Atualizações Recentes
  • T4
    Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content Content...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 1 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • The Bread Crumbs of Bryant Park
    Thomas O'Brien's hands were the color of old parchment, mapped with blue veins and scarred by decades of alkaline burns and the flat iron's relentless heat. At thirty-eight, they looked like the hands of a man sixty. He did not mind. Hands were tools, and his had earned their keep. He worked at a laundry on Mulberry Street, six days a week, from six in the morning until nine at night. The work...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 815 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • The Neon Noir Abyss
    The rain in the city didn't wash anything away; it only smeared the neon lights into long, bleeding streaks of magenta and cyan. Sarah sat in the back of the dimly lit diner, her breath fogging the window. Across from her, Vane was eating a piece of cherry pie with a precision that was more unsettling than any threat. "You have a very interesting mind, Sarah," Vane said, his voice a low,...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 5 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • Sample V-11: The Sovereign Debt
    (Urban Power Play) Sarah was a shark in a pencil skirt. As a senior partner at Sterling & Croft, the most ruthless law firm in Manhattan, she didn't deal in laws; she dealt in leverage. Her office was a glass cage overlooking the city, a place where she could watch the world burn and decide who to sell the extinguishers to. The "Star" was a document—a handwritten covenant from 1820 that granted...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 5 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • THE REFERENCE FRAMES
    Rose lived on the same street in London that Claire would live on fifty years later. The street was called Saxon Road, a short thoroughfare between Mile End Road and Commercial Road in the East End, and the street was brick and gas lamps and narrow terraced houses and a signal tower at the northern end that had been built in eighteen ninety and had been a railroad signal tower and had been a...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 5 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • Sample V-14: The Industrial Ruin
    **Act I: The Iron Foundry** The city of Oakhaven was a forest of smokestacks and soot, a place where human lives were just another raw material for the furnace. Clara had been born into the grinding poverty of the slums, a girl whose only asset was a natural, striking beauty that attracted the attention of the city's industrial king, Silas Vane. The marriage was a strategic acquisition. But...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • Ore Body
    The asteroid dust here was like snow, except snow didn't taste like ground-up metal and except snow didn't get into your lungs and stay there. Thomas Kowalski wiped the grime from his visor and checked the pressure gauge on his rig. The numbers were borderline. They always were. That was the thing about mining in the Belt—you didn't get to choose when the equipment failed. It chose for you. He...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • The Beauregard house spoke.
    It was not a metaphor. The walls literally spoke—low, murmuring voices that moved through the plaster and lath like water through cracked stone, speaking in languages that Seraphina did not know but somehow understood. They spoke of debts and obligations and the weight of blood, and they spoke at night, when the humidity rose and the pines outside the windows groaned like something trying to...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 5 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • The Mirror Ledger
    The air in the basement of the Global Sovereign Trust smelled of recycled oxygen and desperation. Leo sat in a cubicle that was less a workspace and more a sensory deprivation chamber, flanked by gray fabric walls and the rhythmic, oppressive hum of servers that processed trillions of dollars in a heartbeat. To the world, Leo was a ghost—a Level 4 Audit Specialist whose primary function was to...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 4 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • V-11: The Obsidian Obsession
    The mist of the Scottish Highlands did not merely drift; it clung to the grey stone of Blackwood Manor like a damp, suffocating shroud. Inside the manor, the air was thick with the scent of beeswax and ancient dust, a place where time had ceased to flow and only the echoes of the past remained. Clara, a specialist in the forgotten arts of herbalism and alchemy, had been summoned to the manor to...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 8 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • The Keeper of the Iron Flame
    The plague came to the village of Blackmoor in the autumn of 1847, and with it came Edward Ashworth, who was not what he claimed to be. He arrived with nothing but a leather satchel containing a hammer, a set of iron-working tools, and a letter of introduction from a blacksmith in Leeds that Edward had paid a drunken scrivener to forge. He told the villagers he was a journeyman seeking work. He...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 10 Visualizações 0 Anterior
  • The needle was not what caught his attention. It was the map.
    It was lying on the same table as the needle—actually, under the needle, like the needle was protecting it—and it was drawn on something that looked like animal skin but felt like paper. The lines were crude, almost childish, but they were precise. They showed a city. Not just any city. London. But not the London Jack knew. This was a London with streets that did not exist in his version of the...
    0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 5 Visualizações 0 Anterior
Mais Stories