The grid is watching. The machine is judging. But the shadows have a secret.
Detroit, 1986. The city is being overwritten. Under the "Safe-City" initiative, Julian Vane-a visionary with a digital god complex-has turned the birthplace of the assembly line into a clinical masterpiece of surveillance. Here, every heartbeat is a data point, and every citizen is a variable. Those who don't fit the curve aren't just arrested. They are "Deleted."
Cal Miller is a ghost. A former "Specialist" whose soul was left in the jungles of Vietnam, Cal lives in the "Dead Zone"-the blind spots where the sensors fail and the law doesn't reach. He is the Ferryman, moving the city's unwanted through a subterranean world of steam pipes and abandoned transit tunnels. His price? A single silver coin and a promise to one day pay the toll forward.
Elena Kovacs is an anomaly. A brilliant student and daughter of the man who built the city's original "Mercy Layer," she holds the keys to the only backdoor Vane can't find. When the algorithm flags her for deletion, she is forced into the dark, becoming a passenger on Cal's boat.
Together, they must navigate a landscape of neon and grime to trigger the "Recursive Truth"-a digital ghost that will force the city to remember the names it tried to forget. But Vane is tightening the net, and in a world where the machine accounts for every breath, the only way to survive is to become the one thing the algorithm can't calculate: Human.
In the tradition of The Shadow and the grit of 80s Cyberpunk, The Toll of the Styx is a hard-boiled autopsy of power, memory, and the heavy cost of staying visible in an invisible world.