Karantina 4. Perde- Beyza Alkoc - -

Alkoç uses this scene to illustrate a harsh theme: in quarantine, leadership is not about courage but about the ability to postpone your own breakdown for the sake of others.

This act also deepens the betrayal arc. A beloved character from Karantina 3. Perde —a young man named Efe , who was İrem’s moral compass—is revealed to have been a government informant all along. But in a twist that defines the novel, Efe was not malicious. He was a father whose daughter was held hostage outside the dome. His betrayal was a form of love. This moral grayness is Alkoç’s strongest tool: no one is purely evil, just as no one remains purely sane. Karantina 4. Perde- Beyza Alkoc -

The final line of the book is İrem, sitting in the ashes of the medical wing, whispering to herself: "Perde kapanmaz. Sadece koyulaşır." ("The curtain does not close. It only darkens.") Alkoç uses this scene to illustrate a harsh

Alkoç masterfully uses the "stage" as a metaphor for the quarantine dome itself. The infected are not just sick; they are actors forced to repeat the same tragic script day after day—scavenge, hide, distrust, survive. The fourth act is where the audience (the reader) realizes that there may be no final curtain call. There is no rescue. Perde —a young man named Efe , who

The most harrowing sequence in 4. Perde occurs when the quarantine zone’s last remaining medical station catches fire. There is no fire department. There are no hydrants. The survivors form a bucket brigade from a contaminated river, knowing the water may infect them but also knowing the fire will consume their last cache of antibiotics. İrem leads the brigade, but halfway through, she freezes—staring into the flames as if seeing a portal to the world outside. A young girl slaps her across the face to snap her out of it. That girl, Zeynep (age 12), becomes the unlikely hero of the scene, shouting, "You can fall apart after we survive!"