Power isn’t always a decision. Sometimes it’s a dropdown.
Mara Keene is a systems analyst on the Platform Integrity team at Arcway Civic Systems, the contractor behind a state portal that handles licensing, complaints, and "support" for everything that matters. Her job is to keep the dashboards green and the workflows smooth-until a high-sensitivity case appears in her queue by mistake.
The complaint is disciplined: dates, screenshots, precise questions. But before any human reads it, the portal reacts. A containment routing rule fires. Templates queue themselves. The complainant is reclassified as a threat, pushed into "proper channels," and warned into silence with language that sounds like guidance.
When Mara checks the rule that triggered the response, her manager tells her not to "create artifacts." Compliance calls it alignment. HR calls it protection. The system calls it safety. Overnight, Mara’s access is "right-sized," exports are disabled, and she’s offered a resolution path: sign a clean acknowledgment, get her permissions back, and let the file close.
Instead, Mara does the one thing the portal can’t tolerate-she starts building a record. Screenshots. Timestamps. Policy clauses. Public contract links. A trail that reveals how service accounts enforce channels, how identity verification becomes leverage, and how evidence quietly expires unless someone places a hold.
ROUTED is a thriller about modern power at its most polite: the quiet violence of workflow, the professionalism of pressure, and what it costs to insist that truth is not a category.