Mégsem tetszik a termék? Semmi gond! Nálunk 30 napon belül visszaküldheti
Ajándékutalvánnyal nem hibázhat. A megajándékozott az ajándékutalványért bármit választhat kínálatunkból.
30 nap a termék visszaküldésére
Charlie Carter has spent years perfecting the art of being invisible.
As a night janitor in a sprawling airport, he moves through fluorescent corridors long after the last passengers have gone home-cleaning up messes no one remembers, living a life no one notices. Routine is what keeps him intact. Routine is what keeps him from thinking.
Until the night the system sends him somewhere that doesn't exist.
Gate 9B isn't on any map. It shouldn't be there at all. But behind a corridor that no one else can see lies a waiting area filled with the dead-souls caught between life and whatever comes next. And at the center of it all is Valdis, a Valkyrie tasked with processing the endless flow of human endings.
Except the system is breaking.
What was once sacred has become procedural. Death is no longer a passage-it's a process. Souls are categorized, evaluated, and moved along according to rules no one questions anymore. The ones who enforce it are exhausted, injured, and forgotten. And the longer the system runs like this, the more it begins to fail.
When Charlie does the impossible-when he stops a soul from being processed and makes her death matter-he becomes something the system was never designed to handle: a witness.
Now drawn into a hidden infrastructure that governs death itself, Charlie finds himself at the center of a growing crisis. Valkyries are burning out. Souls are backing up. The boundary between life and death is beginning to fracture. And when the system tries to correct itself, it doesn't fix the problem-it threatens to erase it entirely.
But the deeper Charlie goes, the more dangerous the truth becomes.
Because death isn't just happening.
It's being managed.
And if the system collapses, it won't just take the dead with it.
It will take the living, too.
GATE 9B is a literary speculative horror novel about death, bureaucracy, and the cost of caring in a system built not to.
For readers of Annihilation, The City We Became, and Severance.