The Documentarian
Age: 24 (at time of story)
Profession: Documentary filmmaker
Sienna Price arrived at Trap’s garage with a camera and questions that cut closer than Kale expected. She was making a film about memory modification—the legal industry and everything growing in its shadow.
But that wasn’t the whole truth.
The Mother
Sienna’s mother was a city councilwoman in San Antonio who opposed the Memory Verification Act. She called it unconstitutional. She called it the most dangerous legislation in thirty years.
Then she was invited to participate in a pilot program. “Civic alignment research,” they called it.
She came back supporting the Act. Enthusiastically. She gave interviews praising the technology. She travels around giving speeches about the importance of verified memory in democratic society.
She doesn’t remember that she has a daughter.
The Search
Sienna came to Houston hunting answers. Who authorized the program that stole her mother’s mind? Who developed the specific technology that could make a mother forget her own child?
She found Kale. Found something complicated—a man building something meaningful while losing himself in the process. Found love in the worst possible circumstances.
And eventually, she found the truth.
The Documentary
The Memory Broker: How Houston’s Underground Memory Trade Enabled a System of Control.
Sienna’s documentary destroyed Kale’s empire. It exposed the jury manipulation program, the connections to Dom’s network, the whole architecture of control masquerading as liberation.
She didn’t protect him. She couldn’t.
But she never stopped asking the questions that matter: Where does it stop? What happens when someone offers you enough money to cross the line?
“You’re trying to become undeniable. You think if you get big enough, loud enough, visible enough—no one can ever erase you. It won’t work. You can’t outrun that kind of wound.”
