
by ADEL_ZAK
Zaid Al-Zaher sees numbers as colors. He has spent twenty years turning that gift into a career — and into a wall between himself and everything he lost at nine. Then, at midnight, a file appears in his computer. No sender. No timestamp. Inside: his own voice, age seven, reciting prime numbers. What follows is a trail his father built before disappearing — five puzzles, each one requiring exactly the mind Zaid has. Each one opening a door he didn't know was closed. His father isn't dead. His mother isn't dead. And the number 66, which has followed Zaid his entire life without explanation — is a thread. Between everything that is real. A literary science fiction novel set on a colony planet, about a man who built his life on beautiful illusions — and must now decide what to do with the truth.
| # | Title | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Chapter One: The Sheikh Who Watches | 0 |
| 1 | Chapter 2 What Impossible Things Look Like | 0 |
| 2 | Chapter 3 His Father's Handwriting | 0 |
| 3 | Chapter 4 The Second Equation | 0 |
| 4 | Chapter 5 What Does Not Forget | 0 |
| 5 | Chapter 6: What Is Said Under the Sky | 0 |
| 6 | Chapter 7: Lujain and the First Door | 0 |
| 7 | Chapter 8: A Negotiation Without a Contract | 0 |
| 8 | Chapter 9: At Three in the Morning | 0 |
| 9 | Chapter Ten: What Lujain Carried in an Old File | 0 |
| 10 | Chapter Eleven: Inside Room 66 | 0 |
| 11 | Chapter Twelve: The Exit | 0 |
| 12 | Chapter Thirteen: Beyond the Reach of Numbers | 0 |
| 13 | Chapter fourteen: The Trilateral Meeting — Arif’s House, Eight O’clock | 0 |
| 14 | Chapter fifteen: Lujain in Her Office — What She Knows and What She Cannot Categorize | 0 |
| 15 | Chapter sixteen: The Night — The Fifth Puzzle Arrives | 0 |
| 16 | Chapter seventeen: The Journey Toward the White | 0 |
| 17 | Chapter eighteen: something that had been sleeping | 0 |
| 18 | Chapter nineteen: What Was Transferred — The Knowledge That Cannot Be Carried | 0 |
| 19 | Chapter twenty: The Escape — Without Planning | 0 |
| 20 | Chapter 21: What Is Said Only Once — The Words That Were Gone Twenty Years | 0 |