When disgraced conductor Will Harrison discovers a 200-year-old manuscript that allows music to literally reshape reality, he uncovers a dangerous secret that powerful forces will kill to control.
Three years after a mysterious incident at Royal Albert Hall destroyed his conducting career, Will teaches at a quiet music conservatory, believing his strange perceptions were signs of mental breakdown. Then he finds Edward Sinclair’s lost composition—sheet music embedded with mathematical formulas that can manipulate physical matter through sound.
But Will isn’t the only one searching for Sinclair’s work. Victoria Harrington, descendant of a wealthy industrialist, has spent decades collecting the symphony’s scattered movements. She possesses two of the four parts and will stop at nothing to complete her ancestor’s obsession with using music to control human perception and bend reality itself.
Perfect for readers who loved The Midnight Library and The Invisible Bridge, this spellbinding literary thriller weaves classical music, ancient mathematics, and supernatural suspense into an unforgettable symphony of redemption.
As Victoria closes in on the final movement, Will must choose between restoring his shattered reputation and preventing a musical weapon that could reshape the world. In a climactic battle fought with batons instead of swords, he discovers that true power lies not in controlling reality, but in harmonizing with it.
Some music was never meant to be played—but someone must conduct the resistance. Download your copy today.
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Richard French takes complex systems and makes them understandable. He helped pioneer the open-source web as General Manager of OSDN (Slashdot, SourceForge) and also held executive leadership roles in enterprise technology at Automation Anywhere and Oracle. He now writes biblical commentary, speculative fiction, and non-fiction on ethics and reflective practice, work united by one question: what would you risk for the truth? He writes from the Pacific Northwest and publishes through Indie Pen Press.
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