
Albert Oon: Behind the Stories
This blog is where I post everything I have including; free short stories, free book samples, song/poem attempts, links to my work, and more! I'll even post about the interesting dreams I've had, manga, comics, video games, anime, and the like which you can find on here. Read to your heart's content and I hope you enjoy!
Sunday, April 26, 2026
My latest short story is done and out today!

Saturday, April 25, 2026
Least in Heaven: Chapter 3 – Absolution Through Action

Chapter
3 – Absolution Through Action
As I near the end of the tunnel, I hear
Giovanni talk over the speakers, saying, “Alright. You got me. There’s nothing and
no one else I can use to stop you. How about we talk this out?”
“We have been talking,” I say.
“We’ll talk face to face, and I’ll
honestly hear you out. I see that I can’t beat you, and since you’re here for
my repentance and not to kill me, it’s not like I’ll lose anything if you win.
In fact, I have more to gain, correct?”
“Yes. Fine. We’ll talk.”
“Good. I’m on the top floor of the building
ahead of you in my office. Now, don’t mind or kill the guards ahead of you. The
barriers and doors will be opened for you.”
The exit of the tunnel leads into
another research hall with multiple visible levels. There are multiple guards,
researchers, and workers all around me who either try to ignore me, keep their
distance, or keep a close eye on me with their weapons down. I go to the
elevator, take it to the top floor, follow the signs, and enter Giovanni’s
office. His office is decorated with many Catholic paintings, crosses, and
statues, and has a few couches, a desk with a coffee and tea maker, chairs, a TV,
and a desk in the center with a computer, which he is sitting at. He still has
the same confident, smiling face that he had on before, so it’s obvious that he
thinks he’s still in the right.
“Please take a seat, father,” he
says.
“I’m fine with standing,” I say.
“Okay. Whatever you’re comfortable
with.”
“Are you truly willing to repent?”
“If you convince me.”
“Hasn’t my victory against your
defenses convinced you enough?”
“I’ll admit that you’re the only
one to get this far. Most assassins are killed by the first round of defenses;
few manage to survive the traps in the tunnels, and no one has survived against
the three brothers, whom you faced. On the other hand, it’s the fact that you
killed them and many other Catholics, who are more devout and faithful than I am,
that goes against your claim that you’re on a mission from God. You have an uphill
battle to fight, so present your case.”
I consider my words for a second before
speaking. I’ve already told him his sins, and if hearing won’t convince him,
then there’s something else that makes him think he’s in the right. I look over
to my guardian angel, he whispers advice in my ear, and with no better idea, I
do as he says.
“What do you have against those who
think and believe differently from you?” I ask.
“They’re a threat to the society
they live in and their souls. Helping or getting rid of them helps themselves,
so they don’t harm others, and themselves. I am my brother’s keeper, after all.”
“You are, but you are not his master.
I’m sure you’re glad that the Catholic hero association, the Dominion, has
control over the world, so that you can further control events and people happening
all over the world, but the responsibility is not yours. It is those of your coworkers,
who are better men than you are.”
“I helped build up their hero
association until it got larger than my own. Why wouldn’t I have a say in what
it can and can’t do?”
“It’s not yours. You were merely an
investor, a stepping stone for those more deserving of great power.”
“You’re not doing much good at all in
convincing me to repent. What does this have to do with anything?”
“This has to do with why you refuse
to repent. You’re so concerned with creating a better, more Catholic world that
you don’t see the sin that stains your hands and soul. You talk to others who
see you as a living saint and repeat back to you your justifications for your
actions, so that you feel that you’re correct and have your ideology checked by
others when you’re simply living in an echo chamber.”
“I’ve talked to other people with differing
views from mine and admit to being wrong.”
“You only admit to being wrong when
you’re comfortable with it, just like most people. In reality, you remain
steadfast in your thinking and disregard legitimate criticism coming from
trusted sources.”
“Sources such as yourself, an
assassin who lived only for himself with no allegiances to anyone?”
“My words are true, despite my background.
If I repeated your ideology back to you, would it suddenly be false and scrutinized?
No. You’d think I was wise and had seen the light of truth. Admit it. Get out
of the realm of your comfortable excuses to face the uncomfortable truth. You’re
in the wrong here.”
“You-”
“Think and pray on before
responding to me.”
I give Giovanni some time to
answer. After about a minute, he says, “I see where you’re coming from, and
where you get your opinion of me. Still, I am unmoved in my belief that I am
justified. Maybe if you give me more time and show me where I’ve faltered, then
I’ll truly change my mind. Thank you for the hard and expensive lesson, father.”
I look up to my guardian angel, who
shakes his head. He says, “He’s not truly repentant, even though he feels like
it.”
So, what do I have to do next?
“What Fr. Francesco did with his
dying breath, and like him, it’ll cost you your life.”
Really? That?
“You didn’t think you were walking
out of this, alive, were you?”
Guess I shouldn’t have expected it.
Alright….alright, I’ll do it. I use my speed to run over to Giovanni and feel a
great heat well up in my chest, and then immediately burst flames from my mouth
like a volcano. Just like me from before, his face catches on fire, and he
screams out in pain. Meanwhile, I feel the life fade from my body as I fall face-first
on the floor and lose consciousness. When I open my eyes next, I see that I’m hovering
above the room, watching Giovanni writhe in pain as his guards try to help him
in vain, while my lifeless body is taken away. The contract is fulfilled. Now
what?
“Now, you join me in Heaven,” a
familiar voice says.
Turning around, I see Fr. Francesco
in a white and gold priest’s outfit and an all-consuming light that’s pulling
my soul toward.
“Fr. Francesco!” I say as I float
toward him and we embrace. “I did it, my friend.”
“Ha! Besides you going to Heaven,
the second greatest thing is hearing you call me your friend. I knew you’d do
it.”
“Do what? Sacrifice myself or save
Giovanni because I managed to only do one of those things.”
“You did both,” my guardian angel says
as he floats toward the light with me. “Giovanni is in the process of
repenting. You’ve done well, Fr. Luther.”
“I did what I was asked. Nothing
more. All of my life, I’ve done what I wanted, and only at the end did I do
what I was supposed to. I guess I’ll be spending my days at the very edges of Heaven.”
“But you’ll be with God,
nevertheless,” Fr. Francesco says.
“What about you, Fr. Francesco? I’d
be surprised if you’re not sitting directly next to God near Jesus.”
“You’re not far off from the truth.”
As the all-consuming light takes me
into Heaven, I feel peace and happiness for what feels like the first time, me,
a cold, heartless assassin who not a few days ago deserved Hell more than
anything.
The End
Friday, April 24, 2026
Least in Heaven: Chapter 2 – Unfeeling Saint


Chapter
2 – Unfeeling Saint
These dark tunnels that I’m
traveling down are confusing, barely lit, and filled with traps, such as mines,
motion-activated turrets, and hidden guards. Thankfully, my enhanced senses
allow me to react to them, my glasses have a hidden function that allows me to
see in the dark, and my guardian angel has my back in getting rid of some of
the traps and pointing me in the right direction of this maze. I twist my body
to avoid a series of lasers in a split second that activate near me, fire a
series of pistol bullets to blow up the next series of turrets, while
deflecting their shots with my sword, and cutting apart the robots and guards
that jump out from my blind spots. At one point, I think my guardian angel is
guiding me into a wall, that is, until he cuts the fake wall in two, revealing
it was a gate.
Ahead, I see a checkpoint station
with dozens of armed guards and superhumans. Slowing down, I combine my sword
with my pistol, so that I activate the hidden rifle function within the sword.
A scope and muzzle come out of the sword. I look through the scope and aim at
the guards. Waiting for the right opportunity, I take my first shot when three
of the guards are lined up so I can kill them with one shot. They know they’re
under attack, so they turn on the lights, see me, and start attacking. Despite
this, I remain calm and continue firing, taking out one after the other with
headshot after headshot, sometimes taking out two or three with one shot.
Most of the guards are dead, and
the remaining are taking cover. I switch my scope to allow me to see nearby
electrical and heat signatures through objects, and switch the mode of my sword
rifle so it charges up each shot to allow me to shoot through said objects. After
a few of them fall, they get out of cover and must be realizing that I’m not
making lucky shots. They try charging me or running away and end up dying all
the same. With everyone and everything at the checkpoint dead, I continue on my
way.
Over the speakers in the tunnel, I
hear Giovanni say, “You’re something else, Fr. Luther. It’s no wonder why my
corporation hired you so many times. We can still make a deal, you know. You
may have killed many of my men and done a lot of damage to my property, but I
can set aside my grievances for our mutual benefit. I am a good Catholic man,
after all.”
My guardian angel shakes his head,
and I say, “Nothing has changed. I’m still coming after you.”
“That’s a shame. Guess I’ll have to
send my best after you. Just remember that my offer will still stand if you
manage to live.”
“I shouldn’t be surprised that he’s
made a two-way speaker and is giving me offers,” I say to my guardian angel.
“He’s a businessman through and
through, and knows you’re a threat to him.”
“Is he any closer to repenting?”
“Hardly, but you’ve made a little
progress.”
“And if he doesn’t repent? Will I
still obtain my salvation?”
“If you don’t give up hope, you’ll
ensure the salvation of both your souls.”
“Right.”
Continuing on my way, I begin to
encounter fewer obstacles in my way, which isn’t a good sign. It could only
mean there’s something worse ahead, so I slow down, keeping an eye out for the next
trap. Nothing happens for a little while, which is concerning and only makes me
take more precautions as I move forward. The slight crack in the walls gets my
attention, and before I can turn my attention to it, my guardian angel tackles
me out of the way before a mass of gray mud can consume me. Moonlight and fresh
air come from the hole where the mud came from, along with a man in full dark
blue knightly SWAT gear and another man with yellow and red eyes, black and
white hair, and an expensive-looking suit and outfit with the pins of a police
officer on them. The gray mud forms a man with black hair and blue eyes, who
turns one arm into multiple swords and the other into a hammer.
These must be some kind of elite
guards for Giovanni, given that they’re attacking me by themselves and may even
be brothers, since the mud man’s face is similar to that of the man in the expensive
suit. Now I have to fight with a little more effort than I did before. Firstly,
I separate my pistol from my sword so I can use the two independently and wait
for them to make the first move.
“It’ll be better for you to take Giovanni’s
offer, father,” the officer in the SWAT gear says.
“He’s actually a good man,” the man
in the expensive suit adds.
“He gave me a second chance at life
to make me into a better man,” the mud man comments.
“I don’t care who you think he is.
The only thing that matters is who he actually is, and that he must repent,” I
say before quickly firing a shot, splitting the mud man in two.
The officer takes out his
submachine gun and starts firing it at me, which my guardian angel protects me
from as I fire at the man in the suit who is also firing at me, running, and trying
to dodge my bullets in this place that has no cover. Our bullets collide, but I
manage to deflect some of his back at him, injuring him. When the officer runs
out of ammo, my guardian angel goes after the mud man, piercing him and making
him explode into pieces that slowly start to reform themselves. Focusing on the
officer who charges at me, he reloads his submachine gun and dual-wields it
with a heavy revolver. He fires them both at me, and the force of the revolver
shots knocks off my guard, allowing a few of the submachine bullets to hit me.
Nevertheless, I keep dodging as
best I can and trying to knock his revolver shots back at him. The second
attempt doesn’t go as well, but I manage to hit back the third shot from his revolver,
and it felt as if I was using a baseball bat to hit a bowling ball. The shot
that I knocked back at the officer goes through his chest, instantly killing
him and dropping him.
“Renzo!” the man in the suit says.
Fully healed, the man in the suit
draws a pair of rapid-firing pistols with drum magazines and recklessly opens
fire on me. I spin my blade to deflect them all until he runs out of ammo.
That’s when I fire three shots at the man, one hitting his chest and two in the
head, killing him before he can reload or dodge out of the way.
“Salvatore! Renzo!” the mud man
says as he starts to cry. “I’m sorry for being the useless brother I always was…”
My guardian angel finishes the mud
man and stops me from walking off.
With his hand on my shoulder, he
says, “Take a moment to pray for these brothers.”
“Why?” I ask.
“They are good, Catholic men who
are leaving loving and faithful families behind to join the Lord in Heaven.”
“I’m sure many others were much the
same as them, and you didn’t say to pray for them. They’re also going straight
to Heaven as you said, so there’s no need to pray.”
“These are better men than you’ll
ever be. Please, pray for them, or at least their families.”
I sigh, take a few moments to pray
for their families, and move on.
“There’s a good reason why you’re
the man God chose to force Giovanni Coronamento to repent. Only a cold-hearted
assassin such as yourself could kill good men, and not let it bother you.”
“It’s a blessing and a curse,
right? I know that’s what you want me to think, and yet, I can’t. I still don’t
feel sorry for any of the killings I’ve done, and I’m only doing this because I
feel moved to by Fr. Francesco, and it seems like the right thing to do. Will my
soul truly be saved, even though I don’t feel sorry in the slightest?”
“True repentance doesn’t require
feeling. You only need to mean you’re truly sorry with all your heart and soul,
and prove it to God.”
“I see. Well, I hope this all
proves it if, for no other reason than to give God and Fr. Francesco what they
want.”
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Least in Heaven: Chapter 1 – A Judas Priest


Chapter
1 – A Judas Priest
My life was never something I
enjoyed. It was never something I could say I was proud of, and yet I never
tried to change it. As a mercenary masquerading as a priest, I only took up the
priesthood for the cover it provided. During an age of resurging traditionalism,
no one batted an eye at another man who wanted to be a priest, especially when
I appeared to have all the signs of someone who truly wanted to serve God.
People would come to me at my secluded monastery, give me my job, and I’d
complete it. Then I’d resupply and rest back at the monastery. In my line of
work, I killed all kinds of men: normal, superhuman, those with power, those
with little to none, those who were religious, those who pretended not to be,
those who were traditionalist, and those who were liberal, not caring who I
killed, only caring that I got paid.
The only man who did care about
what I did was Fr. Francesco. Everyone else in the monastery either kept to
themselves, was too afraid to scold me, or was in the same business as me;
however, Fr. Francesco was the most honest priest I knew. He constantly hounded
me about my sins in such detail that it seemed like he was there. Fr. Francesco
said he heard it from his guardian angel, who was told about it by my guardian
angel. I didn’t care much for his judgments. What I cared about was arguing
over the moral justifications as if they actually mattered, only to shrug them
off in the end.
He got slicker about trying to
convert me during the days I tried to relax. He’d read me Scripture verses,
fictional stories, his life stories, and stories about the saints that would in
some way relate to my sins or lead up to a lesson about repentance and the cost
of murder. Despite him constantly being after me, some part of me enjoyed his
company and efforts. Maybe it’s because he’s the only person who made an effort
to care about me and never gave up. One day, a group of people who wanted
revenge against me came to shoot up the monastery.
When it happened, Fr. Francesco saw
them first and shielded me from their bullets. After taking care of them,
everyone in the monastery was dead except for me, and Fr. Francesco, who was
somehow clinging to life. I tried my best to heal him, but he stopped me
because he knew that this was his end.
With his final breath, Fr.
Francesco said, “Repent. Repent, Fr. Luther. There’s goodness in you that can
yet be saved.”
As he breathed his last, he spewed
fire on my face. I writhed and screamed in pain as the fires felt as if they
burned me down to the soul.
“Do not let this opportunity go to
waste, Luther. What’s there left to live for? Your next paycheck? The next
murder? Why not give yourself to the role you pretend to be in for something
greater?” I heard a voice say.
I decided to do as Fr. Francesco
said, and soon after, the fires subsided. Looking around, I saw a winged dark
figure with a white bird helmet, a white halo, and three white pincers for
fingers appear over me.
“Who are you?” I asked.
“Your guardian angel, the one who
was feeding information to Fr. Francesco’s guardian angel, to him so he could
help you repent,” he said.
“Ah. So, you’re the snitch?”
“There’s no time to joke. Your life
will soon come to an end, and you will either spend it making up for what
you’ve done or being alone here until you grow too old enough to take care of
yourself.”
Feeling a debt to Fr. Francesco and
not really caring about living a long life, I accept the request to make up for
what I’ve done, and ask, “What do I need to do?”
“Something you’re familiar with.
Giovanni Coronamento continues his sinful works in the shadow of the Dominion’s
new world order. Bring him to repentance and kill everyone else who stands in
your way.”
“That’s it?”
“That is all.”
“Why something so simple?”
“An assassin is who God made you to
be, and an assassin is all you are.”
“I can’t argue with that. Alright.
I’ll take on that contract for the salvation of my soul.”
It’s been a few days since I chose
to change. I’ve been on Giovanni Coronamento’s trail so I could pick the right
opportunity to get to him, and it hasn’t been easy. He’s a celebrity to the
public, and always has guards and others surrounding him as if he’s expecting
someone to take his life, even in this new world he’s helped to create, where
he’s part of the leadership ruling the world. He’s never too hard to pick out
from the crowd, given his slicked back black hair, confident green eyes, and he
usually wears purple and gold dress outfits. In between my recon, my guardian
angel pushes me to pray, so I do so for advice and to regain some patience.
“It’s good that you’re taking my
advice and growing closer to God,” my guardian angel says.
“I don’t feel many of the
benefits,” I admit.
“You don’t need to feel them to get
anything out of it. I know a man like you hardly feels anything at all, and is
only satisfied by cold, hard results.”
“You must hate the fact that you’ve
had to watch over me my entire life. How many times have you asked God to give
the responsibility to another angel?”
“None, and I’ve never wanted to
leave you, not for a second.”
“Is that so?”
“You were entrusted to me before
you were born, and I’ve tried to help you ever since, starting when you were
born to those cold-hearted, white-collared criminals and bankers who were your
family, to the days when you were an assassin with allegiance to no one. I’m
sorry that you’ve never felt the true warmth of love in your life, but you will
after this is over.”
“I…I appreciate it.”
“Oh? Does the heart of stone feel?”
“It has ever since it was shown
true kindness by Fr. Francesco. Part of me regrets that I never showed it to
him back.”
“He never wanted it back. He only
wanted to share the love that God gave him and the salvation of your soul.”
“Then I guess this’ll not only be
my gift to God, but also my gift to him to show that his efforts weren’t in
vain.”
Picking myself up from my prayers,
I continue to follow Giovanni to see that he’s now in one of the hero
association offices that his corporation owns.
My guardian angel says, “This
waiting for an opportunity to go after your targets is irritating me just as
much as you. Haven’t you assaulted buildings like this before?”
“I have, but I had help back then.
I thought you would’ve known that,” I say.
“I did, and that’s the point I’m
getting at.”
“Are you going to help me get in
there to get to Giovanni?”
“Yes. I can sneakily pick people
off for you and empower your sword and gun. Turn around, and let’s give it a
try.”
I do as my guardian angel says, and
watch as he goes out from behind my back to cut apart walls and piles of trash
left in the building we’re in. Since it’s under construction and nighttime, no
one is here to bother us, and there are plenty of things to use as target
practice. The speed at which he slices and stabs happens within the blink of an
eye. As for empowering my sword and pistol, both of them are made with killing
superhumans, armed men, and robots in mind, but with my guardian angel’s help,
they can cut through concrete like butter and blast apart metal and piles of
bricks as if they were paper. These’ll be perfect.
“Are you ready?” my guardian angel
asks.
“Yes. I am. Let’s get this over
with,” I say.
Walking from the construction site
to the Coronamento hero association office, I enter the front entrance waiting
room and am immediately shot in the side of the head. Despite the shot, I don’t
move a single muscle as if nothing had hit me. Looking over to who shot me, I
see that’s none other than Giovanni himself.
He backs off to his gathering of superhuman,
robotic, and cybernetic security forces and says, “Guess you’re not a normal
assassin, Fr. Luther.”
“I guess you should’ve had people
watching out for assassins like me,” I say.
“Or the worst people like the media
who want to invade my privacy and falsely accuse me of crimes.”
“Heh, I can’t argue with that first
part.”
“Who hired you? Maybe we can come
to a deal, and you can work with me instead. We’re men of the same faith,
aren’t we?”
“I come on a mission from God to
bring you to repentance for your sins.”
“Huh. It’s no wonder, given your
appearance and profession, then, but you’re mistaken. I have no sins on my
soul, and I’ve paid for all my crimes with my time in prison.”
“You’ve done nothing more than
pretend to be virtuous and repentant. How about you do us both a favor? I’ll
leave if you truly promise to repent of your ways and be the man your employees
and the public think you are.”
Giovanni looks around him and says,
“I promise to go to confession the next time I sin, as I always do, but right
now, there’s not even a venial sin on my soul.”
Looking over to my guardian angel,
he says, “He makes dishonest confessions. This was never going to be easy for
you. God wouldn’t have sent you to convert Giovanni if it were.”
I wait for a second and see that no
one else hears or sees my guardian angel.
“Okay. The hard way it is then.”
As I draw my sword and pistol, my
guardian angel slices through the group of superhumans and armored heroes that
try to dodge pile me. In one swipe, they’re all cut in half and fall lifelessly
to the floor. Giovanni retreats as he fires his pistol at me, and his robotic guards
come at me. I shoot down many of the robots with my enhanced senses before they
reach me, charge at those remaining, and cut my way through them. Going after
Giovanni, I chase after him and see one of his superhuman guards carry him away.
If I were a beginner, I’d think he was being brought to the uppermost floors,
but knowing the Coronamento Corporation, he’s probably being taken down to the
more secure lower floors.
“Do you have a plan to get down
there?” my guardian angel asks.
You can read my thoughts?
“God allows me to. Hurry, let me
know what your plan is. The authorities and backup from Giovanni’s friends are
on the way.”
Usually, you’d need some legitimate
way to access the lower floors since the doors leading to them are reinforced
to account for a superhuman attack.
“I see where you’re going with
this, and God willing, I’ll be able to open them for you.”
Thank you. Since the building is on
high alert, and the elevators are locked down, I take the stairs. I then cut
through the locked doors and reach the last floor I can go down, where a group
of armed guards is hanging around a set of heavy double doors that look big
enough to drive a truck through. They immediately open fire on me, so I dodge
between their shots and manage to deflect some of their shots back at them with
my sword, along with firing shots of my own. With the way clear, I nod to my
guardian angel to try to break down the heavy doors. He holds back both his
arms and then lunges them forward, blowing open the door and sending them
flying into the underground facility.
“Praise be to God,” I say as I
cross myself.
Entering the underground facility,
I see the two heavy doors set into a wall across from me, and four floors
beneath me, filled with cells holding superhumans being released. At the very
bottom, I see Giovanni, who appears surprised to see me, yet the look of
confidence and his smile don’t fade from his face. Not wanting to box myself in
on this narrow walkway, I throw myself down to the lowest floor and land on one
of the security guards, killing them. Breathing in and out, I push my senses to
their limits as more of Giovanni’s security descends upon me all at once.
Usually, everything feels a bit slower, but with the further enhancements from
my guardian angel, time feels as though it’s been brought to a crawl.
Taking advantage of this boost in
power, I slice and shoot my way through everyone around me, sliding under their
attacks, leaping off each one like platforms to get to others above them,
before coming down and finishing off the remainder of them in a whirlwind of
bullets and spinning my sword around. By the time I hit the ground, time
resumes to its normal pace, and all of Giovanni’s guards are dead. No one else
is left alive except for the scientists and staff of the facility, who cower in
their rooms. I head over to where I saw Giovanni go and find him in a secure
room with glass panels, working on a machine, before
turning to me with the same expression he always seems to have. I try breaking through the glass, but my sword and pistol don't make the slightest scratch on the glass.
“You’ve gotten further than most
other assassins, Fr. Luther. For that, you have my respect,” Giovanni says as
he claps.
“I don’t need your respect. I need
your repentance,” I say.
“For what exactly? Assuming you’re
closer to God than I am and an actual priest, tell me, what are my sins?”
Looking over to my guardian angel,
he tells me Giovanni’s sins as told by his guardian angel, and I relay them to
him, saying, “You are guilty of hiring scientists to experiment on unwilling
prisoners you were meant to execute for their crimes or show mercy to. Additionally,
you hire hitmen to get rid of subversives in society that you deem too
dangerous to live, bribe officials to overlook your crimes, and give people
favors for instituting unjust laws against people of other beliefs.”
“You criticizing me for hiring
hitmen is funny, given your true profession. I know that you’re no real priest.
I’ve looked into your background and found that my corporation has hired you to
do much of its dirty work, which, I might add, was justified. God and His
Church finally have majority control of the world under my ally, the Dominion
of Mercy and Justice, and those who seek to undermine it jeopardize it and the
salvation of souls.”
“There are other ways to keep it safe,
and torturing, killing, and discriminating against others of false beliefs isn’t
the way to do it. I may be an assassin first, and priest second, but God has
changed that.”
“Really? What changed in that hit
that got everyone in your monastery killed except for you? Was that your coming-to-God
moment?”
“Yes. A fellow priest who had been
constantly bothering me to repent finally got through to me. Now, aided by my guardian
angel and tasked by God, I am to bring you to repentance to save my soul.”
“I can’t say the rewards of your
contract can be matched, but as I’ve said before, I don’t have a sin on my
soul. Keep chasing me if you wish, Fr. Murphy. We’ll see who truly has God on
their side.”
In a second, Giovanni’s room
rockets away down a tunnel and disappears from my sight.
“How come you didn’t allow me to
break through the glass barrier and let Giovanni get away?” I ask my guardian
angel.
My guardian angel breaks through the
barrier, then says, “That show of strength and skill you had for Giovanni was a
watershed moment for him. It should’ve gotten him to repent, but he refused.”
“He should’ve taken it when he had
the chance. Now, I have to make more of a mess of his corporation.”
“You had many of the same chances,
and didn’t any of them, except for the last one.”
I let my guardian angel’s words
sink in as I continue my chase of Giovanni by using my enhanced speed to run
down the dark tunnel after him.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
My 350th book is done and out today!

Saturday, April 18, 2026
The Question, The Answer, The Lies, The Truth: Chapter 4 – The Truth

Chapter
4 – The Truth
Wandering the wilderness is always
a welcome change of pace. Besides adoration, Catholic churches, and being in
pain, the wilderness is the fourth place where I feel closest to God. I enjoy
it from a tree branch as I wait for my next target, Hannah, to come this way on
the nature trail. Her two adorable children run past me, then run back to see
me, smile, and laugh.
“How did you get up there, mister?”
they ask.
“I climbed,” I say.
“Why didn’t you sit on one of the
benches instead if you wanted to sit down?”
“It’s more fun to climb a tree and
sit on one of its sturdy branches, don’t you think?”
The children agree just as Hannah
and her husband catch up to them. It’s then that my powers ensnare Hannah and
bring her to a dimension. Half of it is living with greenery, the sun shining down
on it, and flowing rivers with clear water. The other half is bleeding and decaying
with rivers of crimson blood wildly running through, barely being able to be
contained within the stream.
“What is this? Where am I?” Hannah
asks.
I go through the whole song and
dance of explaining who I am, why Hannah is here, and what she can do to get
out.
“Okay, I will! I was going to go to
confession this Saturday for it like I usually do with my family before mass,”
Hannah says with honesty.
“That’s what I’m expecting, but
there’s more to it,” I say.
“What is it?”
“The example that you show to your
children and those you’ll come across. As you can see, you sit at the
crossroads between paradise and ruin, and one step into either can save or damn
you.”
“Is a big event going to happen in
my life? Am I going to be some world-famous person or hero, or will my children
be any of those things?”
“From what I’ve been told by our
Lord, no. None of those things will happen.”
“Why am I being put through this
then, and why are you acting as if the world is on the line if I make the wrong
decisions?”
“Because something more important
than the world is at risk, and that is, your soul and the souls of those you
influence. Remember, our Lord came to save souls, not change the hands of worldly
power, obtain riches, or enjoy Himself. Instead, He suffered, died, and rose
again to save our souls and reinstitute His Church, His Israel, to continue His
work and carry on His legacy.”
“I know this. I’ve been taught it
since I was little and continue to carry it with due respect. Why does someone of
such little importance need to see and hear this?”
“Did you not hear what I said? Our
Lord came to save our souls. Do you think that you’re not one of them?”
“No.”
“No matter how important or
unimportant you think you are. Your role in His plan to save souls cannot be
understated. The salvation of souls is the most important, no, it is the only
important task in every person’s life. The Lord and I need you to remember that
with every passing second of your life. Do you understand?”
“I…I do.”
The scene shifts in the blink of an
eye back to the nature trail we were on. Looking over to Hannah’s husband, I
put him through the same thing as her, and then ask him, “Do you understand?”
“I do,” he says.
Their children ask us what their
parents understand and why I asked them that question, so I explain to them, “That
the Lord loves each one of us and wants us all to be saved and be with Him forever,
both in Heaven and on Earth.”
The children say that they know
this because their parents taught them, they talk about it in Church, and in
school.
“Well, do you really believe it?”
“I don’t see why we shouldn’t,” the
children say.
“That’s good. Your parents and
teachers are good people. Remember to show them their due respect.”
“We will!”
With that done, the souls of more
people are kept on the straight and narrow, so I teleport by disappearing into
the sunlight that shines on me through the trees to my next location, hopeful
that the next people I see will accept the chance at salvation.
The
End
The Question, The Answer, The Lies, The Truth: Chapter 3 – The Lies

Chapter
3 – The Lies
Today’s another meeting day, one
that I hope goes well, but I have my doubts. The three people I’m waiting for
soon appear as I finish my first cup of tea. One flies in with the wings on his
back. His name is Archelaos, and his crimson mask has many eyes on it, and he
wears a one-piece suit that covers his body, which has eyes bulging out of it. Lavinia
transforms from a bird into a woman. Her white mask has makeup on it and
stitches. She wears a silky red dress, has long blonde hair, and wears black
high heels. Finally, there’s Ragnar, a muscular man in army fatigues, and a
mask with three mouths on it and no eyes.
Yelling over to Ragnar, I ask,
“Have you ever ridden on a horse or sat in a cart or a car?”
“Not since the times of Noah, and I
never tried another car after the first one was invented, and I never liked
either. Running and walking everywhere has been my preferred mode of travel,”
Ragnar says as he walks over to me.
“If you weren’t superhuman, I’d
think you were mad, or rather, I’d think you’re crazier than you are now.”
Lavinia walks over to my table,
takes a seat, and says, “Is this meeting about business or pleasure?”
“You know the answer to that. It’s
never about pleasure with Caiaphas,” Ragnar says.
“That’s why all he does with his
time is hurt other people. You can’t let them enjoy their lives, can you?”
“I only hurt the guilty and those
who haven’t set their hearts on fire for love of the Lord. It’s an everlasting
joy better than the fading pleasures you’ve been experiencing,” I say.
“So speaks the priest who had
multiple affairs.”
“That’s how I know the true vanity
of lust since I’ve experienced it firsthand.”
“Can we please get on with this
meeting? There’s much more to be done in the world,” Archelaos says as he sits
down, and his eyes dart around everywhere.
“There are always things to be
done. Some things will be done without your help, while others will never be
truly completed by our hands,” I say.
“That’s what you think! There must
be more events that need to be set in motion so that the perfect future can be
achieved.”
“Please, don’t get him started,
Caiaphas. Let’s get this done. I have people waiting for me,” Ragnar says.
“People who are waiting to be
tortured or people you have on your hit list?” Lavinia asks.
“Both. As Archelaos says, certain
events need to be set in motion.”
“We don’t need any more of the
conflicts you want to start, Ragnar. The Dominion will see to it that the world
is kept in a state of relative peace for the foreseeable future,” I say.
“Conflict is how humanity grows and
what it uses to change the world. Even the Dominion knows that.”
“You should know better than all of
us that humanity hasn’t changed that much since the days of Noah.”
“Did you just bring us all here
because you wanted to start up our rivalries again? If it’s a fight you wanted,
you could’ve simply said so.”
“I wanted more than a fight. I
wanted to bring to your attention the Dominion’s control of the world and the
Lord’s Holy, Catholic Church’s domination of it.”
“He wanted to rub his side’s
victory in our face now that he has more than a couple of victories under his
belt,” Lavinia says. “It’ll be over before you know it, and my vision of what
the world should be may come to fruition.”
“The closest you came to world
domination was burned up in the same fire that gave you your powers and glassed
Sodom and Gomorrah, and you and you perverts haven’t come close since, even
though you continue to be as pervasive and stubborn as cockroaches. Anyways, I
was hoping that ‘rubbing’ the Lord’s victory in your face would get you to
repent,” I say.
“It hasn’t. Not in the slightest,”
all three say.
“One day the world will be a
paradise of unending happiness and pleasure,” Lavinia says.
“It will be engulfed in endless
conflicts so that humanity can continue to grow and learn,” Ragnar argues.
“It will follow my designs,”
Archelaos objects. “It needs my guiding hand.”
“You people never change, do you?
Very well then. Let’s commence with the pleasantries. Waiter? Can you please
get three of our usual teas for us?” I say.
“Yes, Mr. Caiaphas. I already had
it started, so they should be ready in a few seconds.”
“That’ll be plenty of time.”
All four of us activate our powers
and pit ourselves against one another. Razor wire comes out of my face, hands,
wrists, neck, and back that I use to slash at Lavinia, who puts me in a
dimension full of lewd imagery, moaning, and tempting perfumy smells. I cut my
way through it all, and as my razor wires spread through her dimension to cut
it all apart in a less-than-pleasurably painful way.
“Lust is the second sin that all of
mankind is guilty of,” Lavinia says. “It will submit to their passions so that
they’ll forever be happy and in a state of perpetual ecstasy.”
My razor wires start to turn into
solid ice, freezing everything they touch.
“Those pleasures of yours come and
go, and then leave their victims wanting more, longer-lasting, and perverted
thrills. The world will grow bored if it were dominated by your kind, and
mankind would start killing each other just to get any kind of excitement,” I
say.
The entirety of Lavinia’s dimension
of pleasure is frozen and now silent. My razor wires wrap themselves around her,
freeze her, and shatter her into pieces. The dimension is then shattered and
melted by Ragnar, who runs through it. We’re now on an island with an erupting
volcano and rivers of lava around us. Ragnar throws dozens of punches at me as
my razor wires do their best to block his attacks and wrap themselves around
him.
“You can’t prevent the endless wars
and conflicts that humanity craves, Caiaphas. We may be of the same lineage,
but you still have much to learn,” Ragnar says as he relentlessly pursues me.
“I could say the same to you,
elder. What you haven’t learned in the hundreds of thousands of years of living
is that you can be fundamentally wrong about what you believe, no matter how
much wisdom you’ve gained in your years. A long life doesn’t automatically make
you wise or smart, nor does it mean that you’re better than the young. At the
end of the day, you still worship God in an old and expired way. You’ve yet to
realize that the savior has come and His name is Jesus Christ,” I say.
Ragnar can no longer keep up with
my razor wires as they grab him and drag him into the river of lava. The
dimension shatters around me once more as eyes emerge from the ground and sky
around me until there’s nothing around me but eyes and darkness. I can’t keep
my feet on the ground as gravity is nonexistent here, and I’m uncontrollably
pulled towards Archelaos, who is also aimlessly floating around.
“Admit it. You want to control the
events and goings on in the world. You want it to always be in submission to
your Lord so that souls may be saved. What makes us so different?” Archelaos
asks.
“I do as my Lord commands, and
nothing more. I gave up trying to control the opinions and actions of others
after the Lord humbled me. The world will turn in the ways that He allows, no
matter what other people or I do,” I say.
“I’ve influenced many leaders and
people who have changed the world. I have made the difference I’ve wanted to
make.”
“But there’s still more to do, as
you’ve said. Some of those people made mistakes and didn’t do exactly as you
said, or other people came along and ruined your plans. You can’t be everywhere
influencing everyone perfectly. You’re playing checkers, while the Lord is
playing chess, and He knows all your moves before you make them.”
“I still have time to do what I
need to before your Lord can fulfill his plans.”
“Do you? What happened to the
Babylonians that you commanded? The Spartans? Athens? What of the Huns? The
Viking clans you influenced? The Islamic Empire? The Soviet Union? All have
fallen and been relegated to footnotes in the history books, while the Lord’s
Holy Catholic Church still stands strong to this day.”
My razor wires burst through the
many eyes around us and wrap themselves around Archelaos and tear him into
pieces. In the blink of an eye, I’m back in the tea shop. The bodies of
Lavinia, Archelaos, and Ragnar reform themselves as our waiter gives us our
tea.
The waiter says, “Here I thought
I’d be able to serve the tea before you four would finish killing each other. I
guess I have to be faster next time.”
“Maybe you or your descendants
will, but I doubt it,” I say as I sip my tea.
“You’ve been getting stronger,
Caiaphas,” Ragnar says. “I remember the years when you would be the first one
dead.”
“I remember when I had him wrapped
around my finger, and we had a thing going,” Lavinia says with a hint of
disappointment in her voice.
“I remember when we talked for days
on end about how we would change the world and acted on those plans,” Archelaos
adds.
“The secret to my success is-”
“Your Lord. We know,” the three of
them say as they start drinking their tea.
“When will you all learn that a God
of suffering, love, and truth is the only true God of all since He so closely mirrors
the realities of life?”
Lavinia, Ragnar, and Archelaos
finish their tea and leave the shop. I ask the waiter for another tea and a
piece of strawberry shortcake.
When they’re brought to me, the
waiter asks, “Will those three ever change?”
“They’re still alive hundreds of
thousands of years after they should’ve died, with powers and abilities granted
by the Lord. What I’m saying is that there’s a chance, so as long as they’re
alive, they have the opportunity to change and save their souls,” I explain.
“Don’t you ever get tired of this
song and dance that you have with them every so often?”
“Not really. I’ve converted people
who were just as old as them, and as long as the Lord pushes me to convert
them, I’ll keep pushing to do so and convert others like them, no matter how
long it takes.”