David Sorda has spent his life defending liars.
He just never expected to join them.
When a courtroom shooting ends his life, David wakes in a city that looks disturbingly familiar: judges, clerks, bailiffs, hearing rooms. Only here, the accused are dead. Every soul carries a ledger that records their lies. Every confession feeds a vast mechanism that holds reality together.
Truth isn't moral here.
It's fuel.
Recruited as a defense advocate in this afterlife tribunal, David does what he's always done-he looks for cracks in the case. He challenges evidence. He questions testimony. And slowly, he begins to see something no one else wants to acknowledge:
The system is manipulating the record.
Echoes are edited. Ledgers vanish. Entire souls disappear into something called "Exile." At the center of it all stands the Architect-the architect of order, of stability, of a structure that claims it must exist to prevent catastrophe.
Because without control, the boundary between worlds will collapse.
But if the foundation of the afterlife is built on a lie, tearing it down could unravel existence itself.
And saving it might require David to become complicit in the very corruption he swore to expose.
In a court where every lie is documented, how far can a defender bend the truth before he becomes the Architect of it?
The Architect's Lie is a dark, intelligent speculative thriller about power, confession, and the terrifying possibility that some systems survive not because they're just-but because someone decides they must.
If you like morally complex characters, philosophical tension, and stories that don't hand you easy answers, this one will stay with you.