Elijah is a gripping faith-based thriller about what happens when truth no longer waits for permission. Elijah is a quiet, brilliant teenager who sees the world not as it claims to be, but as it actually operates. While governments, corporations, and institutions survive through delay, discretion, and carefully managed inaction, Elijah creates something different—an integrity system that does not rule, punish, or command. It simply remembers. And by remembering, it forces systems to confront the consequences they were designed to postpone. As corruption across the globe begins to collapse—not through revolution or violence, but through consistency—power panics. Financial networks freeze where they once bent. Policies complete instead of lingering. “Temporary” injustices finally end. And when delay stops working, the world responds the only way it knows how: by turning violent. CIA agents Erik Brimstone and Kira Lopez are drawn into the crisis after surviving an ambush meant to silence the truth Elijah represents. Tasked with stopping him, they discover the real danger isn’t Elijah himself—it’s what he exposes. A global system dependent on delay as mercy, and discretion as a mask for corruption. Elijah refuses to rule, even when he could. Rooted in Christian faith, he believes that obedience without conscience is just another form of evil, and that righteousness forced is not righteousness at all. He does not seek control—only accountability. He does not demand belief—only honesty. As violence escalates and lines are drawn, Erik and Kira must decide whether to oppose Elijah, arrest him, or confront the systems they have spent their lives protecting. Elijah is tense, intelligent, and morally uncompromising—a novel about faith, free will, repentance, and the cost of ignoring what we know is wrong. What happens when truth stops waiting… and integrity refuses to hide