Thursday, March 20, 2025

Another in the Divinity in Darkness trilogy is redone and out today!



How long can you suffer without breaking? Adler is suffering the trauma of the damnation of his parents and his old friends and the deaths of his new friends, and yet, he continues his dark path in bringing real truth and love to a world imprisoned by false peace and happiness. He stands with the Sufferer and his new friends against his brother who is the king of the world and the Light who is the world's false savior in the capital of the world, but will he succeed in overthrowing them or fall like so many before him?
This author's edition contains the original artwork for this story and redone ones along with Behind the Story trivia.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Return of the Blessed Curse is now redone with improved art in an author's edition!



Would you give up a life of happiness for doing the right thing?
Adler is posed this question after living one-hundred sixteen years of happiness in a world where no one suffers or dies. The Sufferer who shows him that to suffer is to love blesses him with the gift of necessary suffering and charges him and his new friends to save the world from the false peace it finds itself under and his older brother who is king of the world.
This author's edition of this short story contains concept art of the covers and original character emotes along with a few bits of Behind the Story trivia.

Sunday, March 16, 2025

My 300th book is done and out today!


Download for free at select online retailers - https://books2read.com/u/bzxLdE

Crimes against the Divine must be punished. Timeo Severe is the dark executioner of justice known as the vigilante L’Obscurité. He'll use his influences as part of one of the richest families in Meridian and powers to read people's souls and make them suffer based on their sins to do this in his quest to rid Meridian of criminals, starting by looking into the four powerful families that built it.

Ballad of L'Obscruite: Chapter 4 – Guilty With/Out Evidence

Chapter 4 – Guilty With/Out Evidence

The thought of what Darcy and her allies could be up to keeps me up at night, especially since Lancetto told me how his own companies and allies are influenced by and have connections to them. Eventually, I give in to my need to know more, transform myself, and move faster than the speed of light to Darcy’s mansion. There, I find her in her room with a single light on over her while she paints a dark figure standing among death.

“Darcy, your soul demands my examination,” I say from the dark.

Darcy immediately drops her art tools and looks excited to hear from me. She says, “I’ve been waiting for you to come to me this way, my love, L’Obscurité, or should I say, Timeo Severe.”

Caught off guard by her words, I say, “What are you talking about?”

“Don’t play dumb with me, my dark prince of divine justice. I figured out who you really were by talking with you and expressing yourself through art. It’s why I told you where Klinge Geben was. Speak to me in earnest or I may tell everyone your secret.”

Not wanting to risk the exposure, I manifest myself in front of Darcy.

“I’m done playing nice with you,” I say. “Tell me what the true purpose is of your art or I’ll force it out of you.”

Darcy runs to me and embraces me. I keep one arm out so she doesn’t get too close to kiss me.

“Do you see a guilty woman in front of you? I’ve done the same as you in my own way. I inspire people to take justice into their own hands or have you been so focused on the four families that you’ve failed to recognize the violence that’s been happening in the city? The protests and civil unrest have led people to turn on their officials, police, and heroes and made them kill and take from those they think deserve it.”

Looking into her soul, I see that she’s telling the truth and I see the reflection of my own thinking and mistakes.

“I’ll get to them soon enough. I thought cutting off the problem at the source would do the most good to cut off the problem at the source.”

“You know as well as I do that the problem is the sin of men. They only need to look into themselves for a reason to sin or commit crimes. My art and your example just gave them the final push they needed to do what they wanted, to bring justice to this crime-infested city, and bring real, lasting change to it.”

Further into her soul, I see that Darcy has encouraged people to murder, steal, and cause others to suffer through pain and torture. None of these things can be punished by the law other than a confession from them since it was all inspired by the lines in between her works of fiction and artwork and the words said between them.

“I can read the souls of men and know their God-given punishment. You had no right to tell people to kill, steal, and harm others, so no. We’re not the same,” I say.

“Teach me how to be. I want to be like you. I want to be you. I want you to be mine.”

I make Darcy’s body go limp and hang her in midair by her snake scarf that’s come to life. She’s able to give herself some breathing room, but she’s still suffering the effects of the hanging at the same time.

“I’m going to go fix ‘our’ mess. You’ll be seeing the results of your work as your life flashes before your eyes. Repent and you may live,” I say before leaving.

Knowing where the people Darcy inspired are, I go from place to place bringing judgment upon them. Many are executed for their sins while few repent. Suffering the same fate as their victims or their deserved divine punishment, some are hung to death, thrown out windows, left with nothing to their name, beaten within an inch of their lives, torn or cut to pieces, eaten by insects or rodents, and left crippled or scarred for the rest of their life by the undescribed terrors of Hell that I show them. When I tire of going from place to place, I go to the building where I first revealed myself and make myself known to everyone with my laughter that echoes throughout the streets.

With eyes on me, I say, “Beware, citizens and sinners of Meridian. I, L’Obscurité, offer you another warning. You will not kill without due cause. You will not take without earning. You must not harm no matter how righteous you think you are. I have been avenging the innocent and enforcing justice since I can read souls and hand out punishments due to sinners from God. Unless you can do the same or can truly know right from wrong, I suggest you stop playing heroes otherwise the punishment due to villains will also come to you and others who consider themselves justified. This is my last warning.”

I laugh, terrifying both normal humans and superhumans alike. Going back to Darcy, I find her sitting down on the floor.

After manifesting myself, I ask, “Will you truly change?”

“I will for my sake and the love I have for you,” she says.

“Do you truly love me or do you just love my dark power to enforce justice?”

“I do. I love you, but do you love me?”

“I feel that you’ve been trying to get me to love you so our relationship can be a storybook and use my power to enforce justice as you see fit.”

“But you’ve been able to resist me and get me to change. If I was trying to use my charms to romance you into doing what I wanted, then it backfired and only made me want you more. Again, I’ll ask, do you love me?”

I’m hesitant to answer at first, but then I say, “We’ll see.”

Darcy smiles, laughs, and says, “Always such a tease. I’ll be the woman you deserve in time. I’ll be yours and you’ll be mine forever.”

I disappear into the dark and go to sit on one of the many towers in Meridian and reflect on what I’ve been doing. Surely, I haven’t been doing everything wrong. Even so, my good deeds have inspired people to do the wrong thing and I’ve been focusing so much on the bigger picture that I haven’t bothered to focus on smaller issues that contribute to it. That stops now. I’ll make sure the message I give is felt clearly in every aspect of Meridian. Darcy was right in that the problem of sin lies within everyone, so that is where my terror will strike. The night is young and crime and sin are still running rampant in the city despite my message and they will know true fear by the end of it. As I go to work, I laugh with renewed confidence and a will to see God’s justice done.

 

The End

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Ballad of L'Obscruite: Chapter 3 – Where Secrets Lie

Chapter 3 – Where Secrets Lie

I meet Lancetto at his house at night with my parents with me since they haven’t seen his family in a while. His house is just outside the city like mine and staffed with people cleaning and taking care of it. It has many decorations, paintings, and statues of political and religious saints, some of which are hundreds of years old. His parents and staff are glad to see my parents and me while Lancetto has a fake, uneasy smile on his face. While our parents talk and catch up, Lancetto and I go to talk in his room. He closes the door behind me as I sit down on the chair near his desk and look around the room.

“So, what game are we playing to pass the time while dinner is being made?” I ask, not knowing what else to say. “You still have to beat me in-”

“Oh, I have to beat you alright,” Lancetto says as he sits on his bed. He takes off his glasses, rubs his face, and continues, “When were you going to tell me? Were you going to tell me at all?”

“What are you talking about?”

“Don’t play stupid or lie to me, Timeo. You’re a faithful Catholic and should know better.”

I take a deep breath and breathe out.

“Okay, I didn’t really know when to tell you, so what happened earlier today was just me talking without thinking.”

Lancetto grunts and starts tapping his foot on the ground.

“I don’t know what to feel. I’m thankful for you saving my life, killing those criminals, and exposing the sins of others, but at the same time, you killed those people and many more in such…horrifying ways.”

Lancetto mentioning how horrifying my powers can be gives me pause as if I’m just realizing how scary they can be. I then say, “They deserved it and I don’t get to choose how they die. It’s up to God.”

“What? Did God give you those dark powers?”

“He did. It was after I beat my siblings within an inch of their lives and took care of a homeless person on the street.”

“You became a superhuman after that? L’Obscurité is blamed for all those deaths of criminals in the days before.”

“That was God’s wrath directly from Him. He wanted me to continue enacting His justice on Meridian and then He healed my parents. It’s been a while since I last directly heard from Him.”

“It all makes too much sense now to me. Your parents being healed and your thirst for justice and rooting it out of Meridian. Does anyone else know you’re L’Obscurité? Does Darcy know?”

“No, no one else knows. You’re the first.”

Lancetto sighs, thinks for a few seconds, and then says, “I guess I should be honored. Well, your secret is safe with me, closed doors and all that.”

“I knew I could trust you, brother.”

“Yeah, yeah. Now, to beat you in that game we still have to finish.”

“You’re on.”

Lancetto and I play video games and eat together as if we were kids again. It’s a nice time that comes and goes after four hours, and as per Affare Italian tradition, we go home with a box full of leftovers to eat for lunch and dinner for a week. I’m glad that the talk with Lancetto went well and he accepts my superhuman alter ego. With that bit of messy business done, I focus on my day with Darcy at one of the art museums. She eagerly asks me about the meeting yesterday.

“Tell me especially about what happened when L’Obscurité appeared,” she says.

“What can I say? It was horrifying, and yet, it was just,” I say.

“I see. Only divine justice can be both. I think L’Obscurité was sent by God, don’t you think?”

“I think so and subscribe to the theory that God is the reason why all superhumans obtain their powers.”

“Hmm. Yes, you really are an inspired person. Let’s go to the art room and make something with that vision of yours.”

“Already?”

“Yes! We must work while the memories of yesterday are still fresh in your head.”

Darcy takes me to a room where I can’t hear the noise of the museum or the noise of the city. It’s completely white from floor to roof and contains painting boards, various kinds of paper, and tools to draw with. Darcy sets up a painting board for me and gives me various tools to paint with.

“Paint a scene of what you saw,” she says.

“Okay, but don’t blame me if what I draw looks no different from something that a preschool kid would draw. I’m not that good at it,” I admit.

“Don’t worry. I’ll help you draw,” Darcy says as she takes my drawing hand. “Describe the scene for me. First, let’s start with the drabness of the meeting room. What was decided between you and Lancetto?”

“Basic deals to restore the reputation of the Affare family. They agreed to fund new job opportunities and expansions to what we own and we agreed to hold events at their buildings and give scholarships and discounts at our hospitals for their employees to begin with,” I say as I draw. “Honestly, I forgot what my businessmen decided because of the chaos that followed and I had to read my emails before I got here so I could tell you.”

“So, the scene is hardly recognizable and mostly taken by horror. We won’t worry about that then. What about L’Obscurité?”

“He’s…an agent of God, executioner of justice, knower of men’s sins…death.”

“He sounds like an interesting and dangerous man. It’s a shame that he’s presented as a self-righteous vigilante by the media and government.”

“He’s a force for good, whether they admit it or not.”

“That he is. There. I think that’s good.”

Looking at the image, I only see a man cloaked in the dark, standing in a scene of death and destruction, and a cross crushing a dragon.

“It’s pretty basic.”

“Sometimes it’s best to keep things that way. Overcomplicating a picture can make it look too busy and exhausting to look at. I like what you’ve created.” Darcy holds up the painting like a proud mom looking at her child’s drawing. “I think I’ll hang it in my personal gallery.”

“I’m honored.”

For the rest of our time at the art museum, Darcy walks me through it and only really stops at the interpretive art gallery to ask me my opinion on what the paintings represent. I see divinity, death, rebirth, suffering, innocence, and redemption.

Looking at Darcy to see if I answered to her liking, she smiles and says, “It’s a typical Catholic answer to take from these paintings. I see much the same, but the common theme in all these paintings is struggle. Conflict. Things to fight for such as the divine and innocent and the results of a life well lived.”

“I get it.”

“Do you? I find the mystery of it all more enlightening than the pure fact.”

Darcy’s words are profound and everything that she’s done has admittedly distracted me from asking her deeper questions about her beliefs and what she does explicitly, and yet, it seems like she’s giving me the answers in an artistic way. After a couple of hours in the art museum, we go to one of her family-owned libraries, the biggest in Meridian. It has the newest in literature and some of the oldest books, including those in different translations, including the originals in a museum part of the library that shows some of the most ancient and famous works of fiction and non-fiction. The first area that we look at is the mystery section which sits in between the romance and non-fiction sections.

“I love this part of the library,” Darcy says. “You could be reading stories all along this section and accidentally stumble into the non-fiction section without knowing about it. Reality can be more unbelievable than fiction, after all. What’s your favorite genre?”

“Thrillers, crime stories, and mysteries, so this is my section. When I was in college for a short time, I studied to be a criminologist since comics about criminals and heroes both fictional and real interested me so much,” I say.

“What about romance,” Darcy says as our hands touch while looking through the books. “It can be a mysterious thing. That’s why my family puts the two sections close together in our libraries. My parents met in a library like this and happened to bond over their favorite genres and stories.”

“Mine met and bonded while they went to medical school together,” I say, taking a book from the shelves, and pulling my hand away from Darcy’s. “They didn’t think they’d fall in love, but eventually they did because they kept running into one another, taking the same classes, found that they kept thinking about each other, and that they felt afraid and empty at the thought of being apart forever.”

“Love is divinity itself and true love is divine love. Do you think that’s why we’re together? Did God bring us together for that reason?”

“I…don’t know.” I shake my head as if shaking off a spell. “What’s the reason for this? What are you getting at?”

“Don’t leave me wanting with an ‘I don’t know’. Give me a yes or no because it’s only going to make me want you more.”

Darcy grabs me and is about to kiss me, but I put my fingers on her lips.

“You’re up to something and want me to fall for you. Why?”

She kisses my fingers, smiles, and says, “Maybe the darkness and want for justice is so alluring to me that it makes me fall for you.”

“There’s more to it than that.”

“Okay, then. I’ll tell you plainly. I want to work with you on art to inspire people to live virtuously and take justice into their own hands.”

“You want me to help you inspire more people to be vigilantes?”

“There’s nothing wrong with that, especially with how the vigilantes and heroes need to be legitimized by the government, so I’m not asking them to act outside of the law.”

“What about me? What do I get in return?”

“You want to expunge corruption from the four families and the only family left to ally with is the Geben family, right? I can tell you where Klinge is so the last piece of your puzzle falls in place. All you have to do is sign our contract,” Darcy says with a smile and a finger on her lips.

Already knowing where this is going to go, I kiss her on her lips and she pulls me in to make the kiss last longer. I push her away before she can introduce her tongue into it, but she holds onto my collar.

“I didn’t mention it, but our agreement could come with the benefit of romance. Your resisting me only makes me want you more. This is all so storybook.”

“I…‘signed’ our contract. Tell me what I need to know.”

“Such a tease. Okay.”

Darcy gives me the address of Klinge who is working at the docks today, and not just there, but an underground workshop where his family and allies meet. People know about it, however, it’s a secret club that only people trusted by the Geben family can enter and know when people will be there. I thank Darcy for the information, before promising to see her again and walking out of the library. Lancetto calls me and tells me to go somewhere private, so I duck into a dead-end ally where no one will eavesdrop on us.

“What is it?” I ask in a whisper.

“I talked to my contacts about the Geben family and I know where Klinge will be today. Even though Timeo Severe may not be able to see him face-to-face, I’m sure L’Obscurité can,” Lancetto says with a proud smile.

“Darcy told him where he is.”

“She did? How does she-wait…are you okay?”

“Yeah, I am why?”

My phone vibrates as Lancetto sends a request for a video call. I sigh as I accept.

“See? I’m fine.”

“No, you’re not. Your face is all red and is that lipstick on your mouth?”

I wipe my mouth and say, “Don’t worry about it!”

“Haha! I was joking about your meetings being dates but-”

“But nothing! It was just…business. Closed door stuff.”

“And you’re the one who is supposed to expose scandalous dealings?”

“Shut up! It didn’t go beyond the kiss. Is there anything else you need to tell me?”

“Yeah, so back to business, not involving romance. Surely, she didn’t give you these?”

Lancetto shows me pictures of the maps and shares the scans of them with me through encrypted emails.

“No. They’ll help me know what is where in there. Thank you.”

“One more thing. I’m surprised Darcy knows where Klinge is today. It’s sensitive information that only those close to the Geben family would know where and when they would meet. There’s more to her than it seems. Since she knows where Klinge will be and many people in your organization, I have to check if she has allies in mine as well. I’m expecting it at this point. Has L’Obscurité found any corruption in her family’s museums, libraries, and guilds?”

“He hasn’t taken a deeper look yet.”

“You’re not doing a good job at convincing me that your time with Darcy hasn’t been just dates. He’s exposed all the corruption at my companies, but not at any of the Travail’s?”

“I’ll get to it. It can’t be that bad. She wants to make art with me to inspire more people to be vigilantes.”

“If that’s the case, you should look into it sooner rather than later.”

“Tomorrow I will because tonight, L’Obscurité will meet the mysterious Klinge Geben.”

Even though the Affare family is the most powerful one and most likely to be filled with corruption, I should’ve checked on the Geben family first. They have connections in all levels of society, and there are more middle-class and poor people in Meridian than rich, and the value of power is more corrupting than physical wealth and a person’s financial status can make them seem less powerful than they actually are. I get my driver to take me to the docks and tell him to leave until I call him again. After he leaves, I enter the shadows and cloak myself in darkness and enter them. While entering the buildings and traveling through the vents, I manifest myself in seclusion to see where I am with the maps that Lancetto gave me and start checking out certain spots, starting with an armory.

These people are already talking about giving these weapons to criminals on the streets and villains, making them easily recognizable targets. This is good because I need something to do to release the stress within me. I laugh, introduce myself, tell them their sins, and lock the doors that they try to escape out of.

“There’s no escaping what you’ve done! The blood of the innocents will be avenged!” I say.

“We give these guns to make criminals fight each other! They can kill each other for all I care!” one of the criminals says.

A mess of barbed wire appears around the man and crushes him into a ball.

“What of the innocent people who get caught in it? What about those among the criminals who could’ve been redeemed?” I ask.

“You can’t do this! You’ll pay for it, I swear!”

“Justice has nothing to pay for. Time runs short for your repentance and the fiery gates of Hell are opened for all of you!”

The people in the room say they repent, but none of them are honest. Because of this, I allow the spirits of the innocent to manifest in this room who were killed because of these people. The spirits grab guns from the room, shoot everyone in it, and then return to their rest in Heaven. Next, I turn my attention to a bar and dining hall that doubles as a meeting room. There, many of the lower-end criminals are discussing deals that would bring more people into its ranks and get rid of competition for the Geben family. Those who are overindulging themselves in alcohol start to puke until they die because of my power and I make those who are eating more than their fill choke to death on what they eat.

“Gluttonous pigs are found among the poor just as much as the rich. Both take advantage of the average man and are deserving of swift justice,” I say with a laugh.

“We’ve given those people jobs, ways to take care of their families and themselves! What’s so wrong with that?” one of the crime bosses says.

I crush one of the crime bosses to death in bars of gold that turn into flesh-eating cockroaches that go after the rest of the criminals until the insects are all crushed and shot.

“Sin kills the soul whether or not it’s done for ‘justifiable’ reasons. There is no good deed that can redeem them beyond repentance, penance, and never sinning again,” I say.

“We have nothing to repent for! We’ve done nothing but good things for ourselves and others!”

Starved, wild dogs come out of the darkness and start feeding on the criminals in the room.

“If you want to feed and help the poor, then how about you die for these dogs!” I say before laughing and leaving the rest of the criminals to be eaten alive.

Finally, I go to the last location where Klinge Geben should be. Searching through room after room, I don’t find the mutated man until I go to one of the buildings on the surface, working on cars by himself. He’s able to lift heavy machinery and party without any help and takes periodic swigs from a whiskey bottle. Multiple layers of teeth are visible on both sides of his face, his eyes are lizard-like, and his fingers are like claws.

“Klinge Geben,” I say from the dark.

He disinterestedly looks around and says, “Who’s there?”

“L’Obscurité, the manifestation of your punishment.”

“Punishment for what?”

“The criminals who you’ve allowed to operate within your family’s businesses such as the ones I’ve already killed downstairs.”

“Ah, so that’s the reason I hear so much commotion downstairs.” Klinge puts down his bottle of whiskey on a table. “Take a swig of it or I’ll get you a fresh bottle as thanks for the favor you’ve done for me. This stuff is like soda to me because of my mutation.”

“I don’t drink on the job. Hmm. I can see in your soul that you’re a simple and honest man.”

“I’m not involved with my family’s businesses besides helping the ‘lower’ workers. I like it since it isn’t headache-inducing like being in those higher positions. I just come in, do my job, and then leave, so I’m not guilty of anything.”

“That’s what you think.”

“Pardon?”

“You have a responsibility for your family’s businesses, and like I said, there were criminals just downstairs. You must’ve known they were there and know about the shady dealings that happen behind your back and under your feet.”

“I’ve heard about them, but that’s none of my business. The people who are involved with it are the ones you should worry about. I just stay out of it and they leave me alone.”

“And that is your sin. Sloth.”

“I’m no lazy man,” Klinge says as he picks up a car with both hands. “Can a lazy man pick up a car he’s put together with his own two hands like this?” I lessen Klinge’s power. He starts to weaken to the point where he struggles to hold up the car and is unable to throw it to the side. “What…is happening?”

“Nothing you have is anything you earned. The ‘accident’ that would’ve killed other men and given you your mutations was from God, the job that you have was given to you by your parents, and people fear to push you to do anything for the previous two reasons. You are the epitome of a spoiled child.”

“Fine…I get it. I’ll do something with my life and clean up my act. I swear!”

Sensing the honesty in him, I grant Klinge his strength back, allowing him to safely put down the car.

“Whew! That was close,” he says.

“It was. Your soul was almost damned forever and still may be if you don’t change,” I say.

“I will, starting with the scum downstairs. I think I’ll actually respond to those invitations from the other families that I keep getting, especially Timeo Severe’s and ones from the Travail family. Nothing says I’ve changed than spending time on charity, right?”

“Right,” I say as I leave the building while laughing.

With that done, I only have one more family left to investigate and one that I also should’ve been looking into from the beginning. Darcy, what are you hiding from me?

Friday, March 14, 2025

Ballad of L'Obscruite: Chapter 2 – My Best Friend’s Keeper

Chapter 2 – My Best Friend’s Keeper

This morning I eat brunch with Lancetto at a local restaurant. I tell him about my collaboration with Darcy today and how I plan to impress her so we can work together more.

“That’s not to say that I only want to collaborate with her. We should do something together as well. The Church does co-own many of my family’s properties,” I say.

“It would aid the public image of my family and its allies. We did take the brunt of what L’Obscurité exposed after all. Are you sure you want to do this? Your family could be dragged through the mud with us.”

“Lancetto, you’re like a brother to me, and more of a brother than my actual siblings. I am sure that I work with you. Besides, I have a lot of time to make up with you now that my parents are healthy.”

“Thank you, Timeo. That means a lot to me after all the slander that my family name has endured. Also, aren’t you concerned about your five siblings?”

“No, not at all. They abandoned my parents in their time of need and had enough of the money they took from them to pay for their hospital bills. I pray for them, but I’m not going to act like they didn’t get what they deserved,” I say while rubbing my knuckles, remembering the punishment I gave to them.

“I see,” Lancetto says while looking at his schedule on his phone. “Ah! I have an opening this-”

Four criminals kick in the door of the restaurant. They have masks, are wearing basic, civilian clothes, and have pistols in their hands.

Aiming at us, one of them says, “Lancetto! You’ll pay-”

Before the criminals can do anything else, I draw my two pistols from my suit jacket while Lancetto pulls a revolver from his and guns the criminals down.

Looking over to me, Lancetto asks, “Two guns? Really?”

“Better to be safe than sorry. Speaking of which, we should probably get out of here,” I say.

Lancetto and I put a hundred dollar bill each on the table, overpaying for the brunch, and say to the waitress, “Keep the change.”

As we pass by the bodies of the criminals, we see that one of them is still alive. Lancetto puts his cane at the man, pulls the trigger on it, and blasts the criminal full of buckshot.

“Two guns?” I ask.

“It doesn’t count as one, but yes,” Lancetto says as we walk out of the restaurant. “I’ll ask again. Are you sure you want to work with me after what you’ve witnessed?”

“Of course, I do, probably now more than ever just so I can protect you just in case what happened, happens again. After my parents were put in a coma by criminals, I refuse to let anyone I care about and anyone in this city go through what I had to.”

“Again, I must thank you for your kind words. You’re an invaluable friend, and because of that, I’ll see you at the same time tomorrow at the headquarters of my family’s business. Oh, and I wish you luck with your date with Darcy.”

“It’s not a date. I’ve told you it’s more of a setup by her to take advantage of the collaboration for whatever ends she has.”

“Well, turn the collaboration in your favor and give her a reason to keep coming back to you. It’s the way things are done in business, so this shouldn’t be too dissimilar.”

“I guess so.”

“You’ll do well. I’m sure of it and thank you again for all you’ve said and done. You really are a brother to me.”

I return Lancetto’s sentiment before we go our separate ways to attend to our own business for the day. Going to one of my family’s charity centers where the homeless are fed and given donations by the public such as clothing, toys, and even furniture, I go over the tips that Lancetto gave me in my head while waiting for Darcy. She arrives on time in a simple skirt, hat, and shirt. Despite the simplicity of her appearance, something about it makes her look extraordinary.

“Are you ready to get to work?” she asks me.

“Yes, of course,” I awkwardly say as we head in.

When we walk in, Darcy attracts attention by her presence alone despite not being dressed up like she usually is and just wearing normal clothes. People recognize her, and those who don’t, give her compliments, praise, and say how they are honored to see her.

While getting set up and helping in the kitchen, I ask her, “Have you been here before?”

“I’ve volunteered and made friends at your charity centers before. It’s a humbling experience that has inspired some of my art and is a good place to make friends,” she says. “Is this your first time here?”

“No, I’ve done it before when I was a kid and teenager. I’m surprised people like you so much in contrast to what happened to my friend, Lancetto.”

“I heard about what happened on the news. The media and police will probably come here to question you about it.”

“My family’s lawyers are already talking to the police, and if the media comes, let them come and make all the noise they want. We were in our right to defend ourselves.”

“Understandable, though the media is one thing, and letting your lawyers take care of the law is a privilege of your family that you are within your right to use, however, allying yourself with the Affare family can be damaging to your reputation.”

“I know. Lancetto wouldn’t stop mentioning it, but he’s more of a brother to me than my own siblings and I want to help him.”

“Will you help me if my name gets dragged through the mud? My family and yours got damaged the least out of the four families, but we’re looked at with suspicion nevertheless.”

“Of course. I don’t see why I wouldn’t.”

“I’ll be sure to remember that if I get into any trouble.”

“Ha! I hope you don’t get any trouble to begin with.”

“You never know in these times. Everyone gets in trouble for something even if they never do anything wrong.”

After minutes of working in the kitchen, the media comes and crowds it, pushing out the poor to ask us questions. At the moment, I’m tempted to walk away, so I can transform and use my powers to scare them away, but I simply get mad at them for pushing aside the poor and I get the guards to kick them out. Seeing that the media is crowding the entrance, Darcy and I decide to leave so the media follows us, and the poor are allowed to enter the charity center.

“This feels like running from a crazed mob,” Darcy says.

“Let’s go to the next place where they won’t be allowed to crowd then,” I say.

My driver brings Darcy and me to one of my family’s hospitals. Here, the guards stop the media from crowding it and the look of the media interfering with the healing of the dying stops them dead in their tracks, forcing them to stay outside. Darcy and I walk through the halls of the hospital, witnessing life-saving surgeries, people dying, mourning the dead, and doctors and nurses taking care of others.

“There’s something charming about this place that makes it fascinating to be in,” Darcy says.

“What? Have you worked here before too?” I jokingly ask.

“No, but I’ve been in hospitals before. The charm for me is the contradiction in what it is.”

“Contradiction?”

“It smells like death, and yet, there’s life. People struggle to stay alive even though we all die in the end. There’s hope and happiness along with sadness and despair.”

“I see. Is it giving you the inspiration for anything new?”

“I have an idea in the works about a romance involving it.”

“Tell me more.”

“It’s about a man so obsessed with preventing death that he saves everyone, but himself and his loved ones.”

“Sounds tragic. Call me a sap, but I like happier stories.”

“Me too, but the tragic circumstances make the happier ones look brighter and make us appreciate them more.”

My parents eventually meet us and tell Darcey how they are honored by her visit and generous and continued donations to our charities. Now that they mention it, I remember hearing about their donations and workers meeting our own the few times I was in the office. After hugging and kissing my parents goodbye, I question Darcy on this.

“Why wouldn’t practicing Catholics like my family donate when we have the money?” Darcy asks.

“Was that the only reason for your donations?” I ask.

“Do you suspect me of having ulterior motives?” she says with a sly smile.

“I suspect you’re withholding information.”

“Isn’t it enough to know that I’m doing good in the world?”

“Doing good can mean different things even to those who claim to have the same beliefs as others. It could also be a cover for more nefarious deeds.”

“You and I ought to create a story or poem one day. You have such a creative imagination.”

“Refusing to elaborate and forcing the conversation to go off-topic makes you even more suspicious to me.”

“Do you want to call off the collaboration then?”

“No. In fact, I want to keep an eye on you even more.”

“As do I. Let’s continue our day then and maybe I’ll tell you more,” she says as she runs her hand down my cheek.

Our final destination today is one of my family-owned schools. There, we give talks on our lives and watch classes from the front of the room. I’m also unsurprised at this point to find that Darcy knows people here, is friends with some of them, and that she’s given talks here before.

“What kind of talks and advice have you been giving the students?” I ask.

“Just the kind to pursue virtue, their dreams, and to change the world. Nothing new that other speakers haven’t said before,” she says.

“But I’m sure you gave it in your own way. You said you are a Catholic and what it means to be virtuous and change the world is different from the popular secular views of today.”

“You’ve been hearing me talk today. It’s no different than how I usually speak. If you want to know more, you should read my works.”

“I think I’ll put time aside to do so.”

“Here,” Darcy says while signing one of her books that she brought to hand out to the students. This one she adds a kiss to it to leave the stain of her lips on the inside. “With a personal and extra special signature.”

“Much appreciated.”

By the end of the collaboration, I have more questions than answers. Darcy and I finish the day with dinner today that I treat for.

“Now that you’ve had a taste of being with me, what do you think about me?” Darcy asks.

“You’re a curious creature,” I say. “One who I need to see more often.”

“You’ve interested me as well. You’re not like other men and have something mysterious about you that I’d like to figure out. How does seeing each other tomorrow sound?”

“I have to see my friend, Lancetto, so that’s a no. How about the day after?” I say.

“You’re committed to your friend, and I respect that, but be careful with him. I’ve tried working with his company before, but the arts and business don’t mix well. It’s very constraining and his family is the most powerful in the city, and you know what they say about absolute power.”

“I’m sure I’ll find out everything I need to know. So, is that a yes for the day after?”

“Yes, of course, and be sure to let me know all the juicy details of what happens tomorrow with your friend.”

“I will.”

After finishing our dinner, Darcy and I say our goodbyes. She quickly turns back to me, pecks my cheek with a kiss, winks, and walks away. What a tease. It makes me thankful that I’m seeing Lancetto who is completely honest with me or at least I think he is. I meet him at the center of his family’s power and businesses. It’s the tallest tower in Meridian and is partially decorated with Gothic, Art Deco, modern, and other styles on all sides of the building with a large statue of a hawk on top of it, showing the far-reaching legacy of the Affare family.

High-ranking members of the Affare family and their allies are meeting me and my own allies as we meet in the tower for breakfast, thankfully without being shot at this time. Everyone seems to be having a nice time, talking to one another about business, and personal matters.

“How was your date with Darcy?” Lancetto jokingly asks.

“Fine and it wasn’t a date. During it, I found that Darcy and her family have connections to the people who work at my schools and charities. She’s also been making regular, ‘generous’, donations to the hospitals,” I say.

“A lot can happen when you’re not paying attention.”

“I know and part of me regrets not seeing it earlier. Darcy seems to be hiding something from me while saying that she’s doing good for the world and not elaborating beyond the obvious. Because of that, we’re going to see each other tomorrow.”

“Getting a second date, good job, Timeo!”

“It’s. Not. A. Date. I’m also meeting Klinge Geben soon, probably in a few days if the arrangement can be made. He’s apparently always busy and his company keeps referring me to meet with his businessmen rather than him directly.”

“Klinge is more of a simple worker of the working class rather than a man who knows the inner workings of his businesses. You’re not likely to find out anything from him even though establishing a friendship with him could mean better deals and collaborations with his businesses. Speaking about business, we should get to our own.”

“You go ahead and start it. I have to go to the bathroom.”

“You sure?”

“Yes. Just like Klinge, my businessmen are better at meetings than I am.”

“Okay. You wanted this meeting to happen.”

Once I go to the bathroom, I activate my powers, clothe myself in darkness, and become one with the shadows. While everyone in the meeting introduces themselves and their intentions for it, I read their souls. Many are sinners guilty of some small crimes and evil, but nothing too serious. Suddenly, the alarms in the building turn on and an announcement is made that a superhuman fight between heroes and villains is taking place. The security barriers of this building activate, covering the windows with a shield that not even the shells of a tank could pierce. The noise of the chaos outside gets people talking and worried, opening them up more to me, and yet, I don’t have enough action to sense any real corruption.

“Please, please. Everyone calm down and let us continue the meeting. Our heroes and guards will ensure that we aren’t harmed,” Lancetto says.

A shift in the room turns my attention to certain businessmen as they take out their guns and expose themselves as superhumans by turning their skin to steel, exposing their overly large muscles, and turning their arms into blades.

“Yes, let’s continue,” one of the businessmen says.

“What is the meaning of this?!” Lancetto asks.

“A show of power. Despite many of Affare’s connections and crimes being exposed by L’Obscurité, he didn’t get all of us, particularly the ones outside the city. We have the heroes and villains who are putting on a show outside and some of the people here who can bring Affare back to its state of absolute power in Meridian.”

“Tsk, you won’t get me to agree with your plans?”

“We never needed your approval. Just those above you and in this room. Nevertheless, you should join us for the betterment of your family and the city. The power that we had allowed us to do whatever we wanted with little to no consequence.”

“What you did was nothing more than indulge yourself and incur the wrath of God on you.”

“Don’t you want more to be converted so their souls can be saved? We can make it so that other faiths and non-faiths suffer unfortunate deaths, the burning of their buildings, exposure of crimes, or are simply taxed out of the city.”

“I want you all to repent and leave me and my family alone,” Lancetto says with his revolver drawn.

“Do you really think this empty threat will do anything? Look. No one is standing up with you, and even if they did, they would suffer the same fate.”

Lancetto nervously looks around the room before saying, “I’d rather die than allow you to continue with your evil deeds!”

“So be it then.”

The businessman nods to the man with arms for blades who charges at Lancetto, who in turn, shoots at him, however, his shots bounce harmlessly off the metal man. Before the blades of the superhuman can reach Lancetto, I cut the man’s arm off. The superhuman is stunned by this as his bladed arm floats in mid-air and then turns on him, impaling him through the head, and killing him.

I laugh and then say, “I’ve been waiting for you to expose yourselves.”

“Who are you?” another of corrupt businessmen says.

“Who do you think? I am L’Obscurité.”

Everyone in the room starts to panic, even the superhumans.

“What do you want?”

“I want to punish the guilty and sinful as I always do. If you repent and choose to not pursue your current course of action and turn yourselves in, I won’t harm you, but on the other hand, well, you’ve seen what I’ve done.”

“Do you think violence will get us to change? Do you know who we are?”

I teleport the heroes and villains who are allies with these criminals into this room with their heads cut off.

“You’re the scum of this city who deserve death! You have one last chance.”

“Find him! He’s in this room so he must be close!”

The superhumans in this room wander it, looking for me. One of them thinks he sees me in a dark corner of the room, punches the space, and I explode his arm and then his head. The rest of the superhumans suffer a similar fate based on their powers such as the steel man being crushed as if he were a tin can and the invisible woman’s throat being cut.

“You, clergy of the Church!” I say. “You swore an oath to God, but your hearts are dedicated to your sins. Such will be your fate.”

The criminals who are clergy are all instantly cut in half from their heads down to their feet. Everyone is in a panic now trying to get out of the room, except for Lancetto who is on his knees begging for God’s mercy.

“You, criminals who use force to get what you want will feel the wrath of justice fall upon you!”

I use my powers to exact each criminal their due punishment with some criminals being shot by a firing squad in the dark, others being cut to bits, some being electrocuted as if they were in an electric chair, and a few being injected with lethal chemicals that cause them to bleed from their skin until they die.

“As for the rest of you, you didn’t defend your leader when he stood up for you. You may not be deserving of death, but there are fates far worse than it.”

Lancetto gets up and says, “Wait! Stop! Let these people go! You’ve scared justice into the hearts and I’m sure they’ll change, right?”

The people in the room fervently agree, and looking into their hearts, they mean to do so and not just because they’re scared.

Making myself visible to everyone in the room, I say, “Fine, but I’m trusting you with them. You all must do everything Lancetto says, or else, I’ll be back for you and his words won’t save you then.”

“Thank you, thank you so much!”

“Anything for a brother.”

Lancetto’s eyes narrow before widening and I can feel his mind starting to connect the dots. Before he can say my name, I disappear in the blink of an eye. Surely enough, I receive a text from him much later to meet in private. That might’ve been a mistake hinting too much at my true identity, but at least I’m glad to have removed the corruption from Lancetto’s company. Hopefully, Lancetto doesn’t reveal my identity to anyone else and he doesn’t have any harsh feelings about what I’ve done. Hopefully.