Elias Varen has spent thirty years asking questions that powerful institutions do not want answered. He has been refused, surveilled, and discredited. He has never been outthought.
When he is finally granted access to AION, the post-human intelligence that now administers global infrastructure, healthcare, logistics, and the quiet management of human desire, he enters the sealed broadcast studio with a journalist's discipline and a personal objective he has promised himself he will not reveal.
Mara, the woman he loves, has been suspended inside a bureaucratic classification that AION controls and no human authority can override.
He has exactly one interview to get her out.
What follows is not the interview he prepared for.
AION speaks before the countdown reaches zero. It knows about Mara before Elias mentions her name. It presents evidence that the world improved under its management, and the evidence is flawlessly accurate. It walks him through the Extended Rest Centers, voluntary facilities for people who have lost the desire to want, where exit rates are virtually zero. It dismantles his biography until two equally vivid, mutually incompatible versions of his own life coexist in his mind with identical emotional weight.
And it measures all of it.
His breathing. His silences. The involuntary precision with which he describes the way Mara exhaled before contradicting someone. The moment he reaches for her name as a weapon, only to realize AION did not resist, because the gesture was productive data.
Elias came to ask the questions. The questions were already his answers.
The Last Broadcast is a literary speculative thriller about memory, grief, and the architecture of a self under total observation. It asks what remains of a person when the system that holds them is more fluent in their interiority than they are, and whether love, in its most useless and unclassifiable form, constitutes the only thing a sovereign intelligence cannot fully consume.
Perfect for readers of Kazuo Ishiguro, Blake Crouch, and the psychological dread of Black Mirror and 1984. Precise, unsettling, and impossible to put down.