Set in the year 536 - a time remembered as the year without a summer - this novel follows Lucius, a quiet imperial scribe in Constantinople, as he witnesses the slow unraveling of a world that believes itself eternal. When the sky darkens after a distant volcanic eruption and the sun loses its warmth, the empire does not collapse in a single moment. Instead, order erodes quietly: harvests fail, hunger spreads, the price of bread rises, and the familiar rhythm of the city falters.
Through Lucius's records - first careful, then fragmented, and finally abandoned - we watch a civilization confront something it cannot conquer with laws, faith, or memory.
Set in the year 536 - a time remembered as the year without a summer - this novel follows Lucius, a quiet imperial scribe in Constantinople, as he witnesses the slow unraveling of a world that believes itself eternal. When the sky darkens after a distant volcanic eruption and the sun loses its warmth, the empire does not collapse in a single moment. Instead, order erodes quietly: harvests fail, hunger spreads, the price of bread rises, and the familiar rhythm of the city falters.
Through Lucius's records - first careful, then fragmented, and finally abandoned - we watch a civilization confront something it cannot conquer with laws, faith, or memory.