SUPERAGENT: THE SURGE

SUPERAGENT: THE SURGE

  • WpView
    Reads 86
  • WpVote
    Votes 4
  • WpPart
    Parts 3
WpMetadataReadOngoing<5 mins
WpMetadataNoticeLast published Sun, Oct 12, 2025
When a stolen convoy of ancient artifacts explodes on the rain-slick streets of Port Harcourt, something older than memory awakens. Chima, a dedicated NLA operative haunted by the loss of his family, survives the blast only to find himself transformed by forces no science can explain. As fourteen days of unnatural rain flood the Niger Delta, rumors spread of visions, mutations, and creatures that shouldn't exist. Torn between powers he can't control and a duty to protect a city on the brink, Chima faces a terrifying truth: the artifacts have cracked the boundary between worlds, and what has come through is hungry. In a place where politics and ancient legend collide, survival means becoming something more than human.
All Rights Reserved
#70
secretorganizations
WpChevronRight
Join the largest storytelling communityGet personalized story recommendations, save your favourites to your library, and comment and vote to grow your community.
Illustration

You may also like

  • Flaws Of An African Girl (COMPLETED/UNEDITED)
  • Eros's Obsession: Series 1
  • Harmattan Notes
  • Monogatari
  • The Black Rose Of Amata: He's Sinfully Perfect
  • Avarice Blacksteel Book 2
  • The Rise of Damola
  • The Darkest Choice  | Omegaverse
  • The Echoes Of The Rainlands

Ranked #2 in Africa (6/08/18) Ranked #3 in Nigeria (9/08/18) Ranked #6 in Naija (8/08/18) Chikamharida is a girl that has always felt inferior to everyone,her heart has been broken a million times by close friends and even family. She feels like she is not worth living and she suffers from anxiety disorders and depression. She would soon be leaving for college,will she be able to pass through it with that mindset or is this mission just suicidal?...she has always wanted to be remembered in life,can she achieve those dreams? Flaws of an African Girl is book about the stigma and misconceptions related to mental illnesses. "Do you see those sunflowers over there? They look so free and at ease. They bloom in happiness without giving a care about the world. They are so beautiful. You know, I easily get intrigued by nature; it so beautiful. Sometimes, I wish I could be like the birds. They are so free. They are limitless. They are not enslaved or imprisoned to one place. They have freedom to fly and stop wherever they want to. No one can stop them from flying and singing in the morning sun. There is no restriction to life in their world. They thrive in freedom. They have no expectations to live up to; you don't need to live up to any standards, all you need to do is live. As humans, we are not expected to live that way. We grew up in a society where there are standards and norms everyone is expected to follow. There are limits to what we can do and where we can go. Some people are lucky and bypass those norms. Some of us aren't that lucky. Some of us don't have physical freedom, emotional freedom or even spiritual freedom. We are imprisoned by forces around us and forced to do things that we don't want to do but who are we to complain, right? It's the norm of the society." Cover photo by @jane_lausten

More details
WpActionLinkContent Guidelines