THAT NIGHT, they celebrated. It was Edgefield Federal Prison as Iโve never seen it. Music blaring. Inmates drinking, singing, all armed. Some fighting, some gambling over cards and dice. The commissary was cleaned out. Trash covered the floor. These men, some of whom had been incarcerated most of their adult lives, were carefree at last.
By morning, they were all dead.
I knew because it was too quiet. The silence started sometime around twilight. I stayed up, because frankly, I expected it to be my last night on Earth. I wanted to die on my feet. But no one came for me. I guess they figured there would be time enough for that. Luckily for me, they were wrong.
The sun is up now, and from my bunk I can see bodies strewn across the common area below. They werenโt shot, or assaulted. They just keeled over. Whatever killed them hasnโt affected me. At least not yet.
Footsteps echo in the prison, a pitter-patter in the distance that grows into a rumble, and a chorus of harsh voices yelling, โClear!โ
Troops arrive at my cell, wearing rubber gloves and full-body disposable contact gowns. My mind flashes back to when the National Guardsman demonstrated the rifle for Carl and his rioters. He was wearing gloves.
That confirms it: they doused the guns with poison. Iโm impressed.
The guard troops step aside for a tall man with close-cropped hair and a navy suit. Federal agent. Thatโs the first thing that pops into my mind.
โDr. Sinclair, weโd like to speak with you.โ
I stand and shrug. โYouโre in luck. Iโm just starting my office hours for the day.โ
He mutters to the guardsmen, โBring him.โ
They throw a contact gown and rubber gloves into the cell.
Yeah, definitely poison on the guns. Theyโre scared that some might have been spread across the prison and that I could come into contact with it.
So they want me alive. At least thereโs that.
THE MORNINGย after being the last prisoner in Edgefield, I am the only prisoner to walk out alive.
I look for Pedro, but heโs nowhere in sight.
They lead me to a parcel van, where the federal agent is waiting, along with a man with a beard, short gray hair, and kind eyes. Heโs a man I recognize and respect but have never met. I canโt imagine why he would be here, and my imagination is vast.
โLose the gloves and gown,โ Agent-Man says.
When theyโre off, a guardsman calls out to the van, โWant us to cuff him?โ
Agent-Man gives a wry grin. โNah, heโs not that kind of criminal. Are you, Doc?โ
โMany donโt consider me a criminal at all. Just a man ahead of his time.โ
โWell, Iโm a man without much time, so get up here.โ
Inside the van, Agent-Man dismisses everyone but me and the other man. Then he introduces himself. โDr. Sinclair, Iโm Raymond Larson, Deputy AG.โ
In my mind, I upgrade him to Agent-Boss-Man.
He points to the other man. โThis is Dr. Lawrence Fowlerโโ
โDirector of NASA. I know.โ I look Fowler in the eyes. โItโs nice to meet youโฆ despite the circumstances. Iโve followed your work for a long time, since you were at Caltech.โ
His eyes brighten. โYou have?โ
His voice is more subdued than in the last video I saw of him at a conference giving a presentation. That was four years ago, and the years have apparently taken a toll. Stress and time have worked on Dr. Lawrence Fowler.
โYes. Your research on alternative jet propulsion fuel sources is of particularโโ
Larson holds up a hand. โOkay, thatโs enough. Letโs get to it.โ He smirks at me. โIf youโre as smart as they say you are, why donโt you tell me why weโre here?โ
I shrug. โBecause you need something from me. Specifically, youโre going to offer me a pardon or work releaseโcontingent on my cooperation
โand youโre going to threaten me with the alternatives, most likely a transfer to another prison where the other inmates will know that Iโm the sole survivor of the Edgefield Prison riot. The implication will be that Iโm a snitch, one who got all of his fellow inmates killed. To avoid a lawsuit, the warden will put me in the hole for protection, until I canโt take it anymore. Then Iโll demand to be released, and when that happens, Iโll be dead within a few days.โ
Larson looks genuinely impressed. He draws a folded paper from inside his suit jacket and glances at Fowler, who nods curtly. He unfolds the page and lays it in front of me.
I expected it to be longer. Phrases jump out at me:
Full Presidential Pardon
Contingent upon approval by the Justice Department, NASA, and any government agencies and private entities they designate.
Work period has an indeterminate end date.
No compensation or benefits whatsoever are conferred.
He hands me a pen, and I sign it. Then he folds the page up and slips it back into his jacket.
โDo I get a receipt or a copy or something?โ โYou do not.โ
โSoโฆ when do I start?โ
As I suspected, itโs Fowlerโs show now. He speaks as he opens his laptop. โIโm afraid youโll need to start right away. Time is of the essence, Dr. Sinclair.โ
โCall me James.โ
โAll right, James. What Iโm about to show you is the most closely guarded secret in the world.โ
I have the urge to make a wisecrack. Ever since I was a kid, sarcasm has been my defense against a world that didnโt seem to understand meโor like me. And somewhere along the way, sarcasm became how I communicated all the time. It kept me from getting close to anyone and from getting hurt. But I hold my tongue here. Iโm not sure why. Maybe because I sense, despite the overdramatic opener, that what Iโm about to hear is actually that important. Or maybe itโs because I know Lawrence Fowler doesnโt deserve it. Iโve been in his presence all of five minutes, and I already feel as though I know himโand what heโs about. It isnโt games or politics. Heโs here for a reason, and I bet itโs a good one. And he reminds me of my grandfather.
โAs you know,โ Fowler says, typing away, โthe Long Winter is the greatest threat to humanityโs survival in our history. All the climate models have been wrong. NOAA is collectively pulling its hair out trying to figure out why itโs even happening. In short, it doesnโt add up. Do you know why?โ
โBecause thereโs a variable that hasnโt been factored.โ
He nods. โPrecisely. NASA was tasked with finding that variable. A year ago, we launched a series of probes into space. Our aim was to measure solar output outside of Earth. What we found shocked us.โ
His screen shows an interactive 3D simulation of Earth surrounded by a series of probes in space, a number beside each one. My guess is that these numbers are measures of solar radiation. What strikes me is the variation in the numbers. Solar output isnโt absolutely uniform, like, say, a light bulbโs output, but itโs a lot more consistent than what Iโm seeing here. Earth is getting far less solar radiation than the regions of space surrounding it.
The implication is clear.
My mouth runs dry. Itโs impossibleโbut Iโm looking at the data. I could throw up. This is too odd to be a natural phenomenon. The source is probably an extraterrestrial entity. If Iโm right, this is truly the end of the human race. No two ways about it. Any species or force sufficiently advanced to cause this could wipe us out a trillion different waysโways we arenโt even advanced enough to imagine.
Fowler reads my expression. โNo doubt youโve discerned what these readings mean.โ He pauses, as if adjusting his presentation to my reaction. โBefore we got these readings, a coalition of governments was evaluating
possibleโฆ solutions to the Long Winter. The most viable, or perhaps โpopularโ is a better term, was accelerating the greenhouse effect. That would heat the planet to compensate for the reduced solar output. Many options were presented, some more feasible than others. Underground colonies dependent on geothermal energy. Altering the Earthโs orbit.โ
He sees my surprise.
โAs I said, some proposals were more feasible than others.โ He motions toward the image. โHowever, the probe data changed everything. We kept it a secret and launched a second round of probes four months ago. This group was much larger and had more precise instruments meant to verify the data. They traveled farther and wider into the inner solar system.โ Fowler glances at Larson and me, as if mentally estimating whether weโre prepared, then hits a key. โThis is what they found.โ
The screen switches to a video of a black dot against the burning sun. It comes into focus, an oblong object that shimmers for a second before the video ends.
Larsonโs mouth falls open. Apparently, heโs learning all this at the same time as I am. He didnโt need to know before.
I wasnโt sure what form it would take, but after seeing the probesโ solar radiation readings, I expected something like this. My mind swirls with questions. I need data. Fowler is prepared. I shoot questions at him rapid-fire.
โHow many artifacts have you located?โ โOne.โ
โDid it detect the probe NASA sent?โ โYes.โ
โReaction?โ โDestroyed.โ
My body goes numb at the word. My mind reels with the implications. Larson finally gets a word out, seven of them, all a waste of time. โHey,
what the heck is that thing?โ
Fowler doesnโt break eye contact with me. โPlease be quiet, Mr.
Larson.โ
โDid it take any further action after destroying the probe?โ I ask. โPossibly. Weโre not certain.โ
โExplain.โ
โThe probe relayed data to the ISS. Minutes later, the station experiencedโฆ a solar event that destroyed it. Along with every satellite in orbit.โ
โYou think it was trying to stop the data.โ โThatโs the working theory.โ
โWhat happened to the crew on the ISS?โ
Fowler glances away. Iโve hit a sore subject. โThey were killed in the attack. Except for one. Sheโs still up there. Weโre trying to bring her home, but weโre not sure we can.โ
I nod, sensing he wants to move on. โWhat else do you know?โ โThatโs about it at the moment.โ
In my mind, I begin running scenarios, Hail Marys in which some part of our species survives this. They all end the same: insufficient data. We need to know what weโre dealing with.
Larson shakes his head, frustrated. โHey, will somebody tell me whatโs going on?โ
With my eyes, I ask Fowler,ย You want to tell him?
He glances away. Translation:ย You tell him, your way. He deserves it.
โMr. Larson, we are not alone in the universe. Hereโs the scary part: whoever is out there either doesnโt care enough to contact us, or is trying to kill us.โ