Imagine a world where every smile is a debt and every laugh has a price.In the silver city of Solis, peace is the ultimate law. To ensure no one suffers from the "e;excess"e; of human passion, the Bureau of Equilibrium monitors every heartbeat. In this society, happiness is a luxury—and it is taxed heavily. If you feel too much joy, you pay. If you fall in love, you go bankrupt. The goal is a perfect, flat line of neutrality. No wars, no heartbreak, but also no light.Amara is a top Auditor for the Bureau. She lives a quiet, grey life, measuring the emotional output of citizens and collecting the debt of their hearts. She believes she is a guardian of peace—until she meets Hiroshi.Hiroshi is a man who lives in the shadows of the Old Quarter. He grows illegal red roses and plays forbidden music on a scarred wooden cello. He doesn't care about the credits or the tax. He believes that a single moment of true joy is worth a lifetime of poverty.As Amara is drawn into Hiroshi's world of hidden rhythms and secret gardens, she begins to see the cracks in the silver walls. The "e;peace"e; of Solis is a hollow prison, and the emotional energy harvested from the people is being used for a much darker purpose. When a wave of suppressed grief threatens to swallow the city whole, Amara and Hiroshi must lead a desperate rebellion to break the system.Taxing Joy is a cinematic, deeply emotional journey about the power of the human spirit. It is a story for anyone who has ever been told to stay quiet, and for everyone who knows that being human—with all its pain and beauty—is worth any price.