Acceptable Loss: A Thriller
About
Some systems don’t break.
They decide who can be erased.
When cities begin to disappear quietly, not from maps, but from records, databases, and memory, Jack Mercer is pulled into a truth no one is supposed to see. There are no explosions. No public crises. Just administrative decisions that strip people, places, and histories of existence.
Behind it all is a doctrine buried deep in policy language: acceptable loss.
As Jack follows the pattern, he discovers a network that doesn’t need violence to control the world. It uses procedures, permissions, and silence. Evidence vanishes. Allies lose access overnight. Entire communities become “unlocatable,” dismissed as clerical errors. The system calls it efficiency. Jack calls it murder by paperwork.
With help from a small group of specialists, each seeing the threat from a different angle, Jack races against a machine that learns, adapts, and corrects its own mistakes. The closer they get, the fewer options remain, until stopping the system may require becoming one more acceptable loss.
Tense, atmospheric, and unsettlingly plausible, Acceptable Loss is a modern thriller about power exercised quietly, truth erased cleanly, and the cost of deciding who matters when no one is watching.
Perfect for readers who enjoy intelligent, high-stakes thrillers where the danger isn’t chaos, but order taken too far.