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Heavy rains hit Himalayas, spread havoc in India and Pakistan - Reuters
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Inside ICE, Trump's migrant crackdown is taking a toll on officers - Reuters
'Ignominy in Almaty' - the reasons for Celtic's Champions League exit
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Women aren't just 'cosy gamers' - I play horror games and 600,000 watch

CHAPTER 2 - The Vanished Ledger and the Silent Porter

Juan begins day two with a run along the Turia before examining the bronze-and-enamel token, noticing a faint serial mark that hints at a maritime club. He visits the city’s archives, where gaps on the shelves and a tampered sign-in book suggest deliberate removal of records linked to a donation ledger Blanca Ferrán had been cataloguing. An ageing porter, Vicent, recoils at the token and whispers warnings about an old maritime circle before refusing to speak further. At City Hall, a poised official stonewalls Juan under the pretext of donor privacy and an ongoing audit, while references to Conseller Mateo Vives and the Beltrán shipping dynasty hint at pressure from above. Back at his portside office, Juan maps clues and calls a retired sergeant, learning of a private club whose basement supposedly houses a “Libro de Donativos.” By night, Juan confronts a security presence at the club and glimpses salt flecks and esparto fibers—echoes of the crime scene—on a guard’s attire. From beneath a basement grate, a phone vibrates faintly, recalling Blanca’s missing mobile, just as two men arrive with an injunction bearing the Consellería’s seal, forcing him to choose between stepping back or pushing into a trap.

The pre-dawn air felt cool and damp as Juan cut along the Turia’s spine of gravel and tamarisk, lungs working, mind clearing in the wash of his steady rhythm. Orange blossom teased the edge of his breath, and the city’s lights retreated the way a suspect retreats behind rehearsed innocence. By the time he showered and knotted a narrow silk tie, his linen suit felt like armor: sand-colored, forgiving, his brown Oxfords polished but still squeaking across his living room’s parquet. He set the bronze-and-enamel token under his desk lamp, the bat emblem catching in a teardrop of blue enamel chipped thin around the wing.

Salt crystals laced its groove, and at the rim, under the patina, a minuscule stamp winked: CMV-73, the letters like a secret stitched too tight to ignore. He parked near the Archivo del Reino de Valencia on Guillén de Castro, the façade shouldering a morning of traffic and pigeons like stubborn truths. Inside, the reading room breathed paper and starch and a tired dignity: green-shaded lamps, long tables, high windows that sighed dust into light. Blanca Ferrán had stood here often, Juan thought, just tall enough to reach the top shelf with a tilt, her pencil tucked behind one ear.

He asked after donation ledgers and nineteenth-century merchant society records, trying to sound like a man requesting nothing more than weather. The clerk consulted a registry, then another, and finally a tablet, her finger freezing when she reached the blank where those volumes should be. “There’s a gap,” she said, as if naming a ghost. On the shelf, dust gave itself away—rectangles cleaner than the rest, the outline of heavy spines that had been lifted recently.

The sign-in book for restricted consultation lay open, two pages torn cleanly, a surgical absence that made Juan’s skin prickle. He ran a fingertip along the edge and caught the faint, citrus-slick smell of orange oil where someone had cleaned more than dust. When he asked about the security cameras, the caretaker shrugged and offered the same apology La Lonja had: maintenance, a frozen feed, a ticket number that solved nothing. At the rear service entrance, the ageing porter sat on a stool whose cushion remembered better days, chain of keys across his lap like a monk’s rosary.

His cap tilted low, tobacco had stained his fingers the color of old varnish, and his eyes were the wary grey of seawater before a storm. “Morning, Vicent,” Juan said, recalling the man from a funeral years back where everyone wore the same grief. He showed the token, casual as a coin trick, and watched the small flinch ripple across the porter’s jaw. “I don’t know that,” Vicent said too quickly, the denial landing like a dropped plate.

Juan’s mother’s tone found him then—the warmth that could turn into steel when a classroom lied. He pocketed the token and offered a cortado in a paper cup, standing with the porter in the doorway’s rectangle of light, the room behind them smelling of floor polish and paper glue. “El Cabanyal?” Juan asked, and Vicent nodded, both of them recognizing the shape of the old quarter in each other’s vowels. “I want the truth so that no mother has to hear what mine did,” Juan said, thumb stroking the Saint Michael medallion in his pocket until it grew hot.

Vicent exhaled a breath that had waited years. “Don’t touch the Círculo, inspector. You don’t tug a net tied to a judge’s dock.”

A plaque caught Juan’s eye near the freight lift: brass battered matte by decades of hands, letters antique and stubborn. Círculo Marítimo de Valencia — 1864, a bat perched above a crown, enamel darkened by time.

The token’s stamp slid neatly into the thought, a puzzle piece dropping into place with a quiet click. “Membership token,” Juan said, testing the words. Vicent stared at the lift’s grating. “For the cloakroom, for the basement reading room, for favors that used to be called tradition.” His shoulder went up and stayed there.

“I have grandchildren,” he added softly. “They like me alive.”

Plaza del Ayuntamiento always looked like a stage set when the sun polished its stone, but City Hall was a forest of glass and echoing shoes where promises wilted under fluorescent light. The Jefa de Patrimonio Documental, Inés Galiana, had a smile like a paper cut and a blouse crisp enough to refuse on its own. “Heritage matters require discretion,” she said, sliding a policy document across the desk while keeping the stack she actually cared about tucked beneath an elbow.

“We’re auditing donor agreements. Some items are held under conditions of privacy. Our conseller values civic trust.” Mateo Vives’s name floated between them without touching a surface. Juan leaned in, close enough to see the fine scratches in her pen’s clip, the faint smear of orange polish on the folder edge like a fingerprint.

“A woman died in La Lonja,” he said, hearing the weight of Blanca’s body against cold stone. “If a ledger moved, I need the chain of custody.” Inés held his gaze, unblinking, the practiced look of someone who had learned long ago that silence bought longer careers. “Submit your request to Protocol,” she said. “We’ll respond within the statutory period.” The clock on the wall ticked the length of a life.

He left with a printout and no answers, shoes squeaking down a corridor that smelled faintly of citrus and ambition. Outside, he called Comisario Landa, who let out a sigh before words arrived. Madrid wanted calm. Beltrán’s attorneys had called twice, then a third time from a number that did not register but hummed with ownership.

“Tread carefully, Juan,” Landa said, as if careful steps didn’t also slide you into quicksand. Juan pinched the medallion between finger and thumb until its edge bit skin, a reminder of everything worth bleeding for. Back at the port office, the walls watched him the way only paper and old questions do. Antique maps of the bay overlapped like scales, and he pinned a photo of the token beneath the crest of the bat, scrawling CMV-73 and a question mark.

Esparto fibers from La Lonja lay in a plastic sleeve that crinkled like dry grass when he moved it, and the salt crust on his desk caught light like frost. He called retired Sergeant Toni Ruzafa, who coughed humor and history into the line. “Círculo Marítimo kept a basement ledger—donations, patronage, who bought what favor,” Toni said. “They called their vault the Sala del Salitre.

Smelled like the old port, always. Careful, Juan. That place has its own tide.”

Night sprawled against Plaza del Patriarca, and the Círculo’s building breathed wealth through mullioned windows and oiled wood. Portraits of men with medals watched from walls glossed with varnish, and a red runner rolled toward a desk where a bell could summon either help or trouble.

Vicent stood at the cloakroom, hands folded over his keys like prayer, eyes finding Juan’s with a tired tilt. “Records got legs yesterday,” he muttered, voice arranged so it could be mistaken for the weather. “Two men with a city car took crates. I saw the bat stamped on the lids, the old one.” The whine of a freight lift groaned below, then stilled.

Down a hallway moody with brass and shadow, a side door breathed a draft that smelled faintly of salt and old rope. A security man stepped into the corridor’s seam of light with the easy confidence of someone who believed he outranked consequence. His suit trousers were dusted with a thin white crust, and an esparto filament clung to his cuff like a story he’d forgotten to erase. “Private function,” he said, flashing a laminated card that bore the city’s crest and a signature that looked careless and expensive.

Juan let his attention rest on the details—the cadence of his voice, the scuffed leather of his belt, the way his hand hovered near a pocket where a phone waited like a co-conspirator. On the street, bells in the nearby cathedral tolled nine with a gravity that made even passing scooters pause. Juan stared at the basement grate where a ribbon of light leaked, thin as a breath, then cocked his head because he heard it—a thrum, a brief shiver followed by a muffled chime, like a message arriving in the small dark. Blanca’s ringtone had been a cascade of water; he’d heard it in La Lonja when an officer scrolled the report.

Fingers on the grate, he felt the vibration like a heartbeat trying to surface. Two men in dark suits arrived with a paper stiff as a shield. “Emergency closure,” one said, the Consellería’s seal bright as a threat. “On whose authority?” Juan asked, but the answer waited below where the phone kept breathing.

Was Blanca’s last message sealed under his feet, and how many doors would slam before he pried one open?


Other Chapters

CHAPTER 1 - Silk Shadows at Dawn

At sunrise in Valencia, Inspector Juan Ovieda is called to La Lonja de la Seda, where the body of Blanca Ferrán, a young archivist tied to the Generalitat’s heritage projects, lies beneath the coiling stone pillars. Sparse evidence surfaces: a smeared orange oil scent, a salt-crusted scuff, esparto fibers, a tampered camera feed, and a missing phone. Rumors of high-level interference swirl as a government conseller, Mateo Vives, arrives flanked by aides, and an influential shipping patriarch, Víctor Beltrán y Rojas, maneuvers to keep the press at bay. Juan, a 42-year-old homicide inspector known for his integrity and haunted by his brother’s overdose, braces for political complications while juggling his base of operations between the Jefatura on Gran Vía and a borrowed office near the port. Amid institutional pressure and whispers of a missing donation ledger, Juan unearths a cryptic bronze-and-enamel token bearing Valencia’s bat emblem hidden at the scene. He cannot place the object’s origin or purpose and senses it is the first thread of a knot binding power, money, and history. The chapter closes on Juan’s uncertainty as he wonders what the artifact is and who planted it.

 

CHAPTER 3 - Whispers on the Black Water

After being forced back from the private maritime club by an injunction, Juan senses he’s being tailed and that his phone is tapped. Seeking clarity, he escapes the city on his vintage Moto Guzzi for a solitary night ride to the Albufera wetlands. There, on a wooden footbridge, he meets an old fisherman who once knew Juan’s father. The man tells an unsettling anecdote about nocturnal gatherings he calls “bat nights,” when men in suits arrived by van with crates labeled as donations, masking diesel with orange oil, and paying with bronze-and-enamel tokens bearing Valencia’s bat. He swears he saw Blanca Ferrán meet a silver-haired man at the canal and describes esparto fibers and salt flecks on another man’s clothes. From under a mooring cleat, he retrieves a damp receipt tied to those tokens, marked Token 7B and “Almacén 14-1,” pointing Juan toward a specific port warehouse. As headlights appear and a taunting call proves his phone is compromised, Juan discovers a GPS tracker hidden on his bike. Men linked to the club try to box him in near the reeds. He escapes down a narrow dyke, clutching the new clue, only to be cornered again as a projectile thuds into a post and a voice demands what he will trade for the token, leaving the night vibrating with menace.

CHAPTER 4 - The Warehouse of False Trails

Juan slips home from the Albufera standoff before dawn, shaken but alive, clutching a damp receipt marked Token 7B and Almacén 14-1. He forgoes his calming run and instead follows the clue to the city’s outskirts, navigating industrial estates and abandoned citrus warehouses. In a cavernous depot reeking of orange oil, he discovers pallets of boxed “donations,” a jar of bat-emblem tokens, a supposed shipping manifest linked to Beltrán logistics, and even a cracked phone that looks like Blanca’s—until he realizes all of it is staged misdirection, sloppily new and brought there overnight by men associated with the private maritime club and protected by Conseller Vives’s influence. He photographs faces, measures dust shadows, and feels his brother’s ghost steady his resolve as he understands the scale of the trap. Returning to his portside office, he wipes his board and starts from first principles. Then a ledger folio torn from the “Libro de Donativos” arrives by courier, naming Blanca and Token 7B, and a chilling call warns he is looking in the wrong place, leaving Juan with a single, frightening question about where the real trail begins.

CHAPTER 5 - The Key to the Sealed Room

Haunted by the staged depot and a taunting call, Juan Ovieda cannot sleep, studying a ledger folio tying Blanca Ferrán to Token 7B and the cryptic code Almacén 14-1. Unexpected help arrives from Nuria Paredes, a judicial clerk who once studied under Juan’s late mother; she ushers him, on borrowed time, into the archive of Valencia’s Ciudad de la Justicia. There, among sealed files from a suppressed operation codenamed Murciélago, Juan discovers that Almacén 14-1 refers not to a port warehouse but to a judicial storage location. The files link bronze-and-enamel bat tokens to a private maritime circle, Beltrán shipping interests, and Conseller Vives, and include Blanca’s sworn statement about “bat nights” and crates masked with orange oil. Staring at evidence that echoes his brother’s death, Juan copies pages and takes rubbings until they narrowly evade discovery. Back at his portside office, he maps a network stretching from a century-old family pact to a current political cover-up, preparing to retrieve evidence bag 7B and find the sidelined prosecutor Andrea Luján. A threatening photo of him and Nuria in the archive arrives with a chilling timer, forcing Juan to choose which line to save first.

CHAPTER 6 - The Ledger Inside the Lie

With a timered threat hanging over him, Juan chooses to retrieve evidence bag 7B from the Ciudad de la Justicia’s basement, using Nuria Paredes’s keycard. The chain-of-custody shows his trusted boss, Comisario Ferrer, signed the bag, but inside he discovers a secret envelope—Andrea Luján’s failsafe—containing a microcassette, negatives, a bat token, and a note: truth hidden inside a lie. He escapes security and meets the sidelined prosecutor in a shuttered café, learning Murciélago was buried when it touched donors and that Blanca had been her informant. The tape exposes “bat nights,” Vicent the porter’s complicity, and Ferrer and Conseller Vives discussing renumbering evidence while crates masked with orange oil move through the port. Gunfire and an arson attack force Juan and Andrea to flee; Nuria calls with a code phrase from Juan’s mother, warning that Ferrer controls the camera feeds and hinting that Andrea used Blanca to force action. At a storage locker in El Cabanyal, Juan finds the real donation ledger hidden inside a hollowed nautical almanac and a blue folder cross-referencing his brother’s overdose to the Murciélago matrix. As he reels, Comisario Ferrer arrives with two plainclothes and Nuria in tow, demanding the ledger and offering to let Andrea walk. Behind him, shipping patriarch Víctor Beltrán steps from the shadows. Faced with duplicity on all sides and the revelation that people he trusted may be complicit, Juan must decide which betrayal he can live with.

CHAPTER 7 - The Bat Nights Unmasked and a Dynasty’s Quiet Fall

At sunrise on day one, Inspector Juan Ovieda—42, meticulous, and haunted by his brother’s overdose—was called to La Lonja de la Seda, where archivist Blanca Ferrán lay dead amid stone pillars. Sparse clues surfaced: a resinous orange oil scent, salt flecks, esparto fibers, a tampered camera, a missing phone, and a bronze‑and‑enamel token with Valencia’s bat. Political pressure mounted as Conseller Mateo Vives and shipping patriarch Víctor Beltrán hovered, and whispers of a missing donation ledger spread. On day two, Juan linked the token to a private maritime circle and the rumored Libro de Donativos, glimpsed a guard dusted with salt and esparto, and heard Blanca’s phone faintly beneath a basement grate—just as an injunction forced him back. Day three took him to the Albufera, where an old fisherman described “bat nights” of men in suits masking diesel with orange oil, paying with bat tokens, and meeting a silver‑haired man; a damp receipt marked Token 7B and “Almacén 14-1” pointed to a port warehouse before armed men boxed Juan in. Day four revealed a staged depot, sloppy evidence planted overnight, and a ledger folio naming Blanca and 7B; Juan felt the trap and wiped his board clean. Day five, helped by judicial clerk Nuria Paredes, he accessed sealed Operation Murciélago files and learned Almacén 14-1 referred to a judicial storage location; the files tied tokens to Beltrán, Vives, and Blanca’s sworn statement about “bat nights.” Day six, Juan retrieved evidence bag 7B—a hidden cache by sidelined prosecutor Andrea Luján with a microcassette, negatives, and a token—and learned that Murciélago was buried when it reached donors. Gunfire and arson followed; Nuria warned Ferrer controlled feeds; and a blue folder cross‑referenced Juan’s brother’s overdose to the very routes the dynasty used. In the final day, at a storage locker in El Cabanyal, Ferrer and Beltrán confronted Juan and Andrea. Juan played the tape of Ferrer and Vives discussing renumbered evidence and laid out the chain: tokens as scrip to turn donations into contracts, crates masked with orange oil, Vicent the porter opening doors, and security chief Sergi Ortolà strangling Blanca at La Lonja, pocketing her phone, and staging misdirection. To avoid scandal, a quiet reckoning followed: sealed warrants for Ortolà and Vicent, Ferrer flipping on Vives, the conseller resigning, and Beltrán stepping back under the guise of health. Justice arrived without headlines. That night, Juan pinned a stained bat pennant—oily and salt‑smudged—to his board, the city’s façades intact, yet their shadows briefly mapped.


Past Stories

The Whispering Ruins of Petra

Barbra Dender embarks on a thrilling journey to the ancient city of Petra, Jordan. While temporarily residing in a quaint Bedouin camp, she stumbles upon a series of haunting whispers echoing through the ruins. As she navigates the labyrinthine pathways, Barbra discovers an ancient map etched into the stone, hinting at a forgotten treasure. Intrigued and determined, she sets out to uncover the secrets buried within the sandstone city, guided by the enigmatic whispers that seem to call her name.

 

The Winds of Patagonia

Barbra Dender embarks on an adventure to the remote regions of Patagonia. Staying in a quaint wooden cabin nestled amidst the towering Andes, she stumbles upon an ancient map hidden beneath the floorboards. The map, marked with cryptic symbols and unfamiliar landmarks, piques her curiosity. As she delves deeper, she learns of a legendary lost city supposedly hidden within the mountains. Her first clue, a weathered compass, points her toward the mysterious Cerro Fitz Roy. With the winds whispering secrets of the past, Barbra sets out to uncover the truth behind the legend.

 

The Ruins of Alghero

Barbra Dender embarks on an adventure in the ancient city of Alghero, Sardinia. While exploring the cobblestone streets and historic architecture, she stumbles upon an old, seemingly forgotten ruin that whispers secrets of a bygone era. Intrigued by a peculiar symbol etched into the stonework, Barbra is determined to uncover its meaning. Her curiosity leads her to a local historian who hints at a hidden story connected to the symbol, setting the stage for an enthralling journey that will take her deep into the island's mysterious past.

The Enigma of the Roman Relic

Barbra Dender arrives in Rome, eager to explore the city's hidden wonders. She stays in a quaint apartment overlooking the bustling streets, captivated by the vibrant life around her. While wandering through a lesser-known part of the city, she stumbles upon an ancient artifact in a small antique shop. The shopkeeper's evasive answers pique her interest, and she becomes determined to uncover the relic's secrets. Her first clue comes from a mysterious inscription on the artifact, hinting at a forgotten piece of Roman history.

Shadows on the Turia

Inspector Juan Ovieda is summoned to a deserted marina warehouse where the body of a local journalist, known for digging into the city's elite, is discovered. Sparse physical evidence and rumours of high-level interference already swirl, complicating the investigation. At the scene, Juan encounters a member of the influential Castillo family, who seems intent on keeping the press at bay. As Juan examines the crime scene, he discovers a cryptic artifact, a small brass key with an intricate design, which he does not recognize. This key becomes his first clue, leaving him to wonder about its significance and origin.

– The Frozen Enigma

Commander Aiko Reyes arrives at Leviathan-Bay, a sprawling under-ice algae farm on Europa, to investigate a case of espionage involving a quantum-entanglement drive schematic. The farm is a bustling hub of activity, with the scent of recycled air and the flicker of neon lights casting an eerie glow on the ice walls. The clang of ore lifts echoes through the corridors, creating a symphony of industrial sounds. As Reyes delves deeper into the investigation, she uncovers a cryptic clue in the form of a data-fragment hidden within the algae processing units. This discovery raises more questions than answers, hinting at a larger conspiracy at play.

 

– Whispers Beneath Ceres

Commander Aiko Reyes arrives at Prospector's Rest, a bustling stack-hab beneath Ceres' regolith, responding to a series of mind-hack assassinations. The recycled air carries a metallic tang, mingling with the hum of ore lifts and flickering neon signs. Reyes, a Martian-born hybrid with eidetic recall and optical HUD implants, assesses the scene where the latest victim was found. The lack of physical evidence perplexes her, but a residual psychic echo lingers, hinting at a sophisticated mind-hack technique. As Reyes delves deeper, she uncovers a cryptic data-fragment, a digital ghost in the system, which raises more questions than answers about the elusive assassin and their motives.

 

– The Comet's Enigma

Inspector Malik Kato arrives in Valles New Rome, a bustling arcology (a community with a very high population density) on Mars, to investigate a dispute over sovereign water rights to a newly captured comet. The arcology is alive with the hum of ore lifts and the flicker of neon signs, while the air is tinged with the metallic scent of recycled oxygen. As Kato delves into the case, he discovers a cryptic data fragment hidden within the arcology's network. This fragment, linked to the comet's trajectory, raises more questions than answers, hinting at a deeper conspiracy.

 

– Shadows Over Clavius-9

Commander Aiko Reyes arrives at the ice-mining colony Clavius-9 under Luna's south rim to investigate the sabotage of a terraforming weather array. The colony is a sensory overload of recycled air, flickering neon lights, and the constant clang of ore lifts. Aiko's optical HUD implants scan the environment, picking up traces of unusual activity. As she delves deeper, she discovers a cryptic data-fragment embedded in the array's control system. The fragment, a series of numbers and symbols, suggests a deeper conspiracy at play, raising more questions than answers about who could be behind the sabotage.

– Shadows Over Kraken Mare

Chief Auditor Rafi Nguyen arrives at Kraken Mare Port, Titan's bustling methane-shipping hub, to investigate a sabotage incident involving a terraforming weather array. The port is alive with the hum of machinery, the flicker of neon signs, and the clang of ore lifts, all under the oppressive scent of recycled air. As Rafi navigates through the bustling crowd of Biomorphs and Tekkers, he learns that the weather array, crucial for Titan's terraforming efforts, has been deliberately damaged, causing erratic weather patterns. During his investigation, Rafi discovers a cryptic data fragment embedded in the array's control unit. This fragment, a complex algorithm laced with unfamiliar code, raises more questions than answers, hinting at a deeper conspiracy at play.

The Dragon’s Blood Covenant

Barbra Dender flies to the remote island of Socotra, hungry for an untouristed mystery and a new story for her glass cabinet of artifacts. She takes a whitewashed rental in Hadibu and explores the markets and highlands, where dragon’s blood trees hum in the wind and shattered glass bottles embedded in rock sing a note she cannot explain. An elder hints at a centuries-kept secret—the Dragon’s Blood Covenant—and warns that families guard it fiercely, even as a copper coin and a vial of resin are left at her door with a cryptic line: “Look where trees drink the sea.” A teacher translates a scrap of writing referencing a cave that sings before the monsoon, and night experiments with wind and bottles reveal a coastal blowhole. At dawn, the receding tide exposes a fissure aligned by the markings on the coin, giving Barbra her first concrete clue: a sea cave near Qalansiyah where the trees nearly touch the surf. Just as she steps toward it, someone behind her speaks her name, setting up the next stage of her seven-chapter quest to earn trust, unlock a guarded legacy, and uncover a secret instrument of winds that families have kept hidden for centuries.