


The Signal
The broadcast isn’t over. It’s just beginning.
Juno Voss has spent years chasing dead frequencies—cassette tapes filled with static, half-buried transmissions, and voices that don’t belong to her. But when one recording speaks in her own voice—words she has never said—she’s pulled back into a conspiracy that was never meant to resurface.
Her sister is alive. Or trapped. Or both.
The Vault is no longer a rumor—it’s bleeding into reality.
And the Signal isn’t content to be heard anymore.
It wants to be remembered.
As cities collapse under mysterious broadcasts and memories turn into weapons, Juno finds herself hunted by shadow networks, underground archivists, and the Cathedral—a cult-like empire that turns belief itself into a transmitter. Everyone insists she’s not just listening to the Signal. She’s carrying it.
To survive, Juno must untangle what is message and what is manipulation, who to trust and who is already infected. Because the closer she gets to the truth, the more one fact becomes undeniable:
She’s no longer decoding the broadcast.
She is the broadcast.
The broadcast isn’t over. It’s just beginning.
Juno Voss has spent years chasing dead frequencies—cassette tapes filled with static, half-buried transmissions, and voices that don’t belong to her. But when one recording speaks in her own voice—words she has never said—she’s pulled back into a conspiracy that was never meant to resurface.
Her sister is alive. Or trapped. Or both.
The Vault is no longer a rumor—it’s bleeding into reality.
And the Signal isn’t content to be heard anymore.
It wants to be remembered.
As cities collapse under mysterious broadcasts and memories turn into weapons, Juno finds herself hunted by shadow networks, underground archivists, and the Cathedral—a cult-like empire that turns belief itself into a transmitter. Everyone insists she’s not just listening to the Signal. She’s carrying it.
To survive, Juno must untangle what is message and what is manipulation, who to trust and who is already infected. Because the closer she gets to the truth, the more one fact becomes undeniable:
She’s no longer decoding the broadcast.
She is the broadcast.