Nothing about the scene looked violent.
That was the problem.
Caleb Rourke is a college student with no criminal record, no authority, and no one watching him too closely-exactly why he’s recruited to help clean up a death that can’t become a case.
What begins as a single job turns into a quiet apprenticeship in erasure: removing evidence, reshaping timelines, and learning how accidents are manufactured when the truth is inconvenient.
As a missing student becomes paperwork, campus security asks questions, and a patient detective starts noticing the wrong absences, Caleb is forced to confront the real cost of staying useful.
Clean Enough is a cold, procedural noir about systems that prefer closure over truth-and the people who learn how to disappear inside them.
This is not a story about justice.
It’s about what survives when justice is edited out.