In Neo-London, the Dominion does not just control the present.
It edits the past.
Memories are corrected. Histories are reassigned. Entire lives disappear into clean records and sealed archives. The city still functions. The lights still burn. The people still go to work. That is the horror: the system is not collapsing.
It is working.
Cipher Reeve is the failure in that system.
He survived an erasure that should have emptied him. Now he carries something the Dominion cannot classify cleanly: a buried signal built from the minds it tried to remove, a wounded intelligence reaching through the fractures, and a memory of the world before silence became law.
The Dominion calls him an anomaly.
The Signal calls him a bridge.
And beneath the city, Archive-07 is opening.
What begins as a descent into restricted Dominion records becomes something older, stranger, and more dangerous than a stolen file. The archive does not contain data. It contains lives. Suppressed names. Broken histories. Echoes of people the system declared resolved.
Cipher is not alone inside what he carries.
Every recovered memory changes him. Every contact with the Signal costs him. Every step toward the truth makes him more visible to the systems designed to erase exactly this kind of awakening.
And the Dominion is already watching.
Black Signal is a psychological techno-thriller about memory, identity, surveillance, and the systems that decide what survives. It is built for readers who want intelligent speculative fiction with institutional dread, human consequence, and a world that feels larger than the page.
For readers of Altered Carbon, Annihilation, The City & The City, Control, and cinematic science fiction where memory is not metaphor - it is evidence.
Book One of the ConOps21 sequence - a planned twelve-book arc.
The signal is just beginning.