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.
Her co-pilot, Jalen, tapped the console. “Route looks clean. Cosmic dust low, micro-traffic clear. UPD ETA: forty-one hours.” eaglecraft 12110 upd
Mira squinted at the readout. “Send a hailing packet. Standard check.” They eased into the jump corridor, and the
Eaglecraft 12110 changed course. The ship’s cloak of routine peeled away, revealing something oddly intimate about deep space: its capacity to gather secrets and then abandon them like shells. Her co-pilot, Jalen, tapped the console
The logs unfolded in fragments: cheerful progress reports, field notes about a stabilization lattice—then a change in tone: fear, urgency. Dr. Ibarra’s voice returned, steadier now. “We found a pulse in the lattice. Not our machines. Something older. It responds to the lattice harmonics—the signature of a natural resonance. We tried to contain it. It changed frequency. The field began to sing.”
“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.”
The last recorded file was a solid minute of overlapping data: harmonic spikes that no instrument in Mira’s registry could classify. Then, silence.