Summary

Kai Rook keeps two lists: the things he must do and the things he swore never to tell. When a mission through the glittering arcades of a dying spaceport pulls him toward a girl who speaks in borrowed faces, he learns that survival isn’t a compass but a hypothesis tested against the people who trust him with their futures. In the claustrophobic quarters where old debts rumble like engines, Kai discovers that loyalty can be heavier than bulkheads, and that the best way to move forward is to accept the danger you can’t outrun.

In Feldhoff’s Scitt, the threads of ordinary life pull taut against the cosmos. The series embeds itself in a lineage of crisp worldbuilding and stark, character-driven choices, earning notice for its disciplined pacing and sharp focus on relationships under pressure. Readers who appreciate precise prose and lived-in stakes will find a steady, immersive thread linking episodes through personal loyalties and sudden, consequential decisions.

Titles