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Chapter no 17

Project Hail Mary

โ€ŒIwake up with Rocky staring at me.โ€Œ

It happens every morning now. But it never stops being creepy.

How do I know that a pentagonally symmetrical creature with no eyes isย โ€œstaringโ€ย at me? I just know. Something in the body language.

โ€œYou awake,โ€ย he says.

โ€œYeah.โ€ย I step out of bed and stretch.ย โ€œFood!โ€

The arms reach up and hand me a hot box. I open it up and take a peek.

Looks like eggs and sausage.ย โ€œCo๏ฌ€ee.โ€

The arms dutifully hand me a cup of co๏ฌ€ee. Itโ€™s kind of cool that the arms will hand me a cup when thereโ€™s gravity, but a pouch when there isnโ€™t. Iโ€™ll remember this when writing up theย Hail Maryโ€™s Yelp review.

I look to Rocky.ย โ€œYou donโ€™t have to watch me sleep. Itโ€™s okay.โ€

He turns his attention to a worktable in his partition of the dormitory.ย โ€œEridian culture rule. Must watch.โ€ย He picks up a device and tinkers with it.

Ah, the c-word.ย โ€œCulture.โ€ย We have an unspoken agreement that cultural things just have to be accepted. It ends any minor dispute.ย โ€œDo it my way because itโ€™s how I was raised,โ€ย basically. We havenโ€™t run into anything where our cultures clashโ€ฆyet.

I eat my breakfast and drink my co๏ฌ€ee. Rocky doesnโ€™t say anything to me during that time. He never does. Eridian courtesy.

โ€œTrash,โ€ย I say.

The arms collect my empty cup and meal package.

I head up to the control room and settle into the pilotโ€™s seat. I bring up the telescope view on the main screen. Planet Adrian sits in the center. Iโ€™ve been watching it grow larger and larger for the past ten days. The closer we get, the more I respect Rockyโ€™s astronomy skills. All of his observations on its motion and mass have been spot-on.

Hopefully his gravity calculation is right too. Or weโ€™ll have a very short and painful attempt to orbit.

Adrian is a pale-green planet with wispy white clouds in the upper atmosphere. I canโ€™t see the ground at all. Again, Iโ€™m amazed at the software that must have gone into this shipโ€™s computers. We are spinning around as we hurtle through space. But the image on-screen is rock solid.

โ€œWeโ€™re getting close,โ€ย I say. Rocky is twoย ๏ฌ‚oors below me, but I speak at a normal volume. I know he can hear it justย ๏ฌne.

โ€œYou know air yet, question?โ€ย Rocky calls out. Just as I know his hearing prowess, he knows my hearing limitations.

โ€œIโ€™ll try again right now,โ€ย I say.

I switch to the Spectrometer screen. Theย Hail Maryย has been incredibly reliable in almost every way, but you canโ€™t expect everything to work perfectly. The spectrometer has been acting up. I think it has something to do with the digitizer. Iโ€™ve been trying it every day, and it keeps saying it canโ€™t get enough data to analyze.

I zero in on Adrian and give it another go. The closer we get, the more re๏ฌ‚ected light weโ€™ll get, and maybe itโ€™ll be enough for the spectrometer to tell me what Adrianโ€™s atmosphere is made of.

โ€ฆ

โ€ฆ

โ€ฆ

.ย โ€œIt worked!โ€ย I say.

โ€œWorked, question?!โ€ย Rocky says, a full octave higher than normal. He scampers up his tunnels to the control-room bulb.ย โ€œWhat is Adrian air, question?โ€

I read the results o๏ฌ€ย the screen.ย โ€œLooks like itโ€™sโ€ฆ91 percent carbon dioxide, 7 percent methane, 1 percent argon, and the rest are trace gases. Itโ€™s a pretty thick atmosphere too. Those are all clear gases, but I canโ€™t see the planetโ€™s surface.โ€

โ€œNormally you can see surface of planet from space, question?โ€ย โ€œIf the atmosphere lets light through, yes.โ€

โ€œHuman eyes are amazing organ. Jealous.โ€

โ€œWell, not amazing enough. I canโ€™t see Adrianโ€™s surface. When air gets really thick, it stops letting light through. Anyway, thatโ€™s not important. The methaneโ€”thatโ€™s weird.โ€

โ€œExplain.โ€

โ€œMethane doesnโ€™t last. It breaks apart very fast in sunlight. So how is methane present?โ€

โ€œGeology creates methane. Carbon dioxide plus minerals plus water plus heat makes methane.โ€

โ€œYes. Possible,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œBut thereโ€™s a lot of methane. Eight percent of a very thick atmosphere. Can geology make that much?โ€

โ€œYou have di๏ฌ€erent theory, question?โ€

I rub the back of my neck.ย โ€œNo. Not really. It is odd, though.โ€ย โ€œDiscrepancy is science. You think about discrepancy. Make theory. You is

science human.โ€

โ€œYes. Iโ€™ll think about it.โ€

โ€œHow long until orbit, question?โ€

I switch to the Navigation console. Weโ€™re right on course, and the orbital- insertion burn is scheduled for twenty-two hours from now.ย โ€œJust under one day,โ€ย I say.

โ€œExcitement,โ€ย he says.ย โ€œThen we sample Astrophage at Adrian. You ship sampler working well, question?โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ย I say, with no way to know if Iโ€™m telling the truth. Thereโ€™s no reason for Rocky to know I only vaguely understand the operation of my own ship.

Iย ๏ฌ‚ip through the science instruments until I land on the controls for the External Collection Unit. I look at the diagram on the screen. Itโ€™s simple enough. The sampler is a rectangular box. When activated, it will pivot up to

be perpendicular to the hull. Then, doors on both sides of the rectangle will open up. Inside, thereโ€™s a bunch of sticky resinโ€”ready to catch anything thatย ๏ฌ‚ies in.

Thatโ€™s it. Flypaper. Fancy spaceย ๏ฌ‚ypaper, but justย ๏ฌ‚ypaper.ย โ€œAfter collection, how sample enter ship, question?โ€

Simple doesnโ€™t mean convenient. As far as I can tell, thereโ€™s no automated

system to do anything with the sample.ย โ€œI have to go get it.โ€ย โ€œHumans are amaze. You leave ship.โ€

โ€œYeah, I guess.โ€

Eridians never bothered to invent spacesuits. Why would they? Space is devoid of sensory input to them. It would be like a human with scuba gear diving into an ocean of black paint. Thereโ€™s just no reason to do it. Eridians use hull robots for EVA work. Theย Hail Maryย doesnโ€™t have one of those, so any EVA work has to be done by me.

โ€œAmaze is wrong word,โ€ย he says.ย โ€œAmaze is compliment. Better word is

โ™ซโ™ชโ™ซโ™ช.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s that mean?โ€

โ€œIt is when person not act normal. Danger to self.โ€

โ€œAh,โ€ย I say, adding the new chord into my language database.ย โ€œCrazy. My word for that isย โ€˜crazy.โ€™ โ€

โ€œCrazy. Humans are crazy.โ€ย I shrug.

โ€”

โ€œGosh darn it!โ€ย I said.

โ€œLanguage!โ€ย came the voice over the radio.ย โ€œSeriously, though, what happened?โ€

The sample vial fell gently away from my hand to the bottom of the pool. It took several seconds to fall 3 feet but, wearing this EVA suit at the bottom of the worldโ€™s largest swimming pool, I had no chance of reaching out to grab it.

โ€œI dropped vial number three.โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ย said Forrester.ย โ€œThatโ€™s three vials so far. Weโ€™re going to have to work on the clamper tool.โ€

โ€œMight not be the tool. Might just be me.โ€

The tool in my awkwardly gloved hand was far from perfect, but still pretty ingenious. It turned the clumsy pawing of an EVA suit glove intoย ๏ฌne manipulation at the other end. All I had to do was squeeze a trigger with my indexย ๏ฌnger and the clamp constricted by 2 millimeters. If I squeezed a di๏ฌ€erent trigger with my middleย ๏ฌnger, it would rotate up to 90 degrees clockwise. My ring and pinkieย ๏ฌngers made it tilt forward up to 90 degrees.

โ€œStand by, Iโ€™m checking the video,โ€ย said Forrester.

NASAโ€™s Neutral Buoyancy Lab at Johnson Space Center was a marvel of engineering in itself. The gigantic swimming pool was large enough toย ๏ฌt a full-size replica of the International Space Station inside. They used it to train astronauts on zero-g maneuvering while in EVA suits.

After countless meetings (that I was unfortunately forced to attend), the microbiology community convinced Stratt the mission needed custom- designed tools. She agreed, on the condition that none of them be mission- critical. She was resolute on having all the important stu๏ฌ€ย be o๏ฌ€-the-shelf products with millions of hours of consumer testing.

And, being her little science lapdog, it fell to me to test out the IVME kit.

IVME was an acronym that stood for four words God never intended to be together:ย โ€œin vacuo microbiology equipment.โ€ย Astrophage lives in space. We could study them on Earth in our atmosphere all we wanted, but we wouldnโ€™t get the full picture of how they worked until we studied them in vacuum and in zero g. The crew of theย Hail Maryย would need these tools.

I stood in one corner of the NBL, the imposingย ๏ฌgure of ISS behind me. Two scuba diversย ๏ฌ‚oated nearby, ready to rescue me in the event of an emergency.

NASA had sunk a metal lab table into the pool for me. The biggest problem wasnโ€™t making equipment that worked in vacuumโ€”though they did have to completely redesign pipettes because thereโ€™s no suction force in space. The problem was the ham-๏ฌsted EVA gloves the user had to wear. Astrophage may like vacuum, but human bodies certainly donโ€™t.

But hey, at least I was learning a lot about how Russian EVA suits worked.

Yes, Russian. Not American. Stratt listened to several experts and they all agreed the Russian Orlan EVA suit was the safest and most reliable. So thatโ€™s what the mission would use.

โ€œOkay, I see what happened,โ€ย said Forrester through the headset.ย โ€œYou told the clamp to tilt yaw, but it released instead. The internal microcable wires must be tangled up. Iโ€™ll be right there. Can you surface and bring the clamp with you?โ€

โ€œSure thing.โ€ย I waved to the two divers and pointed upward. They nodded and helped me to the surface.

I got hoisted out of the pool by a crane assembly and placed on the deck nearby. Several techs came forward and helped me out of the suit. Though it was pretty easyโ€”I just stepped out the back panel. Got to love chrysalis suits.

Forrester came from the control room next door and collected the tool.ย โ€œIโ€™ll make some changes and we can try again in a couple of hours. I got a call while you were in the pool; youโ€™re needed in Building 30. Shapiro and DuBois have a couple-hour break while they reset theย ๏ฌ‚ight-control simulators. No rest for the wicked. Stratt wants you over there training them on Astrophage.โ€

โ€œCopy that, Houston,โ€ย I said. The world might have been ending, but being at NASAโ€™s main campus was too awesome for me not to be excited.

I left the NBL and walked to Building 30. They would have sent a car if Iโ€™d asked, but I didnโ€™t want one. It was only a ten-minute walk. Besides, I loved walking around in my countryโ€™s space history.

I walked in, through security, and onward to a small conference room theyโ€™d set up. Martin DuBois, in his blueย ๏ฌ‚ight uniform, stood and shook my hand.ย โ€œDr. Grace. Good to see you again.โ€

His meticulous paperwork and notes were arrayed in front of him. Annie Shapiroโ€™s sloppy notes and wadded papers lay strewn on the table next to him, but her seat was empty.

โ€œWhereโ€™s Annie?โ€ย I asked.

He sat back down. Even while seated, he kept aย ๏ฌrm, perfect posture.ย โ€œShe had to use the facilities. She should be back shortly.โ€

I sat down and opened my backpack.ย โ€œYou know, you can call me Ryland.

Weโ€™re all PhDs here. I thinkย ๏ฌrst names areย ๏ฌne.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry, Dr. Grace. That is not how I was raised. However, you may call me Martin if you wish.โ€

โ€œThanks.โ€ย I pulled out my laptop andย ๏ฌred it up.ย โ€œHow have you been lately?โ€

โ€œI have been well, thank you. Dr. Shapiro and I have begun a sexual relationship.โ€

I paused.ย โ€œUm. Okay.โ€

โ€œI thought it prudent to inform you.โ€ย He opened his notebook and set a pen beside it.ย โ€œThere should be no secrets within the core mission group.โ€

โ€œSure, sure,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œI mean. It shouldnโ€™t be a problem. Youโ€™re the primary science position and Annieโ€™s the alternate. Thereโ€™s no scenario where you wouldย bothย be on the mission. Butโ€ฆI meanโ€ฆyour relationshipโ€ฆโ€

โ€œYes, you are correct,โ€ย DuBois said.ย โ€œI will be setting out on a suicide mission in under a year. And if for some reason I am deemed un๏ฌt or unable, she will go on the suicide mission. We are aware of this, and we know this relationship can only end in death.โ€

โ€œWe live in bleak times,โ€ย I said.

He folded his hands in front of him.ย โ€œDr. Shapiro and I do not see it that way. We are enjoying very active sexual encounters.โ€

โ€œYeah, okay, I donโ€™t need to knowโ€”โ€

โ€œNo need for condoms either. She is on birth control and we have both had extremely thorough medical examinations as part of the program.โ€

I typed on my computer, hoping heโ€™d change the subject.ย โ€œItโ€™s quite pleasurable.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sure it is.โ€

โ€œIn any event, I thought you should know.โ€ โ€œYeah, no, sure.โ€

The door opened, and Annie trotted in.

โ€œSorry! Sorry! I had to pee. Likeโ€ฆso bad,โ€ย said the worldโ€™s smartest and most accomplished microbiologist.ย โ€œMy back teeth wereย ๏ฌ‚oating!โ€

โ€œWelcome back, Dr. Shapiro. Iโ€™ve told Dr. Grace about our sexual relationship.โ€

I put my head in my hands.

โ€œCool,โ€ย said Annie.ย โ€œYeah, weโ€™ve got nothing to hide.โ€

โ€œIn any event,โ€ย said DuBois,ย โ€œif I remember the previous lesson correctly, we were working on the cellular biology within Astrophage mitochondria.โ€

I cleared my throat.ย โ€œYes. Today Iโ€™ll be talking about the Astrophageโ€™s Krebs cycle. Itโ€™s identical to what weย ๏ฌnd in Earth mitochondria, but with one additional stepโ€”โ€

Annie held up her hand.ย โ€œOh, sorry. One more thingโ€”โ€ย She turned to DuBois.ย โ€œMartin, we have aboutย ๏ฌfteen minutes of personal time after this lesson and before our next training exercise. Want to meet up in the bathroom down the hall and have sex?โ€

โ€œIย ๏ฌnd that agreeable,โ€ย said DuBois.ย โ€œThank you, Dr. Shapiro.โ€ โ€œOkay, cool.โ€

They both looked to me, ready for their lesson. I waited a few seconds to make sure there was no more oversharing, but they seemed content.ย โ€œOkay, so the Krebs cycle in Astrophage has a variantโ€”wait. Do you call her Dr. Shapiroย whileย having sex?โ€

โ€œOf course. Thatโ€™s her name.โ€ โ€œI kind of like it,โ€ย she said.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry I asked,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œNow, the Krebs cycleโ€ฆโ€

โ€”

Rockyโ€™s data about Planet Adrian was dead-on. Itโ€™s 3.93 times Earthโ€™s mass and has a radius of 10,318 kilometers (almost double Earthโ€™s). Itโ€™s plugging along around Tau Ceti with an average orbital velocity of 35.9 kilometers per second. Plus, he had the position of the planet correct to within 0.00001 percent. That data was all I needed to work out the insertion thrust needed.

Itโ€™s a good thing those numbers were right. If they hadnโ€™t been, there would have been some serious scrambling when the orbital insertion went wrong. Maybe even some dying.

Of course, to use the spin drives at all, I had to take us out of centrifuge mode.

Rocky and Iย ๏ฌ‚oat in the control room, he in his ceiling bulb and me in the pilotโ€™s seat. I watch the camera-feed screen with a stupid grin on my face.

Iโ€™m at another planet! I shouldnโ€™t be this excited. Iโ€™ve been at anotherย starย for the past several weeks. But thatโ€™s kind of esoteric. Tau Ceti is pretty much like the sun. Itโ€™s bright, you canโ€™t get too close to it, and it even emits the same general range of frequencies. For some reason, being at a newย planetย is much more exciting.

The wispy clouds of Adrian coast by beneath us. Or, more accurately, the wispy clouds barely move at all and we zoom by overhead. Adrian has a higher gravity than Earth, so our orbital velocity is just over 12 kilometers per secondโ€”far more than whatโ€™s needed to orbit Earth.

The pale-green planet that Iโ€™ve been watching for eleven days has a lot more detail now that weโ€™re on top of it. Itโ€™s not just green. There are dark and light bands of green wrapping around it. Just like Jupiter and Saturn. But unlike those two gas-giant leviathans, Adrian is a rocky world. Thanks to Rockyโ€™s notes, we know the radius and mass, which means we know its density. And itโ€™s far too dense to be just gas. Thereโ€™s a surface down there, I just canโ€™t see it.

Man, what I wouldnโ€™t give for a lander!

Realistically, it wouldnโ€™t do me any good. Even if I had some way of landing on Adrian, the atmosphere would crush me dead. Itโ€™d be like landing on Venus. Or Erid, for that matter. Heck, in that case, I wishย Rockyย had a lander. The pressure down there might not be too much for an Eridian.

Speaking of Erid, Rockyโ€™s calibrating some kind of device in his control- room bubble. It looks almost like a gun. I donโ€™t think weโ€™ve started a space war, so I assume itโ€™s something else.

He holds the device with one hand, taps it with another, and uses two more to hold a rectangular panel that is connected to the device by a short cable. He uses his remaining hand to anchor himself at a handhold.

He makes some more adjustments to the device with what looks like a screwdriver, and suddenly the panel springs to life. It was completelyย ๏ฌ‚at, but now has a texture to it. He waves the gun part left and right and the patterns on the screen move left and right.

โ€œSuccess! It functions!โ€

I lean over the edge of the pilotโ€™s seat for a better look.ย โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€ย โ€œWait.โ€ย He points the gun part at my external camera readout screen. He

adjusts a couple of controls and the pattern on the rectangle settles into a

circle. Looking closer, I see some parts of the circle are a little more raised than others. It looks like a relief map.

โ€œThis device hear light. Like human eye.โ€ โ€œOh. Itโ€™s a camera.โ€

โ€œโ™ซโ™ชโ™ซ,โ€ย he says quickly. Now we haveย โ€œcameraโ€ย in our vocabulary.ย โ€œIt analyze light and show as texture.โ€

โ€œOh, and you can sense that texture?โ€ย I say.ย โ€œCool.โ€

โ€œThank.โ€ย He attaches the camera to the bulb wall andย ๏ฌxes its angle to point at my central screen.ย โ€œWhat are wavelengths of light humans can see, question?โ€

โ€œAll wavelengths between 380 nanometers and 740 nanometers.โ€ย Most people donโ€™t just know that o๏ฌ€ย the top of their head. But most people arenโ€™t junior high schoolteachers who have giant charts of the visible spectrum on their classroom walls.

โ€œUnderstand,โ€ย he says. He turns a few knobs on his device.ย โ€œNow Iย โ€˜seeโ€™ย what you see.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re an amazing engineer.โ€

He waves a claw dismissively.ย โ€œNo. Camera is old technology. Display is old technology. Both were on my ship for science. I only modify to use inside.โ€

I think Eridians have a lot of modesty in their culture. Either that, or Rocky is one of those people who just canโ€™t take a compliment.

He points to the circle on his display.ย โ€œThis is Adrian, question?โ€

I check the exact region of Adrian heโ€™s pointing at, then compare to my screen.ย โ€œYes, and that part isย โ€˜green.โ€™ โ€

โ€œI not have word for this.โ€

Of course the Eridian language has no words for colors. Why would it? I never thought of colors as a mysterious thing. But if youโ€™ve never heard of them before, I guess theyโ€™re pretty weird. We have names for frequency ranges in the electromagnetic spectrum. Then again, my students all have eyes

and they were still amazed when I told themย โ€œx-rays,โ€ โ€œmicrowaves,โ€ โ€œWi- Fi,โ€ย andย โ€œpurpleโ€ย were all just wavelengths of light.

โ€œYou name it then,โ€ย I say.

โ€œYes yes. I name this color: middle-rough. My display pattern is smooth for high-frequency light. Rough for low-frequency light. This color is middle- rough.โ€

โ€œUnderstand,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œAnd yes, green is right in the middle of the wavelengths humans can see.โ€

โ€œGood good,โ€ย he says.ย โ€œIs sample ready, question?โ€

Weโ€™ve been in orbit for about a day now and I activated the sampler right when we got here. Iย ๏ฌ‚ip to the External Collection Unit screen. It reads as fully functional and even reports how long itโ€™s been open: 21 hours and 17 minutes.

โ€œYeah, I guess so.โ€ย โ€œYou get.โ€

โ€œUgh,โ€ย I groan.ย โ€œEVAs are so much work!โ€

โ€œLazy human. Go get!โ€

I laugh. He has a slightly di๏ฌ€erent tone when heโ€™s joking around. It took a long time for me to identify. Itโ€™s likeโ€ฆitโ€™s in the timing between words. They donโ€™t have the same cadence. I canโ€™t really put myย ๏ฌnger on it, but I know when I hear it.

From the External Collection Unit screen, I order the sampler to close its doors and return to itsย ๏ฌ‚at con๏ฌguration. The panel reports that itโ€™s been done, and I con๏ฌrm it with hull cameras.

I climb into the Orlan EVA suit, enter the airlock, and cycle it.

Adrian is absolutelyย gorgeousย in person. I stay out on the hull staring at the huge world for several minutes. Bands of dark and light green cover the orb, and the re๏ฌ‚ected glow from Tau Ceti is simply breathtaking. I could stare at it for hours.

I probably got to do this with Earth too. I wish I could remember. Man, Iย really wishย I could remember that. It must have been every bit as beautiful.

โ€œYou out long time,โ€ย comes Rockyโ€™s voice through the headset.ย โ€œYou are safe, question?โ€

I set up the EVA panel to always play my radio feed over speakers in the control room. Plus, I taped a headset microphone to Rockyโ€™s control-room bulb and set it to be voice-activated. All he has to do is talk and it broadcasts.

โ€œIโ€™m looking at Adrian. Itโ€™s pretty.โ€ย โ€œLook later. Get sample now.โ€ย โ€œYouโ€™re pushy.โ€

โ€œYes.โ€

I climb along the hull, bathed in Adrian-light. Everything has a light-green tinge to it. Iย ๏ฌnd the sample collector right where itโ€™s supposed to be.

Itโ€™s not as big as I expected. Itโ€™s a half-meter square or so. Thereโ€™s a lever beside it with red and yellow stripes all around it. Text on the lever reads

โ€”ะŸะžะขะฏะะฃะขะฌ ะ ะซะงะะ“ ะงะขะžะ‘ะซ ะžะกะ’ะžะ‘ะžะ”ะ˜ะขะฌย ECUโ€”ๆ‹‰ๆ†้‡Šๆ”พ

.

I clip a tether to a convenient hole on the unit (presumably put there for this exact use), and pull the lever over to the open position.

The samplerย ๏ฌ‚oats free of the hull.

I work my way back across the hull to the airlock with the sampler in tow.

I cycle my way back in and climb out of the suit.ย โ€œAll is good, question?โ€ย Rocky asks.

โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œGood!โ€ย Rocky says.ย โ€œYou inspect with science gear, question?โ€ย โ€œYes. Now.โ€ย I bring up the Centrifuge panel.ย โ€œPrepare for gravity.โ€

โ€œYes, gravity.โ€ย He grips handholds with three of his claws.ย โ€œFor science gear.โ€

Once the centrifuge spins up, I get to work in the lab.

Rocky scurries into his tunnel in the lab ceiling and watches intently. Well, notย โ€œwatches.โ€ย Listens intently, I guess.

I lay the sampler on the lab table and open one of the panels. This is the side that faced Tau Ceti. I smile at what I see.

I crane my head to look up at Rocky.ย โ€œThis panel was white when we started; now itโ€™s black.โ€

โ€œNot understand.โ€

โ€œThe samplerโ€™s color changed to the color of Astrophage. We got a lot of Astrophage.โ€

โ€œGood good!โ€

Over the next two hours, I scrape everything o๏ฌ€ย of both halves of the sampler, putting each group in their own containers. Then I give each sample a good rinse with water and let the Astrophage settle to the bottom. Iโ€™m sure a lot of that sticky substance came with the Astrophage when I scraped it o๏ฌ€, and I want it gone.

I perform a series of tests. First I run a few Astrophage through DNA- marker testing to see if they are identical to the Astrophage found at Earth. They areโ€”at least, the markers I checked are identical.

Then I check overall population of each sample.ย โ€œInteresting,โ€ย I say.

Rocky perks up.ย โ€œWhat is interesting, question?โ€

โ€œBoth halves had approximately the same population.โ€ย โ€œNot expected,โ€ย he says.

โ€œNot expected,โ€ย I agree.

One side of the sampler pointed toward Tau Ceti, while the other pointed toward Adrian. Astrophage migrate to breed. For every frisky Astrophage that heads to Adrian with a twinkle in its eye, two should return. So, broadly speaking, there should be twice as many Astrophage going from Adrian to Tau Ceti as there are going the other direction. But thatโ€™s not whatโ€™s happening. The outgoing population is the same as the incoming population.

Rocky climbs along the tunnel that runs across the roof of the lab to get a better look.ย โ€œFlaw in counting, question? How you count, question?โ€

โ€œI measure total heat energy output of both samples.โ€ย Itโ€™s a sure๏ฌre way to know how much Astrophage youโ€™re dealing with. Each one insists on being

96.415 degrees Celsius. The more of them there are, the more total heat will be absorbed by the metal plate I put them on.

He taps two claws together.ย โ€œThat is good method. Population must be same. How, question?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ย I smear some of theย โ€œreturningโ€ย Astrophage (that is, the Astrophage that was on the way from Adrian to Tau Ceti) onto a slide. I take

it to a microscope.

Rocky scampers along his tunnel to keep up.ย โ€œThat is what, question?โ€ย โ€œMicroscope,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œIt helps me see very small things. I can see

Astrophage with this.โ€

โ€œAmaze.โ€

I take a look at the sample and gasp. Thereโ€™s a lot more than just Astrophage in there!

The familiar black dots of Astrophage are all over the sample. But so are translucent cells, smaller bacteria-looking things, and larger amoeba-like things. There are thin things, fat things, spiral thingsโ€ฆtoo many to count. Too manyย di๏ฌ€erent kinds of thingsย to count. Itโ€™s like looking at all the life in a drop of lake water!

โ€œWow!โ€ย I say.ย โ€œLife! Thereโ€™s a whole bunch of life in here! Not just Astrophage. A bunch of di๏ฌ€erent species!โ€

Rocky literally bounces o๏ฌ€ย the tunnel walls.ย โ€œAmaze! Amaze amaze amaze!โ€

โ€œAdrian isnโ€™t just a planet,โ€ย I say.ย โ€œAdrian is a planet with life, like Earth or Erid! That explains where the methane comes from. Life makes methane!โ€ย Rocky freezes. Then he shoots bolt-upright. Iโ€™ve never seen him raise his

carapace so high.ย โ€œLife is also reason for population discrepancy! Life is

reason!โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€ย I say. Heโ€™s more excited than Iโ€™ve ever seen him.ย โ€œHow? I donโ€™t understand.โ€

He taps the tunnel wall with his claw, pointing at my microscope.ย โ€œSome life on Adrian EATS Astrophage! Population in balance. Natural order. This explains all things!โ€

โ€œOh my God!โ€ย I gasp. My heart just about beats out of my chest.ย โ€œAstrophage has a predator!โ€

Thereโ€™s a whole biosphere at Adrian. Not just Astrophage. Thereโ€™s even an active biosphere within the Petrova line.

This is where it all started. Has to be. How else can we explain countless extremely di๏ฌ€erent life-forms that all evolved to migrate in space? They all came from the same genetic root.

Astrophage was just one of many, many life-forms that evolved here. And with all life, there is variance and predation.

Adrian isnโ€™t just some planet that Astrophage infected. Itโ€™s the Astrophage homeworld! And itโ€™s the home of Astrophageโ€™s predators.

โ€œThis is amazing!โ€ย I yell.ย โ€œIf weย ๏ฌnd a predatorโ€ฆโ€

โ€œWe take home!โ€ย Rocky says, two octaves higher than normal.ย โ€œIt eat Astrophage, breed, eat more Astrophage, breed, eat more more more! Stars saved!โ€

โ€œYes!โ€ย I press my knuckles against the tunnel wall.ย โ€œFist-bump!โ€ย โ€œWhat, question?โ€

I rap the tunnel again.ย โ€œThis. Do this.โ€

He emulates my gesture against the wall opposite my hand.ย โ€œCelebration!โ€ย I say.

โ€œCelebration!

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