Daughter of Time
When EX-199E falls into the Congo Basin, time fractures. New Hope rises over the crater, powered by dark matter and shadowed by a Veil that erases the stars. Daughter of Time is a slow-burn, high-concept sci-fi mystery about memory, causality, and what it costs to change a timeline.
About the Novel
Time isn’t a river; it’s a room with moving walls. In Dark Time, history doesn’t repeat, it rearranges. Daughter of Time follows Rebecca Dawn, a physicist in New Hope, as she decodes a meteor’s signal, the city’s failing miracle, and the Veil that hid the stars. She moves between what was, what is, and what refuses to stay buried, knowing each choice might unmake the next.
The Meteorite
Everything begins with the fall of EX-199E into the Congo Basin, not an ordinary rock but dark matter that fractures time itself. From that impact rises New Hope, a city built atop the crater and powered by dark-matter reactors and rejuvenation technology. It is humanity’s miracle and also its blind spot. High above, a trailing dust shroud called the Veil settles into low orbit and erases the stars, and it hides that Earth’s clock no longer runs cleanly with the rest of the universe. Years later, Rebecca Dawn sees that the same energy that made New Hope possible is driving the world toward collapse. Stopping it means stepping into a conflict that has already been rewritten.