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La Pu’sey The Hella Initiative. Tales From The Darker Side, #6

Par : kiney
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8235682238
  • EAN9798235682238
  • Date de parution21/06/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim

Résumé

The Daughters of Bastet aka La Pu'sey do not need a courtroom. They do not file grievances. They do not hold press conferences. They do not write op-eds about systemic failure - though the systemic failure is real, documented, and referenced in their case files with the precision of a legal brief.a high-octane techno-thriller that blends the ideological ambition of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, the cyber-warfare precision of Tom Clancy, and the unflinching social justice of the best Black speculative fiction.
It is, at its core, a story about what women do when the world refuses to protect them - and what happens when they build something powerful enough that it never has to ask for help again. La Pu'sey: The Hella Initiative is a Black speculative techno-thriller about an ancient Egyptian sisterhood of women-known as the daughters of Bastet-who have quietly shaped history from the shadows. Founded before Christianity and blamed in whispers for accelerating the fall of Rome, La Pu'sey believes all people are created in God's image and that any system built on racial, gendered, or economic hierarchy is a weapon, not an accident.
In the present day, leadership passes to Ur-a, a Black woman rescued from New York's streets as a child, remade through elite education and militant discipline, and now elevated to Control, the organization's supreme strategist. Under her direction, La Pu'sey deploys HELLA: an advanced cyberweapon that can map a predator's digital footprint, crash his finances and reputation, manipulate his social world, and feed airtight cases to law enforcement-or, when law fails, enable surgical termination.
Across a series of global "cases" that read like self-contained thrillers-an American serial womanizer, a repeat rapist protected by legal loopholes, an Albanian mob boss, an international fugitive abusing boys in Colombia, and a low-level predator in rural Haiti-the book shows HELLA balancing retribution with restitution, destroying abusers while quietly rebuilding survivors' lives with scholarships, financial aid, and new futures.
As La Pu'sey's invisible campaign escalates, patterns of "impossible" justice begin to surface in data streams and news cycles, drawing the attention of intelligence services and political actors who cannot tell whether they are watching a rogue state, a terrorist network, or something older and far more disciplined. The novel blends mythology, cyberwarfare, and social justice into a narrative about Black women seizing the tools of power-code, money, narrative-and using them to rewrite the rules of consequence in a world that has never truly protected them.