PRIMACY: A Near-Future Thriller
The monsters you know. The company you don’t.
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen meets Wall Street meets Black Mirror.
James Moriarty murdered Sherlock Holmes at Reichenbach Falls.
Then he went public.
Welcome to the New London. Glass towers, biotech startups, algorithmic surveillance. It looks like your city, but here the innovation creates monsters.
Dr. John Watson spent years trying to forget the night Holmes fell. He lost his partner and his practice, and he almost managed to disappear into a quiet, broken life.
But Moriarty didn’t stay in the shadows. He evolved.
Now he’s the CEO of PRIMACY, a near-future biotech empire that’s turning classic nightmares into billion-dollar products. The monsters from humanity’s darkest stories aren’t myths; they’re the executive board. Frankenstein runs R&D. Moreau manages the prototypes. They have venture capital and a legal team that makes them untouchable.
Watson can’t take them down alone.
Enter the Broken Guard: Jo March, the journalist with the story that could end it all. Van Helsing, the hunter who knows how to kill what shouldn’t exist. Armitage, the scholar who recognizes the pattern in the ledger.
They follow the trail from London to Berlin to Prague. Prototypes. Patents. A conspiracy that asks one terrible question:
What if literature’s greatest villains survived into our timeline, just waiting for the right market conditions?
Moriarty built an empire on stolen nightmares.
Watson’s going to burn it all down.
Meet the characters of PRIMACY:
Perfect for readers of The Peripheral, American Psycho, and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen who always knew Moriarty would make a better CEO than a criminal.
Look, I know the drill. We’re all tired. The world is a lot. I don't write stories to give you a lesson or a hug. I write them because I want to see what happens when things go sideways. This isn't high art for a coffee table. This is for the people who miss when stories felt a little dangerous, a bit more honest. If that sounds like your kind of trouble, please buy the book. It helps me keep the lights on and the coffee flowing. More importantly, it keeps me at the keyboard instead of shouting at clouds. I’d appreciate the support, and I think you’ll appreciate the ride.









