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Chapter no 42

Winter World

THE RUNUPย to the meeting with Caspiaโ€”thatโ€™s what weโ€™re now calling the Caspian Treaty nations, as well as the land that now holds themโ€”is a rushed, frantic affair. I had expected more time to prepare. Upon contacting the Caspians and requesting a meeting three weeks from now, they replied and said we had to come now or not at all. Maybe the Caspians think that forcing us to come on their schedule will throw us off balance.

One thing is certain: theyโ€™re extremely paranoid. Theyโ€™re permitting only Fowler, me, and a team of six experts and scientists to make the tripโ€” only the people we need to make our presentation. No military. No diplomats. No security detail. Their message is clear: they want the facts, and theyโ€™re very suspicious of us. The Atlantic Unionโ€™s ramped-up military activities donโ€™t exactly inspire trust.

They probably also suspect weโ€™re about to have the same conversation with the Pac Alliance, and they want to get the information first.

We leave at night and fly east in a convoy of two helicopters. Theyโ€™re the stealth variety, and Iโ€™m amazed at how quiet they are.

I was confident in my abilities on theย Pax, directing our strategy in space. Iโ€™m out of my element here. Political intrigue is just not something I understand. And I know very little about the people weโ€™re going to meet.

Caspia, like the Atlantic Union, comprises dozens of nations. In the AU, there are perhaps half a dozen with any real power (their leaders sit on the AUโ€™s Executive Council). In Caspia, two nations hold a plurality of the power: Russia and India. But thatโ€™s about all I know about their internal structure. Perhaps thatโ€™s because the Atlantic Union doesnโ€™t know much

more; or perhaps itโ€™s because they didnโ€™t think that information was pertinent to share with me.

The rest of what I know about Caspia is strictly geographic. The state lies in what used to be southeastern Iran. The capital, Caspiagrad, is located in the Lut Desert. Itโ€™s one of the hottest, driest deserts in the world. The surface temperature has been measured at 159 degrees Fahrenheit. Of course, that was before the Long Winter. The desert lies in a basin, with mountains around it, like a bowl carved into the Earth.

Once we enter the Lut, the ground below is only rock, sand, and salt. The dunes are beautiful. They seem endless, like waves of sand, a brown sea reaching to the horizon. Here and there, punctuating the ripples, a few dunes rise high in the sky, almost a thousand feet.

Some of the geography reminds me of the American Southwest, and some of what I see, I donโ€™t understand. I point to a scattering of what looks like the hulls of shipwrecks, and I ask Fowler over the radio, โ€œWhat are those?โ€

โ€œYardangs.โ€

โ€œWhat did you call me?โ€

He laughs. โ€œThe wind carves them out of bedrock over very long periods of time.โ€

โ€œHow do you know that?โ€ โ€œLifetime of geekhood.โ€

I smile. I like Fowler more and more. I really hope the Caspians donโ€™t kill us.

The Persian name for the Lut region translates to โ€œEmptiness Plain,โ€ but itโ€™s anything but empty now. A city glitters ahead.

Where the Atlantic Unionโ€™s Camp Seven looks like a nomadic settlement, Caspiagrad looks as if itโ€™s here to stay. Skyscrapers rise out of the desert, with high walls ringing them. Helicopters circle in the air, a patrol likely launched as a show of strength for our arrival; they wouldโ€™ve picked us up on radar a long time ago, and they probably have hidden base stations throughout this expansive desert.

But thereโ€™s no formal welcome ceremony, only a handful of mid-level diplomats who introduce themselves before escorting us into a building near the helo pad. Security checks us out thoroughly, then remands us to the diplomats, who offer us water or coffee and ask if we need to use the restroom (we do).

Finally, they lead us into an auditorium. The room is packed. There are far more people than in the gymnasium where Fowler and I gave our presentation to the Atlantic Union.

There are no introductions, no preamble. We are simply instructed to โ€œSay what you came here to say.โ€

When we finish, the questions are much the same as those we received from the Atlantic Union. The Caspians have brought in experts, and those experts question us at length. Fowler knows some of them. Theyโ€™re his counterparts from Roscosmos and the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO). That helps our cause. We share all our information on tabletsโ€” none of it could be transmitted ahead of timeโ€”and theyโ€™re reviewing it on the fly.

Through a translator, a Russian scientist asks the question I would ask in his position. โ€œDr. Sinclair, what do you think is out there? On the mission youโ€™re proposing, what do you expect to find?โ€

โ€œOur working theory,โ€ I say carefully, โ€œis that thereโ€™s an entity or device here in our solar system that is creating the solar cells.โ€

โ€œWhere?โ€

โ€œFrom the locations of the cells weโ€™ve found and their vector, there really is only one place that it could be. The asteroid belt.โ€

โ€œBecause it would need raw materials to build the cells.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s our thinking. The asteroid belt is the most easily accessible source of raw materials in the system. Itโ€™s in a good location, just beyond Mars. The harvester, as we have named this potential device, could conceivably come to our solar system, attach to asteroids, manufacture the solar cells it needs, and dispatch them to the Sun to form a solar array that would harvest the Sunโ€™s output.โ€

The room falls silent.

The Russian president is the first to speakโ€”in fluent English.

โ€œAs I understand it, there are thousands, perhaps millions, of objects in the asteroid belt. Even if you know the general location of this harvester, will it not be a โ€˜needle in a haystack,โ€™ as you Americans say?โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s a fair question. And one of the risks to the mission. But we have enough data to develop a working profile of our enemyโ€™s behavioral patterns.

โ€œWe believe the solar cells are actually very simple machines. The way they reacted to us was no more complex than what you might see from a

one-purpose drone. Weโ€™re assuming that they have limited defensive and communication capabilities. They seem to be tailor-made to travel to the Sun and capture energy. As such, it would make sense for the harvester to prioritize its actions based on economy of energy. Harvesting energy and conserving energyโ€”those are likely its only mission parameters. And, of course, it seems to be monitoring usโ€”its principal enemy or impediment to its missionโ€”and taking action accordingly. We think those actions include destroying the ISS and trying to disrupt the launch of theย Paxย andย Fornax.

โ€œAt any rate, that hypothesis allows us to make an assumption about where the harvester might be. Over half of the mass in the asteroid belt is contained in four asteroids and dwarf planets: Ceres, Vesta, Pallas, and Hygiea. The largest, by a wide margin, is Ceres. It contains almost one third of all the mass in the asteroid belt. And itโ€™s directly on the path from which the solar cells are originating. We think the harvester is on Ceres.โ€

โ€œImpossible,โ€ a Russian scientist mutters. Heโ€™s a pudgy man with bushy eyebrows and thick glasses. โ€œWe can see Ceres with ground telescopes. And it rotates completely every nine hours. There is nothing there, Doctor Sinclair.โ€

โ€œNothing we can see. Our working assumption is that any entity sufficiently advanced to shroud our sun could easily camouflage itself on Ceres. Itโ€™s there. Weโ€™re betting on it.โ€

 

 

AFTER THE PRESENTATION, they make us wait in a conference room. After the first hour, I start to wonder if we have indeed been taken hostage. It would be quite a play.

To Fowler, I say, โ€œHow easy was it to make this meeting happen?โ€ โ€œNot easy. They rejected the initial approach.โ€

โ€œHow did you pull it off?โ€ โ€œI had some help.โ€

He opens his laptop and starts a video.

โ€œThis was in a hidden, encrypted file on theย Paxย escape capsuleโ€” something your crew sent home to help your efforts,โ€ Fowler says.

The video was definitely recorded on theย Pax. I recognize the padded walls of the modules. I also know the voice muttering in the background:

Grigory. He floats into view and stares directly at the camera like he can see right through it and into me. He speaks in Russian, but there are subtitles at the bottom.

To my countrymen and my colleagues at Roscosmos, our mission aboard theย Paxย has been a success. But we are entering a dangerous phase of the mission from which I likely will not return.

I, along with the members of this crew, have elected to send James Sinclair home. The reason is very simple: he is a genius. If anyone can solve whatโ€™s going on out here and stop it, he can. Iโ€™m storing this message using a NASA encryption method that the crew of theย Paxย has access to. The file will unlock after he arrives home. I have one requestโ€”that you give him any assistance he requires. He is trustworthy, and I have placed the lives of my family and everyone I know in his hands.

Iโ€™m once again thankful for my crewmates. Even millions of miles away, theyโ€™ve managed to be there when I needed them.

 

 

MY GENERAL EXPECTATIONย was to get a yes or no answer to the mission weโ€™ve proposed. Instead, one of the diplomats returns to the conference room and tells us weโ€™re free to leave.

When we touch down in the Atlantic Union, I donโ€™t even get a chance to shower or see Emma and Oscar, or to sleep in my own bed. A military detachment escorts me directly from the helicopter to a plane. The Pac Alliance wants to meet immediately. No doubt our meeting with Caspia influenced that decision; they donโ€™t want to be in the dark.

I wish we had a yes from the Caspians. I sense that humanityโ€™s future will be decided soon. These three nations either band together and go out there and fight togetherโ€”or they descend into a global civil war over whatโ€™s left of this withering planet.

 

 

Iย MANAGEย to get to sleep on the flight to Australia. When I wake, I find Fowler hunched over his laptop.

I rub my face, trying to wipe away the weariness.

โ€œWhatโ€™re you working on?โ€

He yawns. โ€œOur presentation. Looking for anything we can improve from our last outing.โ€

I take the laptop from him.

โ€œHere, let me take over. Get some sleep.โ€

 

 

THEย CASPIANS BROUGHTย us in the front doorโ€”flew us directly to their capital, which was glittering in all its glory, and escorted us to their seat of power. They wanted us to see their shining city in the desert, probably to intimidate us with their technological prowess.

But whatever the Pac Alliance has built, they want to hide it from us. They direct us to land on a Chinese aircraft carrier off the western coast of Australia. On the deck, they herd us into three of their own helicopters, the windows blacked out.

When we land a second time, weโ€™re forced to remain in our seats for thirty minutes. And when they finally open the door, thereโ€™s a massive canopy above us, formed into a tunnel that leads to the outer doors of a building.

They really donโ€™t want us to know where we are.

An Asian man in a tailored suit is waiting inside the building, a wry smile on his face.

โ€œDr. Sinclair, Iโ€™m Soro Nakamura. We spoke during your approach to Earth.โ€

โ€œYes. I remember. Nice to meet you in person.โ€

He squints. โ€œLet us hope, for your sake, that this meeting is filled with less deception.โ€

 

 

THEย PACย ALLIANCEย is a tough audience. Even tougher than the Caspians. They ask more questions, are more suspicious, and demand data to support every one of our claims. Thereโ€™s a lot of supposition in what weโ€™re presenting. We simply donโ€™t have the answers. The meeting is long. Seven hours in total. And grueling.

When it finally breaks, they lead us through an underground tunnel to what passes for a hotel. Itโ€™s more like a dormitory with shared bathrooms and small bedrooms. But itโ€™s clean and warm.

โ€œWhen will we be allowed to go home?โ€ Fowler asks Nakamura. He flashes a smile. โ€œWhen itโ€™s appropriate.โ€

 

 

FOR THREE DAYS, the Pac Alliance confines us. Iโ€™m worried. So is Fowler, I can tellโ€”though we donโ€™t talk about it. We know weโ€™re probably being watched, that every word we say is being recorded and analyzed and played back for the people making this decision. So we play our part. We talk about the mission and our presentation and the importance of it.

I donโ€™t say what Iโ€™m thinking: Has a war already started out there? Did we fail?

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