In 2223 technology had evolved enough to allow people's minds to be wiped clean without killing them. And that changes how private detectives work - a new type of them appears that take client confidentiality to an extreme - hire them, pay them a lot of money and when the case is done, all their memories get wiped. Lula Nomi is just getting her training completed post-wipe (because you lose all you had learned - not just the case details). She is late on her rent so when a client shows up with a proposal and a lot more money than Lola usually charges, she jumps at the missing person case she is offered. And things go predictably weird from there.
If it all sounds a bit too cliche, you can see my first issue with the story (or the second - but I will get to the first one shortly). The setup can work if there is something in it to take it out from the cliche but the wiping of the memory is not enough because it really does not help here at all, not at this stage anyway. But as it is a relatively short graphic novel, I decided to continue reading. Lola discovers that the missing journalist had gone to the station orbiting above Earth so off she goes after some more sleuthing Earth-side and a final test which allows her to actually work (not that she cared much that she was not certified when her client showed the money).
I do not know what I expected from this graphic novel. I know what I did not expect - a crazy professor, an evil corporation and rag-tag team of underdogs (human and alien) taking on the corporation in order to save the people who noone cares about. And yet, that is exactly what this story morphed into very quickly. The whole "your memory was wiped" was treated as a gimmick, the missing person case as just a way to get Lola up on the station (with a few nice discoveries on the way).
And throughout it all, I was waiting to see when and how the starting pages of the whole thing will become relevant. You see it starts explaining that in 2123 a nuclear war got both USA and EU out of commission, allowing Africa to rise and Johannesburg to become the center of Earth (now with a new name). It is a wonderful premise but... it is irrelevant to the story and the characters. We never get to hear where the aliens came from or how they work alongside humans - that would have been relevant.
The art is nice and the story is half-decent if you are in the mood for that type of story. But with the way it is marketed and its first pages the way they are, the whole thing is a huge letdown.