In a near-future society plagued by "Affective Isolation Syndrome" (AIS)—a condition where citizens physically cannot form emotional bonds due to screen addiction and algorithmic isolation—the government establishes the Ministry of Public Intimacy (MPI) . Their mandate is not to police love, but to engineer it. They choreograph spontaneous moments: the brush of a hand on a subway, a shared umbrella in the rain, a stranger noticing a tear. The goal is to generate “empathy resonance,” a measurable energy source that powers the city’s emotional grid.
Cora is assigned a new partner: Rook , a charming, cynical “Disruptor” from the Ministry’s internal affairs division. His job is to find leaks. Her job is to fix the Mandatory Companion program. They despise each other on sight. But as they work together, Cora realizes something terrifying: she is falling for him for real . The Ministry’s surveillance flags their genuine, unscripted chemistry as a “Code Black Anomaly”—a forbidden, unpredictable bond. ministry of public
Cora discovers a classified file: . It reveals that the Ministry’s founder, a now-missing visionary named Dr. Elias Thorne , believed that true intimacy cannot be manufactured. It requires risk, rejection, and the beautiful disaster of spontaneity. The Ministry has been lying for decades—they aren’s saving people; they are addicting them to curated, safe, hollow versions of affection. In a near-future society plagued by "Affective Isolation
The Ministry orders Cora to write a “disengagement script” for Rook: a series of calculated cruelties designed to make him hate her, thus neutralizing the anomaly. The goal is to generate “empathy resonance,” a