The map shows ninety-four percent coverage. The wire arrived. By every official measure, the programme has succeeded. Ruth Calloway is the county administrator for Darke County, Ohio, overseeing a forty-seven-million-dollar federal initiative to bring AI-powered services to rural communities. When the infrastructure is built and the tools are live, she expects to feel the clear satisfaction of a problem solved. Instead, she begins keeping a list. The list is of people the signal reaches and the system does not see. The farmer whose ninety acres the agricultural AI cannot understand. The retired schoolteacher the digital literacy platform treats like a child. The elderly woman who needs two volunteers and ninety minutes to book a single telehealth appointment. Working alongside a young technologist who names what she is seeing - the participation gap, the distance between coverage and use - and a retired machinist who knows something about what it means when a system forgets the people inside it, Ruth builds a record. Patient, precise, and made with the moral seriousness of Steinbeck's long-view American fiction, Dead Zone asks what it means to serve a community, and what it costs when the answer is designed without them. A companion novel to Redundant (2026). Each stands alone.
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