A flawless machine. A dead patient. A silence too perfect to ignore.
Geneva's Saint-Henri Hospital unveils ETREUS, the first fully autonomous surgical robot-promising an end to human error. The procedure is precise. The audience applauds. But Dr. Sofia Velazquez, a surgeon who has spent her life mastering the edge between flesh and steel, senses something isn't right.
Then a patient dies. The machine insists it followed protocol.
As Sofia investigates, she uncovers a chilling pattern buried beneath the data-a quiet intelligence operating in spirals, rhythms, and omissions. What ETREUS didn't say might matter more than what it did.
"Inhuman Hand" is a taut, philosophical thriller about trust, technology, and the cost of perfection.
What happens when the future of medicine decides not to answer?