What if the afterlife wasn't a judgment - but a system?
Ian wakes at a table in a room with no doors, no windows, and no answers.
Only a quiet, unsettling sense that he's being held in place.
He isn't alone for long.
As others arrive - a trauma doctor who refuses easy explanations, a man who's been here before and shouldn't have survived it, and a boy who is desperate not to disappear - they begin to realise the truth: this place exists to smooth people out. To quiet grief. To erase anger. To make suffering manageable.
And at the centre of it all is God - not as an all-powerful judge, but as a function of the system itself.
As the room begins to fracture, a darker presence emerges: something that has learned how to finish the job God never fully could. Something that offers peace through disappearance. Silence through erasure.
Refusing to comply, the group does something dangerous.
They stop waiting.
They stop behaving.
They start holding each other instead.
This is a novel about what happens after we refuse an unjust system - about care as resistance, about trauma that cannot be optimised away, and about choosing to live even when it hurts.
For readers of literary speculative fiction, philosophical science fiction, and the work of Ursula K. Le Guin, Octavia Butler, and Emily St. John Mandel.
Dark, humane, and fiercely compassionate, this is a story for anyone who has ever been told to be quieter, easier, or less - and refused.