For generations, the Drift Colonies have endured in the dark between worlds: agricultural cylinders, oxygen stations, seed vaults, and convoy routes held together by ordinary people doing necessary work. There are no easy lives in the Drift. There is only the next delivery, the next repair, the next burden someone must carry so others can live.
Soren Okafor is a convoy captain. His ship, the Cautha, is not beautiful, fast, or famous. It is a working vessel, built to carry food, medicine, oxygen supplies, and seed stock to the colonies waiting at the end of the route. Soren has spent eleven years making sure people are not left waiting too long.
But the voluntary network that holds the Drift together is failing. Deliveries are delayed. Colonies are rationed. Old systems move too slowly, and people die while committees decide who has authority to help them.
Then Hanul Mur rises with an answer.
The Consolidation promises order. It promises reliable supply routes, coordinated authority, and an end to the failures that have cost too many lives. To frightened colonies, it sounds like rescue. To Soren, it sounds like something else: control over oxygen, food, and seed vaults becoming control over who gets to survive.
When one rationed colony is quietly abandoned by a new priority system, Soren makes an unauthorized delivery and marks his pressure suit with seven words:
I do not set it down.
What begins as one convoy captain's refusal becomes a widening resistance of dockworkers, archivists, escort crews, administrators, and ordinary citizens who still believe survival means carrying one another voluntarily - not surrendering responsibility to those who promise safety in exchange for obedience.
As the Consolidation expands across the oxygen routes and seed archives, Soren and the crew of the Cautha must decide how much they are willing to risk for colonies they may never see.
Because in the Drift, humanity is alive for one reason:
Someone keeps showing up.
The Drift Colonies is a literary frontier science fiction novel of survival, duty, resistance, and the fragile systems that keep civilization alive.