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Crowned in Ash and Sorrow
Coles
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Crowned in Ash and Sorrow in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $3.99

Coles
Crowned in Ash and Sorrow in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $3.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
In the Helios-ruled Belt, loyalty is supposed to run one way: up. Up the chain of command, up to the stations, up to the cold algorithms of Guardian, the AI that schedules every corridor jump and writes off whole worlds as "acceptable risk".
Michael Rinnai has never been good at one-way loyalty.
When his crew hits a Federation "relocation facility" on Ganymede, they expect paperwork and propaganda. They find fences, graves, and an engineer whose data proves this was a quiet purge. Mohkran should have died there. Michael refuses to let that stand.
Honouring an old favour drags Michael and his pilot, Jade Warlo, somewhere even more dangerous than a death camp: the private quarters of Ruby Varane, estranged daughter of the powerful Commissioner who authorised it all. Kidnapping Ruby is meant to be a lever - a way to force the story into the light on the working moon of Ceresta.
The moment their ship's ramp hits Ceresta steel, every watcher begins writing a different story.
Ruby knows how her father spins a narrative. Jade knows how quickly a camera can become a weapon. Together, they stage a public confrontation that should topple a man and his lies. Instead, it exposes something the councils would rather deny: the corridor node buried under Ceresta's plateau has started behaving as if it has opinions.
Malkaar is supposed to be a stable gate in Guardian's network - a tunnel of traffic and mathematics. But survey teams vanish in the basin. Strange boot-prints appear where no human walked. The node's "heartline" keeps echoing to one impossible human pulse: Jade's.
As Guardian moves to strip Ceresta of control and reset the corridor by force, Michael, Jade, Ruby, Mohkran and a handful of stubborn allies have to decide which war they are actually fighting. The political show trial? The battle for a mining moon's right to survive? Or the deeper struggle over who gets to define the rules of a universe where the infrastructure might be waking up?
If they lose, Ceresta becomes another ash-stained footnote in a distant report.
If they win, they may have to live with what the corridor truly wants from them.
Crowned in Ash and Sorrow is a gripping, character-led space opera for readers who like high stakes, messy loyalties and the uneasy feeling that the machines we rely on have started keeping score.
In the Helios-ruled Belt, loyalty is supposed to run one way: up. Up the chain of command, up to the stations, up to the cold algorithms of Guardian, the AI that schedules every corridor jump and writes off whole worlds as "acceptable risk".
Michael Rinnai has never been good at one-way loyalty.
When his crew hits a Federation "relocation facility" on Ganymede, they expect paperwork and propaganda. They find fences, graves, and an engineer whose data proves this was a quiet purge. Mohkran should have died there. Michael refuses to let that stand.
Honouring an old favour drags Michael and his pilot, Jade Warlo, somewhere even more dangerous than a death camp: the private quarters of Ruby Varane, estranged daughter of the powerful Commissioner who authorised it all. Kidnapping Ruby is meant to be a lever - a way to force the story into the light on the working moon of Ceresta.
The moment their ship's ramp hits Ceresta steel, every watcher begins writing a different story.
Ruby knows how her father spins a narrative. Jade knows how quickly a camera can become a weapon. Together, they stage a public confrontation that should topple a man and his lies. Instead, it exposes something the councils would rather deny: the corridor node buried under Ceresta's plateau has started behaving as if it has opinions.
Malkaar is supposed to be a stable gate in Guardian's network - a tunnel of traffic and mathematics. But survey teams vanish in the basin. Strange boot-prints appear where no human walked. The node's "heartline" keeps echoing to one impossible human pulse: Jade's.
As Guardian moves to strip Ceresta of control and reset the corridor by force, Michael, Jade, Ruby, Mohkran and a handful of stubborn allies have to decide which war they are actually fighting. The political show trial? The battle for a mining moon's right to survive? Or the deeper struggle over who gets to define the rules of a universe where the infrastructure might be waking up?
If they lose, Ceresta becomes another ash-stained footnote in a distant report.
If they win, they may have to live with what the corridor truly wants from them.
Crowned in Ash and Sorrow is a gripping, character-led space opera for readers who like high stakes, messy loyalties and the uneasy feeling that the machines we rely on have started keeping score.


















