
THE DRIFT
ADVANCE READER COPY: THE DRIFT
The world after the collapse did not end in fire. It ended in systems.
Una is a drifter, moving west along roads that have forgotten what they were built for, through a landscape of disciplined stillness and controlled air. The Hive reaches outward from the east, not through armies or commands, but through pressure.
Through the slow, quiet insistence that everything and everyone should resolve into something readable, manageable, and still. Una cannot be made still. Her body rejects alignment the way a graft rejects foreign tissue, converting the Hive's attempts at obedience into pain she carries like a second heartbeat. This makes her dangerous. It also makes her a target.
Along the road west, Una moves through worlds that have each found their own answer to an unanswerable world. A village built on dead air, surviving by refusing to disturb the atmosphere. A listening station measuring pressure fronts that stopped being weather. A highway where men have claimed the wind itself and charge passage in categories she will not accept. A quarry that corrected its own corruption and now administers compliance without ideology or mercy.
Each place offers shelter and demands surrender. Each place teaches Una the same lesson in a different accent: stillness is not safety. It is a different kind of trap, slower and more confident than pursuit, because it does not need to chase what it trusts will eventually stop moving on its own.
THE DRIFT is a novel about the cost of passage in a world where every system, human and otherwise, believes it has the right to make you legible. It is about what survives in stone when pressure has finished with it, about the difference between enduring and belonging, and about a woman who walks through a landscape of competing controls without ever quite becoming one of them.
The Hive is coming. The systems are tightening. And Una, bleeding and exact and impossible to align, keeps moving west into a world that wants her to be still long enough to be finished.
Series: Warriors of the Last Days | Reading order position: Book III of IV

The Drift Comparables: literary post-apocalyptic fiction with procedural dread, systemic horror, strong ecological horror, and restrained prose: readers of Cormac McCarthy, Emily St. John Mandel, and Paul Tremblay.

Stéphane Roy is a lifelong reader and writer with a deep love for science fiction, apocalyptic worlds, and tightly constructed mysteries. This is his first novel. He lives in the Yukon with his dog and his aquarium, where long winters, silence, and wide, sometimes glowing, skies leave plenty of room for imagining the end of the world, and what might come after it. He is also waiting, with cautious optimism, for the aliens to finally reveal themselves and straighten us all out.