In Golden City, superpowers are registered, regulated, and folded neatly into the machinery of everyday life.
Everett North is not a hero. He is a quiet bank employee with a minor invisibility ability: small objects, short duration, nothing remarkable. His life is ordinary, predictable, and carefully unnoticed.
Until fifty-two million disappears from a sealed vault.
No cameras detect a thief. No heat sensors register a body. No pressure alarms record a single step. The crime has no shape, no face, and no explanation, so the city gives it one.
Everett becomes the perfect suspect.
As the investigation turns into a public spectacle, Gardenia, the official assigned to his case, begins to notice the details that were left out. A second access-card swipe. A report made too clean. A witness who knows more than he is willing to say. And behind it all, the shadow of Golden City's celebrated heroes, powerful figures protected not only by their abilities, but by the institutions built around them.
But in a city that depends on convenient stories, innocence may not be enough.
Invisible is a dark superhero noir about justice, reputation, corruption, and the terrifying ease with which a system can turn a man into a monster simply because it needs one.