โโAll right,โย I said, looking at the clock.ย โWe have one minute until the bell. You know what that means!โโ
โLightning round!โย yelled my students.
Life had changed surprisingly little since the announcement about the Petrova line.
The situation was dire and deadly, but it was also the norm. Londoners during the Blitz in World War II went about their day as normal, with the understanding that occasionally buildings get blown up. However desperate things were, someone still had to deliver milk. And if Mrs. McCreedyโs house got bombed in the night, well, you crossed it o๏ฌย the delivery list.
So it was that with the apocalypse loomingโpossibly caused by an alien life-formโI stood in front of a bunch of kids and taught them basic science. Because whatโs the point of even having a world if youโre not going to pass it on to the next generation?
The kids sat in neat rows of desks, facing the front. Pretty standard stu๏ฌ. But the rest of the room was like a mad scientistโs lab. Iโd spent years perfecting the look. I had a Jacobโs ladder in one corner (I kept it unplugged so the kids didnโt kill themselves). Along another wall was a bookshelf full of specimen jars of animal parts in formaldehyde. One of the jars was just spaghetti and a boiled egg. The kids speculated on that one a lot.
And gracing the center of the ceiling was my pride and joyโa huge mobile that was a model of the solar system. Jupiter was the size of a basketball, while wee Mercury was as small as a marble.
It had taken me years to cultivate a rep as theย โcoolโย teacher. Kids are smarter than most people think. And they can tell when a teacher actually
cares about them as opposed to when theyโre just going through the motions. Anyway, it was time for the lightning round!
I grabbed aย ๏ฌstful of beanbags o๏ฌย my desk.ย โWhat is the actual name of the North Star?โ
โPolaris!โย said Je๏ฌ.
โCorrect!โย I threw a beanbag to him. Before he even caught it, Iย ๏ฌred o๏ฌย the next question.ย โWhat are the three basic kinds of rocks?โ
โIgneous, sedentary, and metamorphic!โย yelled Larry. He was excitable, to say the least.
โSo close!โย I said.
โIgneous,ย sedimentary,ย and metamorphic,โย said Abby with a sneer. Pain in the ass, that one. But smart as a whip.
โYes!โย I threw her a beanbag.ย โWhat wave do you feelย ๏ฌrst during an earthquake?โ
โThe P-wave,โย Abby said.
โYou again?โย I threw her a beanbag.ย โWhatโs the speed of light?โ โThree times ten toโโย Abby began.
โC!โย yelled Regina from the back. She rarely spoke up. Good to see her coming out of her shell.
โSneaky, but correct!โย I chucked her a beanbag.ย โI was answeringย ๏ฌrst!โย Abby complained.
โBut sheย ๏ฌnishedย her answerย ๏ฌrst,โย I said.ย โWhatโs the nearest star to Earth?โ
โAlpha Centauri!โย Abby said quickly.ย โWrong!โย I said.
โNo, Iโm not!โ
โYes, you are. Anyone else?โ โOh!โย Larry said.ย โItโs the sun!โ
โRight!โย I said.ย โLarry gets the beanbag! Careful with your assumptions, Abby.โ
She folded her arms in a hu๏ฌ.
โWho can tell me the radius of Earth?โ
Trang raised his hand.ย โThree thousand, nine hundreโโ โTrang!โย Abby said.ย โThe answer is Trang.โ
Trang froze in confusion.ย โWhat?โย I asked.
Abby preened.ย โYou askedย who could tell youย the radius of Earth. Trang can tell you. I answered correctly.โ
Outsmarted by a thirteen-year-old. Wasnโt theย ๏ฌrst time. I dropped a beanbag on her desk just as the bell rang.
The kids leapt from their chairs and collected their books and backpacks.
Abby,ย ๏ฌush with victory, took a little more time than the others.
โRemember to cash in your beanbags at the end of the week for toys and other prizes!โย I said to their retreating backs.
Soon, the classroom was empty, and only the echoing sounds of children in the hallway suggested any evidence of life. I collected their homework assignments from my desk and slipped them into my valise. Sixth period was over.
Time to hit the teachersโย lounge for a cup of co๏ฌee. Maybe Iโd correct some papers before I headed home. Anything to avoid the parking lot. Aย ๏ฌeet of helicopter moms would be descending on the school to pick up their children. And if one of them saw me, theyย alwaysย had some complaint or suggestion. I canโt fault someone for loving their kids, and God knows we could do with more parents being engaged in their kidsโย educations, but thereโs a limit.
โRyland Grace?โย said a womanโs voice.
I looked up with a start. I hadnโt heard her come in.
She looked to be in her mid-forties, wearing a well-tailored business suit.
She carried a briefcase.
โUh, yeah,โย I said.ย โCan I help you with something?โ
โI think you can,โย she said. She had a slight accent. Something European
โI couldnโt quite put myย ๏ฌnger on it.ย โMy name is Eva Stratt. Iโm with the Petrova Taskforce.โ
โThe what?โ
โThe Petrova Taskforce. Itโs an international body set up to deal with the Petrova-line situation. Iโve been tasked withย ๏ฌnding a solution. Theyโve given me a certain amount of authority to get things done.โ
โThey? Whoโs they?โ
โEvery member nation of the UN.โ โWait, what? How didโโ
โUnanimous secret vote. Itโs complicated. Iโd like to talk to you about a scienti๏ฌc paper you wrote.โ
โSecret vote? Never mind.โย I shook my head.ย โMy paper-writing days are over. Academia didnโt work well for me.โ
โYouโre a teacher. Youโre still in academia.โ
โWell, yeah,โย I said.ย โBut I mean, you know,ย academia. With scientists and peer review andโโ
โAnd assholes who get you kicked out of your university?โย She raised an eyebrow.ย โAnd who got all your funding cut o๏ฌย and ensured you never got published again?โ
โYeah. That.โ
She pulled a binder out of her briefcase.
She opened it and read theย ๏ฌrst page.ย โ โAn Analysis of Water-Based Assumptions and Recalibration of Expectations for Evolutionary Models.โ โย She looked up at me.ย โYou wrote this paper, yes?โ
โIโm sorry, how did you getโโ
โA dull title, but very exciting content, I have to say.โ
I set my valise on my desk.ย โLook, I was in a bad place when I wrote that, okay? Iโd had enough of the research world and that was sort of aย โkiss-my- buttโย goodbye. Iโm much happier now as a teacher.โ
Sheย ๏ฌipped a few pages.ย โYou spent years combating the assumption that life requires liquid water. You have an entire section here calledย โThe Goldilocks Zone Is for Idiots.โย You call out dozens of eminent scientists by name and berate them for believing a temperature range is a requirement.โ
โYeah, butโโ
โYour doctorate is in molecular biology, correct? Donโt most scientists agree that liquid water is necessary for life to evolve?โ
โTheyโre wrong!โย I crossed my arms.ย โThereโs nothing magical about hydrogen and oxygen! Theyโre required forย Earthย life, sure. But another planet could have completely di๏ฌerent conditions. All life needs is a chemical reaction that results in copies of the original catalyst. And you donโt need water for that!โ
I closed my eyes, took a deep breath, and let it out.ย โAnyway, I got mad, and I wrote that paper. Then I got a teaching credential, a new career, and started actually enjoying my life. So Iโm glad no one believed me. Iโm better o๏ฌ.โ
โI believe you,โย she said.
โThanks,โย I said.ย โBut I have papers to grade. Can you tell me why youโre here?โ
She put the binder back in her briefcase.ย โYou are aware of theย ArcLightย probe and the Petrova line, I assume.โ
โIโd be a pretty lame science teacher if I wasnโt.โ โDo you think those dots are alive?โย she asked.
โI donโt knowโthey could just be dust bouncing around in magneticย ๏ฌelds. I guess weโllย ๏ฌnd out whenย ArcLightย gets back to Earth. Thatโs coming up, right? Just a few weeks from now?โ
โIt returns on the twenty-third,โย she said.ย โRoscosmos will recover it from low-Earth orbit with a dedicated Soyuz mission.โ
I nodded.ย โThen weโll know soon enough. The most brilliant minds in the world will look at them andย ๏ฌnd out what theyโre about. Whoโs going to do that? Do you know?โ
โYou,โย she said.ย โYouโre going to do it.โย I stared blankly.
She waved her hand in front of my face.ย โHello?โ โYou wantย meย to look at the dots?โย I said.
โYes.โ
โThe whole world put you in charge of solving this problem, and you came directly to a junior high school science teacher?โ
โYes.โ
I turned and walked out the door.ย โYouโre lying, insane, or a combination of the two. I have to get going now.โ
โThis is not optional,โย she said to my back.ย โSeems optional to me!โย I waved goodbye. Yeah. It wasnโt optional.
When I got back to my apartment, before I even got to my front door, four well-dressed men surrounded me. They showed me their FBI badges and hustled me into one of three black SUVs parked in the complex parking lot. After a twenty-minute drive where they refused to answer any of my questions or even speak to me at all, they parked and showed me into a generic-looking business-park building.
My feet barely touched the ground as they led me down an empty hallway with unmarked doors every 30 feet or so. Finally, they opened a set of double doors at the end of the hall and gently nudged me inside.
Unlike the rest of the abandoned building, this room was full of furniture and shiny, high-tech devices. It was the most well-stocked biology lab Iโd ever seen. And right in the middle of it all was Eva Stratt.
โHello, Dr. Grace,โย she said.ย โThis is your new lab.โ
The FBI agents closed the doors behind me, leaving Stratt and me alone in the lab. I rubbed my shoulder where they had manhandled me a little too hard.
I looked at the door behind me.ย โSoโฆwhen you sayย โa certain amount of authorityโโฆโ
โI have all of the authority.โ
โYou have an accent. Are you even from America?โ
โIโm Dutch. I was an administrator at ESA. But that doesnโt matter. Now Iโm in charge of this. There is noย timeย for slow, international committees. The sun is dying. We need a solution. Itโs my job toย ๏ฌnd it.โ
She pulled up a lab stool and sat down.ย โTheseย โdotsโย are probably a life- form. The exponential progression of solar dimming is consistent with the exponential population growth of a typical life-form.โ
โYou think theyโreโฆeatingย the sun?โ
โTheyโre eating its energy output at least,โย she said.
โOkay, thatโsโwell, terrifying. But regardless: What the heck do you want from me?โ
โTheย ArcLightย probe is bringing the samples back to Earth. Some of them might still be alive. I want you to examine them andย ๏ฌnd out what you can.โ
โYeah, you mentioned that earlier,โย I said.ย โBut I have to believe there are more quali๏ฌed people to do this than just me.โ
โScientists all over the world will be looking at them, but I want you to be theย ๏ฌrst.โ
โWhy?โ
โIt lives on or near the surface of the sun. Does that sound like a water- based life-form to you?โ
She was right. Water simply canโt exist at those temperatures. After about 3,000 degrees Celsius, the hydrogen and oxygen atoms canโt stay bound to each other anymore. The surface of the sun was 5,500 degrees Celsius.
She continued.ย โTheย ๏ฌeld of speculative extraterrestrial biology is smallโย onlyย ๏ฌve hundred or so people in the world. And everyone I talk toโfrom Oxford professors to Tokyo University researchersโseems to agree that you could have led it if you hadnโt suddenly left.โ
โGosh,โย I said.ย โI didnโt leave on good terms. Iโm surprised they said such nice stu๏ฌย about me.โ
โEveryone understands the gravity of the situation. Thereโs no time for old grudges. But for what itโs worth, youโll be able to show everyone you were right. You donโt need water for life. Surely that must be something you want.โ
โSure,โย I said.ย โI meanโฆyeah. But not like this.โ
She hopped o๏ฌย her stool and headed to the door.ย โIt is what it is. Be here on the twenty-third at sevenย Iโll have the sample for you.โ
โWhaโโย I said.ย โItโll be in Russia, wonโt it?โ
โI told Roscosmos to land their Soyuz in Saskatchewan. The Royal Canadian Air Force will recover the sample and bring it directly here to San Francisco viaย ๏ฌghter jet. The U.S. will allow the Canadians use of the airspace.โ
โSaskatchewan?โ
โSoyuz capsules are launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome, which is at a high latitude. The safest landing locations are at that same latitude. Saskatchewan is the closest large,ย ๏ฌat area to San Francisco that meets all the requirements.โ
I held up my hand.ย โWait. The Russians, Canadians, and Americans all just do whatever you tell them?โ
โYes. Without question.โ
โAre youย joshingย me with all this?!โ
โGet accommodated with your new lab, Dr. Grace. I have other things to deal with.โ
She walked out the door without another word.
โ
โYes!โย I pump myย ๏ฌst.
I jump to my feet and climb the ladder to the lab. Once there, I climb that ladder and grab hold of the Mystery Hatch.
Just like last time, as soon as I touch the handle, the computer says,ย โTo unlock hatch, state your name.โ
โRyland Grace,โย I say with a smug smile.ย โDr.ย Ryland Grace.โ
A small click from the hatch is the only response I get. After all the meditation and introspection I did toย ๏ฌnd out my own name, I wish thereโd been something more exciting. Confetti, maybe.
I grab the handle and twist. It turns. My domain is about to grow by at least one new room. I push the hatch upward. Unlike the connector between the bedroom and the lab, this hatch slides to the side. This next room is pretty small, so I guess there wasnโt room for the hatch to swing in. And that next room isโฆumโฆ?
LED lightsย ๏ฌick on. The room is round, like the other two, but itโs not a cylinder. The walls taper inward toward the ceiling. Itโs a truncated cone.
Iโve spent the last few days without much information to go on. Now information assaults me from every direction. Every surface is covered with computer monitors and touchscreens. The sheer number of blinking lights
and colors is staggering. Some screens have rows of numbers, others have diagrams, and others just look black.
On the edge of the conical walls is another hatch. This one is less mysterious, though. It has the wordย stenciled across the top, and the hatch itself has a round window in it. Through the window I can see a tiny chamberโjust big enough for one personโwith a spacesuit inside. The far wall has another hatch. Yup. Thatโs an airlock.
And in the center of everything is a chair. Itโs perfectly positioned to be able to reach all screens and touch panels easily.
I climb the rest of the way into the room and settle into the chair. Itโs comfortable, kind of a bucket seat.
โPilot detected,โย the computer says.ย โAngular anomaly.โย Pilot. Okay.
โWhere is the anomaly?โย I ask.ย โAngular anomaly.โ
HAL 9000 this computer is not. I look around at the many screens for a clue. The chair swivels easily, which is nice in this 360-degree computer pit. I spot one screen with a blinking red border. I lean in to get a better look.
ANGULAR ANOMALY: RELATIVE MOTION ERROR PREDICTED VELOCITY: 11,423 KPS
MEASURED VELOCITY: 11,872 KPS
STATUS: AUTO-CORRECTING TRAJECTORY. NO ACTION REQUIRED.
Well. That means nothing to me. Exceptย โkps.โย That might meanย โkilometers per second.โ
Above the text is a picture of the sun. Itโs jiggling around slightly. Maybe itโs a video? Like a live feed? Or is that just my imagination? On a hunch, I touch the screen with twoย ๏ฌngers and drag them apart.
Sure enough, the image zooms in. Just like using a smartphone. There are a couple of sunspots on the left side of the image. I zoom in on those until theyย ๏ฌll the screen. The image remains amazingly clear. Itโs either an extremely high-resolution photo or an extremely high-resolution solar telescope.
I estimate the cluster of sunspots is about 1 percent the width of the disc. Pretty normal for sunspots. That means Iโm now looking at half a degree of the sunโs circumference (very rough math here). The sun rotates about once per twenty-๏ฌve days (science teachers know this sort of thing). So it should take an hour for the spots to move o๏ฌย the screen. Iโll check back later and see if they have. If so, itโs a live image. If not, itโs a picture.
Hmmโฆ11,872 kilometers per second.
Velocity is relative. It doesnโt make any sense unless you are comparing two objects. A car on the freeway might be going 70 miles per hour compared to theย ground, but compared to the car next to it, itโs moving almost 0. So what is thatย โmeasured velocityโย measuring the velocity of? I think I know.
Iโm in a spaceship, right? I have to be. So that value is probably my velocity. But compared to what? Judging by the big olโย picture of the sun over the text, Iโm guessing itโs the sun. So Iโm going 11,872 kilometers per second with respect to the sun.
I catch aย ๏ฌicker from the text below. Did something change?
ANGULAR ANOMALY: RELATIVE MOTION ERROR PREDICTED VELOCITY: 11,422 KPS
MEASURED VELOCITY: 11,871 KPS
STATUS: AUTO-CORRECTING TRAJECTORY. NO ACTION REQUIRED.
Those numbers are di๏ฌerent! They both went down by one. Oh wow. Hang on. I pull the stopwatch from my toga (the best ancient Greek philosophers always carried stopwatches in their togas). Then I stare at the screen for what seems like an eternity. Just before Iโm about to give up, the numbers both drop by one again. I start the timer.
This time, Iโm ready for how long the wait will be. Again, it seems interminable, but I standย ๏ฌrm. Finally, the numbers both drop again and I stop the timer.
Sixty-six seconds.
โMeasured velocityโย is going down by one every sixty-six seconds. Some quick math tells me thatโs an acceleration ofโฆ15 meters per second per second. Thatโs the sameย โgravityโย acceleration I worked out earlier.
The force Iโm feeling isnโt gravity. And itโs not a centrifuge. Iโm in a spaceship that is constantly accelerating in a line. Well, actually itโs deceleratingโthe values are going down.
And that velocityโฆitโs a lot of velocity. Yes, itโs going down, but wow! To reach Earth orbit you only need to go 8 kps. Iโm going over 11,000. Thatโs faster than anything in the solar system. Anything that fast will escape the sunโs gravity and goย ๏ฌying o๏ฌย into interstellar space.
The readout doesnโt have anything to indicate what direction Iโm going. Just a relative velocity. So now my question is: Am I barrelingย towardย the sun, orย awayย from it?
Itโs almost academic. Iโm either on a collision course with the sun or on my way out to deep space with no hope of returning. Or, I might be headed in the sunโs general direction, but not on a collision course. If thatโs the case, Iโll miss the sunโฆandย thenย ๏ฌy o๏ฌย into deep space with no hope of returning.
Well, if the image of the sun is real-time, then the sunspot will get larger or smaller on-screen as I travel. So I just have to wait until I know if itโs real- time. Thatโll take about an hour. I start the stopwatch.
I acquaint myself with the million other screens in the little room. Most of them have something to say, but one of them just shows an image of a circular crest. I think itโs probably an idle screen or something. If I touch it, that computer will wake up. But that idle screen might be the most informative thing in here.
Itโs a mission crest. Iโve seen enough NASA documentaries to know one when I see one. The circular crest has an outer ring of blue with white text. The text readsย across the top andย across the bottom. The name andย โport of callโย for this vessel.
I didnโt think the ship came from somewhereย otherย than Earth, but okay.
Anyway, I guess Iย ๏ฌnally know the name of this ship Iโm on.
Iโm aboard theย Hail Mary.
Not sure what to do with that information.
But thatโs not all the crest has to tell me. Inside the blue band, thereโs a black circle with weird symbols inside: a yellow circle with a dot in the middle, a blue circle with a white cross, and a smaller yellow circle with a
lowercaseย t. No idea what any of that is supposed to mean. Around the edge of the black area it says:ย โๅง,โ โะะะฎะฅะะะ,โย andย โย โ
The crew.
Iโmย โGrace,โย so those other two must be the names of the mummies in the bunks downstairs. A Chinese person and a Russian person. The memory of them is almost at the surface, but I canโt quite pull it up. I think some internal defense mechanism is suppressing it. When I remember them, itโs going to hurt, so my brain refuses to remember them. Maybe. I donโt knowโIโm a science teacher, not a trauma psychologist.
I wipe my eyes clear. Maybe I wonโt push too hard for that memory just yet.
I have an hour to kill. I let my mind wander to see what else I can remember. Itโs getting easier and easier.
โ
โIโm not one hundred percent comfortable with all this,โย I said. My voice was mu๏ฌed by the full hazmat suit I wore. My breath fogged up the clear vinyl face-window thingy.
โYouโll beย ๏ฌne,โย said Strattโs voice over the intercom. She watched from the other side of double-paned, very thick glass.
Theyโd made a few upgrades to the lab. Oh, the equipment was all the same, but now the entire room was air-sealed. The walls were lined with thick plastic sheets, all held together with some kind of special tape. I saw CDC logos everywhere. Quarantine protocols. Not at all comforting.
The only entry now was through a big plastic airlock. And they made me put on the hazmat suit before going in. An air line led to my suit from a spool in the ceiling.
All the top-of-the-line equipment was ready for whatever I wanted to do. Iโd never seen a lab so well stocked. And in the middle was a wheeled cart holding a cylindrical container. Stenciled writing on the cylinder readย ะพะฑัะฐะทะตั. Not deeply useful.
Stratt wasnโt alone in the observation room. About twenty people in military uniforms stood with her, all looking on with interest. There were
de๏ฌnitely some Americans, some Russians, a few Chinese o๏ฌcers, plus many more unique uniforms I didnโt even recognize. A large international group. None of them said a word, and by some silent agreement, they all stayed a few feet behind Stratt.
I grabbed the air hose with my gloved hand and gestured to Stratt with it.ย โIs this really necessary?โ
She pressed the intercom button.ย โThereโs a very good chance the sample in that cylinder is an alien life-form. Weโre not taking any chances.โ
โWaitโฆyouโreย not taking any chances. But I am!โ โItโs not like that.โ
โHow is it not like that?โ
She paused.ย โOkay, itโs exactly like that.โ
I walked to the cylinder.ย โDid everyone else have to go through all this?โ
She looked at the military people and they shrugged at her.ย โWhat do you mean byย โeveryone elseโ?โ
โYou know,โย I said.ย โThe people who transferred it to this container.โ โThatโs the sample container from the capsule. Itโs three centimeters of
lead surrounding a shell of centimeter-thick steel. Itโs been sealed since it left
Venus. It has fourteen latches youโll need to open to get to the sample itself.โย I looked at the cylinder, back to her, back to the cylinder, and back to her.
โThis is some bull-puckey.โ
โLook at the bright side,โย she said.ย โYouโll be forever known as the man who madeย ๏ฌrst contact with extraterrestrial life.โ
โIf it even is life,โย I mumbled.
I got the fourteen latches open with some e๏ฌort. Those things were tight. I vaguely wondered about how theย ArcLightย probe closed them in theย ๏ฌrst place. Must have been some kind of cool actuated system.
The inside wasnโt impressive. I didnโt expect it to be. Just a small, clear, plastic ball that appeared to be empty. The mysterious dots were microscopic and there werenโt very many of them.
โNo radiation detected,โย Stratt said through the intercom.
I shot a glance over at her. She watched her tablet intensely. I took a good long look at the ball.ย โIs this under vacuum?โ
โNo,โย she said.ย โItโs full of argon gas at one atmosphere of pressure. The dots have been moving around the whole time the probe was returning from Venus. So it looks like the argon doesnโt a๏ฌect them.โ
I looked all around the lab.ย โThereโs no glove box here. I canโt just expose unknown samples to normal air.โ
โThe entire room is full of argon,โย she said.ย โMake sure you donโt kink your air line or rip your suit. If you breathe argonโโ
โIโll su๏ฌocate and wonโt even know itโs happening. Yeah, okay.โ
I took the ball to a tray and carefully twisted it until it came apart in two halves. I placed one half in a sealed plastic container and mopped the other half with a dry cotton swab. I scraped the swab against a slide and took it to a microscope.
I thought theyโd be harder toย ๏ฌnd, but there they were. Dozens of little black dots. And they were indeed wriggling around.
โYou recording all this?โ
โFrom thirty-six di๏ฌerent angles,โย she said.
โSample consists of many round objects,โย I said.ย โAlmost no variance in sizeโeach appears to be approximately ten microns in diameterโฆโ
I adjusted the focus and tried various intensities of backlighting.ย โSamples are opaqueโฆI canโt see inside, even at the highest available light settingโฆ.โ
โAre they alive?โย Stratt asked.
I glared at her.ย โI canโt just tell that at a glance. What do you expect to happen here?โ
โI want you toย ๏ฌnd out if theyโre alive. And if so,ย ๏ฌnd out how they work.โ โThatโs a tall order.โ
โWhy? Biologists worked out how bacteria works. Just do the same thing they did.โ
โThat took thousands of scientists two centuries to work out!โ โWellโฆdo it faster than that.โ
โTell you whatโโI pointed back to the microscopeโโIโm going to get back to work now. Iโll tell you anything I work out when I work it out. Until then, you can all enjoy some quiet study time.โ
I spent the next six hours doing incremental tests. Over that time, the military people wandered out, eventually leaving only Stratt by herself. I had to admire her patience. She sat in the back of the observation room and worked on her tablet, sometimes looking up to see what I was doing.
She perked up as I cycled my way through the airlock and into the observation room.ย โGot something?โย she asked.
I unzipped the suit and stepped out of it.ย โYeah, a full bladder.โ
She typed on her tablet.ย โI hadnโt accounted for that. Iโll get a bathroom installed inside the quarantine area tonight. Itโll have to be a chemical toilet. We canโt have plumbing going in and out.โ
โFine, whatever,โย I said. I hustled o๏ฌย to the facilities to do my business.
When I returned, Stratt had pulled a small table and two chairs to the center of the observation room. She sat in one of the chairs and gestured to the other.ย โHave a seat.โ
โIโm in the middle ofโโ โHave a seat.โ
I took a seat. She had a commanding presence, thatโs for sure. Something about her tone of voice or her general con๏ฌdence level, maybe? One way or another, when she spoke you just kind of assumed you should do what she said.
โWhat have you found so far?โย she asked.ย โItโs only been one afternoon,โย I said.
โI didnโt ask how long itโs been. I asked what youโve found out so far.โ
I scratched my head. After hours in that suit, I was sweaty and presumably smelled bad.ย โItโsโฆweird. I donโt know what those dots are made of. And Iโd really like to know.โ
โIs there some equipment you need that you donโt have?โย she asked.
โNo, no. Thereโs everything a guy could hope for in there. It justโฆdoesnโt work on these dots.โย I settled back into the chair. Iโd been on my feet most of the day and it was nice to relax for a moment.ย โFirst thing I tried was the x- ray spectrometer. It sends x-rays into a sample, making it emit photons and you can tell from the wavelengths of the photons what elements are present.โ
โAnd what did that tell you?โ
โNothing. As far as I can tell, these dots just absorb x-rays. The x-rays go in and they never come out. Nothing comes out. Thatโs very odd. I canโt think of anything that does that.โ
โOkay.โย She took some notes on her tablet.ย โWhat else can you tell me?โ โNext I tried gas chromatography. Thatโs where you vaporize the sample
and then identify the elements or compounds in the resulting gas. That didnโt
work either.โ โWhy not?โ
I threw up my hands.ย โBecause the darn things just wonโt vaporize. That led me down a rabbit hole of burners, ovens, and crucible furnaces that turned up nothing. The dots are una๏ฌected at temperatures up to two thousand degrees Celsius. Nothing.โ
โAnd thatโs odd?โ
โItโs crazy odd,โย I said.ย โBut these things live on the sun. At least some of the time. So I guess having a high resistance to heat makes sense.โ
โTheyย liveย on the sun?โย she said.ย โSo theyโre a life-form?โ โIโm pretty sure they are, yeah.โ
โElaborate.โ
โWell, they move around. Itโs plainly visible through the microscope. That alone doesnโt prove theyโre aliveโinert stu๏ฌย moves all the time from static charge or magneticย ๏ฌelds or whatever. But there is something else I noticed. Something weird. And it made the pieces fall into place.โ
โOkay.โ
โI put a few dots under a vacuum and ran a spectrograph. Just a simple test to see if they emit light. And they do, of course. They give o๏ฌย infrared light at the 25.984 micron wavelength. Thatโs the Petrova frequencyโthe light that makes the Petrova line. I expected that. But then I noticed they only emit light when theyโre moving. And boy, do they emit a lot of it. I mean, not a lot from our point of view, but for a tiny single-celled organism itโs a ton.โ
โAnd how is that relevant?โ
โI did some back-of-the napkin math. And Iโm pretty sure that light is how they move around.โ
Stratt raised an eyebrow.ย โI donโt follow.โ
โBelieve it or not, light has momentum,โย I said.ย โIt exerts a force. If you were out in space and you turned on aย ๏ฌashlight, youโd get a teeny, tiny amount of thrust from it.โ
โI didnโt know that.โ
โNow you do. And a teeny-tiny thrust on a teeny-tiny mass can be an e๏ฌective form of propulsion. I measured the dotsโย average mass at about twenty picograms. That took a long time, by the way, but that lab equipment is awesome. Anyway, the movement I see is consistent with the momentum of the emitted light.โ
She set her tablet down. I had, apparently, accomplished the rare feat of getting her undivided attention.ย โIs that something that happens in nature?โ
I shook my head.ย โNo way. Nothing in nature has that kind of energy storage. You donโt understand how much energy these dots are emitting. Itโs likeโฆgetting to the scales of mass conversion.ย E = mc2ย kind of stu๏ฌ. These tiny dots have more energy stored up in them than remotely makes sense.โ
โWell,โย she said.ย โThey did just come from the sun. And the sun is losing energy.โ
โYeah. Thatโs why I think itโs a life-form,โย I said.ย โIt consumes energy, stores it in some way we donโt understand, then uses it for propulsion. Thatโs not a simple physical or chemical process. Thatโs complex and directed. Something that must have evolved.โ
โSo the Petrova line isโฆtiny little rocketย ๏ฌares?โ
โProbably. And I bet weโre only seeing a small percentage of the total light coming o๏ฌย that area. They use it to propel themselves to Venus or to the sun. Or both. I donโt know. Point is, the light will go away from their direction of travel. Earth isnโt in that line, so we only see the light that re๏ฌects o๏ฌย nearby space dust.โ
โWhy do they go to Venus?โย she asked.ย โAnd how do they reproduce?โ โGood questions. Ones I donโt have answers for. But if theyโre single-celled
stimulus/response organisms, they probably reproduce through mitosis.โย I
paused.ย โThatโs when the cell splits in half to become two new cellsโโ
โYes, I know that much, thank you.โย She looked to the ceiling.ย โPeople always assumed ourย ๏ฌrst contact with alien lifeโif any existedโwould be
little green men in UFOs. We never considered the idea of a simple, unintelligent species.โ
โYeah,โย I said.ย โThis isnโt Vulcans dropping by to say hi. This isโฆspace algae.โ
โAn invasive species. Like cane toads in Australia.โ
โGood analogy.โย I nodded.ย โAnd the population is growing. Fast. The more of them there are, the more solar energy gets consumed.โ
She pinched her chin.ย โWhat would you call an organism that exists on a diet of stars?โ
I struggled to remember my Greek and Latin root words.ย โI think youโd call itย โAstrophage.โ โ
โAstrophage,โย she said. She typed it into her tablet.ย โOkay. Get back to work. Find out how they breed.โ
โ
Astrophage!
The word alone makes all my muscles clinch up. A chilling terror that hits like a lead weight.
Thatโs the name. The thing that threatens all life on Earth. Astrophage.
I glance at the monitor with my zoomed-in image of the sun. The sunspots have moved noticeably. Okay, itโs a real-time image. Good to know.
WaaaaaitโฆI donโt think theyโre moving at the right speed. I check the stopwatch. I was only daydreaming for ten minutes or so. The sunspots should have moved a fraction of a degree. But theyโre halfway o๏ฌย the screen. Way more than they should have moved.
I pull the tape measure from my toga. I zoom out the image and actually measure the widths of the sun and sunspot cluster on the screen. No more rough estimates. I want real math here.
The solar disc is 27 centimeters on-screen and the sunspots are 3 millimeters. And they moved half their width (1.5 millimeters) in ten minutes. Actually, it was 517 seconds, according to my stopwatch. I scribble some math on my arm.
At this resolution, theyโre moving 1 millimeter every 344.66 seconds. To cross the entire 27 centimeters it would take (scribble, scribble) just over 93,000 seconds. So itโll take that long for the cluster to cross the near side of the sun. Itโll take twice that long to get all the way around. So 186,000 seconds. Thatโs a little over two days.
Over ten times faster than the rotation should be. This star Iโm looking atโฆitโs not the sun.
Iโm in a di๏ฌerent solar system.