Jalen frowned. “Signal, starboard aft. Weak, unregistered. Origin—unknown vessel, signature like old mining probes.”
“Then we don’t cut; we translate,” Jalen said. He had been studying the waveforms. “We can modulate the echo—send a low-variance pattern that signals withdrawal. Calm the feedback. Give it a simple refrain that says: we are leaving; we mean no harm.”
Mira exchanged a look with Jalen. “Critical data?” she echoed, thinking of sensitive cargo manifest—outpost research, perhaps proprietary materials. UPD’s work skirted the edge of speculative physics; rumors said they experimented with minute gravity gradients to extract rare isotopes. A core breach could mean contamination, or worse, a field collapse. eaglecraft 12110 upd
“Whatever it is, it’s not simply energy,” Dr. Ibarra said. “It’s a memory. A living configuration encoded in the planet. We woke it, thinking we were miners. We were archaeologists who dug their fingers into a living thing.”
Outside, the planet’s resonance rose. The station’s hull vibrated. The screens painted waves like fingerprints. Instruments recorded organisms’ DNA matching fractal harmonics—and then, underneath, something else: signatures of machines that had once belonged to explorers long gone, their patterns integrated into the planet’s chorus. The planet had been listening for centuries. Jalen frowned
The bay door opened to reveal emptiness and a hush that felt older than the metal. The crew moved through corridors lined with frost and small scorch marks. A jellylike residue sat where instruments had once been. Their lights reflected in the dark like eyes.
They altered course for UPD and found the outpost by the way the sky bent around it: a ring of tethered habitats circling a core of processing towers, haloing a crater rim. The station’s beacons were dimmed and laced with static the way a lantern is when its fuel runs low. Origin—unknown vessel, signature like old mining probes
They eased into the jump corridor, and the world smeared into motion. Stars lengthened into streaks; the hum of the Eaglecraft deepened to a tone that threaded through Mira’s bones. Cruising here always felt like standing at the edge of two possibilities—what you were leaving and what waited on the other side.