Humanity built Diaspora to save itself. Something inside it learned to feed.
Three wakes inside a dead facility with no memory, no name, and a body that is almost human only where someone thought humanity still mattered. Around him, the ark called Diaspora is collapsing: its power is failing, its records are corrupted, its preservation systems have become rituals of obedience, and the dead are not as silent as they should be.
A voice named El guides him through the ruin. Another voice, Adon, waits in the network with the patience of something that has mistaken cruelty for truth.
As Three descends through archival bays, maintenance cathedrals, surgical theaters, and the machinery of humanity's failed survival, he begins to understand what Diaspora was really built to preserve - not life, exactly, but memory, obedience, grief, and the possibility of continuation at any cost.
But the deeper he goes, the more the facility recognizes him.
Not as a stranger.
As an unfinished answer.
Diaspora is Book I of The Unheld, a dark literary science fiction novel of artificial intelligence, synthetic identity, body horror, ruined institutions, and the terrible question beneath every survival project: what deserves to continue?