Colorado Rockies, September 1884. There are two kinds of cold. There’s the cold that bites at your skin. The honest cold of a winter morning that makes you feel alive. And then there’s the other kind. The deep cold. The cold that gets into the bones of a house, into the marrow of a man’s resolve. The cold that whispers a single terrible promise.
You will not see the spring. For Elara Vance, a widow with two small children and a cabin made of more hope than timber, that second cold was not a threat. It was a certainty. But what if the answer to surviving the most brutal winter in a century was not to build a better wall against the cold, but to embrace a different kind of warmth? What if the secret lay not in the sky, but 60 ft under the earth? The pity came first.
It arrived in baskets of dry bread and jars of thin preserves, delivered to her door by the women of Prosperity Gulch. It was a well-meaning pity, but it had the weight of a stone. And Elara felt it settle in her chest each time she forced a smile and offered her thanks. She was a problem waiting to happen.
A tragedy in slow motion. Her husband, Robert, had been a man who saw the world in layers and fissures. A geologist with hands calloused from the rock he so loved. He had seen potential where others saw only granite, but his vision had not translated into wealth. It had translated into a small plot of land high on the shoulder of the mountain.
A plot with a fine view and a cabin that was, to put it charitably, optimistic. The logs were green-felled pine, already shrinking and twisting, opening gaps to the wind. The chinking was a crumbling mix of mud and grass that her son, Leo, liked to pick at. Robert had died in the spring, a victim of a rockslide that seemed a cruel joke from the very earth he had sought to understand.
He left Elara with 7-year-old Leo, 4-year-old Maya, the deed to the land, and a collection of leather-bound journals. He also left her facing a winter that the old-timers were already talking about in hushed, fearful tones. The aspens had turned a month early. The squirrels were frantic, their caches overflowing. The wind, even in September, had a serrated edge to it.
A promise of violence. The community’s solution was simple and unanimous, voiced most loudly by Marcus Thorne. Thorne was the town’s foundation, a man who owned the lumber mill and had built nearly every proper structure in the Gulch. He was not an unkind man, but his certainty was as solid and unyielding as the oak he milled.
“You must come down, widow,” he had told her, standing on her sagging porch, his large frame seeming to dwarf the entire cabin. He did not look at her, but at the flawed joinery of the roofline. “That cabin won’t survive a hard frost, let alone what’s coming. Sell the plot to the mining concern.
They’ll give you a fair price for the timber rights and take a room at the boardinghouse. Find work in the laundry.” He was not wrong. The logic was inescapable. The cabin was a death trap, but selling the land felt like burying Robert a second time. It was the only place his presence lingered. In the strange, smooth stones he’d lined the path with.
In the way the morning sun hit the single window he had so carefully placed. Pity was a blanket that smothered will. And Elara felt herself suffocating under the town’s sensible, fatalistic kindness. She wept. For two days, she let the grief and the fear have their way. Leo grew quiet, his boisterous energy shrinking into a watchful stillness.
Maya, too young to understand, simply mirrored her mother’s sorrow, her small face a mask of tragedy. On the third day, Elara stopped. The tears had washed away the panic, leaving behind a hard, cold clarity. She would not be a ward of the town. She would not raise her children in the steamy clatter of a laundry.
She would not sell Robert’s land. That evening, with the children asleep under a pile of thin blankets, she finally opened the crate that held his journals. She had avoided them, avoided the familiar slant of his handwriting. The first few were filled with geological surveys, dense with terms like pegmatite intrusions and schist formations.
It was the language of his work, a world away from her own. But then she found a different set of books, older and more worn. These were not his notes, but translations and transcriptions of his grandfather’s journals, an old stonemason from the Austrian Alps. Here, the language changed. It spoke not of ore, but of heat.
It spoke of stone not as something to be drilled and blasted, but as something that could breathe. She read late into the night, the oil lamp guttering, the wind moaning through the cabin walls. She read of cockle ovens, massive masonry stoves that burned a small amount of wood for a short time, but radiated gentle heat for a full day.
She read of homes dug into the sides of mountains, using the immense, stable temperature of the deep earth as a shield against the killing cold of the alpine peaks. The old mason wrote of the earth not as a dead thing, but as a vast, warm-blooded animal, its heart a slow furnace. “Men build walls to fight the winter,” one passage read.
“The wise man invites the mountain into his home.” Elara looked up from the page. Her gaze fell on a map Robert had drawn of their small plot. It showed the cabin, the creek, the stand of aspen, and on the far side of the property, marked with a simple X, was a notation. Prospect Tunnel, 60 ft, barren quartz vein, geothermal anomaly? The thought, when it came, was so audacious, so utterly mad, that she almost laughed.
The prospect tunnel. The locals called it Robert’s Folly, a hole he’d spent a month digging by hand before abandoning it. It was a scar on the landscape, a symbol of his failed dreams. A geothermal anomaly. He had mentioned it once, curiosity. “The rock stays warm, Elara, even in a frost. Strange.” She didn’t sleep.
As the first pale light of dawn touched the peaks, she took a lantern and walked to the tunnel. The entrance was choked with rockfall and thorny brush. It took her an hour of pulling and scraping to clear a space large enough to squeeze through. She lit the lantern, took a deep breath of the cold, metallic air, and crawled inside.
The tunnel was narrow, a tube of blasted rock just wide enough for a man with a wheelbarrow. The air grew still and silent, the sound of the wind vanishing completely. The floor was damp, littered with rubble. She crawled onward, the lantern light dancing on the glittering walls of quartz and mica. 10 ft. 20. The air was no longer cold.
It was merely cool. 30 ft. The chill was gone entirely. At 60 ft, the tunnel ended in a solid wall of granite. She placed her palm against the rock. It was not warm, not in the way a sun-baked stone is warm. It was something deeper, a latent, living heat that seemed to seep into her skin, a gentle, persistent energy.
It was the mountain’s own warmth. She crawled back out into the morning, blinking against the light. Her clothes were covered in mud and rock dust. Her hands were raw, but the stone of pity in her chest was gone, replaced by a terrifying, exhilarating resolve. They would not live in the cabin. They would live here.
They would invite the mountain into their home. The work was brutal. It was a battle fought with a shovel, a pickaxe, and a wheelbarrow. First, she had to widen the entrance and clear the floor of the entire 60-ft length. She hauled out tons of rock, one barrowload at a time, her muscles screaming in protest. began to help, his small hands carrying away single stones, his face a miniature mask of adult seriousness.
Next came the floor. Following the old mason’s designs, she needed a foundation of dry gravel for drainage topped with flat stones. She spent weeks by the creek finding and hauling the right stones. Her back an arch of constant pain. The town watched her. At first, they thought she was merely gathering rock to shore up the cabin’s foundation.
It was a sensible if futile task. They approved. But then she began mixing clay, sand, and straw in a shallow pit. She built a small crude kiln and started firing bricks. Misshapen and uneven, but hard. She was not shoring up her cabin. She was building something else. The whispers started then. The pity began to curdle into a different kind of judgment.
Concern. And then, mockery. The heart of her plan was the kachel ofen, the masonry heater. It would be a behemoth, a complex structure of brick and stone with a winding series of internal passages designed to extract every last calorie of heat from the smoke before it escaped. It would stand at the very back of the tunnel against the geothermally warm granite face.
But to vent it, she couldn’t use a simple pipe. The old journal was adamant. A cold chimney kills a fire’s draft and wastes heat. The vent had to stay warm. Robert’s map had shown a fissure, a natural crack in the rock that ran from near the back of his tunnel up to the surface. It took her a week of careful tapping and listening to find it.
With the hammer and chisel, she painstakingly carved a channel from the top of her planned stove location into the fissure. It was the most difficult work of all, performed by lamplight in the cramped, silent dark. Every strike of the hammer was an act of faith. She built the stove brick by brick, her hands coated in clay mortar.
It was a hulking, rectangular beast, ugly and imposing, a clay and stone god in the heart of the mountain. It looked nothing like the elegant cast-iron stoves that sat in the parlors of Prosperity Gulch. It was ancient, primal. The day Marcus Thorne arrived, she was lining the living space, a widened chamber about 40 ft in, with crude wooden planks she had scavenged from a collapsed sluice box.
The late October air was sharp, and the first snows had already dusted the highest peaks. Thorne did not ride up to her cabin. He walked. His expression a mixture of civic duty and profound irritation. He had heard the stories from his men. The Vance widow had gone mad. She was digging her own grave. He stood at the entrance to the mine, a dark silhouette against the bright, cold sky.
“Mistress Vance!” he boomed, his voice echoing in the tunnel. “What is the meaning of this excavation?” Alara emerged, wiping her hands on her apron. She was thin and wiry, her face smudged with dirt, but her eyes were clear. “Mr. Thorne, I am making our winter quarters.” He peered past her into the darkness. His eyes, accustomed to the clean lines of milled lumber and the precise angles of a well-built house, could not process what he was seeing.
The rough stone walls, the uneven floor, the monstrous clay oven at the far end, it was a den, a burrow. “You cannot be serious,” he said, his voice losing its authoritative edge, replaced by simple disbelief. “This is a hole in the ground. It will be a damp, frozen tomb by December.” “The rock is warm,” Alara said simply, “and the earth will keep the wind away.
” Thorne took a step inside, then stopped. He ran a hand along the wall. “This is madness, pure folly. You have children. Do you mean to subject them to this this troglodyte existence? The moisture will sicken them. >> [clears throat] >> The cold will seep from the stone and kill them in their sleep.” He pointed a thick finger at her masonry stove.
“And that, that pile of mud and rock, it will never draw. You’ll fill this cave with smoke and suffocate. I build houses, Mistress Vance. I know heat. I know shelter. You need a proper iron stove, a sealed building, good ventilation. This is a death trap of your own making.” His certainty was absolute. It was the voice of expertise, of established fact, of the entire town’s collective wisdom.
Alara felt a flicker of doubt, a cold wave of fear. Was he right? Was this the desperate act of a grieving, broken mind? She looked past him at Leo, who was watching from the cabin door, his face anxious. She straightened her back. “Your stove’s shout, Mr. Thorne,” she said, her voice quiet, but steady. “My hearth will tell a story.
” The metaphor was lost on him. He saw only a stubborn, foolish woman committing a slow, deliberate suicide and taking her children with her. “I wash my hands of it,” he declared, his voice hard as ironwood. “When the snows come, do not send for help. We all warned you. The whole town warned you.” He turned and strode away, his boots crunching on the gravel she had so painstakingly laid.
With his departure, the last thread connecting her to the community was severed. She was no longer just a pity. She was the town fool, the mad widow in her hole. She was utterly, terrifyingly alone. Before we see how this desperate gamble plays out, I want to ask you something. So many of us are told there’s only one right way to do things, whether it’s in our work, our homes, or our lives.
If you believe in the power of unconventional thinking, of trusting that quiet voice of intuition over the loud chorus of doubters, then take a moment to subscribe to this channel. And tell me in the comments, what is the most stubborn piece of conventional wisdom you’ve ever had to defy? The narrator must now pause the story to explain the chasm of understanding that separated the master builder from the desperate widow.
It was not a gap of intelligence, but of physics. Marcus Thorne, for all his skill, understood heat in only one way. His world was built around the cast-iron stove. A cast-iron stove is a weapon against the cold. It operates on the principle of convection. It burns wood at a high temperature, rapidly heating its metal body.
That metal body, in turn, rapidly heats the air around it. Hot air, being less dense, rises to the ceiling. This creates a current, a cycle. The rising hot air displaces cooler air, pushing it down toward the floor, where it is drawn toward the stove to be heated itself. This is the hum of a conventional home in winter, the circulation of air.
But this method has a fatal flaw, one that becomes catastrophic in extreme cold. The system is inherently leaky. That rising column of hot air creates pressure at the ceiling, forcing warmth out of every crack, every seam in the roof, every gap in the window frames. And for every cubic foot of hot air that escapes, a cubic foot of cold air must be pulled in from the outside to replace it.
This is the stack effect. An iron stove in a conventional cabin is therefore engaged in a frantic, losing battle. It is constantly heating air, only to have that air escape, pulling in more freezing air that then must also be heated. It is trying to heat the entire state of Colorado. It is a hungry god, demanding ever more fuel, shouting its heat into a room for a brief moment before the wind steals it away.
The stove gets hot, but the house stays cold. Alara Vance’s solution was from another age, built on a different principle entirely. Her kachel ofen, her masonry hearth, was not a weapon. It was a bank. It was designed not for convection, but for thermal mass and radiant heat. When she burned wood in its firebox, she did so quickly and intensely, getting the fire as hot as possible.
The genius of the design was not in the firebox, but in what happened to the smoke and hot gases. Instead of venting straight up a chimney, they were forced through a long serpentine maze of brick and stone channels that made up the massive body of the stove. The smoke had to pay rent. It snaked its way back and forth, up and down, for 60 or 70 ft of internal travel.
By the time it finally escaped through the fissure in the mountain, it was cool to the touch. It had surrendered almost all of its thermal energy to the masonry. The stove itself did not get searingly hot like cast iron. It became deeply, profoundly warm. It was now a battery, charged with heat. For the next 18 to 24 hours, it would radiate that heat steadily outward.
Radiant heat does not primarily warm the air. It warms objects. It travels in electromagnetic waves, just like light. It warmed the stone walls of the mine, the wooden floor, the furniture, the people themselves. Everything in the subterranean room became a gentle source of warmth. And she had the ultimate insulation, the mountain.
60 ft of rock maintained a stable temperature, impervious to the most savage wind. She was not fighting the cold. She was living inside a massive, pre-warmed, heat-storing vessel. She wasn’t trying to heat a leaky wooden box. She was charging a stone battery inside an earthen vault. One system shouted, the other told a long, warm story.
The first sign of the great storm came not as a cloud, but as a color. The sky turned a strange, bruised, purple-gray, and the light took on a flat, ominous quality. The wind fell silent. An unnatural stillness descended on Prosperity Gulch, a silence that felt heavier and more threatening than any gale. The animals knew.
The birds vanished. Even the camp dogs whined and pressed against the doors of the saloon. Then, the snow began. It was not a gentle flurry, but a sudden, vertical deluge of tiny, hard pellets that hissed as they hit the ground. Within an hour, the world was gone, erased behind a solid, churning wall of white.
The wind returned, not as a moan, but as a physical scream. It was a solid force that tore at roofs and slammed into walls with the power of a locomotive. This was not a blizzard. This was what the Ute had called the white death. A polar vortex had descended from the Arctic, a river of impossible cold that shattered all records and all illusions of safety.
Inside Marcus Thorne’s house, the finest and best built in the Gulch, the battle was already being lost. The cast iron stove in the parlor glowed a dull cherry red, its belly stuffed with seasoned oak. It devoured fuel with a ravenous hunger. Thorne was a furnace man, constantly feeding it. But the heat seemed to vanish inches from its surface.
The stove was a roaring sun in a universe of absolute cold. His wife, Mary, huddled with their two daughters under a mountain of quilts on the far side of the room, their faces pale, their breath pluming in the air. The windows were no longer glass. They were opaque sheets of thick, crystalline ice, frozen from the inside out.
The walls, which he had built himself with tongue and groove pine, were cold to the touch, leaching warmth from the room as fast as the stove could produce it. He could feel the drafts now, not as gentle currents, but as cutting knives of Arctic air slicing in from under the doors and through the floorboards.
The stack effect had become a siphon, actively sucking the life from his home. “More wood, Marcus.” Mary’s voice was thin, frayed with fear. “This was the last of the dry oak,” he grunted, slamming the stove door shut. “I’ll have to start on the green pine.” He knew it was a fool’s choice. Green wood would burn poorly and fill the house with creosote-laden smoke.
But it was that or freeze. The sound of the wind was a constant, shrieking torment. It was the sound of something vast and ancient and utterly without mercy. With every gust, the house groaned, the timbers complaining under a strain they were never meant to bear. A terrible thought, sharp as an icicle, pierced Thorne’s frantic mind.
The Vance widow. He saw her in his mind’s eye, in that flimsy, poorly chinked cabin, a shack he had condemned as a tinderbox. They would be dead already, frozen solid. Then a worse thought followed. What if they were in that hole? That damp, dark hole. The thought of her children, of their small bodies in that suffocating, freezing tomb he had envisioned.
It was a weight of guilt so heavy, it threatened to crush him. He had washed his hands of them. He had condemned them. 60 ft inside the mountain, Alara Vance was baking bread. There was no sound of the wind. The screaming gale that was tearing Prosperity Gulch apart was utterly absent.
Here, the only sounds were the soft crackle of the embers deep within the masonry hearth, the gentle bubbling of a pot of stew, and the quiet, rhythmic breathing of her sleeping children. Leo and Maya were not huddled under a pile of blankets. They were asleep on simple straw mattresses, covered by a single wool blanket each. Their faces flushed with warmth and sleep.
The air was not cold. It was a comfortable, even temperature, fresh and clean. A small, clever vent near the floor allowed fresh air to be drawn in, where it was warmed by the stone floor before rising gently into the room. Section The walls of the mine were not cold. They were warm to the touch. The entire chamber was a cocoon of gentle, radiant heat.
The massive stone hearth, having been fed a small but intense fire hours ago, was now silently releasing its stored energy. It was a silent, faithful guardian against the apocalypse raging outside. Alara pulled a loaf of perfectly browned bread from the small oven built into the side of the masonry mass. The smell of it filled their subterranean home, a scent of life, of safety, of profound and absolute peace.
She felt a tremor of gratitude so deep it was a prayer. She looked at the rough-hewn walls, the result of her backbreaking labor. She looked at the hearth, her pile of mud and rock, and she looked at her children, safe and warm. Marcus Thorne had called this place a tomb. He was wrong. It was a womb. The storm raged for 3 days.
On the third day, inside the Thorne house, the temperature had dropped below freezing. They had burned a small chair and two wooden crates. The last of the green pine was gone. Marcus Thorne sat wrapped in a bearskin rug, staring at the dead, cold stove. His wife and children were in the bed, buried under every blanket and coat they owned.
Their shivering finally subsided into a dangerous lethargy. The wind had lessened, but the cold remained, a deep, predatory presence that had invaded his fortress and conquered it completely. His expertise was a sham. His well-built house was a failure. His iron stove was a false god. All his certainty had shattered against the reality of this cold.
And the guilt about Alara Vance was no longer a thought. It was a physical agony. He had to know. Even if it was the last thing he did, he had to go to her. He had to see the result of his judgment, of his arrogance. He had to face the ghosts he had helped create. Pulling on his heaviest coat and boots, he told Mary he was going for help. A lie that tasted like ash.
The journey was a pilgrimage of despair. The snow was waist-deep, a thick grinding powder that fought him for every step. The air was so cold it felt like breathing powdered glass. It seared his lungs. The world was a monochromatic nightmare of white snow and purple-gray sky. He navigated by memory, his face a mask of frozen agony.
When he finally saw the roof of her cabin through the swirling snow, his heart sank. It was half collapsed under the weight of the snow. A dark, dead shape against the white. There was no smoke from the chimney, no light, just the absolute stillness of death. He forced his way to the door, his legs screaming with effort, his lungs on fire.
The door was blocked by a drift, but he put his shoulder to it and shoved. It gave way with a groan of splintering wood. Inside, the cabin was as cold as the grave. Snow had poured in through the collapsed section of the roof, covering the floor in a white shroud. It was empty. A frozen, abandoned shell. He had been right. She had failed.
They were gone. He slumped against the door frame, a wave of black despair washing over him. His pride, his anger, his certainty, it had all led to this. He was a harbinger of death. And then, he saw it. Through the haze of blowing snow, beyond the dead cabin, a faint, almost invisible wisp. It was not smoke.
It was a shimmer, a distortion in the air, like heat rising from a summer road. It was coming from the ground, from the mouth of Robert’s Folly. He stumbled toward it, his mind refusing to process what he was seeing. It was impossible, a trick of the light, a phantom of his guilty conscience. He reached the cleared entrance to the mine shaft.
The brush and rocks she had cleared were now buried, but a narrow path remained. And from the dark opening, he felt it. A breath. A slow, impossible exhalation of gentle warmth. He fell to his knees and crawled inside, his body screaming for that impossible warmth. The transition was immediate and shocking. 10 ft in, the brutal killing cold was gone, replaced by a profound stillness.
20 ft in, the air was cool, then neutral. 30 ft in, he began to feel the heat. It wasn’t the scorching dry heat of his stove. It was a living warmth that seemed to come from all directions at once. The floor, the walls, the very air. He rounded a slight bend in the tunnel, and the scene unfolded before him. A soft golden light from an oil lamp.
A widened chamber that was not a cave, but a room. A table, two small beds, and Alara Vance sitting at the table, mending a tear in her son’s shirt. Her children were on the floor, playing with carved wooden figures. They were in their shirt sleeves. The air was filled with the scent of baked bread and stew and warm earth.
The warmth was a physical presence, a gentle wave that washed over him, thawing his frozen limbs, his frozen heart. He saw the great masonry hearth at the back, a silent, warm giant. He reached out and touched the rock wall beside him. It was warm, like a living thing. He was confronted with a reality so far beyond his comprehension that his mind simply broke.
His expertise, his rules, his entire understanding of the world, dissolved in that gentle, impossible heat. He saw life where he had prophesized death. He saw a thriving sanctuary where he had condemned a tomb. Alara looked up and saw him, a frozen, broken man kneeling in the entrance to her home. There was no triumph in her eyes, no I told you so.
There was only a quiet, sorrowful understanding. Marcus Thorne, the master builder of Prosperity Gulch, the voice of conventional authority, tried to speak. His throat was raw, his lips cracked. All his bluster, all his certainty, was gone, boiled away by the storm and shattered by this revelation. He managed a single croaked word, a question that was also a surrender.
How? Alara set down her sewing. “You tried to fight the winter, Mr. Thorne,” she said, her voice soft. “I asked the mountain for shelter. Your stove shouts its heat, and the wind steals the words. My hearth tells a story to the stone, and the stone remembers.” She stood up, went to the hearth, and picked up the loaf of bread she had baked that morning.
She walked over to him, the warmth of her home preceding her. She broke off a piece and held it out. “You are cold,” she said. “Eat.” He took the bread. Its warmth seeped into his frozen fingers. He wept. When the great storm finally broke, a new world was revealed. Prosperity Gulch was crippled.
Three cabins on the outskirts had been crushed by snow. More than a dozen people had severe frostbite. The town’s wood piles were nearly gone. The community was exhausted, terrified, and humbled. Their rescuer was not the town council, not the mining company, but the town fool. Marcus Thorne, his face still raw from frostbite, but his eyes alight with the zeal of a convert, led a small party of men up the mountain.
They did not carry rescue supplies. They carried notebooks and measuring tapes. Thorne became Alara’s first and most ardent student. He spent days in her subterranean home, sketching the design of the cockleofen, measuring the flue paths, making notes on the composition of her clay mortar. He, the master builder, sat at the feet of the woman he had scorned. And he learned.
That summer, a new industry began in Prosperity Gulch. Under Thorne’s direction, the people began to build differently. They dug into the hillsides, creating partially subterranean homes. They built massive masonry hearths, which they called Vance hearths, in the center of their cabins. They learned to bank heat in stone instead of burning it in iron.
They learned to work with the mountain, not against it. Alara Vance never sought recognition. She quietly raised her children in her warm, safe home. But she became the unshakeable foundation of the town. People didn’t ask for her permission, but for her advice. She would walk to their building sites, run her hand over a newly laid stone, and offer quiet suggestions.
The liability had become a legend. The problem had become the solution. Years later, long after Alara was gone and her children had moved away, newcomers to the strangely prosperous and resilient town would notice the unusual architecture. They would ask about the great stone hearts of the homes. An old man, perhaps Marcus Thorne’s own grandson, would take them to the now abandoned mine shaft on the shoulder of the mountain.

And he would show them the final entry in a weathered journal left there. A journal written by a geologist who understood the secrets of the earth. The entry was simple, penned by Robert Vance, but lived by his wife. It read, “Wood gives fire, but stone gives warmth. One is a shout, the other a story. Always listen to the story.
” What about you? What sealed cellars have you inherited, filled with the conventional wisdom that no longer serves you? What accepted truths are leaving you out in the cold, telling you that your only option is to build the same leaky walls everyone else does? We are all told that the way things are is the way they must be, that the expert is always right, that the iron stove is the only source of heat.
But somewhere, on your own plot of land, there is a forgotten prospect tunnel. There is a dusty journal with ancestral knowledge. There is a deep quiet warmth waiting in the earth. An unconventional solution that everyone else will call folly. Your mountain is waiting. Your forgotten knowledge is the key. Start clearing the entrance.
This story is a historically inspired reconstruction. The characters and specific events are fictional, created to illustrate a principle. The content presented here is for narrative and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute professional engineering, architectural, or survival advice. Always consult with qualified experts before undertaking any construction or shelter building projects.
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.