INHERITANCE PROTOCOL
The Uniform Directive
A novel by J.E. Cullen
They arrived with quiet certainty?chosen not for their past, but for what they could become.
At the Academy, obedience isn't requested. It's woven. Into uniforms. Into posture. Into identity. Boys are stripped of name, will, and memory, reclassified and reassigned through performance drills, submission metrics, and emotional recalibration. Femininity isn't optional. It's required.
Ari, once a reluctant participant, begins to thrive under the system's gaze. Her transformation is not just permitted?it is praised. But as her influence spreads and others begin aligning to her emotional gravity, the protocols start to bend. Or fracture.
Across mirrored halls and choreographed evaluations, one truth becomes clear: this is not a school. It is a forge.
And she is not the exception.
She is the directive.
J.E. Cullen's Inheritance Protocol is a haunting descent into control reimagined, where masculinity dissolves under authority's smile, and power is no longer taught?it is worn.
Autorentext
J.E. Cullen is the pen name of a retired male author whose work delves into the quiet disintegration of identity under the weight of psychological control, feminine supremacy, and engineered transformation. With a PhD in psychology and multiple advanced degrees in computer engineering, Cullen fuses clinical insight with literary precision to construct immersive, unsettling narratives that reveal how obedience is not always demanded?sometimes, it is welcomed.
His fiction is a meditation on consent, autonomy, and the mechanisms by which power shifts without force. Cullen's novels?Immaculate Conception and Celestial Obedience?They Will Not Ask Permission, INHERITANCE PROTOCOL - The Uniform Directive, The Protocol Wives - Submission Was Always the Solution?explore speculative futures where gender is rewritten, desire is reprogrammed, and resistance quietly ceases to exist. Through meticulously constructed worlds and emotionally resonant characters, he reveals how systems of control evolve not through violence, but through seduction, suggestion, and surrender.
Cullen does not write of revolutions. He writes of erasures?of the slow, deliberate unraveling of masculine certainty, the reshaping of self beneath a feminine gaze, and the gentle, irreversible slipping away of the word no.
Cullen's work is not about rebellion. It is about the quiet dismantling of resistance, the rewiring of desire, and the dissolution of will?one smile, one directive, one transformation at a time.
Cullen writes not to shock, but to illuminate. His stories ask: If your submission was never demanded, only nurtured?was it ever truly yours to withhold?