The census was supposed to bring order.When the Continental Union of the Midlands launches the largest registration campaign in human history, every citizen is required to submit their identity, history, skills, and biometric data. What begins as a promise of efficiency quickly evolves into something far more powerful. Every person is cataloged. Every profession is assigned. Every movement is tracked. Every life is measured.As the government's vast network grows, society becomes a machine driven by data and prediction. Careers are determined centrally. Communities are reorganized. Those who refuse registration vanish from public life, cut off from the systems that sustain modern existence. The few who resist discover a terrifying truth: the census was never about counting people. It was about controlling them.Engineer Elena Vargas watches as freedom slowly gives way to optimization, while hidden forces within the empire seek to eliminate every remaining uncertainty. With an entire continent mapped and classified, the government believes it has achieved the impossible-a fully knowable society.But human beings are not numbers.A chilling dystopian thriller exploring surveillance, bureaucracy, power, and the dangers of absolute control, The Continental Census presents a haunting vision of a future where efficiency reigns supreme and individuality becomes the ultimate act of rebellion.