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Chapter no 4

Project Hail Mary

Oโ€Œkay.โ€Œ

I think itโ€™s time I took aย long gosh-darned lookย at these screens!

How am I in another solar system?! That doesnโ€™t even make sense! What star is that, anyway?! Oh my God, I am so going to die!

I hyperventilate for a while.

I remember what I tell my students: If youโ€™re upset, take a deep breath, let it out, and count to ten. It dramatically reduced the number of tantrums in my classroom.

I take a breath.ย โ€œOneโ€ฆtwoโ€ฆthrโ€”this isnโ€™t working! Iโ€™m going to die!โ€ย I hold my head in my hands.ย โ€œOh God. Where the heck am I?โ€

I scour the monitors for anything I can make sense of. Thereโ€™s no lack of informationโ€”thereโ€™s too much. Each screen has a handy label on the top.ย โ€œLife Support,โ€ โ€œAirlock Status,โ€ โ€œEngines,โ€ โ€œRobotics,โ€ โ€œAstrophage,โ€ โ€œGenerators,โ€ โ€œCentrifugeโ€โ€”wait a minute. Astrophage?

I check the Astrophage panel closely.

REMAINING: 20,906 KG CONSUMPTION RATE: 6.045 G/S

Far more interesting than those numbers is the diagram below them. It shows what I assume is theย Hail Mary. Myย ๏ฌrst real overview of what this ship looks like.

The top of the ship is a cylinder with a nose cone at the front. Thatโ€™s a rocket shape if ever I saw one. Judging by the tapered, conical walls of the control room, this must be the very front of the ship. Beneath me is the lab.

On the diagram that room is labeledย โ€œLab.โ€ย Below that is the room I woke up in.

The one with my dead friends.

I sni๏ฌ„e and wipe away a tear. No time for that right now. I put it out of my head and keep looking at the diagram. That room is namedย โ€œDormitory.โ€ย Okay, so this whole diagram lines up with my experiences. And itโ€™s nice to know the o๏ฌƒcial names of things. Underneath the dormitory is a much shorter room, maybe about 1 meter high, namedย โ€œStorage.โ€ย Aha! There must be a panel in theย ๏ฌ‚oor that I missed. I make a mental note to check that out later.

But thereโ€™s more. A lot more. Under the storage area, thereโ€™s an area labeledย โ€œCable Faring.โ€ย No idea what that is or why it exists. Beneath that, the ship fans out and there appear to be three cylinders the same width as my little area. Theyโ€™re all side by side. My guess is they assembled this ship in space and the largest diameter they could launch was about 4 meters.

The trio of cylindersโ€”Iโ€™d estimate theyโ€™re 75 percent of the total shipโ€™s volumeโ€”are labeledย โ€œFuel.โ€

The fuel area is broken up into nine subcylinders. I tap one of them out of curiosity, and it brings up a screen for that one fuel bay. It saysย :

0.000ย . It also has a button labeledย โ€œJettison.โ€

Well, Iโ€™m not sure why Iโ€™m here or what these things are all about, but I de๏ฌnitely donโ€™t want to hit any button labeled Jettison.

Itโ€™s probably not as dramatic as it seems. These are fuel tanks. If the fuel has been spent, the ship can ditch the tank to reduce its mass and make the remaining fuel last longer. Itโ€™s the same reason rockets lifting o๏ฌ€ย from Earth have multiple stages.

Interesting that the ship didnโ€™t automatically eject them as they became empty. I dismiss the window and return to the main ship map.

Under each of those large fuel zones is a trapezoidal area labeledย โ€œSpin Drive.โ€ย Iโ€™ve never heard that term before, but since itโ€™s in the back of the ship and has the wordย โ€œdriveโ€ย in its name, I assume itโ€™s the propulsion system.

Spin driveโ€ฆspin driveโ€ฆI close my eyes and try to think about itโ€ฆ.

โ€”

Nothing happens. I canโ€™t call up memories at will. Iโ€™m not quite there yet.

I peer at the diagram more closely. Why is there 20,000 kilograms of Astrophage on this ship? Iโ€™ve got a strong suspicion. Itโ€™s the fuel.

And why not? Astrophage can propel itself with light and has absurd energy-storage capability. Itโ€™s had God-knows-how-many billion years of evolution to get good at it. Just like a horse is more energy e๏ฌƒcient than a truck, Astrophage is more energy e๏ฌƒcient than a spaceship.

Okay, that explains why thereโ€™s a buttload of Astrophage on the ship. Itโ€™s fuel. But why put a diagram of the ship on this screen? Thatโ€™s like putting a blueprint of a car on its gas gauge.

Interestingly, the diagram doesnโ€™t really care about the rooms. It doesnโ€™t even show whatโ€™s inside themโ€”just a label for each one and thatโ€™s it. However, the diagram isย veryย focused on the hull and the rear part of the ship.

I see red pipes leading from the fuel areas to the spin drives. Probably how fuel gets to the engines. But I also see the pipes all along the hull of the ship. And they cut across the Cable Faring area. So the Astrophage fuel is mostly in the fuel tank, but also kept in a shell all around the hull.

Why do that?

Oh, and there are temperature readings all over the place. I guess temperature is important because the readings are every few meters along the hull. And every single one of them reads 96.415ยฐย .

Hey, I know that temperature. I know that exact temperature! What do I know it from? Come on, brainโ€ฆcome onโ€ฆ

โ€”

96.415ยฐย , read the display.ย โ€œHuh,โ€ย I said.

โ€œWhat is it?โ€ย Stratt said immediately.

It was my second day in the lab. Stratt still insisted I be the only person to look at Astrophageโ€”at least for the time being. She dropped her tablet on the table and came to the observation-room window.ย โ€œSomething new?โ€

โ€œKind of. The ambient temperature of an Astrophage is 96.415 degrees Celsius.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s pretty hot, isnโ€™t it?โ€

โ€œYeah, almost the boiling point of water,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œFor anything living on Earth it would be deadly. But for a thing thatโ€™s comfortable near the sun, who knows?โ€

โ€œSo whatโ€™s signi๏ฌcant about it?โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t get them hotter or colder.โ€ย I pointed to the experiment Iโ€™d set up in the fume hood.ย โ€œI put some Astrophage in ice-cold water for an hour. When I pulled them out, they were 96.415 degrees Celsius. Then I put some in a lab furnace at one thousand degrees. Again, after I pulled them out: 96.415 degrees.โ€

Stratt paced next to the window.ย โ€œMaybe they have extremely good insulation?โ€

โ€œI thought of that, so I did another experiment. I took an extremely small droplet of water and put a few Astrophage in it. After a few hours, the whole droplet was 96.415 degrees. The Astrophage heated up the water, so that means heat energy can move out of it.โ€

โ€œWhat conclusion can you draw?โ€ย she asked.

I tried to scratch my head, but the vinyl suit got in the way.ย โ€œWell, we know they have a huge amount of energy stored inside. Iโ€™m guessing they use it to maintain body temperature. Same way you and I do.โ€

โ€œA warm-blooded microorganism?โ€ย she said.

I shrugged.ย โ€œLooks that way. Hey, how much longer am I going to be the only person working on this?โ€

โ€œUntil you stop discovering new stu๏ฌ€.โ€

โ€œOne guy alone in a lab? Thatโ€™s not how science works,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œThere should be hundreds of people all over the world working on this.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re not alone in that thought,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œIโ€™ve had three di๏ฌ€erent heads of state call me today.โ€

โ€œThen let other scientists in on it!โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œWhy not?โ€

She looked away for a moment, then back through the window at me.ย โ€œAstrophage is an alien microbe. What if it can infect humans? What if itโ€™s deadly? What if hazmat suits and neoprene gloves arenโ€™t enough protection?โ€

I gasped.ย โ€œWait a minute! Am I a guinea pig? Iโ€™m a guinea pig!โ€ โ€œNo, itโ€™s not like that,โ€ย she said.

I stared at her. She stared at me. I stared at her.

โ€œOkay, itโ€™s exactly like that,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œDang it!โ€ย I said.ย โ€œThatโ€™s just not cool!โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t be dramatic,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œIโ€™m just playing it safe. Imagine what would happen if I sent Astrophage to the most brilliant minds on the planet and it killed them all. In an instant weโ€™d lose the very people we need the most right now. I canโ€™t risk it.โ€

I scowled.ย โ€œThis isnโ€™t some cheesy movie, Stratt. Pathogens evolve slowly over time to attack speci๏ฌc hosts. Astrophage has never even been on Earth before. Thereโ€™s just no way it canย โ€˜infectโ€™ย humans. Besides, itโ€™s been a couple of days and Iโ€™m not dead. So send it out to the real scientists.โ€

โ€œYouย areย a real scientist. And youโ€™re making progress as fast as anyone else would. Thereโ€™s no point in me risking other lives while youโ€™re getting it done on your own.โ€

โ€œAre you kidding?โ€ย I said.ย โ€œWith a couple hundred minds working on this, weโ€™d make a lot more progress onโ€”โ€

โ€œAlso, most deadly diseases have a minimum of least three days of incubation time.โ€

โ€œAh, there it is.โ€

She walked back to her table and picked up her tablet.ย โ€œThe rest of the world will have their turn in time. But for now itโ€™s just you. At least tell me what the hell those things are made of. Then we can talk about giving it to other scientists.โ€

She resumed reading her tablet. The conversation was over. And sheโ€™d ended it by laying down what my students would call aย โ€œsick burn.โ€ย Despite my best e๏ฌ€orts, I still had no idea what the heck Astrophage was made of.

They were opaque to every wavelength of light I threw at them. Visible, infrared, ultraviolet, x-ray, microwavesโ€ฆI even put a few Astrophage in a radiation-containment vessel and exposed it to the gamma rays emitted by Cesium-137 (this lab hasย everything). I called it theย โ€œBruce Banner Test.โ€ย Felt good about that name. Anyway, even gamma couldnโ€™t penetrate the little bastards. Which is like shooting a .50-caliber round at a sheet of paper and having it bounce o๏ฌ€. It just doesnโ€™t make any sense.

I sulked back to the microscope. The little dots hung out on the slide where theyโ€™d been for hours. This was my control set. The ones I hadnโ€™t battered with various light sources.ย โ€œMaybe Iโ€™m overthinking thisโ€ฆโ€ย I muttered.

I poked around the lab supplies until I found what I needed: nanosyringes. They were rare and expensive, but the lab had them. Basically, they were teeny, tiny needles. Small enough and sharp enough to be used for poking microorganisms. You could pull mitochondria out of a living cell with one of those babies.

Back to the microscope.ย โ€œOkay, you little reprobates. Youโ€™re radiation- proof, Iโ€™ll grant you that. But how about I stab you in the face?โ€

Normally a nanosyringe would be controlled byย ๏ฌnely tuned equipment. But I just wanted some stabby time and didnโ€™t care about the toolโ€™s integrity. I grabbed the collet (where it would normally mount to the control machinery) and brought the needle into view in the microscope. Theyโ€™re called nanosyringes, but theyโ€™re actually about 50 nanometers wide. Still, the needle was tiny compared to the hulking 10-micron Astrophageโ€”only about one two-thousandth the width.

I poked an Astrophage with the needle and what happened next was nothing I could have expected.

First o๏ฌ€, the needle penetrated. No doubt on that front. For all its resistance to light and heat, apparently, Astrophage was no better at dealing with sharp things than any other cell.

The instant I poked a hole in it, the whole cell became translucent. No longer a featureless black dot, but a cell with organelles and everything else a microbiologist like me wants to see. Just like that. It was likeย ๏ฌ‚icking a switch.

And then it died. The ruptured cell wall simply gave up the ghost and completely unraveled. The Astrophage went from being a cohesive roundish object to a slowly widening puddle with no outer boundary. I grabbed a normal needle from a nearby shelf and sucked up the goop.

โ€œYes!โ€ย I said.ย โ€œI killed one!โ€

โ€œGood for you,โ€ย Stratt said without looking up from her tablet.ย โ€œFirst human to kill an alien. Just like Arnold Schwarzenegger inย Predator.โ€

โ€œOkay, I know youโ€™re trying to be funny, but that Predator died by deliberately setting o๏ฌ€ย a bomb. Theย ๏ฌrst human to actually kill a Predator was Michael Harriganโ€”played by Danny Gloverโ€”inย Predator 2.โ€

She stared at me through the window for a moment, then shook her head and rolled her eyes.

โ€œPoint is, I canย ๏ฌnallyย ๏ฌnd out what Astrophage is made of!โ€ โ€œReally?โ€ย She set the tablet down.ย โ€œKilling it did the trick?โ€

โ€œI think so. Itโ€™s not black anymore. Light is getting through. Whatever weird e๏ฌ€ect was blocking it isnโ€™t anymore.โ€

โ€œHow did you do it? What killed it?โ€

โ€œI penetrated the outer cell membrane with a nanosyringe.โ€ โ€œYou poked it with a stick?โ€

โ€œNo!โ€ย I said.ย โ€œWell. Yes. But it was a scienti๏ฌc poke with a very scienti๏ฌc stick.โ€

โ€œIt took you two days to think of poking it with a stick.โ€ โ€œYouโ€ฆbe quiet.โ€

I took the needle to the spectroscope and ejected the Astrophage goop onto the platform. Then I sealed the chamber andย ๏ฌred up the analysis. I bounced from one foot to the other like a little kid while I waited for the results.

Stratt craned her neck to watch me.ย โ€œSo whatโ€™s this youโ€™re doing now?โ€ โ€œItโ€™s the atomic-emission spectroscope,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œI told you about it earlier

โ€”it sends x-rays into a sample to excite the atoms, then watches the

wavelengths that come back. Didnโ€™t work at all when I tried it on the live Astrophage, but now that the magic light-stopping properties are gone, things should work like normal.โ€

The machine beeped.

โ€œAll right! Here we go! Time toย ๏ฌnd out what chemicals are in a life-form that doesnโ€™t use water!โ€ย I read the LCD screen. It showed all the peaks and the elements they represented. I stared at the screen silently.

โ€œWell?โ€ย Stratt said.ย โ€œWell?!โ€

โ€œUm. Thereโ€™s carbon and nitrogenโ€ฆbut the vast majority of the sample is hydrogen and oxygen.โ€ย I sighed and plopped down in the chair next to the machine.ย โ€œThe ratio of hydrogen to oxygen is two to one.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€ย she asked.ย โ€œWhat does that mean?โ€ โ€œItโ€™s water. Astrophage is mostly water.โ€

Her mouth fell open.ย โ€œHow? How can something that exists on the surface of the sun have water?โ€

I shrugged.ย โ€œProbably because it maintains its internal temperature at

96.415 degrees Celsius no matter whatโ€™s going on outside.โ€ โ€œWhat does this all mean?โ€ย she asked.

I put my head in my hands.ย โ€œIt means every scienti๏ฌc paper I ever wrote is wrong.โ€

โ€”

Well. Thatโ€™s a kick in the pants.

But I wasnโ€™t happy in that lab anyway. And they must have brought in smarter people than me, because here I am: at another star in a ship powered by Astrophage.

So why am I the one out here? All I did was prove that my lifelong belief was wrong.

I guess Iโ€™ll remember that part later. For now, I want to know what star that is. And why we built a ship to bring people here.

All important things, to be sure. But right now, thereโ€™s a whole area of the ship that I havenโ€™t explored yet.

Storage.

Maybe I canย ๏ฌnd something other than a makeshift toga to wear.

I climb down the ladder to the lab, and then farther downward into the dormitory.

My friends are still there. Still dead. I try not to look at them.

I scan theย ๏ฌ‚oor for any hint of an access panel. Nothing. So I get down on my hands and knees and crawl around. Finally, I spot itโ€”a very thin seam marking a square directly under my male crewmateโ€™s bunk. I canโ€™t even wedge myย ๏ฌngernail into the seam itโ€™s so thin.

There were all manner of tools in the lab. Iโ€™m sure thereโ€™s aย ๏ฌ‚athead screwdriver I could use to pry this open. Orโ€ฆ

โ€œHey computer! Open this access panel.โ€ โ€œSpecify aperture to open.โ€

I point to the panel.ย โ€œThis. This thing. Open it.โ€ โ€œSpecify aperture to open.โ€

โ€œUhโ€ฆopen aperture to supply room.โ€ โ€œUnsealing supply room,โ€ย says the computer.

Thereโ€™s a click and the panel raises a couple of inches. A rubber gasket around the seam gets torn apart in the process. I couldnโ€™t see it when the panel was closed, things were that tight. Iโ€™m glad I didnโ€™t try to pry it open. It would have been a pain in the butt.

I pull the remnants of the seal o๏ฌ€ย the panel and the panel becomes loose in the opening. I jiggle it a bit beforeย ๏ฌguring out I have to rotate it. Once I rotate it 90 degrees it detaches and I set it aside. I poke my head into the room below and see a bunch of soft-sided white cubes. I guess that makes sense. Packing stu๏ฌ€ย in soft containers lets you cram more things into the room.

Just as the diagram in the control room said, the storage area is about a meter high. And completely full of those soft containers. I would have to remove a bunch just to get in thereโ€”if I wanted to get in there. I guess Iโ€™ll have to eventually. It looks a bit claustrophobic, to be honest. Like the crawlspace under a house.

I grab the nearest package and pull it up through the opening.

The package is held together by Velcro straps. I pull them apart and the container unfolds like a Chinese takeout box. Inside are a bunch of uniforms.

Jackpot! Though not really a coincidence. Whoever packed this probably did it with careful planning. And they knew the crew would want uniforms as soon as they woke up. So theyโ€™re in theย ๏ฌrst bag. There are at least a dozen uniforms in the package. Theyโ€™re each in vacuum-sealed plastic bags. I open one at random.

Itโ€™s a light-blue, one-piece jumpsuit. Astronaut clothes. The fabric is thin but feels comfortable. On the left shoulder is theย Hail Maryย mission patch. Same design I saw in the control room. Beneath that is the Chineseย ๏ฌ‚ag. The right shoulder has a white patch with a blue chevron triangle surrounded by a wreath design and the lettersย โ€œCNSA.โ€ย I recognize it immediately, nerd that I am. Itโ€™s the Chinese National Space Agency logo.

Thereโ€™s a name tag over the left breast pocket. It readsย ๅงšโ€”the same character I saw in theย Hail Maryย mission crest. Itโ€™s pronounced Yรกo.

How do I knowโ€”? Of course I know. Commander Yรกo. He was our leader. I can see his face now. Young and striking, eyes full of determination. He understood the severity of the mission and the weight on his shoulders. He was ready for the task. He was stern but reasonable. And you knewโ€”you just knewโ€”he would give up his life in a second for the mission or his crew.

I pull out another uniform. Much smaller than the commanderโ€™s. The mission patch is the same, but thereโ€™s a Russianย ๏ฌ‚ag beneath it. And the right shoulder has a tilted red chevron surrounded by a ring. Itโ€™s the symbol of Roscosmosโ€”the Russian space agency. The name patch readsย ะ˜ะ›ะฎะฅะ˜ะะ, another name from the crest. This was Ilyukhinaโ€™s uniform.

Olesya Ilyukhina. She was hilarious. She could have you laughing your butt o๏ฌ€ย within thirty seconds of meeting you. She just had one of those infectious and jovial personalities. As serious as Yรกo was, Ilyukhina was casual. They butted heads about it from time to time, but even Yรกo couldnโ€™t resist her charms. I remember when heย ๏ฌnally broke down and laughed at one of her jokes. You canโ€™t be a hundred percent serious forever.

I stand up and look to the bodies. No longer a stern commander; no longer a cheerful friend. Just two empty husks that once held souls but now barely looked human. They deserve more than this. They deserve a burial.

The container holds multiple out๏ฌts for each crewmember. I eventuallyย ๏ฌnd the ones for me. They are exactly as I assumed they would be.ย Hail Mary

mission patch with a U.S.ย ๏ฌ‚ag underneath, a NASA logo on the right shoulder, and a name tag that saysย .

I put on my jumpsuit. After more digging in the storage area Iย ๏ฌnd footwear. Theyโ€™re not shoes, really. Just thick socks with rubber solesโ€”ย booties with some grip. I guess thatโ€™s all weโ€™d need for the mission. I put them on as well.

Then I go about the grim task of dressing my departed comrades. The jumpsuits donโ€™t remotely look the right size on their thin, desiccated bodies. I even put the booties on. Why not? This is our uniform. And a traveler deserves to be buried in uniform.

I start with Ilyukhina. She weighs almost nothing. I carry her over my shoulder as I climb the ladders all the way to the control room. Once there, I set her on theย ๏ฌ‚oor and open the airlock. The spacesuit inside is bulky and in the way. I move it, piece by piece, into the control room and set it on the pilotโ€™s chair. Then I put Olesya into the airlock.

The airlock controls are self-explanatory. The air pressure inside the airlock and even the outer door are controllable by the panel in the control room. Thereโ€™s even a Jettison button. I close the door and activate the jettison process.

It starts with a buzzing alarm, blinking lights inside the airlock, and a verbal countdown. There are three di๏ฌ€erent blinking Abort switches inside the airlock. Anyone whoย ๏ฌnds themselves in there during a jettison can easily cancel it.

Once the countdownย ๏ฌnishes, the airlock decompresses to 10 percent of an atmosphere (according to the readouts). Then it releases the outer door. With a whoosh, Olesya is gone. And, with the constantly accelerating ship, the body simply falls away.

โ€œOlesya Ilyukhina,โ€ย I say. I donโ€™t remember her religion or if she even had one. I donโ€™t know what she would have wanted said. But at least I will remember her name.ย โ€œI commend your body to the stars.โ€ย It seems appropriate. Maybe corny, but it makes me feel better.

Next I carry Commander Yรกo to the airlock. I set him inside, seal it, and jettison his remains in the same way.

โ€œYรกo Li-Jie,โ€ย I say. I donโ€™t know how I remembered his given name. It just came to me in the moment.ย โ€œI commend your body to the stars.โ€

The airlock cycles and I am alone. I was alone all along, but now I am truly alone. The sole living human within several light-years, at least.

What do I do now?

โ€”

โ€œWelcome back, Mr. Grace!โ€ย said Theresa.

The kids all sat in their desks, primed for science class.ย โ€œThanks, Theresa,โ€ย I said.

Michael piped in.ย โ€œThe substitute teacher was booooring.โ€

โ€œWell, Iโ€™m not,โ€ย I said. I picked up four plastic bins from the corner.ย โ€œToday weโ€™re going to look at rocks! Okay, maybe that is a little boring.โ€

A chuckle from the kids.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to divide into four teams and each team will get a bin. You have to separate the rocks into igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic. First team toย ๏ฌnishโ€”and get every rock correctly categorizedโ€”gets beanbags.โ€

โ€œCan we pick our own teams?โ€ย Trang asked excitedly.

โ€œNo. That just leads to a bunch of drama. Because children are animals.

Horrible, horrible animals.โ€ย Everyone laughed.

โ€œTeams will be alphabetical. So theย ๏ฌrst team isโ€”โ€

Abby raised her hand.ย โ€œMr. Grace, can I ask a question?โ€ โ€œSure.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s happening to the sun?โ€

The whole class suddenly grew much more attentive.ย โ€œMy dad says itโ€™s not a big deal,โ€ย Michael said.

โ€œMyย dad says itโ€™s a government conspiracy,โ€ย said Tamora.

โ€œOkayโ€ฆโ€ย I set the bins down and sat on the edge of my desk.ย โ€œSoโ€ฆย basically, you know how thereโ€™s algae in the ocean, right? Well, thereโ€™s sort of a space algae growing in the sun.โ€

โ€œAstrophage?โ€ย said Harrison.

I almost slipped o๏ฌ€ย the desk.ย โ€œWh-Where did you hear that word?โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s what theyโ€™re calling it now,โ€ย said Harrison.ย โ€œThe president called it

that in a speech last night.โ€

Iโ€™d been so isolated in that lab I didnโ€™t even know the president had given a speech. And holy cow. I invented that word for Stratt theย day before. In that time it got from her to the president to the media.

Wow.

โ€œOkay, yes. Astrophage. And itโ€™s growing on the sun. Or near it. People arenโ€™t sure.โ€

โ€œSo whatโ€™s the problem?โ€ย Michael asked.ย โ€œAlgae in the ocean doesnโ€™t hurt us. Why would algae on the sun?โ€

I pointed to him.ย โ€œGood question. Thing is, Astrophage is starting to absorb a lot of the sunโ€™s energy. Well, not a lot. Just a tiny percentage. But that means Earth gets a tiny bit less sunlight. And that can cause real problems.โ€

โ€œSo itโ€™ll be a little colder? Like a degree or two?โ€ย Abby asked.ย โ€œWhatโ€™s the big deal?โ€

โ€œYou guys know about climate change, right? How our CO2ย emissions have caused a lot of problems in the environment?โ€

โ€œMy dad says thatโ€™s not real,โ€ย said Tamora.

โ€œWell, it is,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œAnyway. All the environmental problems we have from climate change? They happened because the worldโ€™s average temperature went up one and a half degrees. Thatโ€™s it. Just one and a half degrees.โ€

โ€œHow much will this Astrophage stu๏ฌ€ย change Earthโ€™s temperature?โ€ย asked Luther.

I stood and paced slowly in front of the class.ย โ€œWe donโ€™t know. But if it breeds like algae does, at about that same speed, climatologists are saying Earthโ€™s temperature could drop ten toย ๏ฌfteen degrees.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™ll happen?โ€ย Luther asked.

โ€œItโ€™ll be bad. Very bad. A lot of animalsโ€”entire speciesโ€”will die out because their habitats are too cold. The ocean water will cool down, too, and

it might cause an entire food-chain collapse. So even things that could survive the lower temperature will starve to death because the things they eat all die o๏ฌ€.โ€

The kids stared at me, awestruck. Why had their parents not explained this to them? Probably because they didnโ€™t understand it themselves.

Besides, if I had a nickel for every time I wanted to smack a kidโ€™s parents for not teaching them even the most basic thingsโ€ฆwellโ€ฆIโ€™d have enough nickels to put in a sock and smack those parents with it.

โ€œAnimals are going to die too?!โ€ย Abby asked, horri๏ฌed.

Abby rode horses competitively and spent most of her time at her grandfatherโ€™s dairy farm. Human su๏ฌ€ering is often an abstract concept to kids. But animal su๏ฌ€ering is something else entirely.

โ€œYes, Iโ€™m sorry, but a lot of livestock will die. And itโ€™s worse than that. On land, crops will fail. The food we eat will become scarce. When that happens, the social order often breaks down andโ€”โ€ย I stopped myself there. These were kids. Why was I going this far?

โ€œHowโ€”โ€ย Abby began. Iโ€™d never seen her at a loss for words.ย โ€œHow long before this happens?โ€

โ€œClimatologists think itโ€™ll happen within the next thirty years,โ€ย I said. Just like that, all the kids relaxed.

โ€œThirty years?โ€ย Trang laughed.ย โ€œThatโ€™s forever!โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not that longโ€ฆโ€ย I said. But to a bunch of twelve- and thirteen-year- olds, thirty years may as well be a million.

โ€œCan I be on Tracyโ€™s team for the rock-sorting assignment?โ€ย asked Michael.

Thirty years. I looked out at their little faces. In thirty years theyโ€™d all be in their early forties. They would bear the brunt of it all. And it wouldnโ€™t be easy. These kids were going to grow up in an idyllic world and be thrown into an apocalyptic nightmare.

They were the generation that would experience the Sixth Extinction Event.

I felt a cramp in the pit of my stomach. I was looking out at a room full of children. Happy children. And there was a good chance some of them would

literally die of starvation.

โ€œIโ€ฆโ€ย I stammered.ย โ€œI have to go do a thing. Forget the rock assignment.โ€ โ€œWhat?โ€ย asked Luther.

โ€œDoโ€ฆstudy hall. This is study hall for the rest of the hour. Just do homework from other classes. Stay in your seats and work quietly until the bell rings.โ€

I left the room without another word. I almost collapsed in the hall from the shakes. I went to a nearby drinking fountain and splashed water on my face. Then I took a deep breath, got some self-control back, and jogged to the parking lot.

I drove fast. Way too fast. I ran red lights. I cut people o๏ฌ€. I never do any of that, but that day was di๏ฌ€erent. That day wasโ€ฆI donโ€™t even know.

I screeched into the lab parking lot and left my car parked at an odd angle. Two U.S. Army soldiers were at the doors to the complex. Just as they had been the previous two days while Iโ€™d been working there. I stormed past

them.

โ€œShould we have stopped him?โ€ย I heard one ask the other. I didnโ€™t care what the response was.

I stomped into the observation room. Stratt was there, of course, reading her tablet. She looked up and I caught a glimpse of genuine surprise on her face.

โ€œDr. Grace? What are you doing here?โ€

Past her, through the windows, I spotted four people in containment suits working in the lab.

โ€œWho are they?โ€ย I said, pointing at the window.ย โ€œAnd what are they doing in my lab?โ€

โ€œCanโ€™t say I like your toneโ€”โ€ย she said.ย โ€œI donโ€™t care.โ€

โ€œAnd itโ€™s not your lab. Itโ€™s my lab. Those technicians are collecting the Astrophage.โ€

โ€œWhat are you going to do with it?โ€

She held her tablet under her arm.ย โ€œYour dream is coming true. Iโ€™m dividing up the Astrophage and sending it to thirty di๏ฌ€erent labs around the

world. Everything from CERN to a CIA bioweapons facility.โ€

โ€œThe CIA has a bioweaโ€”?โ€ย I began.ย โ€œNever mind. I want to do more work on this.โ€

She shook her head.ย โ€œYouโ€™ve done your part. We thought it was anhydrous life. Turns out it wasnโ€™t. You proved that. And since no alien exploded out of your chest, we can consider the guinea-pig phase over too. So youโ€™re done.โ€

โ€œNo, Iโ€™m not done. Thereโ€™s a lot more to learn.โ€

โ€œOf course there is,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œAnd I have thirty labs all eagerly waiting to get started on it.โ€

I stepped forward.ย โ€œLeave some Astrophage here. Let me work it some more.โ€

She stepped forward as well.ย โ€œNo.โ€ โ€œWhy not?!โ€

โ€œAccording to your notes, there were one hundred and seventy-four living Astrophage cells in the sample. And you killed one yesterday, so weโ€™re down to a hundred and seventy-three.โ€

She pointed to her tablet.ย โ€œEach of these labsโ€”huge, national labsโ€”will getย ๏ฌve or six cells each. Thatโ€™s it. Weโ€™re down to that level of scarcity. Those cells are the one hundred and seventy-three most important things on Earth right now. Our analysis of them will determine if humanity survives.โ€

She paused and spoke a little more softly.ย โ€œI get it. You spent your whole life trying to prove that life doesnโ€™t require water. Then, unbelievably, you get some actual extraterrestrial life and it turns out to need water. Thatโ€™s rough. Shake it o๏ฌ€ย and get back to your life. Iโ€™ve got it from here.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m still a microbiologist who spent his career working up theoretical models for alien life. Iโ€™m a useful resource with a skill set almost no one else has.โ€

โ€œDr. Grace, I donโ€™t have the luxury of leaving samples here just to stroke your bruised ego.โ€

โ€œEgo?! This isnโ€™t about myย ego! Itโ€™s about myย children!โ€ โ€œYou donโ€™t have children.โ€

โ€œYes, I do! Dozens of them. They come to my class every day. And theyโ€™re all going to end up in aย Mad Maxย nightmare world if we donโ€™t solve this

problem. Yeah, I was wrong about the water. I donโ€™t care about that. I care about those kids. Soย give me some gosh-darned Astrophage!โ€

She stepped back and pursed her lips. She looked to the side, thinking it over. Then she turned back to me.ย โ€œThree. You can have three Astrophage.โ€

I unclenched my muscles.ย โ€œOkay.โ€ย I breathed a little. I didnโ€™t realize how tense Iโ€™d been.ย โ€œOkay. Three. I can work with that.โ€

She typed on her tablet.ย โ€œIโ€™ll keep this lab open. Itโ€™s all yours. Come back in a few hours and my guys will be gone.โ€

I was already halfway into a containment suit.ย โ€œIโ€™m getting back to work now. Tell your guys to stay out of my way.โ€

She glared at me but didnโ€™t say anything further.

โ€”

I have to do this for my kids.

I meanโ€ฆtheyโ€™re notย myย kids. But theyโ€™re my kids.

I look at the screens arrayed before me. I need to think about this.

My memory is spotty. Seems reliable enough, but incomplete. Instead of waiting for an epiphany where I remember everything, what can I work out right now?

Earth is in trouble. The sun is infected with Astrophage. Iโ€™m in a spaceship in another solar system. This ship wasnโ€™t easy to build and it had an international crew. Weโ€™re talking about an interstellar missionโ€”something that should be impossible with our technology. Okay, so humanity put a lot of time and e๏ฌ€ort into this mission, and Astrophage was the missing link that enabled it.

Thereโ€™s only one explanation: Thereโ€™s a solution to the Astrophage problem here. Or a potential solution. Something promising enough to dedicate a huge amount of resources.

I scour the screens for more info. Mostly they seem to be the kinds of things youโ€™d expect on a spaceship. Life support, navigation, that sort of thing. One screen is labeledย โ€œBeetles.โ€ย The next screen over saysโ€”

Wait, beetles?

Okay, I donโ€™t know if it has anything to do with anything, but I need toย ๏ฌnd out if there are a bunch of beetles on this ship. Thatโ€™s the sort of thing a guy needs to know.

The screen is broken into four quadrants, each one showing nearly the same thing. A little schematic and a bunch of text information. The schematics each show a bulbous, oblong shape with a pointed head and a trapezoid on the back. If you tilt your head just right and squint, I suppose it kind of looks like a beetle. Each beetle also has a name up top:ย โ€œJohn,โ€ โ€œPaul,โ€ โ€œGeorge,โ€ย andย โ€œRingo.โ€

Yeah, I get it. Iโ€™m not laughing, but I get it.

I arbitrarily pick one beetle, John, and give it a good look.

John is no insect. Iโ€™m pretty sure heโ€™s a spaceship. The trapezoid in the rear is labeledย โ€œSpin Drive,โ€ย and the entire bulbous part is labeledย โ€œFuel.โ€ย The little head has aย โ€œComputerโ€ย label and aย โ€œRadioโ€ย label.

I look a little closer. The Fuel info box saysย : 120ย โ€”ย : 96.415ยฐย . The Computer box saysย : 3ย . 5

And the Radio info just saysย : 100%.

Itโ€™s an unmanned probe. Something small, I guess. The entire mass of the fuel is just 120 kilograms. Thatโ€™s not a lot. But a little Astrophage goes a long way. There arenโ€™t any scienti๏ฌc instruments labeled. Whatโ€™s the point of an unmanned ship with nothing on board?

Waitโ€ฆwhat if the 5 terabytes of storage is the point of the ship? A realization dawns on me.

โ€œOh. Shucks,โ€ย I say.

Iโ€™m out in space. Iโ€™m in another star system. I donโ€™t know how much Astrophage it took to get here, but it was probably a lot. Sending a ship to another star probably took an absurd amount of fuel. Sending that ship to another starย and bringing it backย would take ten times as much fuel.

I check the Astrophage panel to refresh my memory.

REMAINING: 20,862 KG CONSUMPTION RATE: 6.043 G/S

The consumption rate was 6.045 grams per second before. So itโ€™s gone down a little bit. And the fuel amount went down too. Basically, as the fuel gets consumed, the total mass of the ship goes down, so it needs less fuel per second to maintain the constant acceleration. Okay, that all makes sense.

I have no idea what theย Hail Maryโ€™s mass is, but to be able to shove it along at 1.5 gโ€™s of acceleration on a few grams of fuel per secondโ€ฆย Astrophage is amazing stu๏ฌ€.

Anyway, I donโ€™t know exactly how the consumption rate will change over time (I mean, I could work it out, but itโ€™s complicated). So for now Iโ€™ll just approximate it to 6 grams per second. How long will that fuel last?

Itโ€™s nice to have a jumpsuit on. Itโ€™s got pockets for all sorts of knickknacks. I still havenโ€™t found a calculator, so I do the math with a pen and paper. Grand total, Iโ€™ll run out of fuel in about forty days.

I donโ€™t know what star that is, but itโ€™s not the sun. And thereโ€™s just no way to get from any other star to Earth with just forty days of accelerating at

1.5 gโ€™s. It probably tookย yearsย to get here from Earthโ€”which might be why I was in a coma. Interesting.

Anyway, all this can only mean one thing: Theย Hail Maryย isnโ€™t going home. This is a one-way ticket. And Iโ€™m pretty sure these beetles are how Iโ€™m supposed to send information back to Earth.

Thereโ€™s no way I have a radio transmitter powerful enough to broadcast several light-years. I donโ€™t know if that would even be possible to build. So instead, I have these littleย โ€œbeetleโ€ย ships with 5 terabytes of information each. Theyโ€™llย ๏ฌ‚y back to Earth and broadcast their data. Thereโ€™s four of them for redundancy. Iโ€™m probably supposed to put copies of myย ๏ฌndings in each one and send them all home. If at least one survives the journey, Earth is saved.

Iโ€™m on a suicide mission. John, Paul, George, and Ringo get to go home, but my long and winding road ends here. I must have known all this when I volunteered. But to my amnesia-riddled brain this is new information. Iโ€™m going to die out here. And Iโ€™m going to die alone.

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