**OFF-the-RECORD // CLASSIFIED SOURCE // BURN AFTER READING**
OFF-THE-RECORD // CLASSIFIED SOURCE // BURN AFTER READING
EXCLUSIVE: “The Scent of Metal” – Simi Valley Blaze Not a Wildfire, Insider Confirms Military-Grade Anomaly
Simi Valley, CA – The official narrative is “dry brush and high winds.” My source, a trembling firefighter who refuses to give their name, tells me a different story. They say the first crews on scene reported something impossible: the flames weren’t orange, but a strange, pulsing blue-green.
And the smell? Not smoke and sage. The scent of hot copper and ammonia—a signature they recognize from… elsewhere.
This isn’t a fire. This is a reaction.
The Santa Ana winds were, in fact, secondary. The primary event? A subterranean ignition source, four hundred feet below the old NASA test site. An unaccounted-for pocket of perchlorate and magnesium, left over from a classified propulsion test in the late ’80s. The Pentagon files say those pits were “cleaned.” My source says the thermal imaging shows a symmetrical, machine-cut void directly beneath the epicenter.
The evacuation is a cover. The real reason they closed the 118 freeway wasn’t falling trees. It was to prevent civilian witnesses from seeing the melt pattern—a perfect, circular heat signature that looks like a landing gear imprint.
I am told the fire is “contained” by 6:00 AM. They’re lying. It’s still burning. But you can’t see it anymore. You can only feel it in the ground.
Keep your windows up and your radios off. If you hear a humming sound tonight, don’t look up.
— Ghost Protocol 33-07