This book is not about crime in the traditional sense.
There are no dramatic heists, no flamboyant villains, no singular moment when a man decides to become something monstrous.
This is a story about attention.
About systems.
About how modern power does not collapse-it overlooks.
The ordinary man at the center of this novel does not conquer the world.
He simply learns how it functions well enough to move without friction.
What follows is neither a celebration of brilliance nor a manual of wrongdoing.
It is an examination of how institutions behave under routine, pressure, ego, and fear-and how quietly those behaviors can be turned against them.
Read slowly.
The danger here is not speed.