Primacy
About
PRIMACY.
A biotech empire built on monsters. A rebellion led by legends. A war for the soul of the future.
In the near-future towers of London, PRIMACY has turned terror into technology, growing nightmares in glass tanks and branding them for profit .
Frankenstein. Moreau.
They're not myths. They're executives.
And at the top sits James Moriarty, the man who turned fear itself into an empire .
But myths don't stay buried forever.
When a disgraced doctor named Watson crosses paths with the driven journalist Jo March, the haunted hunter Van Helsing, and the obsessive scholar Armitage , they uncover the truth PRIMACY was built to hide: humanity's oldest monsters were prototypes, and the apocalypse was a marketing plan .
From the labs of London to the ruins of Berlin and the blood-soaked streets of Prague, the Broken Guard rises, a circle of heroes, survivors, and rebels who refuse to be forgotten .
Opposing them are the architects of extinction: Moriarty and Rotwang , new gods of biotech and steel, entangled with the very creators whose legacies now hunt the shadows.
Across three acts of creation, corruption, and reckoning, PRIMACY chronicles the fall of empires and the rebirth of myth itself .
Empires fall. Myths endure.
Praise for this book
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
"A razor-sharp, unsettling collection of speculative vignettes that reads like Black Mirror fed through a poetry machine. These stories blend absurdism, body horror, and corporate dystopia into something both funny and bleak, where tech, faith, and politics mutate into engines of dehumanization.The author’s gift is compression—each premise detonates almost immediately, leaving you with an image or idea that lingers longer than many full novels. Some pieces feel more like thought experiments than narratives, but the best ones hit with a gut-punch of recognition: we’re already halfway to these futures, and we signed the user agreement without reading it.
Weird, smart, and disturbingly prescient—perfect for readers who like their sci-fi dark, satirical, and uncomfortably close to home."