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Drama Fiction Suspense


“Before you get any ideas, let me clarify: I am not a fraud.”


I can feel the skepticism from here.


You've probably read the headlines, skimmed the articles, and now you think you've got me figured out. Some brilliant guy who flew too close to the sun, right? Another tech genius brought down by his own arrogance.


Well, you're wrong. You don't know half of it.


Let me tell you how it all started. Because you can't understand the fall unless you understand the rise. And let me tell you, my rise wasn't an accident.


No, I wasn't born with a silver spoon in my mouth. I didn't have the connections, the family money, or the cushy college network. I came from nowhere. Just a kid in a dingy apartment, coding like my life depended on it.


Because it did.


I didn't start with grand ambitions of changing the world. No, it was simpler than that. I wanted to create something that no one else could. I didn't care about the money at first. It was about the idea. About proving that I could see things that no one else could.


My first break?


It came out of desperation, really. I have been working on this algorithm, a predictive model for consumer behavior. It was clunky at first, not much more than a rough prototype, but I knew it had potential. I just needed someone to see it.


I spent months cold-emailing companies, trying to get anyone to listen to me. No one cared. They didn't see it. But I did. I knew it was the future.


Finally, one small tech company bit. They were desperate for anything to give them an edge. I showed them my algorithm, and it blew their minds.


Suddenly, I wasn't some nobody anymore. I was Oscar Wilder, the guy who could predict the future. Companies lined up to license my tech. They throw money at me. And just like that, I was in.


But that's not where the real story begins. The real story starts when you realize how the world works. Once people know you're capable of magic, they start demanding it. Again and again. And they don't care how you do it.


And that's where things get interesting.


****


I know what you're thinking: "Oscar, everyone starts somewhere. Big deal. You got lucky with your algorithm.”

Yeah, that's true. I got lucky. But luck only takes you so far.

The rest?

That's all skill. And vision.


You want to know how I became the wizard? It wasn't just because I built good tech. No, it was because I learned early on that success isn't just about what you create but how you make people believe in it. That's the trick.


After my first success, I realized I wasn't just selling products. I was selling the idea that I could do things no one else could and see into the future and shape it, and people wanted to believe in that - hell, they needed to believe in that.


So, I leaned into it. I crafted my image - the boy genius, the visionary, the man who could pull miracles out of thin air.

And guess what?


They bought it, hook, line, and sinker.

But here's the thing. The higher you climb, the more people expect from you. The first product was good. The second was better. But by the time the third and fourth hit, I wasn't just making tech anymore; I was creating illusions.


The pressure was immense. Investors, clients, media, everyone wanted more. They wanted magic. They didn't care how I did it; they just wanted results. So, I gave them the results.

That's when the shortcuts started.


Before you judge me, don't act like you wouldn't have done the same. It wasn't that I was trying to deceive anyone. I was just accelerating the process. Pushing the boundaries of what could be done. And let's be real, nobody wanted the truth. They wanted the show.


I remember one of my early products, a wearable device that promised to track biometrics better than anything else on the market. The tech wasn't quite there yet—it needed more time and refinement - but the investors were breathing down my neck, demanding a launch. They wanted it now.


So, I gave it to them. And yeah, I might have fudged the numbers a bit. Made it look like the product was flawless when it still had a few bugs. But you know what?


It worked.


The launch was a success. The media hailed it as a breakthrough. No one cared about the small details. That's when I realized something that would stay with me for the rest of my career: it's not about what's real.


It's about what people believe is real.


****


Do you want to know how I really became "the wizard"? It wasn't because I was the best coder or the smartest engineer. No. It was because I understood something that no one else did.


Perception is everything.


Let me take you back to one of my biggest moments - the launch of Wilder Link. You've heard of it, right?


The product put me on the map and solidified my place in the industry as the guy who could make the impossible happen. It was a platform that could link all your devices seamlessly, predict your needs, anticipate your behavior, and tailor your entire digital experience to you.


Or at least, that's what it was supposed to do.


In reality?


The tech wasn't fully ready when we launched. But here's the thing - you can't wait for perfection. If you wait, someone else will beat you to it. So, I did what I had to do. I launched it anyway.


And you know what?


People loved it, believed in it, and didn't care about the small bugs or glitches. All they saw was the shiny new toy.


The product wasn't perfect, but the illusion was. And that's what mattered.


You might wonder, “Didn't anyone ever catch on?" Sure, there were whispers. There were always people who wanted to poke holes in the magic. But by the time they figured anything out, I was already two steps ahead, working on the next big thing.


That's the real secret. Stay ahead of the game. Keep the illusion moving faster than anyone can question it.

And it worked. Repeatedly.


Until it didn't.


****


Success has a funny way of twisting things, doesn't it? It starts out as this pure, exciting thing. Passion and the thrill of creating something new are what motivate you. However, something else takes the place of that thrill as you ascend.


Pressure.


You start wanting to change the world, but before long, the world starts changing you.

I remember one moment right after the Wilder Link launch. The investors were excited. They were throwing money at me, demanding more products, innovation, and magic. And I had it. I had a whole pipeline of ideas ready to go.


But here's the problem: no matter how fast or brilliant you work, you can't keep pulling rabbits out of hats forever. There's always a point where the pace of innovation slows, where the magic starts to fade. And that's when the shortcuts become tempting.


For me, it started small: a few creative solutions and embellished numbers to keep the investors happy.

No harm done, right?

But then the shortcuts got bigger and more complicated.


And the funny thing?

The more I bent the rules, the more people praised me. The more they wanted to believe in the magic.


So, I kept going. I told myself it was all part of the process. That the ends justified the means.

And maybe they did.


But looking back now, I can see the cracks starting to form. Cracks that I didn't want to acknowledge.

Not then.


You're waiting for the fall, aren't you? You think you know where this is going.

But we're not there yet.


****


Let me tell you something about power. It's hard to let go once you have it and have tasted it. You convince yourself you can fix anything. No matter how deep the hole gets, you can always dig yourself out.

After all, you're the wizard, right?

The guy who makes the impossible happen.


But here's the thing about control: it's a slippery slope. You think you're holding the reins, guiding everything along. But one day, you realize that the reins are slipping through your fingers, and you can do nothing to stop it.


That day came sooner than I expected.


It started with little things: glitches in the system, data that didn't add up, and things disappearing. At first, I ignored it, telling myself it was just a technical issue, something we could fix.


But the problems kept coming. And then came Noah Pierce.

Do you want to know what's ironic? The thing that finally unraveled everything wasn't some grand technological failure.

It was a man.

A man who saw through the illusion.


But even then, even when the cracks were widening, I told myself I could fix it. That's what you do when you're a wizard.

You fix the unfixable.


Or at least, you try.


****


Alright, you've been patient. Let's get to the part you're waiting for - where everything comes crashing down.


Noah Pierce wasn't just any journalist. He was sharp and relentless. Noah had been digging into my projects, into my methods. And he found things.

Things I didn't want him to see.


I knew it wasn't just a casual meeting when we finally sat face-to-face. It was an ambush. Noah had me in his sights, and there was no talking my way out of it.


You probably want to know how I felt then, don't you?

You're picturing me sweating, panicking, realizing that the game was up.


But that's not how it went. Because even then, I still believed I could control the situation.

I still thought that I could rewrite the story.


I was wrong.


****


You knew this was coming, didn't you?

The fall.

The moment when everything I had built, everything I had worked for, finally collapsed.


The news broke: Oscar Wilder had been exposed as a fraud. It spread like wildfire. Investors pulled out. Clients abandoned ship. The board voted me out of my own company. Everything I had worked for, everything I had built, it all crumbled.


And Noah Pierce?

He disappeared.

Just like that. Like he was never there.

Maybe he wasn't.


Maybe he was just a manifestation of everything I had been running from. The truth that I had tried so hard to bury.


But in the end, the truth always comes out, doesn't it?


****


So, here we are. The end of the story.

You've watched the rise; you've seen the fall. And now you're probably feeling pretty good about yourself.

"I knew it," you're thinking. "I knew Oscar Wilder was a fraud all along.”


But let me ask you this: what would you have done in my place?

If you had the chance to change the world, to build something extraordinary, wouldn't you bend the rules?

Wouldn't you do whatever it took to keep the magic alive?


Because here's the thing: I wasn't a fraud.

I was a visionary.

I built an empire.

I made people believe in the impossible.


Oscar Wilder disappeared from the public eye after his company collapsed. The headlines moved on, and the world kept spinning.


But those who really knew me, who saw what I built, will tell you I found something in the end - something more valuable than the empire I lost.


Because control was always an illusion.


But truth?


The truth is real.

October 05, 2024 14:08

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18 comments

Jerry Borich
17:43 Oct 21, 2024

Just another victim of the world we live in. Good story.

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Darvico Ulmeli
18:01 Oct 21, 2024

Thanks for reading.

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Ellie Mae
04:29 Oct 17, 2024

I want to add something helpful, but I can't think of anything! So I'll just say I really enjoyed this story! No notes! :)

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Darvico Ulmeli
07:21 Oct 17, 2024

Thanks for reading

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James Scott
12:35 Oct 14, 2024

This was great. I work in tech and although don’t assume to be an expert. I can say for sure things are far less mysterious than most people think. It’s all a lot simpler that it’s made out to be! The amount of money people pay for someone to press a single button is insane. As the story says, it’s all about the marketing illusion.

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Darvico Ulmeli
12:44 Oct 14, 2024

So true. I am also in IT and I get your point. Thanks for reading.

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KA James
19:12 Oct 13, 2024

An old tale brought up to modern age, with a different ending. Very unique take on the prompt. Your antagonist telegraphs repeatedly where this is going, yet you still managed to change it up convincingly at the end. Really nice job of balancing those two.

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Darvico Ulmeli
19:30 Oct 13, 2024

Thank you for realising that. I put some effort to pull that off. Feels good when that get noticed. Thank you.

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04:01 Oct 12, 2024

This is what happens in a nutshell. What insight, what passion for creating the impossible, and what humility. Hooked me until the end. I was on that ride with you, Darvico. Great story.

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Darvico Ulmeli
06:34 Oct 12, 2024

Thank you, Kaitlyn. A glimpses of what's going on inside my head.

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Chris Sage
20:17 Oct 10, 2024

Heh, I see a lot of this around, selling something you don't actually have just yet, in the hope you can make it before the deadline, technical debt. Nice sense of inside the antagonist's head. Is Noah an illusion, the man telling on himself?

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Darvico Ulmeli
20:18 Oct 10, 2024

Yes. You got that right. Thanks for reading.

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Chris Sage
20:25 Oct 10, 2024

Just realised it was hinted strongly in the title, missed that first time round!

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Darvico Ulmeli
20:38 Oct 10, 2024

Hah, didn't want point that out. You figured by yourself. Nice.

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Mary Bendickson
20:41 Oct 07, 2024

Perception sometimes wins over truth. Say a lie so many times until people believe it is the truth.

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Darvico Ulmeli
21:37 Oct 07, 2024

Hitler is prove to that. Thanks for reading.

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Helen A Smith
09:32 Oct 07, 2024

For Oscar, what people believe in is real. How true. Believing in control is an illusion because it won’t last. The truth is real, but each person has their own version of it. The journalistic pursuit of truth signalled the end for Oscar. He saw himself as a visionary whereas the journalist saw him as a fraud. Even so, I couldn’t help feeling sorry for him as his vision crumbled at his feet.

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Darvico Ulmeli
09:42 Oct 07, 2024

I know, right? I wanted for him to get victory at the end but that's not how it works in life.

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