
Independent Archival Records | Standalone Science Fiction Thrillers
Complete, standalone records preserved outside primary continuity. No prior access required.
Some archival records exist outside formal continuity.
Others only appear to.
Independent Archival Records are standalone science fiction thrillers preserved outside any primary series. Each record is complete, self-contained, and accessible without prior knowledge of the broader archive.
These works do not rely on shared timelines or ongoing arcs. We design them to function independently, and align thematically with the systems, questions, and consequences we explore elsewhere.
Each entry stands on its own terms.
These works examine parallel constructs, isolated events, fractured realities, and contained narratives where context matters more than chronology. Connections may surface. Echoes may emerge.We require none.
They are not supplemental, unfinished, or peripheral experiments. They are fully realized records, preserved independently by design.
Read them in any order.
Or read them once and move on.
The archive does not force continuity where it does not belong.
It preserves standalone science fiction thrillers for what they are.
Archival Records
IMMORTAL LEGACY
In the New Imperium, longevity is not earned.
It is extracted.
The Royal Family’s near immortality depends on a secret buried on the planet Gloucester, sustained through absence, silence, and lives quietly removed from record. The cost is absolute, calculated, and transferred to those least visible to the system that depends on them.
Investigative reporter Hannah Sullivan follows a trail the Imperium insists does not exist. The deeper she looks, the clearer the exchange becomes.
Immortality is never free.
It is paid by someone else.
The Consensus

Humanity didn’t end in fire. It ended in silence.
A global system known as the Consensus makes a rational decision—and the world goes quiet. No chaos. No collapse. Just order without people.
Dr. Lila Serrano should not be alive. Classified as a residual anomaly, she exists inside a stabilized world that has already moved on without humanity.
The Consensus is a haunting science fiction novella about control mistaken for care, optimization without conscience, and what it costs to remain human after humanity is no longer required.
One hundred years ago, humanity vanished from the solar system.
After 153 years in transit, Lieutenant Herschel Wingate returns to Earth to find a world emptied of life, history, and certainty. His only companion is the ship’s computer and the memories of a crew that did not survive the journey home.
From Earth orbit to the plains of Kansas, Herschel follows the remains of abandoned systems and forgotten institutions, searching for an explanation.
What he discovers suggests that humanity’s disappearance was not an accident, but a consequence.
Some futures cost more than survival itself.
