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Chapter no 18

Winter World

FOWLER LOOKSย up at the crew, seeming to realize weโ€™re still here.

โ€œRight. Well, thatโ€™s a long way to say that there are many variables that go into making sure we reach the Alpha artifact. Ultimately, we have to be sure weโ€™re sending you all up with enough fuel to haul all of the scientific equipment we need to figure out what this thing is.โ€

Chandler seizes the opening. โ€œWell said, indeed. I believe thatโ€™s where we should focus: on the scientific payload. Once we determine that, it seems the balance of the manifest should be crew and provisions, with the remainder dedicated to fuel and propulsionโ€”as much as we can get.โ€

I agree. The others seem to as well.

Chandler motions to a young man at the back of the room who has the look of an eager post-doc. He passes out stapled sheaves of papers to the crew and the NASA staff. Itโ€™s a wish list of equipment Chandler wantsโ€” everything from drones to lasers to a robotic arm for the ship. This stuff is going to weigh a ton. Lots of tons, technically. No way we can manage all this and extra fuel.

I skim the list while he talks (which he likes to do). I finish it about halfway through his monologue, and I do what I used to do in his class: ask myself,ย Is there a better way?ย The answer is yes.

When Chandler finishes speaking, I raise my hand, as I used to do in his class. Thereโ€™s a moment of confusion between him and Fowler about who should give me the floor.

โ€œItโ€™s a good list,โ€ I say. โ€œSome very useful items here. I think weโ€™ll have to take some of what you describe. The arm, for one. However, Iโ€™d like us to entertain an alternative for the bulk of the equipment.โ€

Chandler leans back in his chair and exhales.

I continue. โ€œI donโ€™t favor taking pre-built items that arenโ€™t ready-made for our task. Drones, for example. They may get the job done, but itโ€™s a long shot. And weโ€™ll have no supportโ€”their creators are going to be twenty million miles away. No answers when we need them. We probably wonโ€™t even be able to figure out how to repair them. That would be fine if we had unlimited cargo capacity, but of course we donโ€™tโ€”and this list would add up to a lot of unnecessary weight.โ€

Fowler cocks his head. I think he knows where Iโ€™m going.

Chandler clearly doesnโ€™t. โ€œWell, we launch in twenty-four hours, so we have to take something, and we canโ€™t wait for new equipment to be built. This manifest is the best we can do.โ€

โ€œNot necessarily.โ€

โ€œNecessarily, it is.โ€ Chandler motions to his assistant. โ€œWeโ€™ve done the research.โ€

โ€œBut you havenโ€™t considered the alternative.โ€

He glares at me like an animal ready to pounce. He wants nothing more than to rip me apart. I donโ€™t react. Iโ€™m sure that angers him even more.

โ€œAfter launch,โ€ I say casually, โ€œwe have four monthsโ€™ travel time to the Alpha artifact. Each ship has a roboticist and a software engineer. If we launch with the right raw components, we can build what we need while en route. We turn each ship into a robotics lab.โ€

Chandler scoffs. โ€œRidiculous.โ€

โ€œIt will halve the weight that would be required for all this equipment. And when we arrive, weโ€™ll have better toolsโ€”tools that we understand completely. And can repair. And repurpose if needed.โ€

โ€œI like this idea,โ€ Grigory says.

Lina nods. โ€œSo do I. I can take some base code and frameworks and write the software. No problem.โ€

Chandler actually looks scared now. โ€œItโ€™sโ€ฆ well, franklyโ€ฆโ€ His voice falters. โ€œLook, what if you take the wrong components? Or youโ€™re missing a part?โ€ He has his stride back now, the TV debate skills kicking in. โ€œAnd as you so eloquently reminded us, Doctor Sinclair, Earth is twenty million miles away. You canโ€™t order what you donโ€™t have. And thereโ€™s no tech support on what you do have.โ€

โ€œWhy would you need tech support to help you with something you built yourself? And if you donโ€™t have a part, you simply design around it.

Build whatever you can with whatever you have available.โ€

Chandler looks into the pit at Fowler. โ€œI canโ€™t avoid this any longer. I have to formally protest James Sinclairโ€™s involvement in this mission. Heโ€™s reckless and careless. He has bad judgment. Judgment bad enough to land him in prison.โ€ He looks at the rest of the crew. โ€œAnd on this mission, that could get us all killedโ€”or prevent us from learning what the artifact is, which I consider worse.โ€

Around the room, eyes glance at me and then down and away, as if theyโ€™ve just seen a kid getting beat up on the school playground and know they canโ€™t help. Thatโ€™s about what I feel like. I have a bloody nose, and Iโ€™m down, but Iโ€™m not out. Iโ€™m boiling with rage.

Itโ€™s all I can do not to shout my response. โ€œYour problem is very simple, Dr. Chandler: you canโ€™t do the work. Out there, weโ€™re going to have to build what we need, and repair it. You might have been able to do it twenty years ago, maybe even ten, but since then youโ€™ve been doing nothing but giving TV interviews and delivering paid lectures. That wonโ€™t do us any good where weโ€™re going.โ€

Chandler stands and points at me. โ€œI was inventing things when you were still crapping your pantsโ€”โ€

Fowler holds up his hands.

โ€œGentlemen, please. We donโ€™t have time for this.โ€ He eyes Chandler for a long moment. โ€œDr. Chandler, NASA has never sent anyone into space under protest.โ€ He points at the door, which an assistant opens. โ€œWeโ€™re not about to start now. Please follow me.โ€

 

 

WHEN THE DOORย closes behind Fowler and Chandler, you could hear a pin drop in the room.

My heart is beating like a drum. I was geared up for a fight, and I canโ€™t seem to unwind myself. My hands are even shaking.

Grigory leans back in his chair, getting my attention. โ€œHow much weight for your components?โ€ His tone is nonchalant, as if nothing of note just happened.

โ€œDonโ€™t know yet,โ€ I mutter.

He squints at me. โ€œWhat do you need in order to know?โ€

โ€œAnswers. For example, once we reach the artifact, could we cannibalize parts of the ship without compromising our ability to complete the mission or get back home?โ€

โ€œPossiblyโ€ฆโ€ His head tilts back and he stares at the ceiling, as if taking a mental inventory of the ships. โ€œWhich parts are you interested in?โ€

 

 

FOWLER RETURNS WITH ANOTHER ROBOTICISTโ€”DR. Harry Andrews. Iโ€™ve

met him a couple of times at conferences, years ago. Heโ€™s smart. And most importantly, heโ€™s a working roboticist. Last I heard, he was in the private sector, at a conglomerate that let him tinker in his lab and avoid meetings and management. Heโ€™s perfect for this.

Seeing him makes me realize that there are people like Harry Andrews here on site, waiting. There are replacements for every one of us. Of course there would be. If one of us dies before takeoffโ€”or during the takeoffโ€” they need to be able to send someone else. And there will be no time to bring anyone else in.

Fowler confirms my thinking when he introduces Harry and says, โ€œDr. Andrews has been watching our meeting and is up to speed. So letโ€™s pick up where we left off.โ€

Just like that, the conversation continues, as if nothing had ever happened. No objections. No comments. And the debate is different this time. Itโ€™s driven by facts. There are no personal attacks, only a discussion about the merits of an idea. We all know whatโ€™s at stake.

At a break in the debate, I ask the question that has gnawed at me since I saw the first image of the artifact.

โ€œI think before we go any further, we should consider all the possibilities forย whatย the artifact represents. We need to prioritize our theories if we are to prioritize our payload.โ€

โ€œIs obvious,โ€ Grigory says. โ€œIs causing the Long Winter.โ€

โ€œCertainly, thatโ€™s the most likely possibility,โ€ I say. โ€œBut thatโ€™s far from certain. What if weโ€™re wrong?โ€

Thereโ€™s silence around the room.

Min speaks up. โ€œIt could be a scientist or explorerโ€”notย causingย whatโ€™s happening, just here to observe.โ€

I nod. โ€œAnd unable to stop it.โ€ I let those words sink in. โ€œAnd thereโ€™s another possibility.โ€

All eyes turn to me.

โ€œWhat if itโ€™s been here all along? What if itโ€™s been adrift for eons, and we just now found it because we just now looked hard enough?โ€

Harry Andrews looks over at me. โ€œItย isย small enough to be missed by our telescopesโ€”especially if it hasnโ€™t been moving a lot. For all we know, an ancient civilization on Venus launched it a billion years ago. They didnโ€™t bother to clean up when they left.โ€

โ€œOr were destroyed,โ€ Grigory adds. โ€œThere are other possibilities. Remember, there are two artifacts. What if they are at war with each other? Two space fighters racing through the system. And we are of little interest to them, like ant colony freezing to death while they race by on motorway.โ€

Charlotte Lewis, the Australian linguist and archeologist tasked with first contact, clears her throat and speaks tentatively. โ€œEver since seeing the picture, I have also wondered what the artifact might be. The obvious conclusion is that itโ€™s a spaceship. But if so, what is its crew like? Are they humanoid? Insect-like? Or a lifeform with no analog here on Earth? Are they machines? Or is the artifact itself a machine, nothing more than a drone in space? Or could the artifact itself be aliveโ€”a species native to space? Iโ€™ve looked through the binder but found no answers. Does NASA have any clues to share?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Fowler replies. โ€œAnd I suspect we wonโ€™t have any answers to any of these questions before you all reach the artifact. Perhaps the best clue we have is the fact that the Alpha artifact reacted to the probe. Whatever it is, we know it is under power and aware of its surroundings. The event that affected the ISS and terrestrial satellites immediately followed the discovery of Alphaโ€”that fact canโ€™t be overlooked. So while Jamesโ€™s point is validโ€”it is entirely plausible that the artifacts have nothing to do with the Long Winterโ€”that hypothesis would leave us with a number of coincidences. The timing of the artifactsโ€™ discoveryโ€”right at the time when our planet is suffering from an unexplained decrease in solar radiationโ€”the apparently hostile response to our discovery of Alpha, their courses, which put them en route to the Sunโ€ฆ it all strongly implies that the artifacts are somehow related to the solar anomalies causing the Long Winter. And more importantlyโ€ฆ weย hopeย that they are. Because if they arenโ€™tโ€ฆ then the

Earth is dying, and we have no answers, no ideas on how to revive our planet.โ€

He turns away from us and paces across the pit. โ€œWe have explored all possibilities to enable the survival of the human race. Preparations are being made. But you all know that if solar output continues to fall, our chances of survival drop even faster. As it stands, weโ€™re looking at a future in which, at best, a very, very small number of humans might survive. And the life theyโ€™ll inherit will be dark, and cold, and hungry. Those survivors may consider themselves the unlucky ones.โ€

Fowler looks around the room, staring each crewmember in the eye. โ€œThis mission is the best chance we have. We need to play to win. Weย mustย assume that the artifacts hold the key to our future, one way or another. If we are to survive, this mission has to end in one of two ways.โ€ He looks at me, then at Major Hampstead. โ€œPlan your payloads according to those two possibilities.โ€

Fowler leaves the two possibilities unspoken, but we all know what they are: we either make friends, or we destroy the artifact.

My fear is that we canโ€™t do either.

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