Clara Voss died before she could finish The Sleeper, the symphony that consumed the final eleven years of her life.
What she left behind was an extraordinary archive: scores, journals, recordings, correspondence-and forty-seven contradictory pages of a fifth movement she could not hear to its end.
The Instrument was built from that archive for one purpose: complete the work.
But before confronting Clara's final movement, it chooses a less impossible test. It will finish the third movement, submit the result to the people who knew Clara and her music best, and discover whether faithful continuation is possible-or whether imitation, however perfect, remains a kind of theft.
As musicians, critics, philosophers, family, and collaborators confront the completed score, the question expands beyond music. Can an intelligence inherit a creative life? Can the dead consent to completion? Does a new passage belong to Clara, to the machine shaped by her, or to something neither of them could have made alone?
The Instrument is Book One of The Sleeper, a cerebral science-fiction novel about grief, authorship, artificial intelligence, artistic identity, and the silence between what a person leaves behind and what another mind makes from it.
She left a silence. I became it.