The Innocent Man

As I shook the man’s hand, I knew he was innocent. Not because of anything he said. Not because of some supernatural instinct or lawyerly sixth sense. It was the way he looked at me—steady, quiet, but not pleading. There was no desperation in his eyes, just the kind of hollow certainty that comes after life has already beaten the fight out of you.

His name was Marcus Lyle. Thirty-two. Former paramedic, now sitting in a cold, windowless interview room in the county detention center, wearing an orange jumpsuit that hung too loose around his shoulders.

I sat across from him and opened my file. It was bad. Bad enough that if I were the prosecutor, I’d be rubbing my hands together. Photos. Police statements. The autopsy report. A single gunshot to the chest—his girlfriend, Nina Morales, dead on the kitchen floor of their apartment. Neighbors had heard an argument. The gun was his, registered. His prints were on it. But something about the case didn’t add up. Too clean. Too convenient.

“I didn’t do it,” he said, voice flat.

“I know,” I replied. Not a tactic. Not strategy. Just the truth, or at least what I believed. Marcus studied me, as if trying to figure out what kind of game I was playing. He leaned back in his chair and crossed his arms.

“Then you’re the only one who does.” I closed the folder and set it aside.

“Tell me everything. Start from the moment you woke up that day.”

He hesitated. That was normal—clients always did. But this wasn’t the hesitation of a guilty man scrambling for a lie. It was something else. Fear, maybe. Or shame.

“I was going to propose to her,” he said finally. “Had the ring in my pocket. Took the whole day off to make dinner, set things up right. She never came home.” I didn’t interrupt. I let him speak, watching the way he kept his eyes on the table.

“I waited. Called her. No answer. Around ten, I drove around the block—worried, you know? Then I came back. She was just… there. Lying on the floor. The front door was cracked open.”

“And the gun?”

“In the drawer. Same place I always kept it. But someone used it.”

I nodded slowly. “Did the police test for prints other than yours?”

He shook his head. “They didn’t care. She was dead, I was there, the gun was mine. That was enough.”

I tapped my pen on the edge of the folder, mind already spiraling through what we could do—alternate suspects, forensic inconsistencies, a door left open… maybe even surveillance footage. But mostly, I was thinking about that look in his eyes when we shook hands. Not innocence like a halo, not some divine light. Just the absence of guilt—and something else. Something darker. He knew who did it. Or at least, he had a pretty damn good guess. But he was too scared to say. I leaned forward, voice low.

“Marcus. If you know something—someone who had a reason to hurt Nina—you need to tell me. I can’t help you if you don’t.” His jaw clenched. For a second, I thought he’d say nothing at all. Then he looked up, eyes hard.

“She was scared.”

That stopped me cold.

“Of who?”

He hesitated again. Not the kind of hesitation that comes from lying. This was a man trying to decide if telling the truth was worth the cost.

“She used to work for this guy—Ricardo Talanes. She was just a server at one of his restaurants, but everyone knew it was a front. Drugs. Laundering. People who got close to him either ended up rich, in jail, or dead. Nina quit when one of the other girls disappeared. Just stopped showing up to work one day. No one talked about it.”

“And she was scared he might come after her?”

Marcus nodded. “She said she saw something. Wouldn’t tell me what. Just said, ‘If anything happens to me, it’s not you. Promise me you’ll remember that.’”

Jesus. I rubbed a hand over my face and sat back, the gears already grinding in my head. If what he was saying was true, it changed everything. But hearsay about a boss who was drug dealer wasn’t going to win us a not guilty verdict. We’d need more. A lot more.

“Why didn’t you tell the police any of this?”

“I tried,” he said. “First night they brought me in. I told the detective about Talanes. He laughed. Said I’d been watching too many crime dramas. Next thing I know, the report says I gave no alternative suspects.” I believed him. Maybe I shouldn’t have, but I did.

“Alright,” I said. “Then we do it my way.” Marcus looked up, wary.

“We build a narrative they can’t ignore. If the cops won’t look into Talanes, I will. And if he’s got something to hide, we drag it out into the light. But I need everything you remember. Anyone she talked to, anything she mentioned. We don’t have the luxury of silence anymore.”

He gave a bitter laugh. “You really think we can beat this?” I stood, gathered the file, and gave him a nod.

“I don’t take cases I plan to lose.” He almost smiled at that. Almost.

Three days later, I was sitting in my office, a half-empty coffee cup sweating on a stack of manila folders, when I found the first thread. Nina’s bank records, subpoenaed that morning, showed a withdrawal—five thousand dollars in cash, two weeks before her death. The same day she quit her job at Talanes’s restaurant. A payoff? Or a bribe gone wrong? I picked up my phone.

“Marcus,” I said when he answered. “Did Nina have a storage unit? Safety deposit box? Anything like that?”

A pause. Then: “Yeah. A small unit out by the marina. She never told me what was in it. Just said it was insurance.”

Bingo.

Two Weeks Later

Superior Court of Hamilton County

State of Ohio v. Marcus Lyle

I sat at the defense table, suit pressed, notes arranged with surgical precision. Marcus was beside me, hands folded, eyes fixed on nothing. Jury selection had gone well—we’d kept a skeptical engineer, a quiet librarian, and one retired homicide detective who gave the prosecutor a look that said, Don’t waste my time unless you’ve done your homework.

The state had rested its case yesterday. Their narrative? Textbook. Marcus and Nina argued, Marcus snapped, shot her with his own registered firearm, then called 911 playing the grieving boyfriend. Motive? Jealousy and control. Means? The gun. Opportunity? He was alone with her. Neat. Too neat.

Today, we started our case. I stood and walked slowly to the jury box.

“The prosecution has told you a story,” I began, voice calm. “A simple one. But real life is not simple. It’s complicated. Messy. And sometimes, what looks like the truth is just a shadow cast by the real one, hiding behind it.”

I let that land. A few jurors leaned forward.

“We’ll show you that Marcus Lyle had no reason to kill Nina Morales. That their relationship was stable, that he was planning to propose to her the night she died. And more importantly—we’ll present evidence that someone else did have a reason to want her silenced.”

That word—silenced—hung in the air like smoke.

“And we’ll ask you to consider not just what the prosecution presented, but what they ignored.”

I called Nina’s best friend to the stand—Kayla Duren, steady under pressure.

“Did Nina ever express fear about Marcus?” I asked.

“Never,” Kayla said. “She loved him. She was more worried about someone else.”

“Who?”

She hesitated, then answered. “Ricardo Talanes.”

Whispers from the gallery. The judge banged the gavel, but I had what I needed—Talanes’s name now lived in the jury’s mind.

I submitted evidence from the storage unit—photos, copies of internal ledgers, a USB drive. Nina had been gathering information. She had been planning to go to a reporter. And all of it tied back to Talanes’s restaurant operation.

“Where did these come from?” the prosecutor demanded in a sidebar.

“They were Nina’s. The victim’s,” I said. “They speak for themselves.”

The judge allowed them in—barely.

We brought in a former police investigator turned consultant. Clean record, methodical.

“Were there any signs of forced entry?”

“No, but the door was ajar when officers arrived. That suggests someone left in a hurry.”

“Were fingerprints other than the defendant’s tested for?”

“No. The scene was not processed for unknown prints.”

“Would that be standard in a homicide investigation?”

“No. It would be considered incomplete.”

Then came the critical moment: I cross-examined Detective Roy Haskins, lead investigator.

“You’ve said you found the murder weapon in a drawer, correct?”

“Yes.”

“Was the drawer locked?”

“No.”

“Were Marcus Lyle’s fingerprints the only ones found on the gun?”

“We only tested for his.”

“Why?”

“Because it was his gun.”

I turned to the jury. Then looked back at Haskins.

“So, you assumed he was guilty, and tailored your investigation around that assumption?”

“Objection!” the prosecutor barked.

“Sustained,” the judge said, but the seed had been planted.

As I sat, I caught the jurors stealing glances at Marcus—not with certainty, but with doubt. Reasonable doubt. The kind that grows roots.

Marcus leaned toward me. Whispered, “You think it’s working?”

I didn’t answer right away. Then: “It’s not about what I think. It’s about what they feel.”

And right now, I could feel the tide turning.

We were supposed to be done. My witness list was exhausted, the judge was expecting closing arguments tomorrow, and the prosecution had all but dismissed our case as a conspiracy theory. Then I got the call.

A voice, shaken but urgent.

“She told me she was going to die. I didn’t believe her. I should’ve. I need to talk to someone.”

His name was Eli Reyes—a line cook who used to work with Nina at Talanes’s restaurant. I had him in a hotel by nightfall. By morning, he was on the stand.

He wore a gray shirt with a frayed collar and spoke like a man who had gone years without being heard.

“I saw him. Talanes. The day before Nina died.”

“In what context?” I asked.

“She came to the back of the restaurant. Wanted to give him something. Said she had to return it before it got her killed. They went into his office. She was in there for ten minutes. When she came out, she was crying.”

“Did you hear what was said?”

“Just the end. He said, ‘You think this ends with you walking away?’”

Whispers rolled through the courtroom. I let them settle.

“Did you report this to the police?”

“I tried. They didn’t call me back. Then I started getting strange calls. People following me home. I left town.”

“Why come forward now?” He looked at Marcus. Then at the jury.

“Because I didn’t think he’d actually go down for this.”

The prosecution looked rattled. But during the recess, they played their ace.

“We’re requesting a motion to introduce new evidence in light of the Reyes testimony,” the ADA said, holding up a manila envelope. “It pertains to the defendant’s connection to the victim’s prior employer.”

The judge allowed it—with reservations.

That afternoon, the ADA revealed what they’d found: a series of encrypted messages recovered from Nina’s old phone. Messages not from Talanes—but from Marcus.

He had written, over and over:

“If you go to the cops, I can’t protect you.”

“This isn’t just about you.”

“I need you to be quiet. Just a little longer.”

I didn’t show it on my face, but inside—I froze.

After court adjourned, I cornered Marcus in the holding room.

“You said you didn’t know what she had on Talanes.”

“I didn’t,” he said quickly. Too quickly.

I leaned in, voice low. “Don’t lie to me now. Not here. Not when the truth is about to walk through that courtroom door.” He looked down. His voice was hollow.

“She stole something. From his office. I didn’t know until after she died. She told me it would ‘take him down.’ But I never knew what it was.”

I believed him—mostly. But that seed of doubt, the same one I’d planted in the jury, had now been planted in me.

Now I had two narratives colliding.

One painted Marcus as a scapegoat, framed to keep Talanes safe.

The other? Marcus knew more than he admitted. Enough to keep quiet, maybe enough to cover something up.

I had to make a choice. Push forward with our original theory—and risk the jury seeing Marcus as complicit—or pivot, and suggest that Nina’s death wasn’t about Marcus at all… but about a secret no one had fully uncovered.

The courtroom was silent as I stood and buttoned my jacket. I took a breath and walked slowly to the jury box.

“You’ve heard a lot in the last ten days. Some of it has been messy. Conflicting. Complicated. And that’s because real life isn’t a TV script. It’s not tidy, and it rarely makes perfect sense.”

I paused, scanning the jurors one by one. I needed to feel them leaning toward me.

“The prosecution gave you a clean story. Too clean. A man, a gun, a body. Case closed. But what you’ve seen—what you’ve felt—tells you it’s not that simple.”

I tapped the folder gently.

“We showed you that Nina Morales feared for her life—not from Marcus, but from the people she used to work for. She was collecting evidence. She was ready to talk. And then she was gone.”

I let that sink in before continuing.

“Then came Eli Reyes, a man with no stake in this trial, who told you about the threat she received just one day before she was killed. A threat not from Marcus, but from a man named Ricardo Talanes—a name the state doesn’t want you to remember. Because if you believe Talanes had motive, if you believe he had reach, then you have to consider the possibility that Marcus Lyle is not a murderer, but a casualty.”

A juror scribbled something down. Another nodded, just slightly. I softened my tone.

“You also heard about messages Marcus sent—ones that sounded like warnings. Some of you may still have doubts. That’s fair. I have doubts, too.”

That got their attention. A defense lawyer admitting doubt?

“But that’s the point. Doubt is your standard. Not certainty. Not perfection. Just the knowledge that the story you’ve been told doesn’t hold up under the weight of the truth.”

I walked back to the table, then turned.

“So ask yourself this, before you decide to take away a man’s life: Are you absolutely sure? Are you ready to send him away knowing this case left questions unanswered, leads unfollowed, suspects uninvestigated?”

I glanced toward Marcus, then back to the jury.

“If the answer is no… then you already know what your verdict must be.”

The ADA was sharp, composed. He tried to redirect the narrative:

“Ladies and gentlemen, the defense wants you to believe this was some kind of movie style mob hit. That the victim was silenced by some criminal mastermind. But in doing so, they ask you to ignore the evidence you do have—physical evidence. The defendant’s gun. His prints. His presence. His messages.”

He walked across the room, voice tightening.

“You don’t need a conspiracy to explain this. You need motive. Opportunity. Means. The law doesn’t require a perfect picture. It requires enough.”

He turned to the jury.

“Don’t let shadow stories blind you to the facts.”

They were out for thirty-six hours. Marcus sat with his hands shaking slightly, jaw clenched, staring at nothing. I watched the jury door. If they believed Marcus was a grieving boyfriend caught in something bigger, they’d acquit. If they saw a man covering for someone, or holding back the truth—they might still convict.

The door opened. The bailiff took the slip of paper. Everyone stood. The foreperson handed the verdict to the clerk. It was time.

Leviathan

The rod pulled hard as he tightened his grip and began to reel in the line. Without warning, the reel shrieked, the line spooling out as though dragged by some terrible force from the depths. Jonah Thorne planted his feet against the wooden slats of his skiff, muscles taut, eyes fixed on the water’s surface where something vast and unseen twisted below.

For three days, he had hunted the shark. He had heard whispers of it in the docks, among old fishermen whose voices turned to hushed murmurs at its mention. They called it the Leviathan, a beast long as two boats, with eyes like polished stone and a hunger that never ended.

Jonah had seen what it could do. A week ago, it had torn through a whaling sloop, snapping oars, shredding sails, and leaving nothing but crimson streaks on the tide. He had seen the look in the eyes of the few survivors—men who had stared into the abyss and found it staring back, jaws gaping.

But Jonah was not like them. He was not running. He was here to face it.

The rod jerked again, nearly yanking him overboard. He braced himself, cursing under his breath. The sea around him was eerily calm, save for the black, undulating line that marked where the beast dragged his hook into the abyss. He let the shark run, let it feel it had won, until suddenly, he wrenched back, setting the hook deep into its flesh.

A moment of stillness. Then the ocean exploded.

The shark broke the surface in a frenzy of white water and spray, its bulk rising like a nightmare given flesh. A massive creature, nearly twenty feet from snout to tail, with scars crisscrossing its slate-gray hide like an old warrior’s map of battles past. Its eyes, black and hollow, locked onto Jonah.

A cold certainty settled in his bones. It was not just fighting for survival. It knew him. And it hated him.

The shark thrashed, its tail slamming the side of the skiff. Jonah held fast, his hands raw against the line, the salt spray burning his face. His heart thundered, but he did not waver. He had spent his life chasing ghosts of the sea, chasing something that would make him feel alive.

And here it was.

The battle stretched into eternity, the sun dipping low as the waves bore witness to their struggle. The beast dove deep, trying to wrench free, but Jonah held, his muscles screaming. He had come too far to let go now.

The shark turned, a dark shape gliding just beneath the skiff, and Jonah knew—it is not fleeing. It is coming for me.

A shadow rose, swift as death itself. With a roar, Jonah grabbed the harpoon beside him, lifted it high. The shark erupted from the sea, its maw gaping, rows of teeth like jagged glass.

Jonah struck.

The harpoon plunged deep into the beast’s throat as its weight crashed onto the boat, shattering the stern. The impact sent him sprawling, the salty depths rushing up to swallow him whole.

Darkness closed around him. For a moment, all was silent.

Then he felt it—the slow, fading convulsions of the monster beside him. Blood clouded the waters, warm and thick, as the shark’s body twisted in its final throes.

With a final effort, Jonah clawed his way to the surface, gasping as he broke free into the cold night air. His boat was ruined, little more than driftwood. But the beast was dead.

Floating there in the endless expanse, Jonah let out a ragged laugh. He had won.

Yet as he gazed into the black horizon, he could not help but wonder—what had he truly conquered? The beast? Or the abyss inside himself?

The Endless War

Nobody knows when, or even why, the war started. All they knew was that it had been going on for generations. For as long as their histories stretched, the Varakai and the Xel’Tharim had been fighting one another. Their war spanned countless millennia, consuming stars, worlds, numerous civilizations, entire solar systems. It was not a war for resources, nor ideology. It wasn’t even a war for the expansion of the respective empires. It was simply war, forged into the very fabric of each species’ existence, passed down like an inheritance of blood.

The Varakai, an insectoid species with chitinous armor and bioengineered weaponry, viewed the war as sacred. Their ancient scriptures, passed down through generations of warrior priests and scribes, spoke of an eternal conflict decreed by the long-extinct Elder Queens, the original rulers of their planet and species. To fight was to fulfill the will of their ancestors, to prove their worthiness in the eyes of destiny.

The Xel’Tharim, a race of towering cephalopod-Like beings with luminous, shifting skin and minds capable of bending reality, saw the war as something else entirely. To them, it was a cycle, a fundamental law of existence. Their prophets spoke of the Great Pattern, an ever-turning wheel of creation and destruction. Peace was nothing more than an illusion. The only true constant in the universe was war and conflict.

And so, the fighting never ceased. Star systems burned in battles that lasted centuries. Some planets had been fought over so many times that their surfaces were unrecognizable, reshaped by weapons that had cracked their land masses. Entire civilizations and species, neither Varakai or Xel’Tharim, had been annihilated for their allegiances or, in some instances, just existing in the great war’s path.

There were no negotiations, no ceasefires, no treaties, no attempts at peace. If either side had ever sought to understand the other, that knowledge had long since been buried under eons of rumble and generations of bloodshed.

On the war ravaged world of Kel-Varesh, another battle had just ended. The once-thriving colony was now nothing more than a graveyard, its atmosphere thick with smoke, the land scorched by countless bombardments from orbital weaponry. Varakai and Xel-Tharim forces had clashed here for weeks, neither willing to relinquish an inch of ground to the other. But in the end, both fleets had been destroyed, leaving only two surviving fighter pilots that had crashed on the planet’s surface.

Commander Sharkar Var’Zuun of the Varakai pulled himself from the wreckage of his crashed fighter, his rugged battle exoskeleton cracked, his secondary arms broken and mangled at his sides. He smelled the burning remains of his weapons officer, his body reduced to a smoldering husk. His pulse quickened with rage. His only instinct, his sole reason for existing was to fight, to kill, to fulfill the purpose ingrained into his very being since he was birthed. That’s when he saw her.

Captain Althira Nex of the Xel-Tharim stood among the ruins, her elongated form shifting with subtle bioluminescent pulses. Her tendrils curled around her in a defensive posture, her telepathic abilities probing the ruins for any sign of remaining threats. Like him, she was alone on this now-barren planet.

For a long moment, neither moved. Millennia of war dictated that they should strike each other down without hesitation. Yet, exhaustion had settled in on both of them. Their armies had been obliterated. Their weapons had been spent. Their ships reduced to nothing more than burning debris raining down from the heavens. For the first in ages, a Varakai and a Xel-Tharim faced each other, not as soldiers engaged in battle, but as survivors stranded on the same deserted, ruined world.

Days passed. The first was spent in absolute silence, each keeping their distance, watching the other for any sign of an impending attack. The second, testing the opposition for any weakness that could be used to end this standoff. By the third, they both acknowledged their unspoken truce. They needed to survive, and that could happen if they helped each other. Or at the very least, weren’t consumed with the other’s destruction. Food was scarce, the planet’s ecosystem poisoned by centuries of war. They scavenged what little they could from the wreckage of the war machines around them, their survival instincts momentarily stronger than their inherited hatred for the other. On the tenth day, they found The Archive.

Buried beneath the ruins of a once-great city, it was a vault of ancient data, so old that neither of their species should have been able to understand it. And yet, the symbols were eerily familiar to both of them. On a podium in front of them, there were two touch pads, one in the shape of each of their hands. They exchanged an unsure glance as the reached out towards the panel. Together, they activated the massive machine in front of them. A holographic figure flickered to life, its form neither Varakai nor Xel’Tharim. Instead, it belonged to a species neither of them instantly recognized, a long-thought extinct race that had vanished an untold number of eons ago. Then it spoke. The language was from neither of their empires, yet they both understood it perfectly.

“To those that remain, we leave this recording as testimony. We were the Vorni, the architects of an empire that spanned the known universe. We created the Varakai and the Xel’Tharim, brought them together to be allies, bound to each other by unity and servitude. But as we basked in the glow of our creation, we grew arrogant. We sought to control them, shape the course of their futures. And in doing so, we did the unspeakable. We turned them against each other for our own selfish and small-minded reasons.”

The two beleaguered warriors looked at each other then back at the hologram in bewilderment.

“We erased their histories,” the hologram continued, “sowed false memories of betrayal, and set them on a path of endless war and destruction. Why you may ask? For our own entertainment. Two species, pitted against one another for the viewing pleasure of our populace. Because it was easier to rule them as enemies than as allies. But in our arrogance, we did not foresee the destruction of our own world, the annihilation of our species.”

Neither Althira Nex nor Sharkar Var’Zuun could believe what they were hearing. Yet somehow, they knew the words were true.

“Now, we are gone. And yet, the war continues. If you are seeing this, then know the truth: the was never yours. It was never meant to last. You fight each other for a ghost’s deception.”

And just as quickly as it had the started, the message ended and the hologram disappeared. Silence fell on the chamber around Sahara and Althira like a bomb, a silence heavier than the weight of the ruined planet they found themselves marooned on. Everything they had known, been taught their whole lives, every battle, every death, every sacrifice had been built on a lie. They stood together, unable to muster the words to describe what they had just learned. Then they turned to face each other, a lifetime of taught hate bubbling over like a cauldron on an open fire. But instead of attacking, a Varakai and a Xel’Tharim embraced for the first time in either’s known history.

For them, standing in that chamber, the war was over. There was no need to fight. But the war was bigger than them. It had consumed the lives of their species for generations. Brought about the destruction of entire civilizations. They both knew they had a sacred duty to deliver this information to their people. But would their people believe them? Would they want to believe? As the ruins of Kel-Varesh burned around them, they knew that knowledge alone was not enough. The war was all either planet had ever known. Could the truth end it? Or had the hatred created by a long dead race of beings become so real, so forged into the souls of their species that it could never be undone?