Lia thought she was just an audiobook narrator. Then she accepted a rush job for Vow of Deception —the first in Rina Kent’s explosive trilogy. The manuscript arrived encrypted, along with a note: “Delete after reading. They’re watching.”
He walked her through —a free, command-line tool that transfers large files with end-to-end encryption, no size limits, no accounts. One terminal command generated a single-use code. She typed:
At 98% upload, her door burst open. Agents. Lia hit Ctrl+C , grabbed a USB stick, and slipped through the fire escape. Lia thought she was just an audiobook narrator
“No,” she replied, sliding the USB across the table. “But deception is patient.”
The file split into encrypted chunks, traveled through random relays, and reassembled only on Adrian’s machine. Not even the relay servers could read it. Free. Secure. Untraceable. They’re watching
The book wasn’t fiction. It was a confession. Hidden inside the audio files were schematics for a global surveillance bypass—stolen from the very agency hunting its creator, a whistleblower code-named “Adrian.”
Inside the USB wasn’t the audio file—but a wormhole receipt and a second encrypted layer only Adrian could unlock. The real file had already arrived an hour ago, sent via from a library computer. Agents
wormhole send --code=deception-trilogy-01 Vow_of_Deception_FINAL.wav