What if the greatest discovery in human history was not meant to be controlled... but understood?
Deep beneath a state-of-the-art research facility, a team of scientists completes what was believed to be impossible:
a stable portal capable of piercing the fabric of space and time.
At first, the discovery appears to be a triumph of technology.
Then the data arrives.
And nothing is as expected.
When the experimental tunnel opens, it does not lead to another planet, nor to a distant future-but to a prehistoric Earth, tens of millions of years in the past.
A world alive with unknown ecosystems, unfamiliar life forms, and temporal laws that defy every accepted model of physics.
As the research team begins to explore this new reality, they uncover a disturbing truth:
time does not flow equally on both sides of the breach.
Minutes in the present correspond to hours-or even years-in the past.
A single mission could reshape history itself.
While the scientific implications are staggering, political pressure quickly mounts.
Governments see opportunity.
Resources.
Food.
Control.
But the deeper the team investigates, the clearer it becomes that the portal is not merely a tool.
It is part of a larger system-one that reacts, adapts, and perhaps observes.
Led by physicists, biologists, and engineers bound together by trust and doubt, the group must confront impossible questions:
Can humanity exploit a world that exists outside its own time?
Is intervention inevitable once discovery occurs?
And who-or what-defines the limits of exploration?
As danger escalates on both sides of the tunnel, the scientists realize that the true risk is not technological failure...
but human ambition.
THE FIRST BREACH is a scientifically grounded science fiction novel that blends:
hard science and speculative physics
time dilation and space-time mechanics
exploration of prehistoric ecosystems
ethical conflict between knowledge and power
the fragile balance between progress and responsibility
This is not a story about conquering the past.
It is the beginning of a much larger journey-one that will challenge humanity's understanding of time, life, and its own future.
Because what has been opened cannot simply be closed.
And what lies beyond the breach is only the beginning.