Who knew a single violin could start a world war?
Mauray Hestinska was simply poor. A small shack on 34th street was what she called home; gray would be what she called life. But that all changes with a single robbery.
Hamillia Gonies was a selfish person, and a selfish ghost she will be. Her house was the biggest in town, her treasures were amazing. Mauray sneaks in the day of her death.
The jewels, crystals, gems, precious stones, and diamonds were all neatly piled in a secret room on the third floor, one that Mauray could easily reach in seconds. But Hamillia Goniez's treasure isn't the only thing there.
A violin, with golden accents, sitting in its own little sanctuary, in a dazzling box, becomes an item of Mauray's interests the moment she sees it.
In two short months she achieves what many could never, in two short months she causes a dispute, slowly growing and infesting minds and causing problems, getting bigger everyday, until a single person dares to do something simple but cruel at the same time.
That's when everything really turns for the worse.
Blade Runner meets Orwell's 1984 in Mother's Hand.
Set in a crumbling dystopian future, Earth is ruled by the all-seeing and unforgiving Mother.
Kal dutifully donates his body to the military for four years while his consciousness is stored. He will wake up with no memories of the things his body has done in war.
Six years later, Kal wakes screaming a name he doesn't know. As he tries to reconnect with his former life he soon realizes that Mother is not finished with him yet.
As Kal fights to avoid capture he begins to peel back the lies that surround Mother's system and must discover the truth about his past before it's too late.