The Atlas Corporation was all set to tear apart the planet Mercuryāconverting its resources into a swarm of solar-collecting megastructuresāwhen Esteban Velasco, lead Atlas engineer, is found dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.
Detective Isaac Cho and Special Agent Susan Cantrell, both eager to return to active duty despite close calls on their last case, are sent in to assess the situation. Their superiors expect a simple declaration of suicide, but Velascoās death proves anything but typical.
The detectives soon find themselves embroiled in a mystery far more complexāand strangeāthan anyone expected, leading them to a church for Mercury-loving weirdos, a ānudistā colony open to Saturnās unbreathable atmosphere, an exclusive park for hunting dinosaurs, and a ghost town where forgotten machines wage war over condo floorplans.
What was meant to be an easy return to duty for the detectives takes a sudden dark turn when ruthless mind-hackers ambush and nearly kill them, making one fact crystal clear:
If they donāt solve this case soon, itāll beĀ theirĀ corpses that turn up next.
At the publisherās request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).
Praise forĀ The Janus File:
āA satisfying, self-contained mystery for its mismatched protagonists to gradually unravelĀ .Ā .Ā .Ā moments of humor amid the expected culture clashes, and the exploration of the authorsā well-realized far-future worldĀ .Ā .Ā .Ā Itās pure entertainment.ā āPublishers Weekly
Jacob HoloĀ is a former-Ohioan, former-Michigander living in sunny South Carolina. He describes himself as a writer, gamer, hobbyist, and engineer who started writing after his parents bought him an IBM 286 desktop back in the ā80s. Heās been writing ever since.