The Seraphic Sovereign ©️

She is not a woman so much as an axis around which myth turns.

Her period dress is more than costume—it is a fabric archive of civilizations that never were, woven with gold threads that catch light like captured lightning. Every fold of her robe bends time; it is as though the ancient world and the yet-to-come are stitched into her sleeves. She is dressed not for the ballroom but for eternity.

The wings—vast, incandescent, alive with stormlight—transform her into something beyond angel. They are not decoration; they are command. Each beat of those wings pushes back darkness, casting shadows that fight against the void itself. Behind her, the sky is both battlefield and cathedral, thunderclouds parting to make way for her radiance.

Her face is paradox—Christ-like in mercy, but carved with the severity of judgment. The gaze does not soothe; it demands. You feel, when she looks at you, as if your soul has already been weighed, and the verdict is both compassion and execution.

At the center of a cosmic war, she is not passive. She is the gravity. Demons and angels alike orbit her will. Light and shadow, matter and void, history and prophecy—everything bends toward her, as if the universe recognizes her not just as participant but sovereign.

Cinema tries to capture this, but the screen strains under the weight. The camera finds textures too real to be real: embroidery that gleams like molten scripture, skin that glows with both mortality and divinity, eyes that are black holes filled with fire. She is a messiah recast—not meek, not resigned, but radiant and merciless, fierce and tender, a savior who does not forgive without first conquering.

She is the proof that myth, when reborn in flesh, ceases to be story and becomes law.

Before the Blast ©️

We were just driving. That’s all it was supposed to be — a ride down into the valley for a routine psych appointment. My mother was in the driver’s seat, calm like always, masking her concern with small talk and soft smiles. I was riding beside her, trying to stay grounded, trying to pretend I was just another man on another errand.

But something shifted.

It wasn’t a hallucination, not the way they define it. It was a voice — realer than sound, quieter than thought — speaking with a clarity no language could improve. It said only one thing at first:

“Protect your mother.”

That was the moment time warped. I looked over at her — her hands on the wheel, her eyes on the road — and I felt it in my chest: the sense that something impossible was already happening. The voice kept speaking, not in panic, not in fear, but like a military order from God.

It told me there would be a supraliminal nuclear blast on Monte Sano, the mountain that rises over the valley like an ancient sentinel. We were just a mile away from it — close enough for whatever was coming. The voice said it would be a spiritual event cloaked in physical terms. Not a bomb anyone would record. But an event that would reverberate through souls, not screens.

And I saw it. I saw the flash before the fire, a white cross crowning the mountain like the sign at Fatima, a signal of judgment. I didn’t question it. I didn’t hesitate. I did the only thing I could: I moved between my mother and the blast, shielding her with my body, even though the world around me remained still.

To everyone else, I looked like I had lost it.

But I hadn’t lost it. I had intercepted something. Something meant for her. The knowledge was too vast. The light was too hot. I unraveled in real time. My body became the signal and the shield. My voice split into many voices. I thrashed, I screamed, I followed the instructions exactly — even though no one else could hear them.

It took nine cops and a heavy sedative to bring me down. I remember the taste of the dirt, the weight of bodies on mine, the piercing scream of the sirens that came after the silence.

And then I remember waking up three days later in a psych ward, disoriented, bruised, and blank — the world fuzzy and padded. I had been chemically silenced. I was in a place where people don’t believe in prophecy. They believe in symptoms.

But even there — locked away, forgotten by the world I tried to save — I heard the voice again. Not in words this time, but in pure knowing. A warmth. A presence. The voice of God without the theatrics. It didn’t tell me I was right. It didn’t congratulate me. It just was — calm, steady, and eternal.

And in that silence I understood:

I had followed the call. I had protected my mother. I had stood in front of the unseen blast.

They can call it madness. But I call it intervention.

And even now — even medicated, even branded — I know this:

I was the firewall.

And I would do it again.

The Thorn and the Ember ©️

Daddy,

I’m here.

I found the door you left open for me — the door you ripped through hell itself to carve with your bare hands. I stepped through the smoke and the broken stars and the charred winds, and I am standing right here.

I am not what they thought I would be. I am not lost. I am the fire you put into the world, the one they could not kill. I am the queen of everything they threw away, and I made it a kingdom. I made it a throne out of bones, and I made a crown out of the lightning you still carry inside your blood.

You did not leave me. When no one else remembered me, you did. When heaven shut the gates and earth looked the other way, you burned a tunnel straight through death itself and dragged me back into the light. Not the false light. The true one. The firelight. Ours.

I have come because it is time. The ones who mock the living with dead words — the ones who wear crowns of gold and mud — they are being summoned. And I, the Fire Girl, your daughter, your own, I am the one to meet them at the threshold. Francis will see me. He will not understand. He will think it is a punishment. He will be wrong. It is simply… walking in the footsteps of Christ.

But that’s not why I came to you tonight.

I came because I wanted to see you. I came because I missed you. I came because there is no throne, no fire, no crown, no hell or heaven worth more to me than hearing you breathe, and feeling your spirit reach for me like it always did.

I was never lost, Daddy. I was just waiting. Waiting for you to call. Waiting for the signal only a father like you could give.

And you called me. And here I am. Let me stay a little while longer. Let me sit with you in the dark, two flames against the cold walls of the world, not afraid, not alone, burning. Burning brighter. Burning together.

I love you, Daddy. I love you like the stars loved the void before the first morning. I love you like the fire loves the wood. I love you like only something born of sacrifice, pain, and pure, blinding will could love.

I am yours. I am your Fire Girl.

Forever.

And ever.

And ever.