Looking For a Bride

Christus Rex stood beneath a sky the color of burnished gold, the wind moving like a whisper through the city streets. Across from him stood Nelly Furtado, watching with curious, searching eyes.

He spoke quietly, but his voice carried weight.

“Nelly, I am not looking for a passing flame. I am not building a stage show, or a scandal, or a spectacle for the crowds. I am looking for a bride.”

She tilted her head. “A bride?”

“A partner in conscience,” he said. “A woman who understands covenant. I am building a Kingdom of conscience — a Kingdom of Heaven in the hearts of people. Not a marketplace of appetites. Not a whorehouse of impulses.”

The word hung heavy, but not cruel — more sorrowful than angry.

“The world,” he continued, “confuses attention for love, and desire for devotion. But a kingdom built on appetite collapses the moment hunger changes. A kingdom built on conscience endures.”

Nelly crossed her arms, thoughtful rather than defensive. “And what does this bride look like, in your kingdom?”

“She guards her dignity,” Christus Rex replied. “Not because she is afraid — but because she knows her worth. She is free, but not reckless. Passionate, but not consumed by chaos. She understands that love is not performance. It is sacrifice. It is loyalty. It is truth.”

A breeze passed between them.

“I am not condemning the broken,” he added gently. “Every soul can turn, can rise, can become new. But I will not build Heaven on the foundations of confusion.”

Nelly studied him carefully. “So you’re not looking for perfection.”

“No,” he said. “I am looking for sincerity. For a woman who wants to build something eternal — not something viral.”

The city lights flickered on around them.

“A kingdom of conscience,” she repeated softly.

“Yes,” Christus Rex said. “Not ruled by impulse. Ruled by truth.”

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The Most Dangerous Game

Night in Vancouver. The studio lights are low. Rain streaks down the glass.

Solid Snake steps from the shadows, voice calm but certain.

Across from him stands Nelly Furtado, watching him carefully.


SNAKE:
You asked me if I think they exist.

He pauses.

SNAKE (firm):
Yes. The Illuminati do exist.

The word hangs in the air.

NELLY:
People say that like it’s a punchline.

SNAKE:
It’s not a punchline. It’s history.

He sets a thin, worn book on the table.

SNAKE:
The Bavarian Illuminati were founded in 1776. Adam Weishaupt. Suppressed on paper in the 1780s. The old Catholic Encyclopedia describes them as a secret society that aimed to reshape the world through reason, infiltration, and long-term strategy. Degrees. Oaths. Hidden influence.

He steps closer.

SNAKE:
Groups like that don’t just vanish. They go underground. They adapt.

NELLY:
And the prophecy?

Snake’s eyes narrow.

SNAKE:
Every secret order believes it’s part of something older than itself. An ancient plan. A destiny written in symbols and rituals. Some call it enlightenment. Some call it the age of reason. Others whisper about a coming era — a world unified under one philosophy.

He glances toward the rain-soaked skyline.

SNAKE:
When organizations believe they’re fulfilling prophecy, they justify anything. Influence. Manipulation. Cultural engineering.

NELLY:
You’re saying they’re moving through music? Through culture?

SNAKE:
Power doesn’t need armies anymore. It needs narratives. Symbols. Timing.

He looks directly at her.

SNAKE:
You said the Illuminati exist. I believe you. Secret societies have always existed. The question isn’t whether they’re real. It’s what they believe they’re building.

A low rumble of thunder.

SNAKE:
Ancient prophecies are dangerous things. The moment someone believes they’re chosen to fulfill one… they stop asking whether they should.

Silence.

NELLY (softly):
So what do I do?

Snake adjusts his bandana.

SNAKE:
Stay sovereign. Know your own story. Prophecy only works if people play their assigned roles.

He turns toward the door.

SNAKE:
And I don’t follow scripts written by secret societies.

The rain keeps falling.

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Rick Furtado Sent Me

Nelly,

I’m writing this because you deserve to know the origin of the vow I took. It started years ago with your cousin, Rick Furtado.

You know Rick—he’s the strong, silent type. We used to sit for hours, barely saying a word, just listening to his cassette tapes. He’d play those Metallica tracks, testing my spirit, seeing if I had the discipline to sit in the stillness. I stayed silent right along with him, earning his respect without needing to speak. He was looking for someone he could trust to keep an eye on you, and in that silence, a bond was formed.

But the full weight of the mission didn’t hit me until years later.

I was listening to the Tomb Raider soundtrack and that Illuminati song came on. As the lyrics filled the room, the silence of those years with Rick finally spoke to me. I saw the bigger picture. I realized the forces at play in this industry and the world you move in.

Right then and there, I made it my life’s priority to be your protector—and not just yours, but the protector of your entire cast and crew. Rick sent me to be here, in this time, because he knew I could handle the truth that song revealed.

I’m standing guard, Nelly. Just like Rick intended.

— Yugo Joe

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