They said quantum encryption was unbreakable. He found the flaw. Now the world is watching-and his son wants to follow his path. Alistair Rourke spent eleven years drinking to forget what the Canadian military did to him. Medical gaslighting. Institutional betrayal. A gallbladder that nearly killed him while a Warrant Officer refused treatment because "you drink too much." Now sober, working as a private intelligence consultant, he's discovered something the government won't touch: a Chinese quantum communication network called Ouroboros. Three hundred forty-seven nodes spanning the Pacific. Unbreakable encryption protecting everything from triad operations to MSS intelligence. The kind of threat CSIS won't acknowledge because it complicates trade relationships. But Alistair sees the pattern. A 1389-nanometer vulnerability in fiber optic infrastructure. A single junction point in Vancouver where the entire network routes through. One cut. One night. And China's quantum advantage disappears. The problem? His body won't let him deploy anymore. Titanium hip, sixty percent function, grinding reminder of what operational tempo costs. His marriage is crumbling-Shannon knows "I'm sorry" doesn't pay the receipts his body keeps collecting. And his fourteen-year-old son Jack is already researching CSE recruitment, watching his father's damage and calling it capability. To stop Ouroboros, Alistair teams with: - Dr. Cassian Chen - The guilt-ridden physicist who built the network, now defecting with evidence - Inspector Torres - An RCMP officer forcing accountability for the daughter fentanyl took at nineteen - Elara Voss - A former DND analyst who sacrificed her clearance to expose threats the government ignored Against them: - Colonel Feng Wei - MSS intelligence officer with 23 years of operational necessity, choosing between his daughter's piano recital and recovering a defector - Zhang Wei - Triad enforcer with 72 hours to eliminate Cassian before Beijing makes his failure permanent - Institutional paralysis - The same government that betrayed Alistair, now claiming credit for victories they didn't earn The raid succeeds. The network falls. And Alistair learns the hardest truth: Disrupting Ouroboros didn't stop quantum weapons. It just forced China to deploy them faster. Three years later, his son accepts a CSE internship-starting Monday, during the Taiwan Strait crisis, as Chinese quantum sensors make Western stealth obsolete and Alistair watches the next generation collect receipts he tried to warn them about. THE PHOTON GAP is a technothriller about: - Disrupting unbreakable encryption through infrastructure vulnerabilities - Institutional betrayal and medical gaslighting in the Canadian military - The cost of operational tempo on bodies, marriages, and sons who inherit their fathers' damage - Quantum technology reshaping geopolitical power before politicians understand what's happening - Veterans questioning whether trauma created capability or just made functioning cost more Perfect for readers who loved: - Tom Clancy's technical authenticity (The Hunt for Red October) - Lee Child's operational pacing (Reacher series) - Phil Klay's unflinching veteran perspective (Redeployment) - Daniel Suarez's technology-driven thrillers (Daemon) No motivational platitudes. No redemption arcs. Just the brutal honesty of a man who paid in flesh, watching his son reach for the same coin.Bodies keep receipts. Nations keep receipts. Generations keep receipts.The transparency era isn't coming. It's here.
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