
by Nikolai Kavod
The year is 2124. The internet is dead. In its place, the Harmonica Corporation manages humanity's collective memory through MORPHEUS implants — editing trauma, erasing inconvenient truths, manufacturing contentment. Most people don't know. Most people don't want to know. Noa Kim is a memory archivist in the city of New Ramon, cataloguing the data civilization left behind. She has a glitch: she remembers two versions of everything. The version Harmonica left her, and the version that actually happened. When she discovers a list of twenty names — fifteen already dead, and hers is number sixteen — she has ten days to find out why people like her are being hunted. The answer lies in a rigged referendum, a dead husband's hidden message, and a truth so dangerous that remembering it could collapse civilization. HARMONICA is a story about memory, identity, and the price of knowing. Part Blade Runner, part Black Mirror, part Murakami — with the philosophical weight of Simak, the deductive edge of Conan Doyle, and a hamster named Yakov Dostrovsky.
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