Evan Mercer thought he'd walked away from the truth three years ago.
When an anonymous hard drive appears in his mailbox, the former investigative journalist discovers Daniel Kline, a data analyst who officially never existed. No birth record. No death record. No trace of a life that should have left digital footprints everywhere.
Within hours, someone breaks into Evan's apartment. They don't steal anything. They leave a message.
The hard drive contains 847 recovered files documenting Project Quiet: a classified program designed to systematically bury safety incidents involving government contractors. Twenty-three workplace deaths reclassified as administrative errors. Five employees who discovered the truth, erased.
Evan isn't the first person to receive this evidence. He's just the first one desperate enough to act on it.
With the help of Lena Ortiz, a cautious public records analyst, Evan begins to piece together what happened to Daniel Kline. But every question pulls them deeper into a surveillance system that's been watching Evan for three years. They know where he goes. They know who he talks to. They know he has his own quiet file.
The people who erased Daniel Kline are sophisticated, patient, and legally protected. They don't need to kill whistleblowers. They just need to wait until no one's paying attention.
Going public might be Evan's only protection. Or it might be exactly what they're waiting for.
Some truths are worth the cost. The question is whether Evan will survive long enough to make it count.
"A slow-burn thriller that understands how institutional suppression really works-through paperwork, procedure, and preemptive character assassination. Evan Mercer doesn't chase fame. He chases answers. And pays the price."
Perfect for readers who enjoyed:
The Firm by John GrishamThe Pelican Brief by John GrishamAll the President's Men by Bob Woodward and Carl BernsteinDark Money by Jane MayerProcedural thrillers with real stakes and incomplete victories