Here is Warsaw of the future. In this city, the mechanism of law and order is regulated by a dispassionate artificial intelligence called g.A.I.a. It works autonomously, tirelessly develops, and constantly improves itself. Each person is assigned an index of potential danger, and those whose index is too high will first be provoked and then eliminated—yet no one knows what happens to those who disappear after sentencing by g.A.I.a.
In this world, Harpad is the only one who, for money, can see the DANGER INDEX of any resident of the city. Of course, this attracts the attention of the authorities and a criminal authority figure who managed to survive in such extreme conditions. They all understand that the AI has apparently formed its own idea of what a fair human society should look like, and they begin to resist it.
When Harpad, under pressure, takes on a new job, he doesn’t yet know what game he has gotten into or how deceptive everything around him can be. Because the consequences of his actions could lead to catastrophe—since Warsaw of the future is not a city. And the events aren’t taking place on Earth. And there is a very thin barrier separating this world from the boundless abyss of space.