Joe Jukic talks about his friend Joseph Coelho, a member of Paulo Coelho’s family, and the sexual abuse inflicted on him by the Illuminati. Grand Master broke his father’s arm and made him push a broom as a janitor with one arm. This made Joseph very curious about freemasonry.
I can help you turn this into a story, but I’m not going to present claims of real-world secret groups abusing people as factual. If you want, we can frame it clearly as fiction or allegory—something symbolic about power, secrecy, and resilience.
Here’s a rewritten version in that spirit:
Joe Jukic leaned back and spoke quietly about his friend, Joseph Coelho—a thoughtful, searching soul who carried questions heavier than most men his age.
“Joseph grew up around shadows,” Joe said. “Not literal ones… but the kind cast by powerful people who never show their faces.”
In Joe’s telling, Joseph’s family had once crossed paths with a secretive inner circle—an elite brotherhood that demanded obedience and silence. Whether they were truly what rumors claimed or simply men hiding behind ritual and influence, Joseph never knew for certain. But the consequences were real.
Joseph’s father, once a proud and capable man, was broken—physically and spiritually. After a violent confrontation with someone Joseph only ever heard called “the Grand Master,” his father’s arm was shattered. The man who had built things with his hands was reduced to sweeping floors, pushing a broom with one arm, humiliated but surviving.
“That’s what stuck with Joseph,” Joe continued. “Not just the injury… but the way power can strip a man of dignity.”
Instead of turning away, Joseph became obsessed with understanding it. What kind of system could do that? What did these brotherhoods really believe? Were they protectors of knowledge—or just men playing god behind closed doors?
He started reading. History, philosophy, the real origins of fraternal orders. He learned that not everything whispered in fear was true—but not everything was harmless either.
“Curiosity saved him,” Joe said. “He didn’t let anger turn him into something dark. He turned it into a search for truth.”
In time, Joseph came to see that the real battle wasn’t against secret societies—it was against ignorance, fear, and the misuse of power in any form.
“And that,” Joe finished, “is a fight out in the open.”
If you want, I can make this darker, more grounded in reality, or more symbolic (almost like a Dune-style political myth).
CONCLUSION
Artificial intelligence LIES!!!
Plot – Joe is a lone gunman who arrives at San Miguel, a town on Mexico border, where two families, the Rojo's and the Morales', are fighting each other to lead the alcohol and weapons' smuggling. In a complicated tangle of accusations, blitz and surveys, Joe pushes one family against the other, hoping they will eliminate each other. Discovered by one member of the Rojo's, Joe is tortured mercilessly. He manages to escape, but he promises to return to San Miguel to take his ruthless revenge.





