DOMINION: The Wardenclyffe Files is a high-stakes techno-political thriller where the most dangerous weapon isn't a missile-it's the switch.
Naomi Kessler used to make a living telling powerful people "no" in a way that didn't get her fired. Now she's running on borrowed sleep, moving between public places, watching cranes freeze mid-skyline, because the world's next "innovation boom" is hiding a control network in plain sight.
Across continents, gleaming "Trump Towers" rise on coastlines and trade corridors-prestige architecture masking Wardenclyffe hardware designed to prioritize power, throttle signal, and decide which neighborhoods go dark first.
When a global "stability exercise" is quietly scheduled to align with elections, trade talks, and unrest forecasts, Naomi and investigative reporter Mara race to stop the web from becoming normal. They don't have explosives. They have paperwork, proof, and timing-treaty triggers, insurer freezes, port quarantines, and the one phrase the machine can't bury: discretionary activation.
The machine pushes back the only way it knows how: calibrated fear, staged "incidents," and a swarm that repeats the same line in every accent -oversight is endangering national stability. Naomi sees the trap clearly: break legitimacy too hard and people will suffer outages now. Do nothing and dominion becomes routine forever.
DOMINION ends with a hard-earned delay, not a fairytale win. The web doesn't die. It reroutes. Offshore. Quiet. Patient. Waiting for the next moment the world is tired enough to sign.