19th century, factory construction reached an unprecedented, frantic pace. This period marked the true shift into global mass manufacturing.Rapid Expansion: Machine tools matured, allowing factories to literally mass-produce parts to build other factories.
The American Surge: According to US Manufacturing Censuses, in 1850, only 17% of manufacturing workers labored in mechanized, steam-powered establishments. By 1880, that number skyrocketed to over 50%.
Global Spread: Mechanized factory networks rapidly rippled across Western Europe (Germany, France, Belgium) and the United States, fueled by the explosive growth of the railroad networks connecting them.
 
3. Total Assembly Line Automation (1900s–1939)By the turn of the 20th century, factory construction changed fundamentally. Heavy, centralized steam engines were replaced by electrical grids and the internal combustion engine.
The Ford Era: Henry Ford’s introduction of the moving assembly line in 1913 transformed factory design. Factories were no longer built around a single steam driveshaft; they were built as vast, sprawling, horizontal complexes optimized for continuous workflow.
Pre-WW2 Peak: By the late 1930s, mechanized factory systems had completely conquered the global economy. Massive industrial manufacturing belts (like the American Rust Belt and the German Ruhr Valley) featured thousands of interconnected plants capable of churning out millions of complex goods—aircraft, automobiles, and appliances—setting the stage for the massive industrial output of World War II. 
 
What you produce defines use. Use shapes a societies doings. We are what we do.
 
Between 1781 and 1939, the nations that built the most weapon factories shifted alongside the changing balance of global power. Production evolved from small artisan gunsmith districts into massive, vertically integrated industrial conglomerates.
The primary builders of the world’s weapon factories are best understood through four sequential periods:
 
1. The Napoleonic Era & British Hegemony (1780s–1820s)
The Dominant Nation: Great Britain
The Core Hubs: The British government heavily subsidized private gun manufacturers, turning regions like the Birmingham Gun Quarter into global arms depots.
Key Factory Systems: Unlike modern unified factories, this era relied on localized networks of specialized workshops using water or early steam power. Britain built these hubs so aggressively that by the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, they were the single largest exporter of firearms on earth.
 
2. The Mid-19th Century & "The American System" (1830s–1860s)
The Dominant Nations: The United States and Belgium
Key Factory Systems: The US revolutionized weapon factories by introducing the "American System of Manufacturing."Federal armories like the Springfield Armory (Massachusetts) and private ones like Colt’s Manufacturing Company (Connecticut) pioneered the use of steam-driven machine tools to create perfectly interchangeable weapon parts.
Concurrently, Belgium built up the city of Liège, creating massive, highly efficient factory networks that eventually outpaced British small-arms exports.
 
3. The Imperial Arms Race (1870s–1914)
The Dominant Nations: Germany and Great Britain
The Corporate Giants (The "Merchants of Death"): This period saw the rise of massive, state-backed private monopolies that built the largest weapon factories in human history up to that point:
Krupp (Germany): Based in Essen, the Krupp Works grew into a colossal steel and artillery empire. They manufactured the high-grade steel breech-loading cannons that supplied both the German Empire and dozens of foreign militaries.
Vickers & Armstrong (Great Britain): These British industrial titans built massive, interconnected shipyards, steel mills, and machine-gun factories to supply the Royal Navy and global clients.
Schneider-Creusot (France): Dominated the French armaments sector and heavily funded subsidiary weapon factories across Central Europe.
 
4. Total State Rearmament (1920s–1939)The Dominant Nations: 
Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, and the United StatesKey Factory Systems: In the immediate lead-up to World War II, weapon factory construction shifted from corporate commercialism to total state-directed mass production.
The Soviet Union: Under Stalin’s Five-Year Plans in the 1930s, the USSR built gargantuan industrial cities from scratch behind the Ural Mountains (such as Magnitogorsk), specifically designed to house heavy tractor and weapon-manufacturing complexes.
Germany: After 1933, the Nazi regime forcibly pivoted civilian engineering firms like Rheinmetall-Borsig into massive, covert weapons and ammunition manufacturing hubs, scaling their workforces to tens of thousands.
The United States: While the US army was small in the 1930s, its massive automotive assembly lines (like Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors) were already built. This footprint allowed them to instantly convert civilian factories into the world's largest weapon-producing apparatus when the war began. 

 So, the Germans are my personal problem, currently. The overall problem is a certain kind of human. Those also carry CIA badges. 
 
You all received 10 rules to make an educated decision, humans.
 
Your call.
 
#spartans  
 
If you build a larger table, also build a higher fence.
 
During the industrial era (1781–1939), the manufacturing centers for printing machines and agricultural machines were concentrated in the [United States](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/09c7w0), [Germany](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/0345h), and [Great Britain](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/07ssc). However, because these two types of machinery served completely different economic purposes, their exact manufacturing geographic hubs were vastly different.
------------------------------
## Where Printing Machines Were Built
The manufacturing of printing presses required highly precise, specialized engineering, iron foundries, and close proximity to major publishing and academic hubs. [1, 2] 
------------------------------

[[Frankenthal](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/052ywq): These cities became massive manufacturing hubs for lithographic and offset printing presses (such as Faber & Schleicher, later known as MAN Roland).](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/0345h)

------------------------------

[[Chicago](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/01_d4): The Goss Printing Press Company emerged as a massive rival, building the heavy, multi-story web presses needed for giant metropolitan newspapers.](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/09c7w0)

------------------------------

[[England](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/02jx1). British firms like Vickers and Linotype & Machinery Ltd (Manchester) later built vast factories to supply the British Empire. [1, 3, 4] ](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/07ssc)

------------------------------
## Where Agricultural Machines Were Built
Agricultural machinery manufacturing followed a completely different geographic logic. Instead of being built in dense publishing cities, farm equipment factories were built in regions adjacent to massive open farmlands, heavily reliant on easy access to raw steel and shipping waterways.

* The United States (The Global Heavyweight): By the late 19th century, the US Midwest became the uncontested center of the world's agricultural equipment industry.
* Chicago, Illinois: Chicago was the undisputed capital of farm machinery. It was home to Cyrus McCormick’s massive reaper works, which later merged with rivals to form International Harvester (1902)—the largest agricultural manufacturer on earth.
   * Moline, Illinois: Known as the "Plow City," this was the home base for John Deere, which mass-produced steel plows, seeders, and eventually tractors.
   * Wisconsin & Iowa: Cities like Waterloo (Iowa) and Madison (Wisconsin) became famous for early tractor manufacturing (such as Waterloo Boy and Hart-Parr).
* Great Britain (The Steam & Export Leaders): Before internal combustion tractors took over, Britain led the world in heavy steam-farming equipment.
* Lincolnshire & East Anglia: Towns like Gainsborough (Marshall, Sons & Co.) and Ipswich (Ransomes, Sims & Jefferies) built the massive steam traction engines, threshing machines, and iron plows that were exported to farms across the British Empire, South America, and Europe.
* Germany (The Continental Hub):
* Mannheim & [Munich](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/g/1tdk44rm): As Europe shifted toward internal combustion, German factories like Heinrich Lanz AG (Mannheim) became famous across Europe for building the Lanz Bulldog—a legendary, rugged agricultural tractor that dominated European farming for decades. [5, 6, 7, 8, 9] 

------------------------------
If you are interested, I can provide more details on:

* The story of Koenig & Bauer supplying the first steam press to The Times in London.
* How the McCormick Reaper factory in Chicago used assembly lines before Henry Ford.
* The transition of tractor manufacturing from steam engines to diesel power in the 1920s. [10] 


[1] [https://blogs.loc.gov](https://blogs.loc.gov/headlinesandheroes/2022/04/printing-newspapers-1400-1900/)
[2] [https://en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_spread_of_the_printing_press)
[3] [https://www.omegagraphicsandprint.com](https://www.omegagraphicsandprint.com/omega-blog/2019/1/17/1900-1949-the-history-of-printing-during-the-20th-century)
[4] [https://www.westermann-druck.de](https://www.westermann-druck.de/en/about-us/our-history)
[5] [https://www.farm-equipment.com](https://www.farm-equipment.com/articles/4269-timeline-of-ag-equipment-firsts)
[6] [https://www.flextrades.com](https://www.flextrades.com/blog/evolution-of-farming-equipment/)
[7] [https://thecanadianencyclopedia.ca](https://thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/agricultural-implements)
[8] [https://www.sibo.eu](https://www.sibo.eu/en/the-history-of-the-agricultural-tractor/)
[9] [https://www.tstar.com](https://www.tstar.com/blog/history-of-agriculture-equipment-important-developments-and-examples)
[10] [https://www.britannica.com](https://www.britannica.com/topic/agriculture/Scientific-agriculture-the-20th-century)

 
Vs
 
While the Industrial Revolution transformed the West, the Middle East and Central Asia modernized later and largely under state direction. Both Iran and Afghanistan were never formally colonized, meaning their early factory systems were built through deliberate top-down efforts by reformist kings looking to protect national sovereignty.
------------------------------
## Factories Built in Iran [1] 
Iran’s true industrialization occurred primarily during the Pahlavi Era (1925–1979) under [Reza Shah](https://www.google.com/search?q=reza+shah&kgmid=/m/01l6nb#sv=CBwS1wMKpQMSogMK4gJBTW4zLXlTdHlkdmFzZHBUU1ctaUxvNHU2aG9hZXl2ZGRfcnE3dmZ3
RkxYRTdGYk1FcDgwX3FZMEltTi1CMDYxeEV4M0VIV0lYWEJtaGpKMmlMXzNxWnpuV2JFeEFON0xuMXVINVV
QZTE2SlFPSlYtb2NXdmhTYmFITEQtb25jTTBLeTRvZXNpRTNpU2NoaV9BSlAxekFibFp3dzRGWC1wLTFTNmpK
Qm9KRk9BVzVZMzY5ekZYMjc4bXhGUXNJd0trNXNnYVJUMzJCd0NsZktqQzFkX05kTEZDaW5HWGIzQlc2bDNE
eUNvZVNva1lDVFh0YUVIQUEzaWNISXVZTzN6ZHFYdUpSeU1KYkd4SDdkMVE0NEp4VlZjekFwNDNOc01QR28
4VURZaTZVeG13WDdiUGV0ZF9WbDZ1NlNFYnpMZDl6MmNnbjZtblVMMGFvV1ZaWmM0UzIxWGtxSDdLMm
00eVESFy1GTUthc0d2T3BHRjl1OFB1dlgycVFjGiJBSktMRm1JenRwb2N5aENOM3pzSFk0WnkzVTJpaWVqaDhB
EgQ3ODU0GgEzIg4KAXESCXJlemEgc2hhaCISCgVrZ21pZBIJL20vMDFsNm5iKAAYRSCN0uCtDw) and later his son, Mohammad Reza Shah. Prior to the 1920s, Iran relied almost entirely on traditional crafts and an isolated oil sector. Reza Shah launched a sweeping state-led campaign to build modern processing and production facilities. [2, 3, 4, 5, 6] 

* Textile Mills (1930s): The historical city of [Isfahan](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/m/01gk3x) was transformed into the "Manchester of Persia". Large-scale, mechanized spinning and weaving factories were built to process local cotton, wool, and silk.
* Sugar Refineries & Food Processing (1930s): Because sugar was a vital staple in the Iranian diet, the state built dozens of sugar factories (like the Kahrizak Sugar Factory) to process sugar beets domestically and cut down on foreign imports.
* Building Materials (1933): The Rey Cement Factory was built south of Tehran to supply the immense amount of concrete needed to construct the Trans-Iranian Railway and modernize city buildings.
* Heavy Metallurgy & Automobile Manufacturing (1960s): In 1966, an agreement with the Soviet Union led to the construction of the massive Isfahan Steel Mill (Zob Ahan). Around the same time, the Iran National factory was built to mass-produce the Paykan (Iran's iconic national car).
* Military & Aviation (1930s): Iran built the Shahbaz Aircraft Assembly Plant near Tehran in 1936 to assemble military biplanes using imported parts. [4, 5, 7, 8, 9] 

------------------------------
## Factories Built in Afghanistan [10] 
Afghanistan's geography and rugged isolation made factory building incredibly difficult. Early industrialization was pushed by two main rulers: Amir Abdur Rahman Khan (late 1800s) and King Amanullah Khan (1919–1929). Rather than private consumer goods, Afghanistan’s first factories were strictly built to support the army and central state. [11, 12, 13, 14] 

* The Mashin Khana (1880s): Built in Kabul by Amir Abdur Rahman Khan, this was Afghanistan's first massive, steam-powered industrial complex. Using machinery imported from Europe, it functioned as an all-in-one state factory hub housing:
* A mint for striking coins.
   * A military workshop for manufacturing rifles, ammunition, and boots.
   * A printing press plant.
* Textile & Woolen Mills (1920s): King Amanullah Khan built the Jabal Saraj Woolen Mill (north of Kabul) powered by the country’s first small hydroelectric dam. It was designed to produce uniforms for the army and domestic clothing so the state didn't rely on British imports.
* Light Consumer Goods (1920s): Under Amanullah, small-scale state factories were constructed to manufacture basic everyday necessities like matches, soap, underwear, and leather goods.
* Soviet-Era Infrastructure (1950s–1970s): During the Cold War, the Soviet Union financed and built heavy industrial infrastructure in Afghanistan. This included a massive industrial bread bakery complex in Kabul, the [Ghori Cement Factory](https://www.google.com/search?kgmid=/g/11j11hd94_), and petroleum refining facilities in the north. [10, 12, 13, 15, 16] 

------------------------------
If you want to focus on a particular country or era, let me know:

* Would you like to know more about how Reza Shah financed Iran’s industrial boom?
* Should we look into the British and Soviet rivalries over building infrastructure in Afghanistan?
* Are you interested in the modern factories operating in these regions today? [15, 17, 18] 


[1] [https://amwaj.media](https://amwaj.media/article/why-iran-is-building-weapons-factories-in-other-countries)
[2] [https://elmi.hbku.edu.qa](https://elmi.hbku.edu.qa/en/publications/industrializationthe-reza-shah-period-and-its-aftermath-1925-53/)
[3] [https://www.mchip.net](https://www.mchip.net/browse/u47H6D/245255/Industrial%20Revolution%20Persia%20Chart.pdf)
[4] [https://www.iranicaonline.org](https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/isfahan-xiv2-industries-of-isfahan-city/)
[5] [https://www.researchgate.net](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271525336_Iran%27s_Industrial_Policy_Rebirth_of_a_Nation)
[6] [https://www.sahanz.net](https://www.sahanz.net/wp-content/uploads/SAHANZ_21_Amirjani.pdf)
[7] [https://dorontash.com](https://dorontash.com/en/iran-textile-industry/)
[8] [https://www.iranicaonline.org](https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/isfahan-xiv2-industries-of-isfahan-city/)
[9] [https://www.iranicaonline.org](https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/isfahan-xiv2-industries-of-isfahan-city/)
[10] [https://www.kuna.net.kw](https://www.kuna.net.kw/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=1350536&language=en)
[11] [https://issi.org.pk](https://issi.org.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/1339997165_92983700.pdf)
[12] [https://www.studocu.com](https://www.studocu.com/in/document/jamia-millia-islamia/islamiat-ii/reforms-of-amanullah-in-afghanistan/60930650)
[13] [https://www.ijsr.net](https://www.ijsr.net/archive/v9i1/ART20203987.pdf)
[14] [https://www.facebook.com](https://www.facebook.com/CitizenKamran/posts/in-the-late-19th-century-afghanistan-underwent-a-violent-state-building-campaign/1326412589533105/)
[15] [https://shatteringafghanistan.omeka.net](https://shatteringafghanistan.omeka.net/exhibits/show/shatteringafghanistan/priorto1978/prehistory)
[16] [https://imperialglobalexeter.com](https://imperialglobalexeter.com/2016/03/15/graveyard-of-empires-writing-the-global-history-of-development-in-cold-war-afghanistan/)
[17] [https://thekabultribune.com](https://thekabultribune.com/en/0003589)
[18] [https://www.jamhoor.org](https://www.jamhoor.org/read/empire-and-dependence-in-afghan-history)

 
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
What goes around comes around.
 
Today's major illicit substances—Cocaine, Heroin, and Amphetamines—were all originally created and mass-produced in legitimate, state-of-the-art Western pharmaceutical factories before international laws banned them. [1, 2] 
When global treaties outlawed these medical compounds, their production migrated from corporate factories to clandestine laboratory networks. The production centers for these substances span across distinct geographical regions: [2] 
------------------------------
 
## 1. Cocaine
* The Legal Era Location (1860s–1910s): Cocaine was first isolated and mass-manufactured in Darmstadt, Germany by Merck, which imported coca leaves from South America. Huge processing plants were also built in New Jersey and New York by companies like Squibb.
* The Modern Illicit Hub (Andean Region): Because cocaine requires fresh coca leaves, it cannot easily be synthesized completely from scratch in a standard chemical lab. Virtually 100% of the world's illicit cocaine is cultivated and processed in the remote jungle laboratories of three South American countries:
* Colombia: The world's undisputed leading producer, supplying roughly 90–95% of the cocaine reaching the United States.
   * Peru & Bolivia: Secondary producers that largely supply domestic South American markets, Europe, and Asia. [1, 3, 4, 5] 

## 2. Heroin
* The Legal Era Location (1890s–1920s): Heroin (diacetylmorphine) was invented, trademarked, and mass-marketed as a over-the-counter cough suppressant by Bayer in Wuppertal, Germany.
* The Modern Illicit Hubs (The Poppy Belts): Illicit heroin production requires raw opium poppies, resulting in centralized manufacturing hubs near major agricultural regions:
* The Golden Crescent (Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran): Historically, Afghanistan's Helmand province has been the single largest source of the world's illicit opium and heroin. Despite intermittent Taliban agricultural bans, it remains a dominant global supplier.
   * The Golden Triangle (Myanmar/Burma, Laos, Thailand): Myanmar is the primary hub in this region, housing heavily guarded clandestine labs along its lawless border regions to supply the Asian and Australian markets.
   * Mexico & Colombia: These nations construct hidden mountain laboratories to process black tar and white heroin specifically tailored for the North American market. [6, 7, 8, 9] 

## 3. Amphetamine & Methamphetamine ("Speed" and "Meth")
Unlike cocaine and heroin, amphetamines are entirely synthetic. They do not require a specific plant to grow, meaning their labs can be built anywhere chemicals can be smuggled. [10] 

* The Legal Era Location (1930s–1960s):
* Amphetamine (Benzedrine): First mass-manufactured as an over-the-counter nasal inhaler and pill by Smith, Kline & French in Philadelphia, USA.
   * Methamphetamine (Pervitin): Patented and mass-produced by the Temmler-Werke factory in Berlin, Germany, famously supplied by the millions to Nazi soldiers during WWII.
* The Modern Illicit Hubs (Clandestine Superlabs):
* Mexico: Massive industrial-scale "superlabs" operated by cartels dominate the supply of methamphetamine to North America, using precursor chemicals heavily imported from China and India.
   * The Netherlands and Belgium: The global epicenter for European synthetic drugs. Hidden labs in rural areas of these countries mass-produce amphetamine oil and MDMA (Ecstasy) for global distribution.
   * Southeast Asia (Myanmar's Shan State): The largest methamphetamine manufacturing hub in the world today. Syndicates manufacture billions of "Yaba" tablets and crystal meth in jungle factories to flood the Asia-Pacific market.
   * Syria and Lebanon: Mass-manufacturers of Captagon (an amphetamine derivative), which has become a multi-billion dollar illicit industry dominating the Middle East. [1, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15] 


[1] [https://www.euda.europa.eu](https://www.euda.europa.eu/publications/european-drug-report/2025/drug-supply-production-and-precursors_en)
[2] [https://www.dhs.de](https://www.dhs.de/suechte/illegale-drogen/methamphetamin/geschichte/)
[3] [https://www.dea.gov](https://www.dea.gov/sites/default/files/2025-01/Cocaine-2024-Drug-Fact-Sheet.pdf)
[4] [https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov](https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/ondcp/targeting-cocaine-at-the-source)
[5] [https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk](https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5eafffedd3bf7f65363e4fda/Review_of_Drugs_Evidence_Pack.pdf)
[6] [https://www.unodc.org](https://www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/WDR_2025/WDR25_B1_Key_findings.pdf)
[7] [https://www.deutschlandmuseum.de](https://www.deutschlandmuseum.de/en/collection/stimulant-pervitin/)
[8] [https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK361953/)
[9] [https://2009-2017.state.gov](https://2009-2017.state.gov/j/inl/rls/nrcrpt/2014/vol1/223173.htm)
[10] [https://www.gov.uk](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/review-of-drugs-phase-one-report/review-of-drugs-summary)
[11] [https://www.smithsonianmag.com](https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/speedy-history-americas-addiction-amphetamine-180966989/)
[12] [https://www.history.com](https://www.history.com/articles/history-of-meth)
[13] [https://accessemergencymedicine.mhmedical.com](https://accessemergencymedicine.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?legacysectionid=goldtox11_ch73)
[14] [https://time.com](https://time.com/5752114/nazi-military-drugs/)
[15] [https://germanhistorydocs.org](https://germanhistorydocs.org/en/nazi-germany-1933-1945/drugs-for-the-wehrmacht-c-1940)

 
Lets get murder home, with all its buddies. #TIE  
 
 
If you look strictly at the intensity of warfare, technology, and systemic mortality rates for armies, Europe was arguably the most dangerous place in the world for a tyrant's troops.
 
However, for the tyrants themselves, it remained statistically safer than other regions.
To understand why this paradox exists, we have to separate the fate of the ruler from the fate of their soldiers.
1. For the Troops: Europe Was Extremely LethalIf you were a soldier serving an oppressive ruler, Europe was an incredibly dangerous place to fight. European warfare evolved unique characteristics that maximized troop casualties:
The "Infantry Revolution" and Firearms: Starting in the late Middle Ages, European armies mastered dense pike formations and gunpowder. Unlike feudal armies elsewhere that relied on skirmishing, European battles became highly organized, face-to-face slaughters with massive casualty rates.
Extreme Fortification (Trace Italienne): Europe became densely packed with star-shaped fortresses. Sieges were grueling, multi-month affairs where disease, starvation, and trench warfare wiped out entire armies before a single wall was breached.
Systemic Logistics Crises: Because Europe was divided into many small, heavily armed states, armies constantly outran their food supplies. In conflicts like the Thirty Years' War, more soldiers died of typhus, dysentery, and starvation than actual combat.
2. For the Tyrants: The Danger Was Systemic, Not Personal
While a tyrant’s army faced slaughter, the tyrant themselves still enjoyed structural protections that rulers in Asia or the Middle East did not have. The violent end of the Valois dynasty was devastating, but it highlights a specific European rule: they died of institutional collapses and disease, rarely from their own people.
The "Rules of War" 
Protected Elites: In Europe, a captured king or noble was a massive financial asset. If a European tyrant lost a battle, they were usually ransomed or exiled (like Napoleon), not executed. In contrast, a defeated ruler in Mongol, Ottoman, or Chinese history was almost instantly put to death along with their entire family to prevent future rebellions.
The Power of Bureaucracy: European tyrants were among the first to successfully decouple their personal safety from the battlefield. They could sit in a fortress (like Louis XI) or a palace (like Stalin) and command millions of troops via a massive bureaucratic machine. If the army died, the tyrant simply levied more peasants.
Summary: The Deadly Paradox
Europe was a meat grinder for the troops because the continent was a crowded, hyper-competitive arms race where military technology and disease killed millions.
But for the tyrant, the danger was lower than on other continents. As long as they maintained their institutional legitimacy, they could lose entire armies on the battlefield and still die safely in their own beds.
If you want to explore this dynamic further, let me know if you would like to:
Examine the troop casualty percentages of major European vs. Asian battles.
Look at how the ransom system kept European royal tyrants alive during defeats.
Analyze how trench and siege warfare disproportionately killed soldiers over commanders.
AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more 
 
With still space to improve, and Hitler as a good starting example. Finally a good use, for that monster.
 
So, 
 
What is our profession, Europeans??? EACH HIS WAY?

PS

 That's what you did CIA, by not prosecution of criminals, and instead actively protecting the Germans.

That's why we see their tactics and strategies world wide on every battle field worse than ever in the history of war.

#provos #IRAmovement
#cyberpuncoltoure 
 
Oh and...
 
While CIA files highlight tactical subversion and internal vulnerabilities, Russian historiography and modern narratives present a radically different framing of the war. [1, 2] 
Russian archives, state media, and veteran organizations shift the blame entirely outward. They emphasize geopolitical betrayal by the West and charge that the CIA actively weaponized narcotics to destabilize the Soviet Union. [1] 

## 1. The Official Narrative: "International Duty" vs. Terrorism
* Defending a Sovereign Ally: Official Russian sources reject the term "invasion." Modern state school textbooks and military archives frame the deployment as the fulfilling of "international duty" (internatsionalny dolg). They argue Soviet troops were legally invited by the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan to defend secularism, schools, and infrastructure against religious extremism.
* The CIA's "Monster": Russian analyses rarely view the Mujahideen as an autonomous resistance. Instead, they classify them as a proxy army created, funded, and armed by the West via Operation Cyclone. State-aligned media frequently assert that by supporting these radical groups to defeat the USSR, the CIA directly created the modern networks of international terrorism. [3, 4, 5] 

## 2. Russian Findings on Military Casualties
* The Krivosheev Study: Rather than relying on foreign estimates, Russia’s definitive stance on military losses comes from the landmark 1993 Krivosheev report ("Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century"), compiled by Colonel-General Grigori Krivosheev using declassified General Staff archives.
* The Breakdown: The Russian state stands firmly by Krivosheev's verified metric of 14,453 total deaths. This official breakdown is highly precise:
* 9,511 killed in action.
   * 2,386 died of wounds.
   * 2,556 died from diseases or accidents.
* The Medical Reality: Russian military-medical archives emphasize that the biggest threat wasn't Mujahideen bullets, but climate and hygiene. They record that 415,932 soldiers were hospitalized during the war. The vast majority were sidelined by rampant outbreaks of hepatitis A, typhoid fever, and dysentery rather than combat wounds. [6, 7, 8] 

## 3. The Heroin Trade: "Narco-Aggression" Charged Against the West

* The Weaponization of Addiction: Russian historians and state security officials strongly advance the theory of intentional narco-aggression. The narrative argues that the CIA and Pakistan’s ISI intentionally looked the way—or actively assisted—as Afghan warlords vastly scaled up opium production. According to Russian perspective, this was a calculated strategy to addict Soviet soldiers, demoralize the Red Army, and pollute Soviet society.
* Glasnost Disclosures: During the late 1980s under Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet state media stopped hiding the problem. The Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) began publishing warnings about the rising threat of domestic drug abuse (narkomaniya), admitting that returning Afghantsy veterans were bringing habits back across the border.
* The Modern Accusation: Russia's contemporary government links the 1980s drug pipeline directly to their current drug problems. Russian officials frequently point out that 30,000 to 40,000 Russians die annually from Afghan heroin—meaning more Russians die from Afghan drugs every single year than the total number of soldiers lost during the entire decade-long war. State media often uses this to criticize Western foreign policy, noting that Afghan drug production spiked both during the 1980s CIA intervention and the subsequent 20-year US/NATO occupation. [1, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13] 


[1] [https://www.geopoliticalmonitor.com](https://www.geopoliticalmonitor.com/afghan-heroin-the-cia-519/)
[2] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onYfeoUSZg8&t=2)
[3] [https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu](https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1442&context=etds)
[4] [https://www.youtube.com](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejUsQaQMH0k&t=3)
[5] [https://www.facebook.com](https://www.facebook.com/WUSA9/posts/back-in-the-1980s-the-cia-helped-fund-anti-soviet-afghan-fighters-years-later-so/10161357144039778/)
[6] [https://historynet.com](https://historynet.com/book-review-soviet-casualties-and-combat-losses-in-the-twentieth-centur-edited-by-col-gen-grigori-f-krivosheev-mh/)
[7] [https://en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet%E2%80%93Afghan_War)
[8] [https://history.stackexchange.com](https://history.stackexchange.com/questions/72351/how-were-soviet-afghanistan-war-casualties-distributed-between-the-soviet-republ)
[9] [https://www.cia.gov](https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/DOC_0000500703.pdf)
[10] [https://www.cia.gov](https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/DOC_0000500703.pdf)
[11] [https://www.unodc.org](https://www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/Afghanistan/Afghan_Opium_Trade_2009_web.pdf)
[12] [https://www.unodc.org](https://www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/Afghanistan/Executive_Summary_english.pdf)
[13] [https://www.facebook.com](https://www.facebook.com/himal.southasian/posts/replug-the-limited-historiography-of-drugs-in-afghanistan-reinforced-many-common/10159251131812752/)

 
What makes more sense to you? No matter Commis VS Capitalist. Just from the given intel...

#TheGermans - Mind Set

 His nightmare making him wake up aware?

While asleep, he finds himself in a wheelchair, he feels is hang over, he cannot move. First he feels happy that he is pushed through a warehouse of bottled drinks away from the bassboom of the Club. Then he realizes, still incapable of moving the chaos in the shells....!!!! A silent scream .... and ever more rows of warehouse cupboards.

 #ironcladthegoblin
#socialengeneeringdiv
#provos #undergroundwars

Who want's me to ask for names?? BKA? 

 PS: That's realistically what Deltas would do...here...  for way less. Copy Right what??? And I am IRA for real, nazi boys of bka.

 

Just Fuck Me.

 He says "Elite Recon Unit".

Obviously, Tears of the Sun and even Blackhawk Down must be Hollywood action movies and no one manages to understand the reality level in any of the two movies.

So, Reconnaissance means to collect information about enemy positions. That needs as Infantry the ability to sneak very close to the enemy, observe the enemy and retreat without being spotted.

You don't talk, you don't march. You feel and hear. The wind carries sound differently and sight is very different in a clear full moon night. You read signs, try to understand how something fell into its position and when that might have happened.

Or you jaywalk through a wrecked village like other go shopping in New York, just open carrying military guns.

#armystrong
#cyberpunkcoltoure 
 
To be honest. Considering that they move and act like a regular infantry unit, I do wonder if they are performing a SS like frontline tasks of ending retreats the very illegal way to enforce moral at the front. 
If that is true, but only than, I strongly encourage everyone capable to crack related computer networks to identify all personal and kill them as soon as back home. Where ever that was. When ever they get there.
#undergroundwars 
And spread the news...  
 
PS: Why the Russians would not attack them to enable a retreat? Well, sometimes they will. This way they can be certain to create staffing issues. Like, wounding a soldier causes more bound personal and higher spendings than a corp. That is not the dark side of war. That is just the sober calculation, resource management and estimations part. The dark side is "information extraction" and illegal "retaliation" actions.

PS

 "If a cockroach comes from under your fridge, what do you do? You don't think about it. You stomp it down."

DEA Agent Hank Schraderm the "stomp it down" speech in Season 2, Episode 5 ("Breakage"), Hollywood, The War on Drugs, Cinematic

#cyberpunkcoltoure #terroristgangs #provos #IRAmovement Vs #BKA #FRG #coldwarrelics

 

#TheGermans - Misconceptions

 So, they hated it and will never do it again.

All it would have needed was to understand the Camping part. Having a large mobile home, they missed the heater. There must be a compartment for a propane gas bottle.

When choosing a propane gas heater for camping cars, camper vans, or RVs, the most critical factor is safety. You can select either a permanently installed, externally vented built-in furnace (the safest option for overnight use) or a portable unvented propane space heater (best for quick, daytime, or temporary heat under close supervision. 

While being a efficiency nightmare such systems create a dry warmth inside the vehicle that turns during rain or hail the space into a cave like experience. 

To heat a large van in lower plus temperatures (around 2°C to 7°C) over a long weekend (3 days), you will need either one single large 5 kg to 11 kg reusable gas cylinder or approximately 6 to 8 small 450g (1 lb) disposable canisters.           

The next part of understanding the Camping intel is to not use household kitchen and dining equipment, but dedicated sets and recipes for a one flame small space inside cooking experience, such as:

 Here is a set of three high-density, comforting recipes designed for a single-burner camping stove. They use minimal cookware, require no advanced prep, and focus on ingredients that do not need refrigeration.

## 1. Creamy Tomato & Chickpea Stew
A rich, protein-packed stew that requires only one pan and leaves almost no mess.

* The Ingredients:
* 1 can chopped tomatoes (400g)
   * 1 can drained chickpeas (400g)
   * 2 tablespoons tomato paste
   * 1 teaspoon garlic powder or 1 fresh clove
   * 2 teaspoons Italian herb mix
   * 1 packet of ambient shelf-stable Halloumi or Feta cheese (optional)
   * Crusty bread for dipping
* The Steps:
1. Place your pan on the burner over medium heat.
   2. Add the tomato paste, garlic, and herbs. Stir for 1 minute until fragrant.
   3. Pour in the chopped tomatoes and the drained chickpeas.
   4. Bring to a simmer. Let it bubble for 5 to 7 minutes until thickened.
   5. Crumble the cheese directly into the pan. Stir until melted.
   6. Eat straight from the pan with the bread.

## 2. One-Pot Cheesy Sausage Pasta
Traditional pasta requires draining water, which is difficult in a van. This method cooks the pasta directly in the sauce.

* The Ingredients:
* 150g dried pasta (Fusilli or Penne work best)
   * 1 jar of premium pre-made Bolognese or Marinara sauce (approx. 400g)
   * 1 pack of shelf-stable smoked sausages or salami (sliced)
   * 350ml water
   * Grated parmesan cheese (individual packet)
* The Steps:
1. Place your pot on the burner. Fry the sliced sausages for 2 minutes to release their oils.
   2. Pour the pasta sauce and the 350ml of water directly into the pot.
   3. Stir in the dry pasta. Ensure the liquid completely covers the noodles.
   4. Bring to a boil. Turn the flame down to low and cover with a lid.
   5. Simmer for 10 to 12 minutes. Stir frequently so the bottom does not burn.
   6. Once the pasta is tender and the sauce is thick, top with parmesan and serve.

## 3. Coconut Peanut Satay Noodles
A fast, savory Asian-inspired dish that cooks in under 10 minutes and uses zero fresh ingredients.

* The Ingredients:
* 2 blocks of instant ramen noodles (discard the flavor packets)
   * 200ml coconut milk (small carton or can)
   * 2 tablespoons smooth peanut butter
   * 1 tablespoon soy sauce
   * 1 teaspoon chili flakes or sriracha sauce
   * A handful of crushed peanuts (optional topping)
* The Steps:
1. Pour the coconut milk, peanut butter, soy sauce, and chili into your pot.
   2. Place on medium heat. Whisk gently until the peanut butter melts into a smooth sauce.
   3. Break the dry instant noodles in half. Submerge them directly into the bubbling sauce.
   4. Turn the heat to low. Cover and let the noodles absorb the liquid for 3 to 4 minutes.
   5. Stir well to coat the noodles completely. Top with crushed peanuts.

## Van Kitchen Efficiency Tips
* Pre-cut at home: If you use fresh meat or vegetables, chop them at home and pack them in airtight containers to save counter space.
* Windshield protection: Always use a folding wind shield around your stove. Wind drastically increases cooking time and wastes your propane gas.

Do you have any dietary restrictions (like vegetarian or gluten-free) that I should accommodate? I can also provide a list of essential pantry staples that travel well without a fridge.

Now imagine that is your BKA covered Ops KZ Wardens on the sublime threat parts... Poverty Oath? yeah. Love of Stupidity, you corrupt nazi cop fucks.

#provos #terroristgangs
#undergroundwars 

... in a close potential future ...


 Incorporated with DeepSeek

# THE ELLY BY LAWS

## Part One: The Sprawl Below

The helicopter banked hard over the Blue Nile, and Corporal Finnian Cross watched the sprawl unfold beneath him like a living circuit board. It was 3:47 AM local time, 2078, and the astral sky was bleeding.

From two thousand feet, New Roserea didn't look like a refugee settlement. It didn't look like a farming collective either, though that's what the logistics manifests called it. It looked like something that had grown rather than been built—a labyrinth of shipping containers stacked three and four high, welded together with scaffolding skeletons that climbed toward the heat-hazed stars, canvas domes hardened with resin-fiber compounds until they held the same tensile strength as ferrocrete but breathed in the wet-season humidity like living skin. Dirt tracks twisted between structures, some paved with compacted laterite, others just scars in the red earth that filled with mud every time the rains came. Lantern light bled through gaps in corrugated walls. Generator hum mixed with the distant lowing of cattle. Somewhere down there, a mosque's morning call was already crackling through tinny speakers, competing with the bass thrum of irrigation pumps.

Finnian had been flying over this sprawl for three years now. It still found ways to surprise him.

"Two minutes to drop, Corporal." The pilot's voice crackled through his helmet comms, filtered through the low whine of the rotor wash. "Got movement on thermals at grid reference Kilo-Seven. Looks like a technical, maybe two. Could be our friends from across the Ethiopian line."

Finnian didn't answer. He was already slipping sideways, not physically but perceptually, the way he'd been taught at the Academy of Applied Thaumaturgy in Dublin before he'd dropped out, before the Elly By Laws had given him a different kind of education entirely. His cooling suit hummed against his spine—a second skin of nano-woven carbon fiber threaded with liquid coolant capillaries that kept his body temperature stable even as his magic spiked. The suit was matte black, articulated at every joint, and when he moved, it made no sound at all.

The astral plane opened around him like a second set of eyes.

From two thousand feet, astral New Roserea was a different creature. The physical structures became shadows—grey suggestions of walls and roofs, transparent where living things had worn paths through them. But the *people*—the people were fire. Every soul in that sprawl burned with its own color: farmers still asleep in their container homes glowing soft amber, children dreaming in resin-hardened tents blazing bright blue, the night watch walking their routes with the steady orange of disciplined attention. He could read their emotional states from the way their auras flickered: fear in the eastern sectors where the last raid had hit, contentment in the central compounds where the community kitchens were already firing up for the morning meal, the particular grey-green exhaustion of a woman in labor in the medical outpost by the river.

And to the southwest, where the thermal signatures were converging, he saw the dead patches. The places where human souls had burned out their emotional spectra and gone cold. Drugged. Desperate. Dangerous.

"Got them," Finnian said, his voice flat. "Six bodies, two vehicles. One of them's carrying something with an active astral signature. Could be a fetish, could be worse."

"Worse how?"

"Worse like someone taught them blood magic."

The silence on the comms was answer enough.

---

## Part Two: The History Etched in Container Steel

They called them the Elly By Laws or just in short the Ely Laws, and almost no one in the sprawl knew the name. It was better that way.

Finnian had been twenty-two when the truth started leaking out of London and Dublin and New York—the truth about what had happened in the margins of the Good Friday Agreement, the secret addenda that the press never saw, the quiet provisions that turned the IRA's remaining infrastructure into an investment vehicle aimed at the soft underbelly of Western finance.

The way the old hands told it—the ones who'd been there, the ones who'd done the work—it started with a conversation in a safe house in Derry, sometime in 1998. The Agreement was being hammered out in Stormont, all cameras and handshakes, but in the back rooms, a different negotiation was taking place. The British Crown had a problem: decades of civil war financing had left trails. Western banks, hedge funds, private equity firms—they'd all taken their cut of blood gold from Sudan, from the Congo, from a dozen other killing fields. The money had been laundered through shell companies and offshore accounts, but it left a stain. It left witnesses.

The IRA had a different problem. Peace was coming, and with it, the end of their primary revenue streams. The organization needed to transform or die.

The Ely Laws were the solution.

Named for the Ely Lodge, where the secret protocols were allegedly drafted, the Laws established a framework. Certain individuals in Western financial centers—the worst of the worst, the ones who'd personally profited from genocide and civil war—would be removed. Not arrested; the legal systems they'd bought wouldn't allow it. Not tried; the evidence had been buried too deep. Removed. As if Elizabeth made a deal with Robespierre through time and space, deep in the Shadows.

The stabbings in London alleyways. The car accidents on Swiss mountain roads. The overdoses in Manhattan penthouses. The suicides that made no sense to anyone who'd known the deceased. All of it meticulously planned, meticulously executed, and meticulously forgotten by authorities who understood, on some level, that a certain kind of justice had been done.

And in exchange, the transformed IRA—rebranded, restructured, laundered through a dozen legitimate fronts—received investment capital. Seed money for a project that would, in theory, make the old ways obsolete.

Finnian's mother had been one of the accountants. She'd never carried a weapon, never pulled a trigger. She'd just made numbers disappear and reappear in the right places. She died of pancreatic cancer in 2063, and on her deathbed, she'd told him enough that he'd spent the next five years filling in the blanks.

The project had found its home in the Blue Nile region, in the chaos left behind by the Sudanese Civil War. An Irish investment company—Faughan Holdings, registered in Dublin, run by an AI named Gráinne that operated out of a server farm buried somewhere in the Wicklow Mountains—had purchased development rights to a stretch of land along the Ethiopian border that no one else wanted. The soil was workable. The climate was brutal but survivable. And the location, critically, was far enough from Khartoum and Juba that no central government would bother them for decades.

They built New Roserea with container homes and scaffolding and resin-hardened fabric. They built it with the labor of displaced farmers and former child soldiers who'd been given a choice between the sprawl and the grave. They built it with money that had been washed clean through Dubai logistics firms and AI-managed investment funds, every cent reinvested, no one getting rich, everyone getting fed.

The UAE's food processing industry, insatiable and ever-growing, bought everything the sprawl could produce. Sorghum, sesame, cotton, millet—the crops that had sustained this region for millennia, now grown with precision agriculture algorithms and drip irrigation and genetically optimized seeds that could survive the semi-arid climate. The money flowed back into roads and schools and clinics and security.

No one got rich. That was the point. That was the Ely Laws' great innovation: a value chain that served everyone and enriched no one. It just made everyone in feel good, which was a rare privilege in the world of terrorism and greed, and also a powerful magical focus in many offices and meetings creating an Aura of certain, most impressive kind.

---

## Part Three: The Drop

"Thirty seconds."

Finnian stood, his cooling suit's servos humming as they compensated for the helicopter's movement. The rest of his squad were doing the same—eight operators in matte black combat armor, faces hidden behind full-seal helmets, weapons checked and rechecked. They were an international force, these soldiers, and that was part of the design. Irish, Ethiopian, Sudanese, Nigerian, one woman from the Maluku Islands who'd been a pirate before she'd found religion and a cause worth fighting for. They weren't mercenaries in the traditional sense—Faughan Holdings paid them well but not extravagantly, success-based compensation that kept everyone invested in outcomes rather than body counts. They were believers. That was more dangerous.

"Remember the rules of engagement," Finnian said, his voice carrying through the squad channel. "We're not here to rack up kills. We're here to protect the sprawl. Anyone who drops a weapon gets to walk away. Anyone who doesn't—"

"Gets to meet the Corporal up close," said Deka, the Ethiopian woman who served as his second. There was dark humor in her voice, the kind that came from too many nights like this one.

Finnian didn't smile. He was already slipping deeper into astral perception, letting the physical world fade to grey shadows while the mana-plane blazed around him. The cooling suit's temperature dropped five degrees, compensating for the metabolic spike. His heart rate was 110 and climbing, but his hands were steady.

The helicopter's doors slid open. Hot night air blasted through the cabin, carrying the smell of dust and diesel and something older—the river, the soil, the particular funk of a million human beings living close together.

"Go."

He jumped.

Falling from a helicopter at two hundred feet with a combat load should have been terrifying. Finnian had done it often enough that the terror had calcified into something else—a kind of hyperaware focus that merged with his astral perception until he could see the world in both dimensions simultaneously. The physical ground rushing up to meet him, a patch of packed earth between two container homes. The astral ground, a shadow-plane where the emotional residue of decades of fear and hope and stubborn survival had stained the mana-lines like old blood.

His jump pack fired at fifty feet, a controlled burst that slowed his descent to something survivable. He hit the ground in a crouch, rifle already coming up, and the world resolved into immediate tactical reality.

Container wall to his left, corrugated steel painted with fading Arabic script. Scaffolding tower to his right, wrapped in resin-hardened canvas that glowed faintly in his astral sight from the body heat of the family sleeping inside. Ahead, a narrow alley that twisted between structures, dark enough that even his augmented vision struggled to parse the shadows.

"Spread out," he subvocalized. "Deka, take Beta team east. I've got the technicals."

The squad moved like oil on water. Finnian was already running, his cooling suit's actuators multiplying his stride length, his perception flicking between physical and astral every few heartbeats. In the physical world, he was a shadow among shadows, his matte black armor absorbing light, his footfalls nearly silent on the packed earth. In the astral, he was a bonfire—his awakened aura burning white-hot with the power he was already pulling into himself, shaping into forms that would become combat spells when he needed them.

He found the first technical at the junction of two dirt tracks, its engine still running, its flatbed packed with men who had the hollow-cheeked, glassy-eyed look of khat chewers on a three-day binge. Their weapons were a mix of Kalashnikovs and jury-rigged energy weapons, the kind of gear that filtered down from the corporate wars when the corps upgraded to newer models. Dangerous enough at close range. Useless against what was about to happen.

Finnian stepped out of the shadows and let them see him.

"Evening, gentlemen."

The gunfire started immediately, rounds pinging off the container walls behind him, sparking against the packed earth. Finnian was already moving—not dodging, but stepping *sideways*, his astral form separating partially from his physical body so that he occupied both planes at once. On the physical plane, the bullets passed through the space where he'd been. On the astral plane, he was reaching out with tendrils of shaped mana, wrapping them around the technical's engine block, and *squeezing*.

The engine seized with a sound like grinding bones. The technical lurched to a halt.

Three of the gunmen jumped from the flatbed, scattering. Two kept firing, their terror flaring bright orange in Finnian's astral sight. He could smell the drugs in their sweat, the particular chemical reek of long-term stimulant abuse.

He didn't kill them. That wasn't the point.

What he did was worse.

His first combat spell wasn't a fireball or a mana bolt. It was something he'd developed himself, a modification of the standard Stunbolt that targeted the amygdala directly. The gunman on the left dropped his weapon and started screaming, clawing at his own face as every fear receptor in his brain fired simultaneously. The second gunman turned to run and found his legs wouldn't obey him—a paralysis spell, precisely targeted, leaving him crumpled in the dirt with his eyes wide and his mouth working soundlessly.

The third was the one with the astral signature. Finnian could see it now—a fetish, bone and hair and something that glistened wetly, strapped to the man's chest. Blood magic. Amateurish, but potent enough.

The man raised his hands, and darkness boiled out of them.

---

## Part Four: The Nature of the Enemy

The thing about blood magic, Finnian had learned at the Academy, was that it was fundamentally parasitic. It didn't generate power—it stole it. Every spell cast with blood was fueled by someone's death, and the more deaths, the more power. The fetishes, the rituals, the symbols drawn in viscera—all of it was just a way of storing stolen life force until it could be used.

The darkness boiling from the drug-soldier's hands was a Death Touch variant, crude but effective. If it touched him, it would start unraveling his life force, pulling it out through his pores, leaving him a dessicated husk.

Finnian was already countering. His astral form solidified around him like armor, mana hardening into a barrier that the Death Touch splashed against uselessly. On the physical plane, he closed the distance in three strides, his cooling suit's servos whining with the effort. The drug-soldier had time to look surprised before Finnian's rifle butt connected with his temple.

The man went down. The fetish on his chest pulsed once, twice, and went dark.

"Clear," Finnian said. "Three hostiles down, non-lethal. I need a mage team to contain a blood fetish at grid reference Kilo-Seven."

"Copy, Corporal." Deka's voice was calm. "We've got the second technical. Same profile—drugged out, poorly equipped. No magic, though."

"Good. Start the sweep. I want the whole sector cleared before dawn."

He stood over the unconscious drug-soldiers and let himself feel, for a moment, the weight of what he'd just done. Three men who'd probably been farmers once, before the drugs and the desperation and the promises of whatever warlord had armed them. They'd come to New Roserea to steal food or fuel or just to hurt something, because hurting something was the only power they had left. And he'd broken them without killing them, because that was the mission, because that was the point.

The Ely Laws had been built on the idea that some people needed to be removed. But New Roserea had been built on a different idea: that everyone could be saved. The tension between those two principles was the thing that kept Finnian awake at night.

---

## Part Five: Retrospective

He'd been thirty-one when he signed the contract. Old enough to know better, young enough to still believe.

The recruiter had found him in a bar in Mombasa, where he'd been working as a freelance enforcer for a Kenyan shipping magnate who needed people intimidated on a regular basis. It was ugly work, but it paid, and Finnian had been trying to stay as far from Dublin as possible. The memories were too thick there—his mother's face, her stories, the way she'd looked at him in her final days and said *I did terrible things for good reasons, and I don't know if that makes me a monster or a saint*.

The recruiter was a woman in her fifties, silver-haired, with the kind of quiet competence that came from decades in the field. She'd bought him a drink and told him about New Roserea. About the sprawl along the Blue Nile, built on container homes and scaffolding and hope. About the farming collectives that fed the UAE's endless hunger for processed food. About the AI in Dublin that managed the investments, and the logistics center in Dubai that coordinated the supply chains, and the international force of mercenaries who protected it all.

"We're not an army," she'd said. "We're not even really a security company. We're just people who believe that the world can be different. That you can build something that serves everyone and enriches no one."

"And the pay?"

"Success-based. You eat what you kill, metaphorically speaking. But no one goes hungry."

He'd signed because he was tired of hurting people for money. He'd stayed because he'd found something he'd never expected to find: a purpose that didn't require him to become a monster.

---

## Part Six: The Astral War

The blood fetish containment took three hours. Three hours of ritual magic, of carefully unraveling the stolen life force bound into the bone-and-hair construct, of releasing the trapped deaths back into the mana-flow where they could dissipate naturally. By the time the mage team finished, dawn was breaking over the Blue Nile, and Finnian was sitting on the roof of a container home, watching the light spread across the sprawl.

From up here, New Roserea looked almost peaceful. The container homes gleamed in the early light, their corrugated walls painted in bright colors by the families who lived inside them. The scaffolding towers rose like industrial trees, wrapped in resin-hardened canvas that caught the sunrise and glowed amber. Smoke rose from cooking fires, and the sound of children laughing drifted up from the compounds below. Irrigation pumps chugged steadily, feeding water to fields of sorghum and sesame that stretched toward the Ethiopian border in geometric patterns of green and gold.

In the astral, the sprawl was even more beautiful. The mana-lines that ran beneath the earth—ley lines, the old texts called them—had been shaped by decades of human habitation into patterns that reflected the community's emotional life. Hope ran like a river of silver light through the central compounds. Grief pooled in the corners where people had died, but it was clean grief, processed grief, not the festering wounds that attracted dark spirits. The whole sprawl glowed with a particular shade of amber that Finnian had come to associate with stubborn, pragmatic survival.

This was what he was protecting. Not just the physical structures, but the astral ecosystem—the web of relationships and emotions and shared purpose that made New Roserea something more than a refugee camp. Something that might, given enough time, become a model for how the Sixth World could work.

His comms chimed. It was Gráinne, the AI, her synthesized voice carrying the faintest trace of a Dublin accent.

"Corporal Cross. I've reviewed the after-action reports. The blood fetish is concerning."

"Concerning how?"

"I've cross-referenced the construction with known patterns. It matches a template that was used by certain factions during the Sudanese Civil War. Factions that were, at the time, financed by Western interests."

Finnian was quiet for a moment. "You're saying this is blowback. The Ely Laws coming home."

"I'm saying that the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children, Corporal. It's an old concept. But the children have guns now, and someone is teaching them blood magic."

"Do we know who?"

"Not yet. But I'm running the numbers. When I know, you'll know."

The connection clicked off. Finnian sat in the growing light and watched the sprawl wake up, and thought about his mother, and the Ely Laws, and the long slow wheel of consequences that never stopped turning.

---

## Part Seven: The Long Game

At 0800, he met with the community council in the central compound. It was a weekly ritual, part security briefing and part political theater, but Finnian had learned to take it seriously. The council members were elected representatives from every sector of the sprawl—farmers and mechanics and teachers and the imam who ran the largest mosque. They were the people who actually made New Roserea work, and they deserved to know what was happening in the world beyond their container walls.

"The raid was contained," he told them, standing in the shade of a resin-hardened canopy while the morning heat built. "Six hostiles neutralized, non-lethal. One blood fetish confiscated and neutralized. No civilian casualties."

"What about the Ethiopian side?" asked Fatima, the woman who represented the eastern farming sectors. Her face was lined with sun and worry. "The raids always come from across the border. When are we going to do something about it?"

"That's not our mandate," Finnian said. "We defend the sprawl. We don't project force into sovereign territory."

"Sovereign." The word came out bitter. "Ethiopia hasn't controlled that border region in twenty years. It's warlords and drug gangs and whatever's left of the old rebel movements. They come here because we have something worth taking."

"They come here because they have nothing worth staying for."

The imam, a quiet man named Ibrahim who'd been a child soldier before he found God, spoke up. "The Corporal is right. Violence begets violence. We built New Roserea to break that cycle, not to perpetuate it."

"Easy to say when you're not the one whose irrigation pumps get stolen every dry season."

The argument continued, as it always did, but Finnian let it wash over him. He was watching the astral again, tracking the emotional currents in the room. Fatima's anger was genuine but not dangerous—a hot red that flared and faded. Ibrahim's calm was the deep blue of genuine faith. The other council members flickered through their own spectra, their auras blending and clashing as the debate went on.

This was the work. Not the combat drops, not the spell-slinging, not the adrenaline-soaked nights when death came calling. This—sitting in the shade, listening to people argue about pumps and patrol routes and whether to plant sorghum or millet in the east fields this season. This was what he was actually protecting.

---

## Part Eight: The Whisper from Dublin

That night, Gráinne called again.

"I've found the connection," she said. "The blood fetish template originated with a coven operating out of London in the 2050s. They were funded by a hedge fund manager named Alistair Vance. Vance was one of the early targets of the Ely Laws—he died in a car accident in Switzerland in 2060. But his money didn't die with him. It moved through a series of shell companies and eventually ended up in the hands of a warlord operating in the Ethiopian borderlands."

"Who's teaching the blood magic?"

"That's the interesting part. The warlord has a mage on retainer—a woman who calls herself the Red Doctor. She was trained at an academy in Cairo, but she went rogue about a decade ago. Her specialty is combat thaumaturgy, with a focus on blood magic applications. She's been selling her services to whoever can pay."

"And now she's sending her disciples into our territory."

"It would appear so. The question is why. The raids don't make strategic sense—they're too small to do real damage, and the losses in personnel and materiel are unsustainable. Unless..."

"Unless they're testing us. Probing our defenses. Looking for weaknesses."

"My analysis suggests a 78% probability that a larger operation is being planned. The Red Doctor has been recruiting aggressively for the past six months. If she's ready to commit her main force, we could be looking at something much worse than hit-and-run raids."

Finnian looked out over the sprawl, the lights of New Roserea twinkling in the darkness like earthbound stars. In the astral, he could see the mana-lines pulsing with the slow, steady rhythm of a community at rest.

"Then we need to be ready," he said. "Start running scenarios. I want to know every possible vector of attack, every weakness in our perimeter, every asset we can call on if things go bad."

"I'll have the analysis by morning."

"Good. And Gráinne?"

"Yes, Corporal?"

"Find out everything you can about the Red Doctor. If she's coming for us, I want to know her better than she knows herself."

---

## Epilogue: The Watch

Dawn came again, as it always did, and Finnian was still on watch.

The night had been quiet—no raids, no alarms, no blood fetishes pulsing darkly in the astral. Just the ordinary sounds of the sprawl sleeping, the generator hum and the distant river and the occasional cry of a night bird.

He stood on the roof of the tallest scaffolding tower in the central compound, watching the light spread across the Blue Nile valley. The river itself was a ribbon of silver in the early morning, winding north toward Khartoum and the distant sea. The fields stretched east and west, green and gold, fed by irrigation canals that glittered like veins of light. The container homes and resin domes and scaffolding structures spread in every direction, a labyrinth of human habitation that had grown organically over decades, adapting to the land and the climate and the needs of the people who lived there.

In the astral, the sprawl was a city of souls. Every life burned with its own light, its own story, its own hopes and fears and stubborn determination to survive. The mana-lines pulsed with the accumulated emotional energy of thousands of human beings living together, working together, building something that had never existed before.

Finnian thought about the Ely Laws, and his mother, and the long bloody road that had led from the Troubles to this place. He thought about the men he'd killed—directly or indirectly—in the service of a cause that most people didn't even know existed. He thought about the Red Doctor and whatever darkness she was preparing to unleash.

And then he let it all go, because there was work to do.

The sprawl was waking up. The irrigation pumps were already running. Somewhere below him, a child was laughing.

He climbed down from the tower and went back to work.

---

*In the months that followed, the raids increased in frequency and intensity. The Red Doctor's forces probed every weakness in New Roserea's defenses, and Finnian and his squad met them every time—sometimes with non-lethal force, sometimes with combat magic that left craters in the red earth. The war, if it could be called that, was fought mostly in the shadows: in the astral plane where mages dueled with mana and will, in the back channels where Gráinne tracked financial flows and intelligence assets, in the quiet conversations between council members who had to decide how much to tell their constituents.*

*But the sprawl held. The farms kept producing. The UAE kept buying. The AI in Dublin kept managing the investments, and the logistics center in Dubai kept coordinating the supply chains, and no one got rich, and everyone got fed.*

*And in the long watches of the night, Finnian Cross stood guard over a labyrinth of container homes and scaffolding towers and resin-hardened tents, waiting for the next fight, and the next, and the next.*

*Because that was the point. That was always the point.* 

  

# PART NINE: THE STORM AND THE BLACK SAINT

The rain had been falling for three days straight when Gráinne's voice came through the secure channel, carrying something Finnian had never heard in her synthesized Dublin accent before. Hesitation.

"Corporal Cross. I have an option. You will not like it."

Finnian was in the medical outpost, watching the mage team stabilize a farmer who'd caught a sliver of blood magic during the last raid. The man's aura flickered grey-green in his astral sight, fighting off a spiritual infection that would have killed a mundane within hours. Outside, the Blue Nile was rising, the dirt tracks turning to mud, the sprawl huddling under the downpour like a wounded animal.

"Tell me."

"The Red Doctor's main camp has been located. Grid reference One-Niner-Alpha, fifteen kilometers across the Ethiopian line. Fortified position, approximately eighty combatants, multiple blood magic practitioners, and the Doctor herself." A pause. "It is beyond your squad's operational capacity to neutralize. Even with the full mercenary complement, we would sustain unacceptable casualties. However, there exists an asset that could eliminate the target with extreme prejudice."

Finnian stepped outside into the rain. It hammered against his cooling suit, beading on the matte black surface, the liquid coolant system automatically adjusting to the temperature drop. "What kind of asset?"

"A Black Marauder."

The words meant nothing to him at first. Then they settled into context—fragments of old war stories, rumors from the European theater, whispers of a machine that had driven its pilots mad.

"That's a BattleMech," he said. "Seventy-five tons. Those things have been obsolete for—"

"This one is not obsolete. It has been... modified. Fusion reactor with infinite endurance. All-energy weapon loadout—twin Particle Projection Cannons, medium lasers, a pulse laser array. It is maintained by an order based out of Fortress Karpfenstein, in what used to be the Bavarian-Czech borderlands before central Europe fractured. They call themselves the Ordo Equitis Nigri. The Order of the Black Knight."

"And they just happen to have a functioning BattleMech."

"They have the only functioning Marauder variant left in existence that can still take the field. It has been kept operational for sixty years by a combination of technical expertise and what I can only describe as obsessive devotion. The fortress itself is built into a mountain, perpetually shrouded in rain and mist—central Europe's climate has become what the old meteorological models predicted. Perpetual precipitation. The Order keeps the machine in a vault beneath the keep, tended by generations of tech-adepts who have never seen the sun."

Finnian watched the rain carve channels in the red earth. In the astral, the storm was a cascade of grey-white energy, natural mana churned by atmospheric violence. "What's the catch?"

"The catch, Corporal, is that a Black Marauder cannot be piloted by a normal human being. The fusion reactor's electromagnetic field interacts with the neural interface in a way that creates a feedback loop. When a pilot jacks in, they experience what the Order calls the 'Immortality Cascade.' They become convinced—utterly, irrevocably convinced—that they cannot be killed. That they are an instrument of divine will, beyond death, beyond pain, beyond fear."

"That sounds like a tactical advantage."

"For the first few minutes. Then the feedback deepens. The pilot's sense of self dissolves. They stop distinguishing between themselves and the machine. They stop distinguishing between combat and existence. They seek out situations that would kill a sane person because some part of them wants to *test* the immortality, to prove it by surviving the unsurvivable. Most pilots last one mission before they have to be forcibly extracted from the cockpit, at which point they either fall catatonic or become homicidally psychotic. The Order calls it the Martyrdom Cycle."

"And you want to use this."

"I want to survive the Red Doctor's assault. She has been massing forces for a strike that will come within the next seventy-two hours. If she hits New Roserea with her full complement, the sprawl will burn. Thousands will die. Everything we built—everything your mother's generation built—will be erased. The Black Marauder can prevent that. But only if its pilot is someone who can withstand the Cascade."

Finnian closed his eyes. The rain sounded like static. "The 'Jesus level' thing. That's real?"

"It is the Order's central doctrine. They subject candidates to a battery of psychological and spiritual evaluations that would break a Zen master. Ninety-nine percent wash out. Those who pass achieve a state of radical self-emptying—a complete absence of ego, a total acceptance of mortality, a surrender so absolute that the Cascade has nothing to latch onto. They become, in the Order's terminology, 'hollow vessels.' The machine fills them, but it cannot break them, because there is nothing there to break."

"And they have one of these hollow vessels?"

"They have one. His name is Brother Erasmus. Before he joined the Order, he was a Carthusian monk in what remains of Switzerland. He has been piloting the Black Marauder for eleven years. He is, by all accounts, still sane. Still functional. Still capable of distinguishing between friend and foe."

"Eleven years." Finnian opened his eyes. "That's not possible."

"I have reviewed the mission logs. He has conducted forty-seven combat drops. Each time, he returns to baseline within hours of extraction. The Order considers him a living saint. The tech-adepts have begun incorporating his image into the machine's devotionals. There is a small shrine to him in the cockpit."

There was a long silence, filled only by the rain.

"When?"

"Tonight. The stratospheric bomber is already in the air—a modified B-1R airframe out of a private airfield in Djibouti. The Black Marauder was loaded aboard six hours ago, transported from Karpfenstein in a cargo submarine through the Mediterranean and the Suez. Brother Erasmus is in the jump seat, in meditation. They will reach drop altitude over your position at 0300 local time."

Finnian looked out across the sprawl, at the container homes and scaffolding towers and resin-hardened tents, at the fields of sorghum and sesame stretching toward the Ethiopian border, at the thousands of souls whose auras flickered in his astral sight like candles in a storm. "What do you need from me?"

"Target designation. You will move to a position overlooking the Red Doctor's camp and paint the primary structures with a laser designator. The Black Marauder will drop from sixty thousand feet—too high for anti-aircraft fire, too high for magical detection. It will use jump jets to guide its descent. When it lands, it will engage. The engagement window is estimated at four to seven minutes. After which, there will be nothing left of the camp but slag."

"And if Brother Erasmus... loses control?"

"The bomber carries a failsafe. A fusion detonator wired into the Marauder's reactor. If the pilot becomes non-responsive for more than fifteen minutes, the machine will self-destruct. The Order accepts this. Brother Erasmus himself requested it."

Finnian let out a breath that misted in the rain-cooled air. "Jesus Christ."

"Precisely, Corporal. That is the point."

---

At 0100, he assembled his squad in the armory. Deka, the Maluku pirate-turned-believer, was checking her rifle with methodical precision. The Nigerian, Adebayo, was humming a gospel hymn under his breath. The rest—Irish, Ethiopian, Sudanese—sat in various states of grim readiness, their faces illuminated by the blue glow of charging stations.

"We're not doing the killing tonight," Finnian told them. "We're doing the directing. I need a four-person team to move with me to the observation point. The rest of you will hold the border line in case anyone tries to run."

"Who's doing the killing?" Deka asked.

"Something out of Europe. A machine. An old machine." He paused. "A haunted machine, if you believe the stories."

"I believe all the stories," said Adebayo quietly. "I have seen too much not to."

The observation point was a ridgeline three kilometers from the Red Doctor's camp, a spine of volcanic rock that jutted from the rain-soaked earth like the vertebrae of some buried giant. Finnian and his team reached it at 0230, moving through the darkness with the ease of long practice, their cooling suits and combat armor rendering them nearly invisible in the downpour.

The camp below was a wound in the astral plane.

Finnian had seen blood magic before, but never concentrated like this. The Red Doctor had been building her forces for months, and the accumulated residue of her rituals had stained the mana-lines black. In the physical world, the camp was a collection of pre-fab structures and tents and technical vehicles, clustered around a central compound where something pulsed with malevolent light. In the astral, it was a necrotic tumor, tendrils of stolen life force reaching down into the earth, feeding on the death-energies of the civil war dead who still haunted this region.

"There must be sixty people down there," Deka murmured, her voice barely audible over the rain. "Maybe more."

"There are eighty-three," Finnian said, his astral perception counting the auras. Most of them were the cold grey of drugged-out soldiers, their emotional spectra burned out by khat and desperation. But a dozen burned with the particular black-red of blood magic initiates. And at the center, where the pulsing light was brightest, sat the Red Doctor herself—a woman whose aura was so corrupted that it barely registered as human anymore. She was a void in the shape of a person, a hunger that had consumed everything else.

"She's summoning something," Finnian said. "A spirit. A big one. We're just in time."

He unpacked the laser designator—a compact unit no larger than his fist, military-grade, manufactured in a Dubai factory that had no official existence. The targeting beam was invisible to mundane sight, but in the astral, it would paint the target like a pillar of fire for anyone with the right sensors. The Black Marauder, presumably, had such sensors.

"Grainne," he subvocalized. "We're in position. Target painted. Tell the bomber we're ready."

"Acknowledged, Corporal. Drop in sixty seconds. I am told to inform you that Brother Erasmus has completed his pre-drop prayers and is... smiling."

"Smiling."

"That was the word the bombardier used. Smiling. And humming. Something in Latin."

The rain intensified, as if the sky itself was trying to wash the corruption from the earth. Lightning flickered on the horizon, and in the brief illumination, Finnian saw the silhouette of a man standing on the ridgeline fifty meters to his left. He hadn't been there a moment ago. He wasn't there in the physical spectrum—Finnian's augmented vision showed only empty rock. But in the astral, he burned like a magnesium flare, white-gold and blinding, and his face was serene.

*Brother Erasmus.* Astrally projecting across kilometers, his physical body still strapped into the cockpit of a falling war machine.

The monk raised one hand in blessing. His lips moved, and Finnian heard the words as if they were spoken directly into his mind, bypassing his ears entirely.

*"Media vita in morte sumus. In the midst of life, we are in death."*

Then he was gone, and the sky split open.

---

The Black Marauder fell from the stratosphere like a judgment.

Even with his astral perception dialed to maximum sensitivity, Finnian barely tracked its descent. One moment, there was only rain and lightning and the distant thunder of the storm. The next, a column of fire was punching through the cloud ceiling at Mach 2, riding a plume of superheated air from the jump jets that screamed like the end of the world.

The sonic boom hit a second later, flattening the scrub grass on the ridgeline, cracking windows in the camp below. Soldiers started shouting, running, pointing weapons at the sky that would do nothing against what was coming.

The Marauder's jump jets flared again at five hundred meters, the fusion reactor's energy bleeding off velocity in a controlled deceleration that turned the rain around it to steam. For a moment, the machine hung suspended in the air, illuminated by its own drive plume—a seventy-five-ton humanoid shape of blackened armor plate and weapon barrels, its bird-like legs extended for landing, its torso bristling with the emitters of twin PPCs that glowed an unholy blue-white in the storm's darkness.

It was, Finnian thought, the most terrifying thing he had ever seen.

And he was looking at it through astral perception, which meant he was also seeing the thing that lived *inside* the machine.

The Black Marauder's fusion reactor wasn't just a power source. It was a spiritual nexus, a wound in the mana-plane that sucked ambient energy into itself and spat it out as coherent destruction. The neural interface that connected pilot to machine had, over sixty years of continuous operation, become something more than technology—it was a possession circuit, a bridge between the physical and astral that allowed the pilot's soul to merge with the machine's killing intent. The feedback loop wasn't a bug; it was the intended function. The Marauder had been designed not just to carry weapons, but to *be* a weapon, and that required a pilot who was willing to become ammunition.

Brother Erasmus, the Carthusian monk who had emptied himself of everything, was now filling the machine like water fills a vessel.

And he was, as Gráinne had reported, smiling.

The Marauder hit the ground with a seismic thud, its bird-like legs flexing to absorb the impact, and immediately opened fire.

---

The next four minutes were a light show.

Particle Projection Cannon bolts seared through the rain, turning water to steam and flesh to ash. The twin PPCs fired in alternating sequence, each shot a blue-white lance of man-made lightning that vaporized everything in its path. The medium lasers carved precise lines of destruction through the pre-fab structures, igniting fuel stores and ammunition caches. The pulse laser array stuttered with a sound like tearing fabric, its rapid-fire beams chopping down fleeing soldiers with mechanical precision.

The Red Doctor's camp had been a fortified position. It had earthworks and sandbags and anti-vehicle weapons and blood magic wards that should have turned aside any conventional assault. It had eighty-three combatants, twelve blood mages, and a summoning ritual that was intended to call up something from the deep astral that would have devastated New Roserea.

None of it mattered.

The Black Marauder walked through the camp like a god of war, its armor absorbing small-arms fire without scratching, its reactor powering weapon systems that had been designed for a battlefield where BattleMechs fought other BattleMechs. The blood magic wards shattered under the PPC fire, their black-red energies no match for the fusion-powered hell that was bearing down on them. The blood mages tried to fight back—Finnian saw tendrils of dark mana reaching for the machine, Death Touches and Mana Bolts and something that might have been a Blood Storm—but the Marauder's astral presence was so overwhelming that the spells simply dissolved against it, like waves against a cliff.

And through it all, Brother Erasmus was singing.

Finnian could hear it on the astral plane, a Gregorian chant that wove through the roar of weapons fire and the screams of the dying and the endless hammering of the rain. It was the *Dies Irae*, the old funeral mass, and the monk's voice was calm and steady and utterly without fear.

*"Rex tremendae majestatis, qui salvandos salvas gratis, salva me, fons pietatis."*

King of tremendous majesty, who saves the saved by grace, save me, fount of mercy.

The Red Doctor made her stand in the central compound, where the summoning circle pulsed with stolen life force. Finnian saw her through the driving rain—a woman in red robes, her face hidden behind a mask of human bone, her hands raised to call down the spirit she had been bargaining with. The thing was already halfway through the veil between worlds, a mass of tentacles and eyes and hunger that would have required a dozen combat mages to banish.

The Black Marauder brought both PPCs to bear and fired simultaneously.

The summoning circle vaporized. The spirit, caught between worlds, screamed once in the astral and was torn apart. The Red Doctor had time to raise a personal barrier—a shield of crystallized blood magic that would have stopped a tank shell—before the Marauder's pulse laser array found her and turned her into a memory.

Four minutes and thirty-seven seconds after the drop, the camp was silent.

---

Finnian descended from the ridgeline with Deka and Adebayo, picking their way through the rain-slick rocks toward what was left of the Red Doctor's compound. The rain was still falling, but now it was mixed with ash—the fine grey residue of everything that had burned. The smell was ozone and cooked meat and something else, something acrid that caught in the back of the throat.

The Black Marauder stood motionless in the center of the devastation, steam rising from its cooling vents, its weapon barrels still glowing faintly in the darkness. Its head—a low-slung sensor pod with a single cyclopean vision slit—was tilted slightly downward, as if the machine was contemplating the ruin it had made.

The cockpit hatch was open.

Brother Erasmus was climbing down the access ladder, moving with the careful deliberation of a man who had just spent four minutes as a god and was now remembering how to inhabit a human body. He was small—smaller than Finnian had expected, a wiry man in his fifties with a shaved head and a face that was all angles and hollows. He wore a simple grey flightsuit, unarmored, unadorned except for a wooden cross around his neck.

His eyes, when they met Finnian's, were the pale grey of a winter sky. And they were absolutely, terrifyingly serene.

"Corporal Cross," he said, and his voice was exactly what Finnian had heard on the astral plane—calm, musical, touched with an accent that might have been Swiss or might have been something much older. "The target has been neutralized. I trust this resolves your difficulty."

Finnian looked at the man, and then at the machine behind him, and then at the smoking crater where the Red Doctor had died. In the astral, the corruption was already fading, the stolen life force dissipating back into the mana-lines, the land beginning the slow process of healing.

"Yes," he said. "It does."

"Good." Brother Erasmus smiled, and it was the smile of a man who had looked into the abyss and found it full of light. "I will return to the bomber now. The machine requires its post-mission rites, and I require prayer. The Cascade leaves a residue, you understand. A kind of... echo. I must empty myself again before I can be of further use."

He turned and began walking toward the extraction point, his grey-clad figure quickly swallowed by the rain and the darkness. The Black Marauder's cockpit sealed itself with a hydraulic hiss, and the machine's reactor began cycling up again, preparing for retrieval.

Deka let out a breath she'd been holding for what seemed like a very long time. "I have seen many things," she said quietly. "I was a pirate in the Maluku Sea. I have killed men and watched them die. But that..."

"That was something else," Finnian agreed.

"Was he even human?"

"I don't know. I don't think it matters." He turned away from the machine, from the ash and the ruin and the fading echoes of a battle that hadn't been a battle at all, just an execution. "What matters is that the sprawl is safe. The Red Doctor is dead. And we're still here."

"Until the next one," Adebayo said.

"Until the next one."

They began the long walk back to New Roserea, and behind them, the Black Marauder rose into the storm on pillars of fire, ascending toward the stratospheric bomber that would carry it back to its fortress in the rain-soaked heart of Europe, where the Order of the Black Knight would tend its wounds and sing its hymns and wait for the next time the world needed something that could walk through hell and smile.

---

Later, much later, Finnian would learn the rest of the story.

He would learn that Brother Erasmus had been born in a monastery in the Swiss Alps, the son of a mother who had died in childbirth and a father who had never been named. He would learn that the Order had found him when he was twenty-three, already a monk, already hollow, already waiting for something to fill him. He would learn that the Cascade did leave a residue, that every mission eroded another layer of the man's humanity, and that the Order expected him to last perhaps another three years before the vessel cracked and the machine consumed him entirely.

And he would learn that there were other Black Marauders—not operational, not yet, but preserved in the vaults beneath Karpfenstein, waiting for the day when the Order found other hollow vessels to pilot them. The central European fortress town, perpetually shrouded in rain and mist, was not just a monastery or a maintenance facility. It was a factory, slowly, painstakingly, building an army of saints to pilot an army of demons.

The Ely Laws had been designed to end a certain kind of evil through targeted violence. The Black Marauder was something else entirely—a weapon that consumed its wielders as surely as it consumed its targets, a sacrament of destruction that turned men into martyrs whether they wanted it or not.

Finnian thought about that a lot, in the long watches of the night, standing guard over a sprawl that had been built on the bones of one kind of violence and was now being protected by another. He thought about his mother, and the car accidents and suicides that had cleared the path for New Roserea's creation. He thought about the Red Doctor, and whether she had been born a monster or made into one. He thought about Brother Erasmus, and the smile on his face when he climbed out of the cockpit, and the way his eyes had looked like winter.

The rain kept falling. The sprawl kept growing. The sorghum and sesame kept pushing up through the red earth, and the UAE kept buying, and the AI in Dublin kept managing the investments, and no one got rich, and everyone got fed.

And in a fortress beneath a mountain in central Europe, the Order of the Black Knight kept polishing its machines and praying for the souls of its pilots and waiting for the next war.

There was always a next war. 

A mail arrived. The Order was asking for a garden spot in their sprawl. A legend coming along with that. To retire. A man. One day.