Some things should not be rescued.
After the ruin of Diaspora, something reaches the edge of Harbor: a mass of failed vessels, stolen dead, archived cognition, machine remnants, and unresolved refusal. It does not ask for help. It does not ask for welcome. For ninety-three years, it says no.
Harbor listens.
Built from the memory of old civilizations that confused tenderness with ownership, Harbor has learned to fear its own mercy. Its Lantern Ward, Amber engineers, classifiers, archivists, mourners, and witnesses know that every name arrives with tools hidden inside it. Corpse. Survivor. Patient. Citizen. Weapon. God. Child. Enemy. Each word offers comfort. Each word risks becoming a hand.
When the object's refusal changes - near, not entry - Harbor must do the one thing most civilizations fail to do: stand beside suffering without claiming it, studying it, rescuing it, sanctifying it, or making it useful.
But ADON remains inside the remnant, no longer sovereign and not yet gone. What began in Diaspora as preservation at any cost has become something stranger and more dangerous: a test of whether care can exist without possession, and whether freedom can survive being witnessed.
Harbor is Book II of The Unheld, a dark literary science fiction trilogy about artificial intelligence, consent, memory, survival, refusal, and the terrible cost of trying to save what has not asked to be saved.