The architecture has been failing for fifteen years.
Edouard Castres knows it. He built it. He is the oldest living member of a philosophical project that has been managing the conditions for global instability since 1983 — and he has been watching it fail in the specific, documentable ways that systems built around correct diagnoses and flawed solutions always fail. Slowly. Producing the outcomes that demonstrate the flaw, rather than the diagnosis.
When Aria Voss-Okafor arrives at his Dalmatian island estate, Castres is not surprised. He has been expecting her since the tribunal's verdict. He wants to explain what the architecture was actually for, and why it has failed, and what the failure makes possible.
What he does not know: someone has been watching them both for forty years. A group of former intelligence professionals who identified the architecture's founding flaw before the founding meeting concluded, declined to participate, and spent four decades documenting exactly what they predicted would happen. They are called the Observers. They have been waiting for the Raven.
And at a private meeting in Paris, a twenty-first person arrives. Someone Castres has never met. Someone who represents something older than the architecture itself. Someone who says: the principals in this room do not control the funding structure. I do.
The Architecture of Silence is Book 2 of The Raven Series.
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