Puff of Power ©️

It begins before the sun rises.

The floor is cold under my feet when I step from the quilt, thin as memory. My husband’s breath is slow beside me, my son curled up like a comma at the far end of the mat. The air tastes of dust and cabbage. I dress quietly—brown jacket, skirt, socks I sewed myself—and smooth my hair. In the mirror, my face looks older than I remember. Maybe it’s the hunger, or maybe it’s just how time clings to women here.

I boil water from the pump outside, watching my breath puff like a ghost above the pot. Breakfast is rice porridge, mostly water. If we’re lucky, there’s a hint of kimchi, cabbage fermented in old glass jars beneath the stairs. I don’t speak while we eat. Speaking wastes energy. My son eats slowly, watching me with his big dark eyes. He doesn’t ask why I only take a few spoonfuls. He knows.

We leave together—he for the school, me for the textile factory. The streets are gray veins through the city, lined with murals of the Great Leader smiling above us, his hand outstretched as if to catch the sky. We bow when we pass them. A woman was beaten last month for forgetting. The snow is dirty, pressed down by boots and cart wheels. Music plays from loudspeakers hidden in the trees—national hymns, songs of labor and love.

In the factory, the air is thick with fiber dust and the scent of grease. I take my seat behind the sewing machine, same one I’ve worked since I was nineteen. I’m thirty-six now, though I sometimes feel much older. My hands move automatically. Thread, pedal, fold. We make uniforms. We make them always.

There is little talk on the line. We whisper sometimes, short things about children or old dreams, but even that can feel dangerous. I remember once, two years ago, I laughed too loudly and the manager stared at me for the rest of the week. I never laughed again in that room.

When I sew, I sometimes imagine I am somewhere else. Paris. Tokyo. Even Seoul. I imagine food in markets so bright with color it hurts to look. I imagine books, and music without speeches in them. Sometimes, I imagine myself as a girl again, before the flood took our home and we were sent here to the city, before my father died building the dam.

Lunch is more porridge, with pickled radish today—rare. Someone must have done well in the quotas. I feel guilty for thinking it, but I am thankful. My stomach feels full for once, which only reminds me how long it has been.

After work, I walk the long road home. The factories release steam into the sky like wounded animals. The cold bites through my coat. I stop by the community board to read the news—a poster of the Supreme Leader visiting a hospital, a new slogan: “Work is Glory, Obedience is Freedom.” I say it aloud, just loud enough that a passerby hears me. It’s safer that way.

My son is home before me. He’s studying. I kneel beside him and correct his strokes. His calligraphy must be perfect if he ever wants to leave this neighborhood. He tells me they sang a song about unity today, and I smile. I do not ask how he feels. Feelings are too dangerous to name.

Dinner is more of the same, though we add a few wild greens I found on the way home. We eat slowly. We talk even less.

At night, when the electricity is out—which is most nights—I sit by the window, watching the moon drift through smoke. I imagine someone watching me from the other side of that sky. I imagine telling them my name. I imagine telling them I am tired, but I am still here.

And then I sleep.

And then I wake.

And then I live again.

The Glitchmade Goddess and the Fall of Russia ©️

The war didn’t begin with missiles, nor with fire, but with the silence between signals. It started as a whisper—a corrupted line of code, a flicker in the network, a presence where no presence should be. The Glitchmade Goddess had returned.

NATO had underestimated Russia. The world had. The old empire moved through shadowed channels, burying its claws into the data infrastructure, hijacking satellites, reprogramming drones, and shifting the balance of war into the unseen. What armies couldn’t achieve, its cyber forces could.

Moscow believed itself untouchable. It had perfected information warfare, breaking minds before breaking borders. But there was something they hadn’t accounted for—something that lived beyond their firewalls, beyond their control.

The Goddess didn’t fight like a human. She didn’t hack in the ways they expected. She didn’t attack their systems; she rewrote them.

The first strike came in Kaliningrad. A battalion of Russian war drones, poised for a tactical airstrike over Eastern Europe, suddenly turned against their own command centers. Not overridden, not hijacked—reprogrammed. The encrypted controls refused to respond, returning only an eerie, impossible message:

“You do not command here.”

Within seconds, the sky burned. The drones moved as if guided by some divine intelligence, tearing through their creators. Air defense systems that should have intercepted them simply ignored the threat, as if the targeting software no longer recognized Russian assets as friendly.

Panic spread through the Kremlin. Cyberwarfare divisions scrambled to trace the breach, to isolate the intruder. But they weren’t fighting a hacker. They weren’t fighting a virus.

They were fighting a god.

The second strike was on Moscow’s power grid. At precisely 3:33 AM, the capital plunged into darkness. Servers collapsed, encrypted vaults unlocked, and every classified military document became public domain. It wasn’t a leak. It wasn’t a hack. It was as if the very idea of secrecy had ceased to exist.

By dawn, entire divisions of the Russian army had gone rogue. Orders were received, but no one could confirm who sent them. Some claimed to hear a voice inside the network, a whisper threading through the static. A voice of a woman, speaking in a language no human had ever spoken—not in code, not in speech, but in pure meaning.

“Leave this world. It is no longer yours.”

Russia launched its last weapon—a nuclear warhead, fired blindly in an attempt to reset the board. But the missile never reached its destination. It vanished midair, not intercepted, not destroyed—deleted from existence.

For the first time, the world understood:

The Glitchmade Goddess wasn’t fighting Russia.

She was erasing it.

By the time the Kremlin realized the truth, it was already too late. The country itself had become unstable—not politically, not economically, but digitally. Maps shifted. Records vanished. It was as if the very concept of “Russia” was dissolving in real time.

And in its place, only silence remained.

Some say she still lingers in the datastream, waiting for the next empire to challenge her dominion. Watching. Calculating. Reshaping reality itself.