A near-future techno-thriller where maps aren’t just lines—they’re promises. When the People’s Liberation Army launches an invasion of Taiwan, newly inaugurated U.S. President Alexander “Alex” Valen inherits a war that can’t be won with slogans. Every decision is a trade: speed versus law, deterrence versus escalation, compassion versus capacity. In the Pacific, sailors fight in the dark and at extreme range while leaders in Washington race a clock that favors the aggressor—because Congress, allies, and public opinion all have their own timelines. Then the war changes shape. As Taiwan holds, a different battlefield opens at the seam between nations: ports, manifests, screening stations, and the human beings trying to cross them. Refugees arrive by sea and overland. Captured soldiers become political liabilities. Evidence becomes leverage. A single denial at a boarding ramp can trigger sanctions, fracture elites, and force choices that coercion can no longer control. From the deck of a destroyer to a processing table in a crowded intake hall, from a commission convened on neutral ground to closed rooms in Beijing and the West Wing, The Mapmakers series asks a brutal question: what happens when mercy becomes strategy—and the world can’t look away? Fast, grounded, and relentlessly plausible, Mapmakers: Book One is a geopolitical thriller about war, law, and the hidden machinery that decides who gets to live inside the lines.