
Former MMA champion Frank Tyree thought he knew loss—until his adopted brother Michael turns up dead under circumstances that lead straight to Dugway Proving Ground, a shadowy military installation in the Utah desert. What appears as a personal tragedy soon spirals into a dangerous investigation that unearths a vast conspiracy involving alien technology, government cover-ups, and humanity's very future. Teaming up with his conspiracy-theorist brother Aaron and a mysterious alien named Zisa—whose own past is entwined with Dugway’s darkest secrets—Frank delves into the heart of a terrifying truth. Together, they uncover a sinister military project conducting unethical experiments with alien technology, guarded by powerful forces willing to kill to maintain secrecy. As the trio navigates a deadly maze of lies and betrayal, they're relentlessly pursued by those determined to silence them. Their quest for justice takes them from the gritty streets of Salt Lake City and the desolate Goshute Reservation to the very heart of Dugway itself, culminating in a high-stakes confrontation that will challenge everything they thought they knew. Black Site: Dugway is a gripping blend of suspense, action, and speculative intrigue, exploring the dangers of unchecked power, the complexity of identity, and the profound cost of uncovering truths that powerful people would prefer remain buried. In the fight to expose the conspiracy, Frank, Zisa, and Aaron discover that some secrets are worth risking everything—even their lives.

Hal, an android built in humanity’s image, hides among the living, haunted by the man he was made from. Jane, a nurse with prophetic visions, warns that something inside the network has awakened. Meanwhile, soldiers and fugitives alike are drawn to a new facility—Dreamland—where the dead experiments of Dugway have been reborn.


Welcome to author
Roy Monday's
Future Revisionism

Yet do not cast all hope away. Tomorrow is unknown..
—J.R.R. Tolkien
What's Past is Prologue...
—William Shakespeare
Sci-Fi is the future playground setting for Gothic Horror...
—Roy Monday
...not till we have lost the world, do we begin to find ourselves...
—Henry David Thoreau










