Seven-year-old Muna hasn't spoken a word since she watched her mother fall to her death in their high-tech Geneva estate. The police call it a tragic accident. The security cameras show no intruder. The world is ready to move on. But Muna is still watching.
Instead of speaking, Muna draws. Her room is a gallery of nightmares—jagged purple figures, faceless men in grey suits, and silver shadows that shouldn't exist. To everyone else, these are the tragic scribbles of a broken mind. To investigative psychologist Elias Thorne, they are a map.
Elias specializes in the language of the silent, but even he isn't prepared for what Muna's art reveals. As he deciphers her drawings, he uncovers a terrifying conspiracy: a global technology known as the Janus Protocol, capable of making a killer invisible to any digital lens. Sophia Sterling wasn't just murdered; she was "unwritten" by her own technology.
Now, the architects of this digital New World Order have realized that their perfect crime has one flaw: a witness who sees what machines cannot.
From the hidden industrial tunnels of Lausanne to a high-security "Ghost Ship" in the Mediterranean, Elias and Muna are hunted by an enemy that controls the very satellites in the sky. To survive, they must go off the grid and into the "blind spots" of a world that is always watching.
In this gripping technothriller, the battle for the future won't be fought with hackers or soldiers, but with the memory of a child. Because when the truth is hidden in plain sight, only the innocent can see it.