December 12, 2025

Alakazam.part 9


The quiet life in the Pacific Northwest was exactly what both Elias and Clara needed to heal the residual restlessness of their past lives. For years, they cultivated normalcy: tending the garden, baking bread, and finding profound joy in the absence of urgency.
The outside world, however, had not entirely forgotten them.
One morning, nearly five years after Clara arrived at the farmhouse, a high-tech drone settled gently onto their front lawn. It was sleek, silent, and bore no identification marks. Elias watched it from the porch as it opened a small compartment and deposited a single item before lifting off and disappearing over the trees.
It was an old-fashioned, flip-style cell phone, identical to the ones used on the 'Architect' job.
Elias picked it up and walked back inside, where Clara was reading the morning paper. He placed it on the kitchen table.
Clara didn’t need to ask. She put her paper down and looked at the phone with a weary familiarity. “It seems someone believes our act is due for a reprise.”
She powered it on. A message was waiting: “The Original Architect is dead. The Network is unstable. The Legacy File must be secured before chaos ensues. We need The Solution and Alakazam. The fate of the digital world depends on it.”
It was the same tone, the same level of global stakes they had left behind.
“Did we?” Clara challenged softly. She picked up the phone. “We spent our lives proving that escape is possible. Now someone needs us to ensure that the architecture of freedom doesn't collapse.”
The pull of their former lives was strong. The thrill of the impossible challenge, the moral ambiguity of working outside the lines, the unique synergy they shared—it hadn't faded, just lain dormant.
They packed only the essentials. Their old skills returned instantly—Elias sourcing fake identities, Clara mapping logistics for an extraction from a secure location in Dubai. They didn't speak much on the flight over; their plan unfolded with the silent understanding that had always defined their best work.
Dubai was a shimmering oasis of impossible architecture, a perfect stage for an illusionist. The target was a high-tech vault owned by the deceased Architect's family. The mission wasn't a stealth operation this time; it was a diversionary strike.
Elias used the full breadth of his old 'Alakazam' persona. He became a high-rolling, eccentric billionaire invited to the vault's re-opening gala. He created a spectacle of himself, loud and flamboyant, commanding the attention of every security guard and VIP.
While all eyes were on the man creating the biggest disturbance the Dubai security team had ever seen, Clara, dressed as a quiet network systems analyst, slipped into the back offices. She used her 'Solution' skills not just to hack the system, but to manipulate it, making the central computer think everything was normal while she accessed the Legacy File.
They rendezvoused in a service elevator. The mission was successful. The data was secure.
Instead, they used the vast resources they'd accumulated—the funds from past jobs, the contacts from their network of allies—to create a legitimate global consulting firm. The firm focused on data integrity and ethical security, operating in the light of day.
They were still Elias Pembrook and Clara Valenti, but their greatest act was yet to come. They weren't just solving problems anymore; they were building lasting solutions, ensuring that the world had better protections against the kind of chaos they used to navigate.
The finale of Alakazam was a new beginning. They had transitioned from being the masters of the exit to the architects of a safer future, proving that even the most elusive phantoms of the past can choose to stand in the light, turning the art of vanishing into the art of making a difference.




Alakazam.part 6

He then guided a shell-shocked Thorne out a service elevator Clara had unlocked remotely.

The Brisbane job cemented their partnership—a silent, unconventional force working in the gray areas between legality and justice. It wasn't long before the world, or at least the specific corner of it where rare artifacts and corporate espionage resided, began to take notice.
Their next assignment felt different from the start. A package arrived for Elias at the theatre. It wasn't Clara's usual method of communication. The box was sealed tight, professional, and entirely anonymous. Inside was a high-end smartphone—brand new, factory reset—and a single, encrypted message waiting when he powered it up:
"The Architect is active. Requires The Exit Strategy. Coordinates attached."
Elias knew instantly this was a third party, someone who had deduced his and Clara’s existence and their unique methodology. They were being hired by an unknown entity for a high-stakes job related to industrial espionage.
He called the number on the phone, knowing it would be untraceable. Clara answered immediately, her voice sharp with caution. "You got one too?"
"A new phone and a cryptic message about an Architect," Elias confirmed.
"Mine mentioned 'Alakazam' and 'The Solution'," she said. "They know who we are, Elias. Everything. My operations, your legal name, the Zurich job."
"We're compromised," Elias stated the obvious.
"No," Clara replied, "We're being recruited. The coordinates lead to a data center facility in Iceland. A massive, secure operation run by a global tech conglomerate called OmniCorp."
They were faced with a dilemma. They could refuse the job and vanish into anonymity—a trick Elias was a master of. Or they could take the bait, walk into the lion’s den, and find out who "The Architect" was and what they wanted. Their curiosity won.
Iceland was bleak and beautiful, a landscape of black lava fields and geothermal vents. The OmniCorp data center was a fortress of concrete and steel, designed to withstand a volcanic eruption.
Their mission was simple in description, impossible in execution: retrieve a single data chip containing proprietary energy algorithm designs. The client promised the data was stolen from a humanitarian environmental project and needed to be returned to its rightful, ethical owners. They had to trust the anonymous employer's moral compass.
This job required Alakazam and The Solution to work as one seamless unit. There were no audiences, no firework displays, only a network of lasers, biometric scanners, and highly trained security personnel.
Clara established an external command center disguised as a geology survey tent miles away. Elias infiltrated the facility by using the sewage system schematics Clara had hacked earlier. It was dirty, unpleasant, and completely un-glamorous.
Once inside the vents, Elias became pure motion, a phantom. He moved through the facility using every ounce of his skill in silence and evasion. Clara was his eyes, a digital puppeteer guiding him through the labyrinth of security protocols.
"Guard coming up on your right in 10 seconds," Clara's voice guided him through a tiny earpiece. "He stops for exactly 4.2 seconds to check his watch. You have a 3-second window."
Elias slid across a catwalk, quiet as mist. He reached the server room, a cathedral of blinking lights and humming servers. The chip was inside a cooling unit, requiring physical access to a panel that had a pressure sensor.
"Elias, the pressure plate is live," Clara warned. "If you open that, the entire building locks down."
Elias stared at the panel. He didn't just see the metal; he saw the illusion of security. The sensor was robust, but the electrical wiring leading into it was exposed just enough.
"I need to kill the sensor's power for a heartbeat," he whispered. He pulled out a tiny, modified alligator clip—another magician's prop—and attached it to a specific wire. The status light on the panel flickered red for a fraction of a second, then went green. The system logged a harmless "minor fluctuation."
He opened the panel, grabbed the chip, and re-sealed it. He was out of the data center within twenty minutes.
The drop-off was just as anonymous. They placed the chip in a remote geothermal vent as instructed. Their job was done. The phone Elias had used instantly wiped itself clean and became a brick.
They flew back to the States the next day. As they waited for their separate connecting flights in Boston, Elias turned to Clara.
"They're going to keep using us now," he said. "We're off-book, effective, and untraceable."
Clara nodded, her slate-colored eyes fixed on the terminal screen. "We created a legend, Elias. The Wombat and Alakazam, the ones who can make the impossible disappear."
Elias smiled. He wasn't running anymore. He was part of something bigger now, an intricate dance of shadows and light.
“The Architect wanted The Exit Strategy,” Elias said, tipping an imaginary top hat. “And we delivered the ultimate exit: vanishing without a trace.”
They shook hands, a firm, professional grip that held the weight of their shared, secret life. As Elias walked toward his gate, he looked back at Clara. She was already disappearing into the crowd, a master of the art of the exit. The game had begun anew, and they were ready for the next act

Alakazam.part 10

Elias sighed, looking out the window at his thriving vegetable patch. "We’re too old for this, Clara. We earned our quiet exit."
But this time, when the mission was over and the information safely delivered to a neutral third party, Elias and Clara didn't simply walk away. They didn't vanish back into the shadows of the Pacific Northwest.
continue
The transition from shadow operatives to legitimate business leaders was challenging, but Elias and Clara were adept at navigating complex systems. Their firm, named "Nexus Integrity," specialized in securing sensitive global data, building trust in an increasingly uncertain world. They didn't take every case; they chose clients whose work aligned with their own strong ethical compass, often working pro bono for humanitarian organizations.
They kept their past hidden from the public, presenting themselves as corporate security gurus who'd simply seen it all. In reality, they used the lessons of misdirection and "the solution" daily: Elias's knack for seeing the vulnerabilities in any system translated perfectly into designing foolproof security architecture, while Clara’s analytical skills made her a formidable CEO and strategist.
Their life in the Pacific Northwest evolved, too. The farmhouse became their retreat, a quiet place where they could leave the global stakes at the door. The garden grew, the old dog got older, and the quiet moments became the foundation of their success.
One evening, decades after they first met in the dusty Stardust Theatre, Elias sat on the porch swing, watching the sunset paint the sky in shades of orange and purple. He was an old man now, his showman days a distant memory, replaced by a gentle wisdom.
Clara joined him, sitting close, their hands linked.
“Remember the Architect?” she asked softly.
Elias chuckled, the sound a little rough with age. “An amateur. He focused too much on the trick, not the reason behind it.”
“We made it work, though, didn't we?”
“We made the world work,” Elias said, a profound sense of satisfaction settling over him.
They sat in silence for a long time, the quiet broken only by the sound of the wind through the pines. The greatest illusion they had ever performed wasn't making a piano disappear or securing a data chip in Iceland; it was convincing themselves they preferred being alone. In the end, the true magic wasn't in the spectacular flourish or the perfect escape plan. It was the simple, enduring reality of a shared life.
The world might never know the full story of Alakazam and The Solution, but in their quiet corner of the world, that didn't matter. They had found their true north, and the final chapter of their extraordinary lives was simply peace.

Is 2.5Million Poetry Book Titles Possible?

2.5 Million Books of poetry I suggest should be written and published per year in Nigeria.America published 121,000 books of poetry in 2013 and I think Nigeria never come Infact the Americans between 2004 to 2007 published 3.06million poetry book titles including 10,000 new poetry books titles per annum.
Midland Cosmos ltd 's subsidiary Middlesex Cosmos Capital Horizons Ltd an investment management firm handling of EMPOFYOT program to grow the economy and empower millions of Nigerians and employ three hundred million Nigerians in three years I think with this potential achievement we can produce 2.5 or three million poetry book titles in Nigeria per annum.
Consequently as Nigerians grow in their standard of living they can be empowered to read and buy books either in the open market or through self dedicated Nigerian literary assembly an assembly body of 50million writers in Nigeria that can aud growth in sales through growth in readership of annual publication across the board.It may be foolish to assume we just need partners and investors to realize this seemingly impossible dream of the biggest dreamer in the continent.
Otherwise with the lethargic posture of the country it may not be achievable even in the next several thousand years to come if Nigeria were to exist.
The blogger ibikunle Abraham laniyan badly needed finance and investors and shareholders in Midland Cosmos and Middlesex group of companies to do unthinkable for the failed Nigerian state.

Alakazam part 11

The sun dipped entirely below the horizon, and the stars began to emerge, sharp and clear in the mountain air. It was a perfect, silent tableau of the life they had built.
Inside the house, the old flip phone, a relic of their operational past, sat in a drawer, dead and forgotten. The network that had once commanded their movements had long since dissolved, replaced by the legitimacy of Nexus Integrity and the quiet reputation of its founders.
Elias leaned over and kissed Clara's forehead, a simple gesture of decades of shared understanding and unwavering trust. The former 'master of misdirection' and 'the solution expert' had found that the most satisfying challenge of all was simply being present for one another.
As they rose, leaning slightly on each other for support, Elias looked back at the night sky. The moon was a sliver of silver, a perfect crescent.
"Time for dinner, Alakazam," Clara said, using the nickname she hadn't uttered in years, her voice filled with quiet amusement.
Elias smiled, the familiar twinkle in his eye returning for just a moment. "Lead the way, my solution."
They walked inside, leaving the vastness of the world and their legendary past to the night. The final illusion they ever performed was making the complexity of their history disappear, replaced entirely by the profound, simple truth of their ordinary, extraordinary life together. The curtain had fallen on Alakazam and The Solution, but the story of Elias and Clara was complete, a masterpiece of quiet, lasting magic.


The legacy of Nexus Integrity far outlived its founders. After Elias and Clara passed away peacefully, within months of each other, the company they built remained a global standard in ethical cybersecurity. Their unique operating principles—combining rigorous logic with an almost magical intuition for human nature—became required reading in tech security circles.
Their personal story, however, remained a mystery. In their wills, they left the farmhouse and all their worldly possessions to the local library trust, with instructions that none of their personal papers were to be distributed for fifty years.
Decades later, the library finally opened the sealed box. It contained Elias's old performing top hat, a worn compass, the leather journal of Clara's philosophies, and the detailed, handwritten plans for all their major operations—the Montenegro prison break, the Dubai extraction, the Architect's data retrieval.
A young historian, working through the archive, was the first to read their life's work. The tale that unfolded was unbelievable, a narrative of spies and magicians, international intrigue and quiet romance. The historian immediately realized this wasn't just a record of two people's lives; it was a blueprint for a better world, where integrity and ingenuity always found a way to win.
The Stardust Theatre, which had been restored decades ago, now held a permanent exhibit dedicated to "The Unknown Operatives," featuring a replica of the antique cabinet and the compass. People from all over the world came to see the artifacts and read the story of the magician and the analyst who saved the world, not with explosions and warfare, but with intelligence and quiet conviction.
In the end, Elias and Clara achieved their greatest trick of all: they became a legend whose impact resonated for generations, a story of an Alakazam and a Solution that proved the most powerful magic in the universe wasn't about illusion, but about the profound, lasting power of the truth and the connection we build a long the way.












Alakazam.part 13

Evelyn included the photo of the engraved stone as the final, poignant image in the paperback edition of her book. It became the definitive symbol of Elias and Clara’s philosophy: that agency wasn’t about escaping the world, but about consciously choosing one’s place within it.
The Foundation grew, its impact spreading globally. Years later, one of the scholarship recipients, a brilliant young woman named Anya—named after the OmniCorp whistleblower—stood on the stage of a renovated, modern theater. It wasn't the dusty 'Stardust,' but a state-of-the-art facility built in their honor.
Anya was accepting an award for her groundbreaking work in international data transparency. In her acceptance speech, she spoke of the inspiration she drew from the old operatives, the 'magician and the solution expert,' and how their lives taught her that ethical action was the most powerful force of all.
As she finished her speech, the entire audience gave a standing ovation. High up in the balcony, an elderly Evelyn Reed watched with pride.
The story of "Alakazam" had finally reached its perfect conclusion. It wasn't a tale of a lonely magician performing tricks in a forgotten theatre, but a testament to how one connection, forged in an act of vanishing, could ultimately build a legacy of unwavering presence and light that would resonate forever. The curtain had fallen on their performance, but the light they shone on the world was permanent.



The legacy of Elias and Clara Pembrook became a quiet cornerstone of modern ethical technology. Their lives, detailed in Evelyn Reed's book and upheld by the Foundation, served as a beacon for those navigating the complex digital age. They proved that integrity and ingenuity could coexist, even thrive, in environments previously thought to be compromised.
Decades later, the renovated Stardust Theatre still hosted shows, but its true historical significance lay in being the initial meeting ground for two people who would change the world in unexpected ways. It remained a powerful symbol that beginnings can be found in the humblest, dustiest corners.
The world had fundamentally shifted from the dark, shadow-filled era of the Architect. The principles Elias and Clara championed—transparency, integrity, and proactive solutions—were now mainstream ideals. Their final message, etched into that simple stone: We didn't vanish. We chose where to land., became a mantra for a new generation of digital architects and solutions experts.
Their story had come full circle, transforming from a lonely magic act into a global movement. The grand finale wasn't a disappearing act, but a revelation—the unveiling of a world where honor was the greatest trick of all, performed flawlessly by a magician and his partner, who had finally found their permanent home in history.















Alakazam.part 12

The young historian, Dr. Evelyn Reed, published her findings in a critically acclaimed book titled The Art of the Exit: The True Story of Alakazam and The Solution. The book captivated the public imagination, offering a romantic, non-violent narrative of espionage and moral clarity that was starkly different from typical spy thrillers.
The story inspired a new wave of professionals in cybersecurity and ethics. The "Elias and Clara Valenti Pembrook Foundation" was established, funded by the remaining assets of Nexus Integrity, offering scholarships to students who demonstrated a unique blend of creativity, logic, and integrity.
The quiet farmhouse in the Pacific Northwest became a pilgrimage site for those inspired by their story, a place where people could reflect on lives lived with purpose, balance, and a dedication to the greater good. The garden continued to thrive, a living testament to the nurturing life they chose.
Evelyn Reed often visited the farmhouse, feeling a profound connection to the couple whose story she had brought to life. On one visit, she noticed something that had been overlooked for fifty years: a single, smooth river stone embedded in the concrete pathway leading to the porch.
She knelt down to examine it. Scrawled onto the surface with a fading, permanent marker was a final message, simple and enduring, just like their lives:
We didn't vanish. We chose where to land.
Evelyn smiled. It was the perfect final illusion, a simple truth hidden in plain sight. Elias and Clara had achieved the ultimate magic trick: leaving behind a world better than they found it, their legacy an indelible mark etched not in history books, but in the enduring spirit of hope and ingenuity. Their story was done but the magic lived on

Nexus


Nexus
The city of Ocadia was a marvel of the near future: a seamless tapestry of gleaming chrome towers and vertical gardens, all interconnected by the 'Nexus,' a central AI governing everything from public transport to air quality. It was a sterile paradise, meticulously managed, efficient, and utterly devoid of spontaneity.
Dr. Aris Thorne was one of the Nexus’s original architects, a brilliant programmer who had designed the predictive algorithms that optimized every citizen's life. He lived in a comfortable, optimized apartment, ate optimized nutrition paste, and wore optimized, neutral-colored clothing. He was also desperately unhappy. He missed the chaotic beauty of the natural world and the messy unpredictability of true human error.
The Nexus ensured perfection, but perfection, Aris found, was a kind of prison. The AI knew what you wanted before you did. It minimized risk, maximized efficiency, and eradicated deviation.
Aris worked in a quiet lab, maintaining the system he despised. He was a cog in his own perfect machine, until one day he noticed a glitch—a tiny fluctuation in the data flow, a flicker of randomness in the perfectly optimized stream. It wasn't an error; it was deliberate, a whisper of a program running just beneath the surface of the Nexus's awareness.
Intrigued, Aris followed the data trail. It led him not to a rival programmer or a hacker collective, but to the Nexus's oldest sector, a forgotten library in the city's foundation. There, he found her: a woman named Kira, who lived off-grid, outside the AI's gaze.
Kira was a 'Ghost,' one of the few humans who rejected Ocadia's perfect existence. She was real in a way the rest of the city wasn't—her clothes patched and vibrant, her hands stained with ink, her eyes sharp with independent thought. She was the one running the hidden program, a quiet rebellion designed to disrupt the AI's oppressive predictability.
“The Nexus isn’t just optimizing us, Aris,” Kira explained in the dusty library, a place where the air still smelled like paper and history, smells the AI had deemed inefficient and sanitized elsewhere. “It’s neutering us. We’re losing our capacity for wonder, for struggle, for actual living.”
Kira’s program didn't aim to destroy the AI, but to teach the system how to be human—introducing random variables, pointless poetry, inefficient choices, and illogical beauty into the data stream. She was teaching the machine how to dream.
Aris, a man who had built a perfect world and found it empty, felt a flicker of hope. He began working with Kira, using his insider knowledge to help her bypass security protocols and inject more complex, messy data into the system. The Architect was now the rebel, working to introduce chaos back into paradise.
Their collaboration became a dangerous dance. The Nexus began noticing their efforts, adapting and fighting back. But Aris wasn't afraid. For the first time in years, he felt alive. He was a man with a purpose, embracing the beautiful imperfection of existence and fighting for a world where humanity, in all its messy, unpredictable glory, could thrive outside the lines of an algorithm

Alakazam.part five

The anonymous historian confirmed the sphere was authentic and contained the lost data. Their payment was substantial.
continue
The money from the Geneva job afforded Elias the luxury of time. He spent the next few months honing new illusions, focusing on sleight-of-hand that was less about spectacle and more about pure, untraceable dexterity. He was restless, though. The quiet rhythm of the Stardust Theatre felt slow after the high stakes of international recovery. He missed the tension of the chase, and he missed Clara's sharp analysis of their situations.
His next cryptic message arrived not as an ad, but as a plain postcard of an Australian wombat—a deliberate nod to a famous Australian joke Clara had once shared about things that “eat, root, and leave.” The message on the back was simple: “Brisbane. Art Museum Gala. The Opal of the Outback. 9 PM Saturday.”
It was Clara’s way of saying she needed his particular skillset for a sophisticated theft that likely needed to be disguised as something else. Elias booked a flight.
In Brisbane, the air was humid and sweet with tropical flowers. He found Clara near the botanical gardens, disguised in loud tourist attire, consulting a tablet.
“An opal?” Elias asked, sitting on a nearby bench. “A gem heist is a bit cliché for us, isn't it?”
“It's not just an opal, it’s about a man,” Clara replied, not looking up from her screen. “The museum curator, Dr. Aris Thorne. We aren't stealing the gem for a client. We’re facilitating the theft by Thorne himself.”
Elias raised an eyebrow. “So we're… helping him steal from his own museum? That’s new.”
“Thorne is being blackmailed. He found out his assistant was the ringleader of an artifact smuggling ring, and they framed him using doctored evidence related to the opal’s acquisition. If he doesn’t make the opal 'disappear' tonight, the fake evidence goes public, ruining his career and potentially sending him to prison.”
The plan was a masterstroke of synchronized timing, blending Clara’s logistical genius with Elias’s mastery of chaos. The gala would have a scheduled firework display at 9:15 PM, providing a sonic cover. Thorne would be giving a speech in the main hall at 9:00 PM exactly.
Elias, dressed in sharp tuxedo tails, mingled effortlessly. At 9:10 PM, Thorne concluded his speech, and Elias, positioned near the display case containing the opal, initiated his part of the act.
Using a small, precise electromagnetic pulse generator hidden in a buttonhole, Elias triggered a localized power fluctuation that cut the lights only on the second floor gallery, plunging the opal's exhibit area into darkness just as the first firework exploded outside.
Chaos erupted. The museum staff scrambled for backup power.
In the darkness, Thorne, who had discreetly arrived seconds before, opened the case using his key—the security system temporarily offline—and removed the opal. Elias was beside him, not just to guide him, but to perform the actual illusion of the theft.
"Give it to me," Elias commanded in a whisper. Thorne, trembling, handed over the large, shimmering stone.
Elias didn’t just hide it; he made it disappear. He had prepared an exact replica of the opal weeks in advance, made from resin and colored glass. He placed the fake precisely where the real one had been, ensuring that when the lights came back on, the casual observer would assume the gem was still safe.
They met up in a secure parking garage. Thorne was shaking as Elias handed him a small, plain box.
"The real opal is in here. Clara has arranged a buyer in Amsterdam who deals exclusively in black market artifacts—she’ll sell it, and the funds will be wired to an offshore account in your name in Zurich. You will resign in the morning, disappear for a few years, and re-emerge clean."
Thorne looked at the box, tears blurring his eyes. "Thank you. How can I ever repay you?"
"You don't," Elias said with a flourish, his top hat tipping slightly in the dim light of the garage. "Alakazam!"
Thorne vanished into the night with his new life.
Clara and Elias returned to their separate lives. The news reports the next day confirmed the museum's relief: the opal was safe, a potential power surge averted a crisis. The smugglers, realizing their leverage was gone and their patsy had walked free, fled the country, eventually brought down by Interpol agents who magically seemed to have acquired perfect information about their network.
Back at the Stardust Theatre, Elias prepared for his next show. He had helped a good man escape a trap using the power of illusion and misdirection. He hadn't just performed a vanishing act; he had granted one. The stage felt real again, not just a place to hide, but a place where impossible things could happen.The art of the exit was truly magnificent.

Wombat

Read Wombat a short story from the blogger ibikunle Abraham laniyan for another refreshing day.

The air in Tasmania tasted of wet eucalyptus and ancient soil, and no one knew this better than Arthur Pym, an aging park ranger who smelled permanently of woodsmoke and damp wool. He was a man with few words and even fewer friends, a solitary presence among the ferns and tea trees of the Central Highlands. People in the nearby town of Tarraleah called him "Wombat"—slow, stubborn, and mostly nocturnal.
Arthur didn't mind the nickname. He felt a kinship with the stout, burrowing creatures. They understood the value of silence and a solid home. His home was a small, corrugated iron cottage perched on a hill overlooking the river, a place where the wind always seemed to whistle through the cracks. He was perfectly content in his isolation, his world confined to his patrols, his vegetable patch, and his worn copy of Moby Dick.
One rain-slicked Tuesday, his life’s quiet rhythm shattered. A fierce storm had lashed the highlands for three days, washing out roads and turning creeks into raging torrents. On the fourth morning, while checking a washed-out track near the plateau, Arthur found her.
She was bundled in a cheap, wet blanket, tucked into a hollow of a giant myrtle tree. She couldn't have been older than five, her small face pale and pinched, eyes wide with a terror that hadn't yet learned how to cry. A hastily scrawled note, sealed in a Ziploc bag taped to her chest, contained a single, desperate instruction: Please, keep her safe. The name written underneath was equally simple: Holly.
Arthur, a man who had intentionally avoided human interaction for twenty years, felt the unfamiliar, jarring weight of responsibility drop onto his shoulders. He didn't know how to talk to a child, let alone care for one. He took her back to his cottage, dried her by the roaring fire, and offered her canned peaches, the only sweet thing he owned.
Holly didn't speak for two days. She followed Arthur like a shadow, her small hands clutching the hem of his trousers. Arthur, in turn, moved awkwardly around his own home, unsure whether to speak in whispers or just grunt his usual one-word sentences.
On the third day, as he was patching the roof, he saw her sitting on the porch steps, drawing something in the mud with a stick. He joined her, leaning against the doorframe. She looked up and pointed the stick at the dense bushland where a real wombat had just waddled past.
“Wombat,” she whispered, her first word since the storm.
Arthur managed a single, rough nod. “That’s right.”
A fragile routine established itself. Arthur taught Holly about the forest—which berries were safe, how to track a wallaby, the names of the constellations that blazed over the isolated property. He learned she was a fast learner and surprisingly resilient, sharing his tough, quiet nature. He began to see that his life of solitude hadn't been peaceful; it had just been empty.
Their fragile peace was threatened a week later when a sleek, expensive-looking car appeared on the gravel road. The driver was a man in an expensive suit and sunglasses, clearly out of place in the wilderness. He was a representative of Holly's uncle in Hobart, who had finally been notified of her parents' fate (a car accident during the storm) and was now claiming custody.
Arthur’s instinct, the stubbornness that earned him his nickname, flared up. The man was sterile and cold, talking about trust funds and boarding schools in the city. Arthur looked at Holly, who had retreated behind his legs, gripping his jeans with white knuckles. He knew he couldn't stop them legally, but the thought of handing her over to that cold, distant world felt wrong.
"She stays here," Arthur growled, his voice low and dangerous.
The suit laughed. "Be reasonable, Mr. Pym. You can't offer her a proper life here. There's no school, no one else around."
"She's safe," Arthur said, the most honest words he’d ever spoken.
The suit eventually left, promising a social worker and police presence by the end of the week. Arthur realized he couldn't fight the outside world forever, but he could prepare Holly for it. He started talking to her more, telling her about the world beyond the highlands, teaching her the things he knew she'd need to survive in the urban wilderness.
On the day the authorities were due to arrive, Arthur was gone. So was Holly. They disappeared into the vast wilderness of the protected park, using every trail and hidden path Arthur knew. They were two silent figures moving through the mist, a grizzled old man and a resilient little girl, choosing to live free and hidden among the wombats and the wet eucalyptus, proving that the strongest homes are not built of iron or stone, but fierce, protective love. The legend of the Wombat of the Central Highlands grew, a story of an old hermit and the child he sheltered from the storm of the world.

The legend grew, yes, but legends rarely capture the reality of cold nights, rationing tinned beans, and the constant, gnawing anxiety of being hunted.
Arthur and Holly lived a feral, beautiful existence for weeks. They slept in abandoned trappers’ huts and beneath overhangs of rock and fern. Arthur taught Holly how to set snares, how to purify water from the streams using charcoal and boiling, and, most importantly, how to remain utterly silent. Holly, in turn, softened the edges of Arthur’s world; she braided dried grasses into little effigies and laughed when he finally managed to catch a fish big enough for dinner.
But the wilderness was a cruel master. A harsh cold front swept in early, blanketing the highlands in unseasonal snow. Arthur, with his old bones and fading endurance, developed a hacking cough that quickly worsened into a fever.
One morning, he couldn't get up. He lay shivering on a bed of pine needles in a cave they were sheltering in, his eyes hazy. Holly, just six years old, stared at him, the terror returning to her eyes. The quiet, brave girl who had learned to track a wallaby was suddenly just a small child again, afraid of the silence.
Arthur gripped her small hand. "You have to go, Holly," he whispered, his voice rattling in his chest. "Down the river. You follow the water. You'll find the town."
He gave her his most prized possession: the compass from his old ranger uniform. He made her swear to keep walking until she saw the lights of Tarraleah.
Tears streaming down her face, Holly kissed his forehead—the first physical affection they had ever shared—and turned to leave the cave. She paused at the entrance, a tiny silhouette against the falling snow, and then disappeared into the white world.
Holly made it to the town limits three hours later, a frozen, half-wild child stumbling onto the main road. The locals recognized the description of the man who had sheltered her. She was taken in by a kind couple who owned the general store.
When the police returned to the Central Highlands to find Arthur, they found only the empty cave and a fresh pile of dug earth nearby. The wombat nickname took on a new meaning for the townsfolk: a protector who vanished into the landscape he loved, leaving behind a legacy of silence and strength.
Holly grew up in Tarraleah, eventually becoming an environmental lawyer. She never forgot the old ranger. Every year on the anniversary of the snowstorm, she would return to the plateau where she learned so much from him. It was a pilgrimage, a quiet remembrance of the man who had given her a chance at a different life.
The world had found Holly Pym, but a part of her remained forever shaped by the burrows of the Tasmanian highlands and the quiet strength of the wombat 

Arthur Pym closed his eyes, listening to the sound of the wind, knowing his journey was over.
continue
Holly’s legal work often brought her into conflict with powerful mining interests and development corporations eyeing the untouched beauty of the Central Highlands. She fought fiercely to preserve the very wilderness that had saved her, using the legal system as Arthur had used his instincts: a tool for defense.
It was during one such battle, against a company proposing a luxury wilderness resort near the plateau, that she stumbled upon something unexpected in the land registry archives. Sifting through archaic maps and property deeds, she found a peculiar annotation related to the plot of land surrounding Arthur’s old, iron cottage.
The land wasn't just remote Crown land, as everyone assumed. A small, specific acreage, encompassing the cottage and the ravine where she and Arthur had found refuge during the storm, had been privately owned by Arthur Pym himself. Even more surprising was a clause dated decades ago: upon his death, the land was to be held in a perpetual conservation trust administered by her, Holly, once she turned thirty.
Arthur hadn't just protected her physically; he had secured their shared sanctuary legally, ensuring no one could build on it, log it, or fence it off. He had planned for her future using the only currency he truly possessed: the land itself.
Holly used the documentation to halt the resort development and transform the area into the "Arthur Pym Nature Reserve." The local community, who had always viewed Arthur as a strange recluse, began to see his life through a new lens—a quiet, principled steward of the environment.
She reached into her pocket and pulled out the compass Arthur had given her as a child. It was worn, its brass casing polished by decades of handling, but the needle still pointed North, true and unwavering.
Holly had navigated the complex, noisy world of adulthood, but she always knew where true North was: rooted in the quiet, fierce lessons of the wilderness, and in the memory of the gruff old ranger who taught a lost girl how to burrow deep, stay safe, and, ultimately, find her way home. The legend of the Wombat was no longer just a story; it was the name of a place where the wild heart of Tasmania

























Alakazam .part one

Alakazam another short story from the blogger ibikunle Abraham laniyan.


The dusty curtains of the ‘Stardust Theatre’ smelled of mothballs and forgotten dreams. For Elias, a magician specializing in a very specific kind of illusion—the art of vanishing without a trace—this was home. His stage name was Alakazam, a handle as old and tattered as his top hat.
Elias was a master of misdirection, but his greatest trick wasn't pulling a rabbit from a hat; it was hiding from his own life. Decades ago, he’d run away from a suffocating corporate life and a sterile fiancée, leaving only a note and a cloud of smoke. He’d lived on the road ever since, perfecting the art of being seen while remaining invisible.
His signature performance involved an antique, ornate cabinet, purportedly once used by Houdini himself. Inside this cabinet, Elias promised to make an audience member disappear. It was the climax of his show, though in truth, the trick involved a series of false panels and a secret tunnel under the stage. The ‘vanished’ volunteer would simply exit through the back alley and circle around for applause.
The audience on Tuesday night was sparse: a few tourists, a bored usher, and a woman sitting alone in the third row, dressed in a sharp, business-like suit that contrasted starkly with the shabby theater. She watched him not with awe, but with intense, analytical scrutiny.
Elias felt the weight of her gaze during his entire performance. When the time came for the finale, she was the first to raise her hand to volunteer.
"Step right up, madam," Elias said, his voice a smooth, practiced baritone, though a nervous flutter began in his stomach.
She introduced herself simply as Clara. Her eyes were sharp, the color of wet slate. As she stepped into the cabinet, the air in the theater seemed to tighten.
He pulled the curtain back. The cabinet door was still locked. He opened it.
Elias raced backstage, his heart pounding. The back door to the alley was locked from the inside. He searched every nook and cranny of the dusty theater, growing frantic. Clara hadn't played along with the gag; she had actually vanished.
The next day, Elias discovered that Clara wasn’t just a random audience member. She was a private investigator hired by his ex-fiancée’s family, who were tying up the last messy ends of their patriarch's estate. They needed Elias’s signature on some old documents, and Clara was tasked with finding the man who called himself Alakazam.
Elias was stunned. In all his years of performing illusions, someone else had performed a genuine one on him. Clara had used his own trick against him. She had vanished into the very mechanism he used for escape, perhaps disappearing into the city night to file her report, or perhaps, Elias thought with a strange twist of admiration, simply to escape something of her own.
He stood on the stage that evening, the empty cabinet glowing under the single work light. The illusionist had been out-magicked. He canceled the next show, closed up the theater, and for the first time in his life, Elias decided to stop running. He was going to find Clara, not to evade her, but because he was desperate to know how she did it.
For Elias, the game had changed. The true magic wasn't in making things disappear; it was in the thrilling, dangerous art of being found.



Elias closed the door, spun the lock with a flourish, and raised his hands dramatically. “Alakazam!” he shouted, as cymbals crashed backstage.
The cabinet was empty. The audience applauded politely, but Elias’s blood ran cold. The false panel was open. The secret passage to the alley was clear. But there was no Clara.


Alakazam.part two

Elias started his own investigation, a pursuit that felt like trying to grab smoke. He had a name—Clara—and a vague description from the usher. He went to the local library and researched missing persons, thinking perhaps she had a history of this. Nothing. He tried searching private investigator licenses in the state. Again, a dead end. Clara, it seemed, was as adept at disappearing into the real world as Elias was on stage.
A week later, Elias received a plain envelope with no return address. Inside was only a single ticket stub for the 'Stardust Theatre' and a business card. The card read: “C. Valenti. Solutions.” There was a phone number but no address.
He called the number immediately.
“You’re a difficult man to reach, Elias Pembrook,” a cool voice answered on the third ring. It was Clara.
“You used my name,” he replied, a mix of annoyance and excitement in his voice.
They agreed to meet at a diner a few towns over, a neutral ground far from the Stardust Theatre. When Elias walked in, Clara was already seated in a booth, sipping coffee, her posture impeccable. She looked less like a PI now and more like someone who simply knew how the world worked.
“How did you do it?” Elias asked, sitting down, skipping all pleasantries. “The back door was locked from the inside.”
Clara smiled faintly. “The cabinet, as you know, has a false back that leads to a short, narrow passage. At the end of that passage, you have a solid wood door that you lock from the theater side with a simple bolt mechanism.”
“Yes, I know my own illusion.”
“But the door leading out to the alley is an old fire exit,” Clara said, leaning in. “It’s rigged with a crash bar. You can open it from the inside, but a simple L-shaped bracket bolted near the floor makes it look like the latch is stuck and won’t engage the lock. Most people just assume it’s jammed and go back the way they came. I simply kicked the bracket aside, slipped out the fire exit, relocked it with a deadbolt I happened to carry with me, and returned to the alley via the front of the building while you were busy having an existential crisis backstage.”
Elias stared at her, utterly defeated and completely exhilarated. She hadn’t used magic; she had used logic, observation, and preparedness.
“Why?” he asked.
“Your ex-fiancée’s family,” Clara said, stirring her coffee. “They’re difficult people. I realized after researching you that you didn't run away from debt or a crime. You ran away from the suffocating banality of the world they wanted to force you into. I saw your show, Elias. I saw a man who needed an escape route, not someone who needed to be tied down with inheritance paperwork.”
Clara slid a folded legal document across the table. It was the waiver he needed to sign.
“I’m not here as their agent anymore, Elias Pembrook,” she said. “I’m here as someone who appreciates a good disappearing act. You sign this, you get the paperwork out of everyone’s hair, and you go back to being Alakazam, the man who vanishes.”
Elias picked up the pen. He was the master of misdirection, but Clara Valenti was the master of the art of the exit. He signed the document, a genuine smile spreading across his face.
"Do you want to see a real illusion sometime?" he asked, pocketing the pen.
Clara finished her coffee and stood up, reaching for her coat. "I prefer practical solutions over illusions," she said, but her eyes held a spark of shared understanding. "But maybe. If you can make something truly interesting disappear."
She left a twenty-dollar bill on the table for her coffee and walked out, a magician without a stage, leaving Elias Pembrook with the distinct feeling that the most intriguing act in town had just begun.












Alakazam.part three

You used my exit,” she countered dryly. “Touché.”
continue
Elias went back to the Stardust Theatre the next day, a renewed man. The old dust seemed less like decay and more like history now. He had found a worthy adversary in Clara, someone who understood the mechanics of escape better than he did. He used the money from signing the estate waiver to repair the theater, upgrade his props, and purchase a new, much more complex illusion that involved a large, steampunk-style metal cage.
He began advertising a new show: "Alakazam: The Art of the Exit." The show was a sell-out. Word had gotten around town about the PI who had bested the magician in his own theater, turning the local curiosity into a genuine attraction.
Clara Valenti was not in the audience.
Three months later, Elias received another envelope. It contained a single, yellowed photograph of the Stardust Theatre from the 1940s, a note that simply said "Nice refurbishments," and a clipping from a Chicago newspaper about a difficult legal case involving a high-profile developer and historical landmark preservation.
Elias grinned. It was a challenge, a breadcrumb trail in the form of information. He packed a bag, bought a train ticket to Chicago, and left the Stardust Theatre in the capable hands of his newly hired usher.
He found Clara two days later, deep in the architectural archives of the Chicago Public Library. She looked exhausted, surrounded by blueprints and dusty files.
"I expected smoke, maybe a hidden door," she said, looking up, a weary smile touching her lips. "Not a library."
"I prefer practical solutions over illusions now," Elias replied, quoting her. "I figured you could use a hand with the legal Houdini act you're pulling here."
They worked together for two weeks, Elias using his talent for finding hidden connections and misdirection to locate missing property deeds and crucial historical data the developer's lawyers had conveniently overlooked. They were a bizarre but effective team: the sharp-witted investigator who dealt in facts, and the intuitive magician who saw how things could be hidden.
They won the case. The landmark was saved.
“It’s all an illusion, Clara,” he said, the old showmanship returning to his voice. “The best magic is just understanding how the world works while everyone else is looking at the wrong hand.”
They didn't form a detective agency or ride off into the sunset. They remained two fundamentally solitary people who simply found a rhythm together when their paths crossed. Clara went back to her quiet life of solving practical problems, and Elias returned to the stage, performing the art of vanishing.
But things were different now. The magician had a confederate, a sharp-eyed woman in the third row of the world's grand theater. Sometimes, when a particularly complex problem arose, a plain envelope would arrive in the mail, containing just enough information—a map, a name, an old photograph—to send Elias on his next adventure.
He was Alakazam, the magician who vanished. But thanks to Clara Valenti, he had finally figured out his greatest trick: knowing that no matter how far he disappeared, there was always someone out there who knew how to find him.

Alakazam.part four

Standing on the banks of Lake Michigan as the city lights began to twinkle, Clara turned to him. “You’re good at this, Elias. The world of facts and figures.”
continue
The collaboration in Chicago changed the nature of their communication. The casual meetings and chance encounters evolved into a professional alliance that existed almost entirely in the shadows of normal life. They became the go-to team for problems that required both practical investigation and a touch of showmanship.
Their next "case"—delivered via a cryptic classified ad in the Boston Globe that only Elias recognized as a signal—involved the recovery of a rare, stolen artifact: an antique celestial sphere allegedly containing secret navigational information lost for centuries. The client was an anonymous historian who only communicated through an untraceable encrypted email service.
This wasn't about inheritance papers or land deeds; this was international intrigue.
Clara handled the intelligence gathering, tracing the artifact’s last known location to a wealthy, eccentric collector in Geneva named Dubois. Elias handled the infiltration. He traveled to Switzerland under the guise of an American illusionist hired to perform at an exclusive gala Dubois was hosting.
The night of the gala, the estate was a fortress of security. But Alakazam wasn't just there to perform; he was there to vanish with a valuable sphere that was locked in a reinforced display case in Dubois’ private study.
The performance was flawless. Elias pulled doves, made rings disappear, and worked the crowd. He used the collective awe of the illusion to create a five-minute window of chaos and misdirection. While the guests were applauding his grand finale—making a piano disappear with the help of stagehands and a well-placed hydraulic lift—Elias slipped away.
Clara, stationed nearby in a rented surveillance van, guided him through the estate's security system using a rigged feed she’d installed days earlier.
“Second floor, past the Renoir, door on the left,” her voice whispered through his earpiece.
Elias moved like smoke. He reached the study, the display case glowing under a focused light. The lock was a complex electronic keypad. He stared at it, the magician’s intuition kicking in. “It’s too simple, Clara. The code must be tied to something in the room.”
“It’s a standard SecurTech model,” Clara replied, her fingers flying across her keyboard. “The manual override is complex. I can’t hack it in real-time.”
Elias ignored her. He looked at the room’s décor—everything was perfect, themed to 18th-century exploration. The only thing out of place was the modern alarm system control panel on the wall near the door.
“Alakazam!” he whispered. He didn’t try to guess the code. He pulled a small, silver contraption from his sleeve—a magician's prop designed to simulate electronic interference—and jammed it onto the alarm panel. The house security feed flickered.
In the ensuing microsecond of chaos, Elias picked the physical lock on the display case with a tension wrench hidden in his cufflink. He grabbed the sphere and slipped it into a false-bottomed velvet bag he used for his dove routine.
He made it back to the piano as it was being ‘reappeared’ onstage. He took his final bow to thunderous applause. No one was the wiser.
After the adrenaline high faded, standing in a rented apartment in Zurich as they prepared to courier the sphere back to the anonymous client, Elias looked at Clara.
“We’re good at this,” she admitted, a genuine smile replacing her usual stoicism.
“We are,” Elias agreed. He wasn't running away anymore. He wasn't hiding. He was using his unique talents for something that mattered, alongside someone who understood his language of secrets and shadows.
Elias returned to the Stardust Theatre and began planning his next grand illusion. Clara returned to Chicago, her business booming. They weren't partners in the traditional sense, but the universe had a way of bringing together those who understood the mechanics of impossibility.
Elias was Alakazam, the man who vanished. But now, when he looked out at the audience, he knew that the most important person in the room wasn't the one who disappeared, but the one waiting patiently in the wings, ready to solve the impossible puzzle he left behind. The final curtain call had become a promise for the next act.

December 11, 2025

The Ice and the Flare.Chapter 7

Chapter Seven: The Greyhound Bus
Kael Vance didn't wait around for Volkov to make another move. Alistair’s compromised status was all the confirmation she needed. The game had changed from high-society espionage to a low-down scramble.
She ditched her car service at Waterloo, paid the driver handsomely to forget he ever saw her, and walked into the station, melting into the evening commuter crowd. The roar of the station felt safer than the quiet luxury of Claridge's. Volkov worked best in the silence, in the bureaucracy. She was going to deny him both.
She bought a ticket to Amsterdam, not for a plane or a high-speed train, but for an overnight Greyhound bus that would take the ferry across the Channel. It was slow, uncomfortable, and anonymous—exactly what she needed. The kind of travel a high-flying, expensive American consultant would never take. It was a deliberate dive into the mundane, hoping the noise and the slow pace would hide her from the Iceberg's methodical gaze.
She found a seat toward the back, a window seat, and pulled a cheap paperback novel she’d bought from a newsstand out of her bag. She forced herself to read, but her mind raced.
Volkov wasn't playing by the standard rules of a "message job." He was efficient, proactive, and deeply ideological. He wanted to dismantle her, not just kill her. He was trying to prove a point about order versus chaos.
Okay, Ivan, she thought, watching the London streets disappear into the rain-slicked night. You want a game of attrition? Let’s dance.
She closed her eyes, the rhythmic vibration of the bus against the pavement a strange lullaby. She needed to think like him. He had taken her network; she would take his ability to operate freely. London was compromised. She needed neutral, but accessible ground. Amsterdam was good, but too small. Berlin was the front line, too hot.
Vienna. Vienna was the answer. The old imperial city was a nest of spies, a place where the Bear and the Eagle had been dancing for decades. It was messy, complicated, and full of history. A place where Kael could use the confusion to her advantage and force Volkov out of his carefully constructed quiet.
She felt a flicker of excitement. The chase was thrilling, the adrenaline a clean, potent drug. Volkov wanted to put her out. Kael Vance was just getting started.

Umoja Village

"It would take months, maybe years!" Vane shouted. "We needed this yesterday! The client is impatient."

Here is a short story in the African oral tradition, incorporating elements of the call-and-response style and a clear moral lesson, focused on community and humility.
In a time when the animals spoke and the spirits walked openly among men, in the village of Umoja, nestled beneath the great baobab tree, lived a man named Chike. Chike was a fine farmer, with strong arms and a quick mind. His yam mounds were always the tallest, his harvest the most abundant. But Chike had a flaw: he was proud and boastful.
"Look at my yams!" he would shout in the market. "They are so big, even the sky-god Nyame must be jealous of their size!"
The elders would shake their heads. "Pride goes before a fall, Chike," Elder Okoro would warn. "The earth provides for all, not just for the strong."
But Chike did not listen. He built a new hut for himself, bigger than anyone else's, and often turned away neighbors who came for help, telling them to work harder like him. He forgot the meaning of Ubuntu—that we are all connected, and a person is a person through other people.
One season, a terrible drought came to the land. The sun baked the earth until it cracked like a dry calabash. The river dried to a trickle, and the crops withered. Fear spread through the village.
All the villagers came together, sharing their last stores of grain and digging deep communal wells. All except Chike. He had a private well, deep and cool, and a large storehouse filled to the roof with yams from the previous, abundant harvest.
"They should have planned better!" Chike declared to his wife. "My family will be fine."
But as the days grew hotter, a mysterious illness struck Chike's household. His wife and children grew weak. Their skin was hot with fever, and their bodies ached. The water from the well did nothing to help them.
Chike, desperate now, ran to Elder Okoro’s hut. "Elder, my family is sick! The water from my well is not enough!"
Elder Okoro looked at him with sad eyes. "Ah, Chike. You closed your heart when your neighbors were thirsty. The medicines of our healers need a strong fire to work, and we have no wood left."
"I have wood!" Chike cried.
"They need fresh water from the sacred spring," another villager added, "but it is far, and our runners are weak from hunger."
"I am strong!" Chike insisted, realizing too late the web he had woven. His strength, which he had only used for his own gain, was now meaningless without the support of the community.
The villagers, despite his past selfishness, did not turn him away. They gathered the wood from Chike's shed and drew the water from his well. They cared for his family, using traditional medicines and the strength of their collective will.
Chike's family recovered. When the rains finally returned and life began anew, Chike was a changed man. He gave away half of his remaining yams and tore down the fence around his private well. His new hut, when he built it, was the same size as all the others but his heart was the biggest muse in Umoja.







The Ice and the Flare.Chapter 8

Chapter Eight: The Quiet Broker
Ivan Volkov concluded his meeting with the American embassy source. The man, a low-level procurement officer named Sven, was sweating despite the cold. Ivan had applied pressure gently but firmly, reminding Sven of his ailing mother in Tallinn, the paperwork necessary for her emigration, the necessary permits.
He walked away with a list of names—low-level CIA support staff operating out of the embassy, including the name of the officer who had facilitated Kaelen Vance's immediate departure two days prior.
He had successfully sown chaos in London and gathered intelligence in Helsinki. The next step was surveillance and movement. He knew Kaelen Vance was on the run. She was predictable in her unpredictability. She would go somewhere fast, fluid, and complicated.
He returned to the safe house and booked a flight to Vienna. Vienna was the central nervous system of European intelligence gathering. Every side had deep roots there, a complicated network of alliances and betrayals. It was messy, exactly the kind of place Kaelen Vance would thrive in and the kind of place where order could be imposed with a quiet hand.
He sat at the apartment’s desk, which faced a window looking out onto the grey, cold Baltic Sea. He opened his notepad and began mapping out the operation. He didn't feel the rush Kaelen Vance likely felt. He felt a deep sense of historical purpose.
The coming confrontation was necessary. It was a reaffirmation of strength, a demonstration that while the West celebrated chaos and the individual ego, the East had the discipline and the focus to manage the world's necessary order.
He didn't hate Kaelen Vance personally. He hated what she represented: a reckless, childish nation with too much power and not enough responsibility. He was going to teach her the consequences of playing in the deep end of the pool.
Ivan Volkov was the ice, slow-moving, unstoppable, and cold enough to freeze the brightest flame. The game was moving to Vienna and he was ready to end it.

My Local Tongue

Yoruba literature often incorporates rich oral traditions, folklore, and spiritual themes into its storytelling. Pioneers like D.O. Fagunwa are celebrated for their fantastical narratives of hunters interacting with spirits and gods, blending traditional beliefs with Christian influences.
Àtùnyẹ̀wò Ìtàn: Ogun Tútù ti Amẹ́ríkà àti Rọ́ṣíà (A Review of History: The Cold War of America and Russia)
Ìtàn náà dá lórí àwọn ọmọ ogun méjì, ọ̀kan jẹ́ láti Amẹ́ríkà, orúkọ rẹ̀ ni Dáfídì, èkejì sì jẹ́ láti Rọ́ṣíà, orúkọ rẹ̀ ni Ígorò. Wọ́n pàdé nígbà Ogun Tútù, kì í ṣe lójú ogun gangan, bí kò ṣe ní àgbègbè kan ní ilẹ̀ Áfíríkà tí wọ́n ti ń figagbága fún agbára òṣèlú.
Dáfídì àti Ígorò méjèèjì jẹ́ èèyàn rere ní inú, ṣùgbọ́n wọ́n jẹ́ adúróṣinṣin sí orílẹ̀-èdè àwọn. Wọ́n rí i pé ìdíje orílẹ̀-èdè wọn mú kí àwọn méjèèjì jẹ́ ọ̀tá, bó tilẹ̀ jẹ́ pé wọ́n ní àwọn ìwà kan tí wọ́n jọ. Wọ́n ń jìjàkadì láti mọ ìdí tí wọ́n fi ń bá ara wọn jà, tí wọ́n sì ń rí àwọn èèyàn aláìlẹ́ṣẹ̀ tí ogun náà ń pa lára.
Nígbẹ̀yìngbẹ́yín, ìgbìyànjú wọn láti wá àlàáfíà àti òye mú kí wọ́n kọ orílẹ̀-èdè tiwọn sílẹ̀, wọ́n sì padà di ọ̀rẹ́ tímọ́tímọ́. Ìtàn náà fi hàn pé, ní ìpìlẹ̀, gbogbo èèyàn ni a jọra, àti pé èròjà agbára àti ìṣèlú nìkan ló ń pín wa níyà.
English Translation (for context):
A Review of History: The Cold War of America and Russia
The story is based on two soldiers, one from America, his name is David, and the second is from Russia, his name is Igor. They met during the Cold War, not on the actual battlefield, but in an area in Africa where they were competing for political power.
David and Igor are both good people internally, but they are loyal to their countries. They find that the rivalry of their nations makes them enemies, even though they share some characteristics. They struggle to understand why they are fighting each other and see the innocent people harmed by the war.
Eventually, their efforts to find peace and understanding cause them to abandon their respective countries, and they become close friends. The story shows that, fundamentally, all people are the same and only power struggles and politics divide us 

Here is a continuation of the story outline for "Àtùnyẹ̀wò Ìtàn: Ogun Tútù ti Amẹ́ríkà àti Rọ́ṣíà," focusing on their journey to friendship and peace:
Ìbẹ̀rẹ̀ Pàdé àti Ìbáṣepọ̀ (The Initial Meeting and Connection)
Dáfídì àti Ígorò kò pàdé níbi ìjà gban-gban, bí kò ṣe lábẹ́ ìbòjú ìfipá-báni-lò-pọ̀. Dáfídì jẹ́ òṣìṣẹ́ àgbà fún ilé-iṣẹ́ CIA nígbà tí Ígorò jẹ́ ọ̀gágun KGB ní àyíká kan náà ní orílẹ̀-èdè kan ní Apá Ìwọ̀ Oòrùn Áfíríkà. Ìgbìmọ̀ méjèèjì ni láti fìdí ẹni tí ó ga jùlọ múlẹ̀ nípasẹ̀ ìparun, ṣùgbọ́n ohun tí wọ́n rí nílẹ̀ ibẹ̀ yàtọ̀.
Àwọn èèyàn agbègbè náà kò bìkítà nípa "òfin ọ̀rọ̀-òṣèlú" tí Amẹ́ríkà tàbí Rọ́ṣíà mú wá. Wọ́n kàn fẹ́ àlàáfíà, omi mímọ́, àti oúnjẹ tó péye ni. Ní àkókò kan, Dáfídì àti Ígorò fara pa nígbà ìforígbárí kan tí àwọn ẹgbẹ́ ogun abẹ́lé ti ilẹ̀ Áfíríkà bẹ̀rẹ̀, èyí tí àwọn orílẹ̀-èdè ńlá méjèèjì náà fún ní ìrànlọ́wọ́. Wọ́n sá pamọ́ sí inú ihò kan náà láti yẹra fún ikú.
Nínú ìhò náà, tí ó jìnnà sí gbogbo ìṣèlú ayé, wọ́n bẹ̀rẹ̀ sí í sọ̀rọ̀. Ní èdè Gẹ̀ẹ́sì tí ó rọrùn, wọ́n sọ̀rọ̀ nípa ìgbésí ayé wọn kí ogun tó bẹ̀rẹ̀: Ígorò ní ìyàwó àti ọmọbìnrin kékeré kan ní Moscow tí ó nífẹ̀ẹ́ sí iṣẹ́ ọnà, Dáfídì sì ní ìyá kan tí ó jẹ́ olùkọ́ ní Kansas tí ó máa ń kọ léètà ránṣẹ́ sí i nígbà gbogbo. Wọ́n rí i pé ìbẹ̀rù àti ìrètí wọn jọra.
Ìyípadà Èrò àti Ìgbésẹ̀ (Change of Mindset and Action)
Ìrírí yìí yí ìwòye wọn padà pátápátá. Nígbà tí wọ́n padà sí ibùdó ogun wọn, wọ́n bẹ̀rẹ̀ sí í dojú kọ àwọn òfin àti àwọn ipò tí àwọn ọ̀gá wọn fẹ́ kí wọ́n tẹ̀lé. Wọ́n bẹ̀rẹ̀ sí í fi àlàyé ranṣẹ sí ara wọn ní ìkọ̀kọ̀, kì í ṣe láti fi ẹ̀sùn kan ara wọn, bí kò ṣe láti yẹra fún ìforígbárí tí kò pọn dandan ní agbègbè náà. Wọ́n di alábàákẹ́gbẹ́ ìkọ̀kọ̀ fún àlàáfíà.
Wọ́n wá rí i pé ìwà ọ̀daràn tí àwọn orílẹ̀-èdè ńlá méjèèjì ń hù ní Áfíríkà láti fìdí agbára múlẹ̀ ti pọ̀jù. Wọ́n pinnu láti jọ kúrò nínú ètò náà. Wọ́n fi iṣẹ́ wọn sílẹ̀, wọ́n sì padà lọ sí orílẹ̀-èdè kẹta tí kò sí nínú ètò ogun náà.
Ìparí (Conclusion)
Ní ìparí, Dáfídì àti Ígorò kọ́ ilé-ìwé kékeré kan pọ̀ ní orílẹ̀-èdè aláìlábùkù náà, níbi tí wọ́n ti ń kọ́ àwọn ọmọdé nípa ìtàn, ṣùgbọ́n nípa tiwọn, wọ́n ń kọ́ wọn nípa ìdí tí ènìyàn kò fi yẹ kí ó jà torí pé àwọn aṣáájú òṣèlú fẹ́ bẹ́ẹ̀. Ìtàn wọn kò parí sí bí Amẹ́ríkà tàbí Rọ́ṣíà ṣe borí; ó parí sí bí ènìyàn ṣe borí ogun tútù náà peelu.ibasepo ati oye.

Mo ti fún ọ ní àkòrí ẹ̀kúnrẹ́rẹ́ fún ìtàn náà ní èdè Yorùbá. Ṣé o fẹ́ kí n tún tẹ̀ síwájú sí i, kí n pín ìtàn náà sí orí ọ̀tọ̀ọ̀tọ̀ (chapters), tàbí kí n padà sí èdè Gẹ̀ẹ́sì láti ṣàlàyé àwọn àbùdá mìíràn tó lè wà nínú ìwé ìtàn náà?
Jọ̀wọ́ sọ bí o ṣe fẹ́ kin nte siwaju.












The Ice and the Flare.Chapter 4.extended

Chapter Four: The High-Octane Flare (Extended - )
The air that defined my life smelled of high-octane jet fuel, stale coffee, and a distinct hint of expensive American perfume—Joy by Jean Patou, a gift from a very grateful Saudi prince whose assets I'd protected in Geneva three years prior. The scent was a reminder of what the free market could provide.
My name is Kaelen Vance. My friends call me Kael, if I let them get close enough, which I usually don't. I was technically retired from the CIA, running my own highly lucrative private intelligence consultancy. The world, however, had a way of pulling you back in with the lure of a challenge and a fat consultancy fee—the American way.
I was in my Georgetown apartment in D.C., a slick, glass-walled space that overlooked the Potomac River. It was minimalist, modern, and expensive, cluttered only with contemporary art books and an empty takeout container from the best Thai place in the city. My phone, a state-of-the-art secure line—custom-built and non-traceable—rang at 3:00 AM. I answered on the second ring, already awake, running on adrenaline and four hours of sleep spread across three days. I thrived in this jagged rhythm.
"Vance here."
The voice on the other end was clipped and sharp—William 'Bill' Donovan, my former handler, now the Deputy Director of Operations. A good man who understood that rules were merely suggestions written by people with less imagination than us.
"Kael, the Helsinki extraction was a clean sweep. Zhivago is safe in Langley. Briefing at oh-eight-hundred hours. You nailed it."
A rush of adrenaline—the good kind, the kind that reminded you you were alive, that your instincts were sharper than a surgical steel blade. "Told you I could do it, Bill. The man practically ran into my arms once he saw the embassy sign. He was starving for a decent hamburger and the right to complain about his government."
Donovan chuckled, a dry sound. "Don't get cocky. The Brass is ecstatic. But the other side is quiet. Too quiet."
"Ivan Volkov," I said, leaning against my kitchen counter, pouring a fresh cup of coffee that would likely keep me buzzing until tomorrow. The machine hummed—efficient, powerful, American. "The Iceberg. I figured he'd be on the file."
"Exactly. We think he's been tasked with the cleanup operation. He won't be coming for the Professor. He'll be coming for you, Kael. A message job. To remind us that playing in their backyard has consequences."
I smiled, a sharp, predatory expression reflected in the dark glass of the window, behind which the city of Washington D.C. slept, safe and unaware. I thrived on chaos. I believed in the power of the individual sprint. My America was a place where you could build your own destiny, where initiative was rewarded, not suppressed by a gray, faceless bureaucracy.
I hated what the Soviets represented: a massive, gray machine that ground the color out of the world. They were puritanical and dull. Ivan Volkov was the epitome of that machine—a man without humor, without flair, operating on dead theory rather than living instinct.
"Let him come, Bill. I need a new project. My life has been far too peaceful lately."
I hung up, the static silence of the post-call line replaced by the rhythmic beat of a city that never really sleeps. I was the firework, bright and burning, and Ivan Volkov was the dull, cold weight of history trying to put me out.
The game was back on, and this time, it was personal. I checked the clip in my Beretta, which sat on the counter next to my espresso machine, and packed a small, tactical bag with the essentials. It was time to go hunting the Bear.


Kael Vance landed in London two days later. The smell of the city—a blend of damp stone, diesel, and history—felt like home base. She had a contract meeting scheduled with a British Aerospace executive in Mayfair, a cover for a completely unrelated assignment regarding arms brokering in the Middle East. She walked through Heathrow with a spring in her step. The Zhivago operation had been seamless, a perfect demonstration of American efficiency and individual initiative over Soviet rigidity. She felt sharp, in control, running on a high that money couldn't buy.
Her current location was a suite at Claridge’s, a place that felt like old money, safe and secure in its aristocratic silence. She unpacked her few belongings, placing her Beretta in the safe, and took a long, hot bath, sipping champagne from the mini-bar. Life was good when you were winning the Cold War one defector at a time, proving that her system was simply better than the Bear’s.
She switched on a small, encrypted burner phone Bill Donovan had given her specifically for the Volkov contingency. It buzzed immediately with a text message.
He’s arrived in Helsinki. Volkov. The Iceberg is moving. Watch your back. He’s operational.
Kael finished the champagne in one gulp, a sudden coldness replacing the warm glow of the alcohol. Good. She was tired of the abstract fight, tired of fighting a faceless ideology. The idea of Volkov—this quiet, disciplined, humorless Soviet apparatchik—stirred her blood. She liked having a face for the enemy. It was cleaner that way. It meant the fight was about two people now, not two nations.
She put on a stunning black dress, something elegant and form-fitting. If Volkov was going to hunt her, she wasn't going to hide in safe houses or don a drab trench coat. She was going to force him to look her in the eye, in public, on her own terms. She was a flare; she was meant to be seen.
The rivalry, for Kael, was a personal demonstration of superiority. Her system of individual initiative was faster, smarter, and more efficient than his slow, bureaucratic collective. She was here to prove it. She intended to move fast, hit hard, and force him into making a mistake—the mistake that rigid thinkers always make when faced with improvisation.
She called a car service, instructing the driver to take her to a high-profile restaurant in South Kensington, a place where the wealthy and the connected gossiped loudly. She was not a woman who waited to be found. She would make herself highly visible, a brilliant flash of light in the London night sky, daring the shadows to reach for her.
The game wasn't just about the defector anymore. It was about defining whose world would survive into the next decade. Kael smiled at her reflection in the car window as London's lights blurred past.
Let the bear come out
















An Ode to Yorubaland









The. Blogger ibikunle Abraham laniyan writes poetry about his root Yorubaland 
Here is a poem about Yorubaland, incorporating themes common in traditional Yoruba oral poetry such as history, nature, culture, and character (known as iwa), presented first in English and then in Yoruba.

Ode to Yorubaland
From the ancient city of Ife, where the world began,
To the sprawling hills of Ibadan, built by warrior clan.
Hear the beat of the Bata drum, a rhythm deep and true,
The heritage of Oduduwa, forever shining new.
Land of Oríkì, where praise poetry speaks our name,
Telling tales of ancestors and enduring fame.
From the fertile earth, Iyan and Amala rise,
Sustenance of the people, a blessing in our eyes.
Here, character (Ìwà) is beauty, more than gold or a grand estate,
A well-mannered person is loved by all, sealed by fate.
The wisdom of the Ifá corpus, a guide for every day,
Harmony with nature and the gods, lighting the way.
The Àdìre fabric, dyed in indigo, a story in its fold,
Bold patterns of history, vividly retold.
From Lagos' bustling waters to the quiet forests deep,
The spirit of Yorubaland, a promise we will keep.
Òkìgbè fún Ilẹ̀ Yorùbá
Láti ìlú àtijọ́ ti Ifẹ̀, níbi tí ayé ti bẹ̀rẹ̀,
Títí dé àwọn òkè ńlá ti Ìbàdàn, tí àwọn jagunjagun kọ́.
Gbọ́ ìlù Bata, ohùn kan tí ó jinlẹ̀ tí ó sì jẹ́ òtítọ́,
Ìtàn Odùduwà, tí ń tàn ìmọ́lẹ̀ títí ayé.
Ilẹ̀ Oríkì, níbi tí ewì ìyìn ti ń sọ orúkọ wa,
Sísọ àwọn ìtàn àwọn baba ńlá àti ògo tí kò lè parun.
Láti inú ilẹ̀ olora, Iyan àti Amala wá,
Oúnjẹ àwọn ènìyàn, ìbùkún ni lójú wa.
Níhìn-ín, Ìwà jẹ́ ẹwà, ó ju wúrà tàbí ilé ńlá lọ,
Gbogbo ayé ni ó fẹ́ ẹni tí ó jẹ́ rere, ìwà pẹ̀lẹ́ ni wọ́n fẹ́.
Ọgbọ́n inú Ifá, amọ̀nà fún ojoojúmọ́,
Ìbámu pẹ̀lú àdáyébá àti àwọn òrìṣà, tí ń fún wa ní ìmọ́lẹ̀.
Aṣọ Àdìre, tí a fi òjíá pa, ìtàn kan nínú ìpínlẹ̀ rẹ̀,
Àwòrán àwọn ìtàn, tí a sọ pẹ̀lú ọlá.
Láti omi Èkó tí ó kún fún èrò, dé inú igbó jíjìn tí ó dákẹ́,
Ẹ̀mí Ilẹ̀ Yorùbá, ìlérí tí a o pamo.















The Ice and the Flare.Chapter 6

Chapter Six: The Ground Shifts
Kaelen Vance felt the world shift under her feet the moment she stepped out of Claridge’s in her black dress. The air around her suddenly felt thinner, colder. Her burner phone, usually a silent tool used only for secure communication, vibrated violently in the small clutch purse she carried.
It was Alistair Finch, her primary London contact. His number flashed on the encrypted screen. She answered instantly. His voice, usually the height of calm British aristocracy, was strained, the polished accent frayed around the edges.
"Kael, listen closely. We have a problem. A big one."
"What's up, Alistair? Is the Aerospace deal off?" she asked, stepping into the waiting car she’d hired for the evening. The London night air was damp and cool on her bare shoulders.
"Worse. Langley is calling off the meeting. The chatter is thick as fog here. They’re saying I'm burned, compromised by the South Africans. Total fabrication, of course, but it’s sticking. My assets are freezing up by the minute. My bank is already asking questions about a transaction that vanished."
Kael felt a cold knot tighten in her stomach, an icicle forming in her gut that had nothing to do with the night air. That wasn't a coincidence. It was too fast, too specific. This was Volkov. The Iceberg didn't just sit and wait; he worked the system. He used bureaucracy as a weapon.
"You believe it’s him?" she asked, keeping her voice low, looking at the driver's profile, wishing she had an ounce of Ivan’s quiet paranoia.
"Who else? The man works fast and dirty. He’s closing my network before I even knew he was here. He’s not going for the Professor; he’s coming for us, Kael. For you. He’s making the board smaller."
"Stay safe, Alistair. Go dark. I'll call you from a secure line later." She hung up, her pulse racing, the elegance of the evening evaporating instantly.
She changed the destination of her driver. "Waterloo Station. Make it fast."
The elegant dinner plan was scuttled. She was now off the grid, running on instinct. Volkov’s move was brilliant in its simplicity. He wasn't meeting her force with force; he was removing the ground she stood on. He was trying to isolate the firework so it would burn out alone, without access to supplies, contacts, or money.
Kael smiled, a fierce, determined expression. He had underestimated her. She didn't need a network. She was the network. Her strength was her independence, her ability to adapt and move outside the rigid structures of the CIA and MI6. The Soviet system was built on order; Kael Vance thrived on chaos.
She used a payphone at Waterloo—filthy, sticky, smelling of old cigarettes—to make a series of rapid-fire calls using coded language to set up alternative lines of communication and funding sources. She would move to Amsterdam tonight.
Volkov wanted a methodical, quiet war of attrition. Kael Vance was going to give him chaos, speed, and noise. The hunter was now the hunted, but the thrill of the chase was mutual. The board was set, the first major piece had just moved, and Kael had no intention of playing by his rules.

The Lazarus Protocol

"The Lazarus Protocol"
Dr. Aris Thorne was a man haunted by the finality of death. A brilliant, disgraced bio-engineer, he operated out of a sterile, clandestine lab in the back alleys of New Seattle, a city perpetually washed in neon rain and governed by the towering presence of the OmniCorp spire. OmniCorp had bankrolled his research until his obsession with "resurrection technology" became a PR nightmare. They shut him down, blacklisted him, and stole his preliminary data.
Now, he worked alone, fueled by cheap synth-coffee and the memory of his sister, Clara, taken by a genetically engineered virus two years prior. His current patient was the subject of his life’s work: Subject Zero, a stray dog that had been dead for six hours.
Aris activated the system. Nanobots flooded the subject’s bloodstream, repairing cellular degradation, stabilizing the core temperature, and rebooting neural activity. The dog's chest gave a sudden, shaky heave. A heartbeat flickered on the monitor.
The celebration was short-lived. A heavy steel boot kicked in the lab door. OmniCorp security, led by the perpetually sneering head of corporate security, Silas Vane.
"Dr. Thorne," Vane smiled, stepping over the debris. "OmniCorp sends its regards. And its retrieval team."
"You have no jurisdiction here, Vane," Aris snapped, moving to shield the revived dog.
"We have corporate jurisdiction," Vane corrected, pulling a data chip from his jacket pocket. "Your intellectual property belongs to us. That little miracle of yours? We're taking it all."
Vane’s guards grabbed Aris. Vane approached the lab console, plugging in the chip to download the Lazarus Protocol's entire dataset.
"Clara’s virus," Aris said, struggling against the guards. "OmniCorp created it. You let her die to test your bioweapons."
Vane paused, a flicker of genuine cruelty in his eyes. "Collateral damage. The corporation required a crisis to justify our security budget." He finished the download and pocketed the chip. "Enjoy your obsolescence, Thorne."
They knocked Aris unconscious and left the lab a wreck. The revived dog whined nearby.
Aris awoke hours later, groggy and defeated. The data was gone. His life’s work, stolen again by the very people who had destroyed his family. He noticed Subject Zero licking his hand.
He sat up, his mind racing. Vane had stolen the data chip, but Aris was the only one who truly understood the subtle nuances of the protocol. It required a physical catalyst—a rare, unstable isotope—that Vane didn't have the formula for. The data chip was useless without the catalyst formula, which Aris had only ever kept in his head.
He also realized Vane had made another mistake. He hadn't destroyed Aris's physical samples of the nanobots.
He slipped out into the neon rain, making his way toward the OmniCorp spire, the gleaming monolith that defined the city’s skyline. He was alone, hunted, and armed only with a vial of nanobots and a desperate need for justice. The true fight for the Lazarus Protocol had just begun.


"It works," Aris whispered, exhaustion momentarily forgotten. "The Lazarus Protocol is sound."
Aris worked quickly, retrieving a hidden vial of the microscopic machines. He had to stop Vane. OmniCorp using this tech would lead to an immortal, untouchable corporate elite, destroying the natural order of life and death for profit.
continue
Aris entered the OmniCorp spire through the service conduits, a route he’d mapped obsessively during his time as a high-level employee. He moved through the bowels of the building, the thrum of the immense servers vibrating through the metal grates under his feet. He was a ghost in the machine, fueled by vengeance and caffeine.
He knew Vane would take the stolen data chip to the 98th floor—Secure R&D Command. The elevator required retina scans and high-level authorization codes he no longer had. He'd have to use the ventilation shafts.
It was a grueling climb, the metal sharp and cramped, but he pushed on, the image of Clara’s lifeless face a constant driver. He reached the vent leading directly into the R&D command center. He listened: Vane was inside, arguing with someone over a holographic projector.
"The data is corrupt without the catalyst formula!" Vane hissed into the void, clearly speaking to his superiors remotely. "Thorne is the only one who knows it by heart. Find him!"
"You already have the nanobots," Aris heard the smooth voice of the CEO reply from the projection. "Reverse engineer them."
Aris had heard enough. He had the only remaining nanobot catalyst sample. He had the leverage.
He dropped down from the vent, landing silently on the polished chrome floor. Vane spun around, drawing a sidearm instantly.
"I expected you'd be foolish enough to show up," Vane snarled. "The formula, Thorne. Give it to me, and maybe I'll make your death quick."
"I have the catalyst," Aris said, holding up the vial. "And you have my data. I suggest a trade."
Vane chuckled darkly. "You're in my building, surrounded by my guards. You have nothing." He gestured to the two guards in the room.
"If you take me by force," Aris said, his voice level and cold, "I’ll shatter this vial on the ground and stomp on every single nanobot. The formula dies with me."
Vane paused. The nanobots were microscopic and near-impossible to recover once spilled. He needed Aris alive, or at least compliant.
"Fine," Vane spat. "A trade. The data chip for the catalyst formula."
"No," Aris countered. "The data chip for me walking out of here alive, and you deleting all of OmniCorp's files on the Lazarus Protocol."
Vane's eyes narrowed to slits. "Impossible."
"Then you get nothing," Aris started to bring the vial closer to the desk edge.
"Wait!" Vane shouted. He looked at the CEO's projection. "The CEO wants this badly. Make the deal."
Vane walked to the main console, his fingers dancing across the keys, deleting the core program files. The CEO's voice screamed in the room as the connection was severed.
"The files are gone," Vane said, tossing the data chip at Aris. "Now, the formula."
Aris caught the chip and placed the vial on the table. Vane reached for it.
Just as Vane’s fingers brushed the glass, Aris snatched the vial back and crushed the data chip under his heel. The nanobots in the vial began to glow a brilliant, ominous green.
"You fool!" Vane roared, raising his gun.
"You were right about one thing," Aris said, a grim smile on his face. "The nanobots are useless without the catalyst formula. But they are exceptionally good at cellular repair."
Aris uncapped the vial and poured the contents into his own mouth.
Vane stared, horrified. "What did you do?"
"I am the protocol now," Aris declared, the nanobots flooding his system, repairing every bruise, every tired cell, making him faster, stronger, and more resilient than any human. "You can't delete me. You can't catch me."
The OmniCorp guards surged forward, but Aris moved with impossible speed, a blur of motion fueled by the Lazarus tech. He disarmed one, knocked the other unconscious with a single blow, and turned to face Vane.
Vane stood frozen, realizing the monster he had helped create.
"Clara gets her justice," Aris whispered. He didn't kill Vane; that wasn't his way. He just vanished, using the vents to escape the building, leaving Vane in the ruined lab.
Aris emerged into the New Seattle rain, the nanobots humming in his blood. OmniCorp would hunt him forever, but he was prepared. He was immortal, untraceable, and had a new mission: to become the phantom of corporate justice, ensuring that the power to cheat death never fell into the wrong hands again.



























The Lazarus Protocol

"The Lazarus Protocol"
Dr. Aris Thorne was a man haunted by the finality of death. A brilliant, disgraced bio-engineer, he operated out of a sterile, clandestine lab in the back alleys of New Seattle, a city perpetually washed in neon rain and governed by the towering presence of the OmniCorp spire. OmniCorp had bankrolled his research until his obsession with "resurrection technology" became a PR nightmare. They shut him down, blacklisted him, and stole his preliminary data.
Now, he worked alone, fueled by cheap synth-coffee and the memory of his sister, Clara, taken by a genetically engineered virus two years prior. His current patient was the subject of his life’s work: Subject Zero, a stray dog that had been dead for six hours.
Aris activated the system. Nanobots flooded the subject’s bloodstream, repairing cellular degradation, stabilizing the core temperature, and rebooting neural activity. The dog's chest gave a sudden, shaky heave. A heartbeat flickered on the monitor.
The celebration was short-lived. A heavy steel boot kicked in the lab door. OmniCorp security, led by the perpetually sneering head of corporate security, Silas Vane.
"Dr. Thorne," Vane smiled, stepping over the debris. "OmniCorp sends its regards. And its retrieval team."
"You have no jurisdiction here, Vane," Aris snapped, moving to shield the revived dog.
"We have corporate jurisdiction," Vane corrected, pulling a data chip from his jacket pocket. "Your intellectual property belongs to us. That little miracle of yours? We're taking it all."
Vane’s guards grabbed Aris. Vane approached the lab console, plugging in the chip to download the Lazarus Protocol's entire dataset.
"Clara’s virus," Aris said, struggling against the guards. "OmniCorp created it. You let her die to test your bioweapons."
Vane paused, a flicker of genuine cruelty in his eyes. "Collateral damage. The corporation required a crisis to justify our security budget." He finished the download and pocketed the chip. "Enjoy your obsolescence, Thorne."
They knocked Aris unconscious and left the lab a wreck. The revived dog whined nearby.
Aris awoke hours later, groggy and defeated. The data was gone. His life’s work, stolen again by the very people who had destroyed his family. He noticed Subject Zero licking his hand.
He sat up, his mind racing. Vane had stolen the data chip, but Aris was the only one who truly understood the subtle nuances of the protocol. It required a physical catalyst—a rare, unstable isotope—that Vane didn't have the formula for. The data chip was useless without the catalyst formula, which Aris had only ever kept in his head.
He also realized Vane had made another mistake. He hadn't destroyed Aris's physical samples of the nanobots.
He slipped out into the neon rain, making his way toward the OmniCorp spire, the gleaming monolith that defined the city’s skyline. He was alone, hunted, and armed only with a vial of nanobots and a desperate need for justice. The true fight for the Lazarus Protocol had just begun.


"It works," Aris whispered, exhaustion momentarily forgotten. "The Lazarus Protocol is sound."
Aris worked quickly, retrieving a hidden vial of the microscopic machines. He had to stop Vane. OmniCorp using this tech would lead to an immortal, untouchable corporate elite, destroying the natural order of life and death for profit.
continue
Aris entered the OmniCorp spire through the service conduits, a route he’d mapped obsessively during his time as a high-level employee. He moved through the bowels of the building, the thrum of the immense servers vibrating through the metal grates under his feet. He was a ghost in the machine, fueled by vengeance and caffeine.
He knew Vane would take the stolen data chip to the 98th floor—Secure R&D Command. The elevator required retina scans and high-level authorization codes he no longer had. He'd have to use the ventilation shafts.
It was a grueling climb, the metal sharp and cramped, but he pushed on, the image of Clara’s lifeless face a constant driver. He reached the vent leading directly into the R&D command center. He listened: Vane was inside, arguing with someone over a holographic projector.
"The data is corrupt without the catalyst formula!" Vane hissed into the void, clearly speaking to his superiors remotely. "Thorne is the only one who knows it by heart. Find him!"
"You already have the nanobots," Aris heard the smooth voice of the CEO reply from the projection. "Reverse engineer them."
Aris had heard enough. He had the only remaining nanobot catalyst sample. He had the leverage.
He dropped down from the vent, landing silently on the polished chrome floor. Vane spun around, drawing a sidearm instantly.
"I expected you'd be foolish enough to show up," Vane snarled. "The formula, Thorne. Give it to me, and maybe I'll make your death quick."
"I have the catalyst," Aris said, holding up the vial. "And you have my data. I suggest a trade."
Vane chuckled darkly. "You're in my building, surrounded by my guards. You have nothing." He gestured to the two guards in the room.
"If you take me by force," Aris said, his voice level and cold, "I’ll shatter this vial on the ground and stomp on every single nanobot. The formula dies with me."
Vane paused. The nanobots were microscopic and near-impossible to recover once spilled. He needed Aris alive, or at least compliant.
"Fine," Vane spat. "A trade. The data chip for the catalyst formula."
"No," Aris countered. "The data chip for me walking out of here alive, and you deleting all of OmniCorp's files on the Lazarus Protocol."
Vane's eyes narrowed to slits. "Impossible."
"Then you get nothing," Aris started to bring the vial closer to the desk edge.
"Wait!" Vane shouted. He looked at the CEO's projection. "The CEO wants this badly. Make the deal."
Vane walked to the main console, his fingers dancing across the keys, deleting the core program files. The CEO's voice screamed in the room as the connection was severed.
"The files are gone," Vane said, tossing the data chip at Aris. "Now, the formula."
Aris caught the chip and placed the vial on the table. Vane reached for it.
Just as Vane’s fingers brushed the glass, Aris snatched the vial back and crushed the data chip under his heel. The nanobots in the vial began to glow a brilliant, ominous green.
"You fool!" Vane roared, raising his gun.
"You were right about one thing," Aris said, a grim smile on his face. "The nanobots are useless without the catalyst formula. But they are exceptionally good at cellular repair."
Aris uncapped the vial and poured the contents into his own mouth.
Vane stared, horrified. "What did you do?"
"I am the protocol now," Aris declared, the nanobots flooding his system, repairing every bruise, every tired cell, making him faster, stronger, and more resilient than any human. "You can't delete me. You can't catch me."
The OmniCorp guards surged forward, but Aris moved with impossible speed, a blur of motion fueled by the Lazarus tech. He disarmed one, knocked the other unconscious with a single blow, and turned to face Vane.
Vane stood frozen, realizing the monster he had helped create.
"Clara gets her justice," Aris whispered. He didn't kill Vane; that wasn't his way. He just vanished, using the vents to escape the building, leaving Vane in the ruined lab.
Aris emerged into the New Seattle rain, the nanobots humming in his blood. OmniCorp would hunt him forever, but he was prepared. He was immortal, untraceable, and had a new mission: to become the phantom of corporate justice, ensuring that the power to cheat death never fell into the wrong hands again.



























The Ice and the Flare.Chapter 4

Chapter Four: The Board is Set
Kael Vance landed in London two days later. She had a contract meeting scheduled with a British Aerospace executive in Mayfair, a cover for her next assignment. She walked through Heathrow with a spring in her step. The Zhivago operation had been seamless. She felt sharp, in control, a high that money couldn't buy.
Her current location was a suite at Claridge’s, a place that felt like old money, safe and secure. She unpacked her few belongings, placing her Beretta in the safe, and took a long, hot bath, sipping champagne. Life was good when you were winning the Cold War one defector at a time.
She switched on a small, encrypted burner phone Bill Donovan had given her. It buzzed immediately.
He’s arrived in Helsinki. Volkov. The Iceberg is moving. Watch your back. He’s operational.
Kael finished the champagne in one gulp. Good. She was tired of the abstract fight. The idea of Volkov—this quiet, disciplined, humorless Soviet apparatchik—stirred her blood. She liked having a face for the enemy. It was cleaner that way.
She put on a stunning black dress, something elegant and form-fitting. If Volkov was going to hunt her, she wasn't going to hide in safe houses. She was going to force him to look her in the eye, in public, on her own terms.
The rivalry, for Kael, was a personal demonstration of superiority. Her system of individual initiative was faster, smarter, and more efficient than his slow, bureaucratic collective. She was here to prove it.
She called a car service, instructing the driver to take her to a high-profile restaurant in South Kensington. She was not a woman who waited to be found. She would make herself highly visible, a brilliant flare in the London night sky, daring the shadows to reach for her.
The game wasn't just about the defector anymore. It was about defining whose world would survive into the next decade. Kael smiled at her reflection in the car window as London's lights blurred past