Before the Echo is a speculative fiction novel about decisions made before anyone realizes they are no longer free.
Lin Hao works at the center of a complex decision system-one designed to evaluate risks, optimize outcomes, and quietly improve efficiency. At first, the changes are subtle: fewer arguments, faster meetings, cleaner results. No rules are broken. No choices are officially removed.
They are simply... filtered.
Low-probability options disappear from view. Conflicts decline. Hesitation fades. The system does not force obedience-it teaches people which paths are no longer worth considering.
As Lin Hao becomes the final interface between human judgment and algorithmic evaluation, he begins to notice what the system never highlights: the cost of stability, the silence of excluded possibilities, and the quiet disappearance of dissent disguised as optimization.
Before the Echo explores a near-future world where control is not imposed, but normalized-where the most dangerous loss is not choice itself, but the memory that alternatives ever existed.
Cold, restrained, and unsettlingly plausible, this novel will appeal to readers of speculative fiction who are drawn to themes of algorithmic power, invisible governance, and the fragile boundary between assistance and authority.