The aircraft descended through a layered ceiling of Arctic cloud, the vibration of the hull shifting subtly as the pilot adjusted thrust against crosswinds rolling off the ice fields. When the cloud cover thinned, the landscape emerged without transition — a vast, uninterrupted expanse of white broken only by deep glacial fractures and wind-scoured ridgelines that caught the low southern light. North Ellesmere Island did not present itself as terrain so much as exposure. There were no trees, no elevation changes of comfort, nothing that softened the horizon. Only distance and cold.
From his seat near the rear of the cabin, Reid leaned slightly toward the reinforced window and studied the ice below as they crossed over long fissures that revealed darker blue depths beneath the surface crust. The sun, already sinking though it was early afternoon, cast oblique light that exaggerated every imperfection in the ice sheet. Ahead, a small geometry of artificial illumination marked the landing zone — a calculated intrusion in an otherwise indifferent environment.
He lowered his gaze to the data pad resting against his knee. The facility map filled the display in layered transparency: surface structures, reinforced corridors, and the exposed arc of the collider ring currently accessible above the ice. Their projected descent vector intersected the primary platform at a shallow angle to minimize crosswind instability. He zoomed briefly on the ring segment nearest the damaged hall and overlaid the structural reports against the thermal imaging captured earlier in the week.
He had reviewed the logs repeatedly during the flight north, enough that the timestamps no longer felt sequential but memorized. Impact windows. Containment protocols. Emergency shutdown. Casualty transfers. The official classification labeled the incident a coordinated terrorist strike, complete with projectile trajectories and explosive residue analysis, yet the modeling of stress distribution along the ring did not entirely match the surface damage described in the summary brief. It was not that the report was implausible; it was that it resolved too neatly.
He shifted in his seat as a familiar stiffness tightened along his upper back, the old injury responding to hours in a fixed posture. Without looking away from the screen, he rolled his shoulder once and scrolled further into the telemetry. The ring’s magnetic field readings during the attack window had spiked, then stabilized, then flattened in a pattern that suggested either rapid compensation or deliberate recalibration. He made a mental note to pull the raw magnetometer data once inside. The summary files rarely contained what mattered.
A small notification appeared at the top of his display. Laura.
He accepted the call, angling the screen slightly away from the window glare. Her image resolved slowly as the signal stabilized, warm interior lighting behind her contrasting sharply with the colorless world outside his viewport.
“I watched the press conference,” she said. “They extended the no-fly zone through the end of the month.”
Her tone carried more information than the words themselves. Hope, perhaps. Or an appeal for reconsideration disguised as logistics.
Reid glanced once more toward the horizon where the sun had slipped lower, flattening into a pale disk just above the ice. “That complicates rotation,” he replied evenly.
She studied him for a moment before continuing. “So you’re staying longer than expected. It’s like you never left.”
He understood the meaning beneath it. Even when he had been home, he had been reviewing plasma containment models, recalculating field tolerances, replaying reactor instability curves in his head long after dinner plates had been cleared. Geography did not always equate to presence.
“When I have a clearer picture of what failed,” he said, “I’ll make arrangements if necessary.”
“You know I’m not bringing the kids into a military cordon,” she answered without hesitation.
Before he could respond, Noah’s face abruptly filled the frame from below, then tilted sideways as he tried to orient the tablet properly. Reid felt the tension ease slightly at the sight of him, the familiarity grounding in a way that no briefing ever managed.
“So we get to come up there?” Noah asked. “Is it as big as the videos say?”
“It’s large,” Reid answered, allowing a faint smile. “And cold. Which means someone has to stay home and make sure your mother and sister don’t freeze Michigan solid while I’m gone.”
Noah straightened at the implied responsibility. “I can do that.”
“I know,” Reid replied. “That’s why I’m counting on you.” Noah hesitated, disappointed but unwilling to show it fully. “Okay. I’ll get Ava.”
Reid heard the word “turkey” shouted faintly as Noah ran out of frame, the reminder of the approaching holiday lingering in the background of a place where seasons meant little beyond survival. The cabin lighting shifted abruptly to a muted red as the aircraft entered final approach. A soft alert tone sounded overhead.
“Is everything all right?” Laura asked.
“Final descent sequence,” Reid said. “We’re two minutes out.” He paused before adding, “I’ll call once I’m inside.” She nodded, searching his expression for something he did not offer. The connection ended.
Reid secured the pad and returned his attention to the window. The facility now occupied a measurable portion of the horizon. Surface structures appeared orderly, scaffolded where repairs were underway, but not ravaged. Snow had been cleared from primary walkways in straight, disciplined lines. Lighting arrays were functional. Nothing suggested the level of infrastructural devastation described in the press release.
He reopened the structural overlay and compared it again to what he could see with his own eyes as the aircraft descended. If the attack had been as concentrated as reported, there should have been wider displacement along the outer ring supports. Instead, the visible damage appeared localized, contained to a specific hall and adjacent corridor.
The aircraft adjusted pitch and lowered toward the platform, rotors shifting angle as forward motion bled away.
Reid watched the installation rise beneath them, cataloging details without commentary, already assembling questions he would not ask aloud until he had data to anchor them. Something here required closer measurement.
Reid secured the data pad in its magnetic holder and turned fully toward the window as the aircraft continued its descent. For a moment his thoughts lingered on the call he had just ended. He understood Laura’s refusal without resentment. The Arctic offered nothing forgiving — not the terrain, not the weather, and certainly not the strategic uncertainty that had already proven lethal. Even without the recent attack, the isolation alone was reason enough to keep them far from this latitude. Michigan, in all its seasonal predictability, was safer in ways that had nothing to do with temperature.
The exposed segment of the collider ring passed beneath them as the aircraft reduced altitude. The structural supports were visible now, rising from reinforced anchor points drilled into bedrock below the ice shelf. Reid leaned slightly closer to the glass, studying the surface for scoring, buckling, or thermal distortion that might indicate explosive overpressure. From this vantage, the ring appeared intact. No visible warping along the outer braces. No obvious fracture lines along the superconducting housing.
The ring curved away and disappeared beneath a sheet of refrozen accumulation, leaving only the surface buildings exposed — low, angular structures engineered to shed wind and drift. The aircraft banked right, and the landing platform lights intensified in the growing dusk, their glow reflecting faintly off the undercarriage.
Reid tapped the side of his visor and brought up a transparent overlay across the interior of the glass. The facility’s schematic aligned itself with the physical structures below, damage zones marked in amber and red according to the incident report. The official summary described widespread infrastructure compromise and long-term reconstruction projections. What he saw from above suggested something narrower.
“Circle once,” he said into the cabin mic, keeping his voice level. “I want a full pass.”
There was a brief pause before the pilot responded. “You’ll get your tour on the ground.”
Reid did not raise his voice. “I was sent to evaluate operational viability, not to admire architecture. Either we circle now, or I escalate the request.”
The cockpit remained silent for several seconds, long enough to register reluctance, before the aircraft adjusted heading. The lateral shift was subtle but deliberate, and the nose dipped slightly to give the rear cabin a clearer angle.
Reid allowed himself a faint exhale as the facility rotated beneath them. Influence was rarely about volume. It was about understanding who answered to whom.
He focused again on the overlay, aligning projected impact vectors with visible surface scarring. A crashed vessel lay near the perimeter of the landing area, its hull partially embedded in snow and ice. The impact pattern suggested a controlled descent rather than a high-velocity strike. Several missile craters punctured the surface near the outer corridor, their spacing irregular but not random. He traced their orientation relative to the damaged hall identified in the report.
One structure showed clear structural failure — a collapsed section near what appeared to be a meeting chamber or auxiliary control room. Scaffolding surrounded it now, and crews were spraying water along reinforced panels, allowing the Arctic air to flash-freeze the surface into a temporary ice shell. Reid watched the process carefully. Encasing repairs in ice provided short-term insulation and structural rigidity against wind shear, but it also concealed underlying material stress.
He shifted the overlay slightly and studied the adjacent command building. According to the damage report, it should have sustained shockwave displacement. From this altitude, its outer shell appeared untouched. Window panels intact. Reinforcement ribs unbent. No visible emergency plating.
He said nothing.
They were not here to question the attack narrative — not yet. They were here to determine whether the machine could run again. Everything else would follow from that. After two full rotations, the aircraft leveled off.
“That satisfactory?” the pilot asked, tone dry.
“It will do,” Reid replied. “Bring us in.”
The aircraft reoriented and began a controlled descent toward the platform. The rotors adjusted pitch, slowing forward velocity as the landing struts prepared for contact. Reid cycled through his suit diagnostics while they dropped the final meters: cabin temperature holding at fifty degrees Fahrenheit, internal suit environment stable at sixty-four, external air reading minus twelve with sustained winds just under fifteen knots. Surface forecast projected further temperature decline after sunset. His team’s inbound aircraft remained approximately thirty minutes out, assuming no wind deviation.
The VTOL settled onto the platform with a controlled jolt that traveled through the frame and into the cabin floor. Rotors remained engaged as the rear door cycled through pressure equalization.
The pilot’s voice returned over the internal channel. “You can wait inside while they clear the platform.”
Reid keyed the channel open as he unlatched his harness. “I’ll disembark here. Inform Commander Ryson I’ve arrived. And remind him he still owes me a drink.”
There was no immediate reply, only the faint hum of rotor wash against ice as the rear hatch began to lower. Reid stepped toward the opening before the pilot had the opportunity to respond further, the conversation already concluded in his mind.
Outside, the cold pressed against the exposed sections of his suit as he moved toward the threshold, the wind cutting clean across the platform and carrying with it the sterile scent of snow and machinery.
From this distance, the facility no longer looked distant or abstract.
It looked operational.
As the rear hatch lowered and the Arctic air moved across the platform, the temperature differential registered immediately along the exposed surfaces of his suit. A notification pulsed along the edge of his visor display: sustained winds at twelve knots, ambient temperature minus twelve Fahrenheit, projected wind chill approaching negative thirty. The suit responded without delay, recalibrating internal heating gradients and tightening the environmental seal along the collar. The outer visor extended incrementally to cover the remaining exposed skin at his neck, micro-servos adjusting with quiet precision.
The cold did not bite so much as press, dense and absolute.
He stepped down from the aircraft onto the platform. The rotors remained engaged long enough to pivot the craft toward the hangar lift before the rear door sealed shut behind him. The aircraft’s movement sent a spiral of loose snow outward in a widening ring before settling again into stillness.
Reid drew a slow breath through the suit’s filtered intake and let his eyes adjust to the scale of the installation at ground level. The sun, flattened by the horizon, hung low over the southern ridge line, its light diffused into muted bands of pink and pale blue that bled into the ice fields. He checked the timestamp on his visor out of habit rather than necessity: 1321 hours, 21 November 2070. With the solstice approaching, daylight would continue to compress until it dissolved entirely into polar night.
He shifted his gaze southward where the moon hovered just above the glacier’s crest, pale and distinct against the fading sky. Even in this latitude, the celestial mechanics felt predictable. The sun dipped, the moon held its arc, gravity remained constant. Some systems could still be trusted.
He turned toward the main entrance.
Personnel moved across the platform in measured patterns — soldiers in Arctic combat gear conducting perimeter checks, civilian repair crews managing scaffolding and reinforcement panels. The rhythm of movement struck him immediately. There was no visible haste, no tightening of posture, no heightened perimeter discipline that typically followed a successful strike on critical infrastructure. Patrol spacing appeared standard rather than reinforced. Weapons were carried properly but not at the ready. Conversations occurred in low tones that suggested routine, not alert status.
As he approached the damaged structure he had observed from the air, several men were removing ladder assemblies and retracting support lines for the evening. The collapsed section had been reframed, and a fresh ice shell was forming along the exterior where water had been applied to stabilize temporary supports. It was the kind of repair work intended to survive weather, not concealment — but concealment was a byproduct nonetheless.
The main entrance doors parted with a controlled hydraulic hiss as he crossed the threshold. Two guards stood positioned on either side, rifles secured across their chests, posture formal but not tense.
“You’re Mercer?” one of them asked. “We’ll need identification and a quick weapons scan.”
Reid removed the access card from an inner pocket and handed it forward without comment. As the scanner passed across his suit, he glanced past them toward the interior corridor.
“For a no-fly exclusion zone,” he said evenly, “this feels relatively accessible.”
The guard returned the card after the device emitted a confirming tone. “Above our pay grade. All airspace is monitored now. Anything inbound gets flagged before it reaches visual range.”
Another alert sounded from the handheld unit, sharper than the first. The guard looked down at the display and hesitated briefly before looking back up.
“Lieutenant Colonel,” he said, more to the device than to Reid. “Didn’t expect that attached to an analyst credential.” Reid allowed the faintest hint of acknowledgment. “That designation belongs to a previous chapter. Mercer will suffice.”
The guard’s posture adjusted subtly — not exaggerated, but measurable. Both men straightened, reflexively sharper now that context had shifted. They offered a brief salute, which he returned without ceremony.
“Where can I report for quarters?” he asked. A call was placed for an escort while they waited.
Reid’s attention drifted back toward the reinforced corridor visible through the glass partition behind them. “This section,” he said, nodding toward the repaired hall, “collapsed during the strike?”
The guard nearest him — Payton, according to the stitched nameplate — followed his gaze. “That’s what we were briefed. Frame was already refitted when we arrived. They’re rebuilding the ice cap over it now.”
“And that corridor leads where?”
“A meeting chamber,” the second guard — Goodwin — answered. “Structural failure. Casualties were inside.”
Reid studied the angle of the damage again through the glass. A meeting room was a specific target. Not infrastructure critical to power routing. Not a support column. A gathering space. He let the thought remain unspoken.
“Mercer?”
He turned at the sound of his name. A woman in an Arctic environmental suit approached from the adjacent corridor. Her gear carried no visible military insignia, only a systems badge partially obscured by frost.
“Dr. Sharon Brig,” she said, extending a gloved hand. “Systems repair.” He removed his glove long enough to shake it. Her grip was firm, efficient. “I understand you’ll need orientation,” she continued. “I can walk you through.”
He nodded once and fell into step beside her as she turned down the right-hand corridor. Behind him, Payton and Goodwin exchanged brief looks that suggested mild curiosity before resuming their posts.
“The damaged hall isn’t priority,” Dr. Brig said as they moved. “Structural stabilization first. Full rebuild later. It won’t affect primary operations.”
Her pace was steady, and she did not look back as she spoke. “Mess hall is ahead. Limited selection. Enough to function.”
She gestured toward one branch of the corridor before turning another direction. The facility’s interior lighting was recessed along the upper walls, reflecting softly against white composite panels that concealed insulation layers beneath.
“Recreation area is further down,” she added. “Closest thing to normal you’ll find up here.”
Reid studied the layout as they moved, noting junction points and secondary exits. “You mentioned recreation like it’s rare.” She gave a brief, quiet laugh. “You don’t strike me as someone who watches much entertainment.”
“Not recently.”
“Figures.”
They descended a short flight of reinforced stairs, and Reid tapped his visor to bring up a structural overlay. A wireframe model pulsed into view, mapping corridors and adjacent rooms in faint green lines. They were moving beneath the primary access hall that connected directly to the command center. He noted the density of secondary rooms along the second level — storage, dormitories, labs.
Dr. Brig stopped at a secured door and entered a code. The panel slid open.
“Your quarters.”
Inside, the space was compact but functional — a narrow bed against the left wall, a small sink and sanitation module to the right, a desk anchored beneath a reinforced wall panel. No unnecessary ornamentation. No wasted volume.
Reid removed his helmet and set it on the table, allowing the interior air to replace the filtered atmosphere of his suit.
“If my team arrives within the hour,” he said, “direct them here briefly, then to the control center.” She nodded. “I can handle that.”
She lingered only long enough to ensure there were no further questions before stepping back into the corridor. “I’ll return to systems,” she said. “We’ll likely speak again once you’ve had a look.” The door sealed behind her.
Reid remained standing for a moment in the quiet, allowing the residual hum of the facility to settle into awareness — ventilation systems, distant mechanical movement, the faint vibration that suggested machinery running deeper beneath the ice.
He reached for his helmet again. The control center would answer more than the platform ever could.
Reid inclined his head once, and Dr. Brig turned without further exchange. Her steps were brisk but unhurried as she disappeared down the corridor, the soft hum of ventilation filling the space she left behind.
A faint internal tone vibrated against his inner ear — the cochlear implant receiving an incoming call. He accepted it without moving.
“Reid,” Arnold’s voice came through immediately, thick and impatient, accompanied by the sound of labored breathing. “About time you got there.”
Reid remained still, eyes briefly scanning the small room once more as Arnold continued without pause.
“Unfortunate timing on that little incident. We had… visitors. Unexpected ones. But that’s resolved now.” Something clattered faintly in the background, followed by a muffled curse. “Silver lining is I had an excuse to pull in federal oversight. Uniforms, flags, the whole theater. Whatever color they’re wearing up there.”
Reid could picture him pacing — large gestures in a room too small for his ego.
“Amir and the rest should be inbound,” Reid replied evenly. “Once we’re inside the system, we’ll have a clearer assessment.”
“Assessment,” Arnold repeated, the word flattening under his tone. “You have one objective. Get the data. The faster I get what I paid for, the faster you get what you want. Stable output. Unlimited supply. Everyone wins.”
Reid walked to the small desk and rested one hand against its edge, studying the faint wear patterns in the composite surface.
“And if the system doesn’t behave as advertised?” he asked calmly. “If there are structural instabilities or code-level interference—”
“No setbacks,” Arnold cut in sharply. “I don’t want caveats. I don’t want delays. I want results. Get me the particle, or the field, or whatever you people call it. I want control over energy supply. When I control that, everything else follows.”
Reid allowed himself a quiet breath through his nose. Arnold’s vision of power was always vertical — top down, command imposed. He had seen that model fail more often than it succeeded.
“Control is fragile,” Reid said, tone still even. “It’s better to have capable people aligned beside you than resentful ones behind you. Those at your back tend to notice weakness first.”
Arnold’s breathing grew heavier. “Save the leadership seminar,” he muttered. “I tolerate you because you’re useful. Don’t mistake that for affection.”
“I wouldn’t,” Reid answered. There was a brief silence on the line, thick but not empty.
“Deliver,” Arnold said at last. “Or I replace you with someone who will.”
The connection terminated without farewell.
Reid remained standing for a moment after the tone faded, weighing the conversation not for its threats but for its implications. Arnold believed the breakthrough lay in a particle — something discrete, nameable, marketable. A headline. Reid knew better. The real variable was stability — magnetic containment, resonance tolerance, coupling duration. Those were not glamorous terms. They were not easy to sell. But they were what mattered.
He secured his helmet under one arm and exited the quarters, sealing the door behind him. The corridor lighting cast soft reflections across the white paneling as he retraced his path toward the main junction. The recreation area remained quiet, the mess hall dimmed for afternoon cycle. Personnel moved in small clusters, conversation subdued but not guarded.
At the entrance corridor, Payton looked up as Reid approached. “Control center?” Reid asked. “Straight down, sir,” Payton replied. “Last doors on the left.”
Reid inclined his head in acknowledgment and continued forward. The hallway widened slightly as it approached the core of the installation. Recessed lighting traced the walls, and thin floor strips illuminated the path without glare. Everything felt functional. Maintained. Not abandoned.
The double doors to the command center parted as he approached, revealing an open circular room with consoles arranged in concentric arcs. Several individuals were already stationed at terminals, reviewing readouts and adjusting parameters with the quiet focus of technicians rather than soldiers.
The room bore no visible signs of structural trauma. No patching. No temporary reinforcement. The air carried a faint scent of insulation and metal — old circuitry warmed back to operation after a period of dormancy.
Reid stepped inside without announcement.
Most of the personnel registered his presence with peripheral awareness before returning to their screens. Only one man, positioned along the far bank of consoles, held his gaze a fraction longer than necessary.
Reid studied him without turning his head directly. Mid-forties, perhaps older. Approximately six feet. Physically disciplined posture but not military. The beard was longer than regulation would allow, the hair slightly unkempt. The stance suggested someone accustomed to physical strain rather than desk work.
Reid moved toward the nearest terminal and began reading the surface-level diagnostics displayed across multiple screens. Energy throughput charts. Magnetic coil status. Field resonance graphs. Command-line prompts in an older syntax — not obsolete, but not modern either. He recognized the framework but would need time to trace its architecture.
Near the center of the room stood a circular command table, integrated display surface dormant for the moment. Reid rested his hand lightly on one of the outer consoles, not interacting yet, simply testing proximity.
He felt the shift in attention from across the room before he heard the voice.
“Don’t,” the bearded man said evenly. “They’re still running diagnostics.” Reid turned fully toward him now.
“They?” he asked, letting the question remain neutral.
The man’s eyes held steady. “Systems.” Reid nodded once. “I’m not here to interfere with baseline testing. I’m here to determine whether it can operate again.”
The man studied him for another moment before returning his attention to his own console, fingers moving across the keys with quiet familiarity. Reid watched the motion carefully.
Whatever had happened here had not fully cleared. And not everyone in the room was simply a technician. The man held Reid’s gaze for several seconds before returning to his console. “It would be better if it never worked again,” he said quietly.
There was no bitterness in the tone. No theatrics. Just conclusion. Reid studied him more carefully. The others in the room were engaged in controlled diagnostics — monitoring coil temperatures, magnetic confinement parameters, calibration curves. They were here to restore function. To refine. To stabilize.
“You disagree with the science,” Reid said evenly, “or the outcome?” The man’s fingers paused over the keys. He turned just enough to meet Reid’s eyes again. “Both.”
No elaboration followed.
Reid resisted the urge to press immediately. He shifted instead to the central console near the circular command table and activated the primary display surface. Graphs expanded outward in layered transparency — energy throughput projections, harmonic resonance modeling, coil stress tolerances, magnetic field density maps. The data was live but idle. Diagnostic only.
Without baseline reference points, the numbers meant little. Stable readings could still hide systemic drift.
“What’s your role here?” Reid asked after a moment. “If you oppose both the work and its purpose.”
The man’s shoulders shifted almost imperceptibly. “It’s bigger than me.” He resumed typing.
Reid watched the cadence of his movements — confident, familiar with the system architecture. Not someone visiting. Someone who knew the pathways.
Sometimes silence extracted more than pressure. Reid turned back to the console and began querying archived test data. He navigated through layered directories until he reached the most recent pretest logs.
His brow tightened.
“Why run a partial ignition sequence during a pretest?” he murmured. “That contaminates baseline calibration. It guarantees instability.”
He sensed the man’s attention sharpen from across the room.
“How are you involved?” Reid asked directly. The response came without hesitation. “I helped build it,” the man said. “And I ran it.” Reid glanced toward him fully now. “You built the system. Operated it. And now you believe it should remain dormant.”
The man did not turn this time. “Experience has a way of adjusting perspective.” Reid allowed that to settle. “If you were responsible for design and execution,” he continued, “then you understand its failure points better than anyone in this room. Any guidance you’re willing to share would be practical.”
The man’s jaw tightened slightly. “Don’t trust what you see.” Reid leaned back slightly in his chair. “That’s vague.”
“It’s accurate.”
“The sensors are compromised?”
“Something like that.”
Reid held his gaze long enough to measure sincerity. It was not paranoia. It was conviction. He returned to the directory tree and noticed a subfolder flagged as recently unencrypted. Timestamped within the last operational cycle. He opened it.
A cascade of archived materials populated the display — video captures, still imagery, engineering logs, personal annotations. The dates aligned with the collider’s original shutdown nearly two decades earlier.
Someone had accessed these files recently. Reid shifted tactically. “Were you present during the attack,” he asked without looking up, “or brought in after containment?”
“I was there,” the man replied. “In the middle of it.” Reid scanned his memory of the casualty reports — fatalities, evacuations, injuries transferred south. No notation of someone remaining onsite. “What happened?” Reid asked plainly.
“Exactly what the report says.” The man’s voice flattened. “Nightshade.” Reid had read the summary but not the manifesto. “Environmental justification?”
“So they claimed.”
A notification flickered across the man’s console, drawing his attention. His hands moved quickly across the keys, correcting something Reid could not see.
“For an organized strike,” Reid continued, eyes still on the screen, “the structural targeting appears selective. One major collapse. Adjacent corridor compromise. Minimal ring damage. If their objective was environmental protection, the attack profile was inefficient.” The man did not respond immediately.
Reid continued scrolling through archived files. As he did, the man finally spoke again — quieter this time. “I was in that room when it detonated.” Reid’s eyes lifted.
“I was offset from the epicenter,” the man continued. “Thrown clear. Others weren’t. Some died instantly. Others under debris.” His hands stopped moving. “I pulled one out,” he added. “She was alive. For a while.”
Reid searched his memory. He had studied the names on the incident report, but faces blurred after years. He looked harder at the man’s profile and recognition surfaced. “I’ve seen you before,” Reid said slowly.
The man turned his head just enough. “I helped build a machine that nearly tore open the planet’s magnetic equilibrium,” he said dryly. “My face circulated.”
“That’s not what I meant,” Reid replied. “You were escorted into a briefing years ago. You interrupted it.” A pause. The man nodded once. “You were being removed,” he said. “I came to stop the whole thing.”
Reid considered him carefully. “Stop what?”
“Ignorance. Pride. Stupidity”
Reid studied him another moment before shifting back to the console. “And now you’re here,” Reid said. “Walking freely through a reactivation cycle.”
“I’m gathering information,” the man replied. “Then I leave.”
“You won’t assist?”
“I won’t endorse.”
Reid returned to the archive and cross-referenced personnel records from the attack. No listing of the man among the deceased. No evacuation entry either. A discrepancy.
Another name caught his attention — status revised. Injured to deceased. Timestamp altered. Lianna Kade. He opened the file.
“Succumbed to injury,” the updated notation read.
Reid’s eyes narrowed. He turned to question the man— But the station across the room was empty. The bearded man had left.
The doors parted again before Reid could pursue the altered personnel record.
Amir entered first, white coat already unbuttoned, eyes scanning the room with analytical focus rather than curiosity.
“What have you found?” he asked.
“Surface diagnostics only,” Reid replied. “And someone who doesn’t think this machine should ever run again.” Elena and Kieran followed in behind Amir, removing gloves as they crossed the threshold.
“I think I prefer orbital insertion,” Elena muttered, pressing two fingers briefly to her temple. “The Arctic has opinions.”
“You’ll adapt,” Reid said without looking up. Kieran stepped toward the outer consoles, examining the readouts. “From this vantage point, I don’t see structural compromise. Was the ring damaged?”
“Not visibly,” Reid answered. “Above-ground infrastructure appears largely intact. Systems were recently unencrypted. Diagnostics are active across all stations.”
He gestured lightly toward the room. “Let’s assume nothing and verify everything.” The team dispersed without further instruction. Reid returned to the archived directory and began opening random video captures, searching not for spectacle but for pattern.
One clip showed the command center in full operation years earlier — personnel rotating between stations, hands moving across controls with familiarity. Nothing erratic. No visible instability.
Another file displayed exterior timelapses — maintenance cycles, crew movements across the ice, routine inspections beneath auroral bands.
He scrolled deeper. A subdirectory labeled “Anomalies / Internal Review” expanded across the screen. One file was flagged: Purge Event 064052.
Reid’s eyes narrowed slightly. “Why does a collider require a purge protocol?” he said quietly, more to himself than to the room as he opened the file.
The initial feed showed a static hallway camera. A young woman in a white environmental suit walked away from the lens toward a sealed room at the corridor’s end. She entered an access code. The door opened normally, but there was no audio.
Inside the room, she began sorting through storage containers, speaking as though in conversation. Her lips moved. Her posture suggested dialogue, but no one else was visible in frame. “Comms channel?” Elena suggested from across the room.
“Possibly,” Reid replied. Without warning, the door behind her slammed shut. A timer appeared in the upper right corner of the feed: 00:30.
The lighting shifted from neutral white to emergency red. Vapor began venting from concealed ceiling ports and Reid paused the feed.
He rewound several seconds, then redirected the output to the central command table. The circular surface illuminated, reconstructing the hallway and chamber in three-dimensional projection.
The room darkened slightly as the table’s holographic field activated. “Run it,” Amir said quietly. Reid pressed play.
This time, audio initialized as the red light intensified. “Rowan!” the woman’s voice echoed, sharp with confusion. “Rowan, it’s killing me!”
From outside the chamber, a man rushed into frame — younger, leaner and a clean shaven version of the man that was just in the control center. He slammed his hands against the access panel, entering commands with increasing urgency.
“It won’t open,” he said. “Step back.” The timer ticked downward: 00:10.
He seized a chair from the hallway and drove it into the reinforced glass. The leg splintered on impact. He struck again. And again. The chamber interior filled with dense vapor.
“It’s trying to kill me!” the woman shouted from within. At zero, the chamber vents surged. The projection did not show flame or explosion. It showed containment with a violent chemical purge.
The audio shifted from shouting to a sound no one in the present room commented on. Rowan continued striking the glass long after the timer expired. Blood marked the surface where his fists met reinforced composite.
Inside, movement ceased. Ten seconds later, the purge cycle terminated and the red lights faded. The vapor dissipated. And then, the door unlocked automatically. Rowan stumbled inside and dropped beside the woman’s body, pulling her out into the hallway.
He shouted for medical support. The projection froze as Reid ended playback. No one spoke for several seconds. The room’s present-day hum felt louder in contrast. Elena was the first to break the silence.
“What was that?”
Amir’s jaw had tightened visibly. Reid did not answer immediately. The man who had stood at the console earlier — older now, heavier in posture — had been the same man in the recording.
“Purge event,” Reid said finally, voice measured. “June 2052.” He pulled the incident report onto the side panel. “Unscheduled internal containment protocol. Fatality: Terra Green. Renowned systems engineer.” He scrolled further.
The language was technical and sterile, but inconsistent. “The narrative is fragmented,” he continued. “Time stamps misaligned. Sections rewritten.” He zoomed in on the system header. “This was not a random malfunction.”
Amir stepped closer to the table. “Then it was deliberate,” he said. “Or automated beyond human override,” Reid replied. Elena folded her arms tightly. “The door didn’t respond. Rowan had no control.”
“No,” Reid agreed. “And the purge cycle completed in full before manual intervention was restored.” He looked at the team. “A system designed to protect itself from contamination,” he said slowly, “just executed a human being and prevented interruption.”
Kieran exhaled. “Is that protocol still active?”
“That,” Amir said, “is our first concern.” Reid nodded once.
“Before we touch ignition parameters, before we discuss coupling or field harmonics, we identify every autonomous routine embedded in this system. I want purge authority pathways mapped. I want override permissions traced. I want to know whether the machine can act independently of human command.”
He looked back at the frozen holographic image of Rowan kneeling beside Terra Green.
“And I want to know why the man who tried to break that door down is walking freely in this facility.”
The faint vibration of distant engines passed through the walls — perhaps another transport arriving, perhaps a maintenance unit cycling beneath the ice.
Reid dimmed the projection.
“Pull every log Rowan accessed before shutdown,” he said. “Cross-reference with magnetic field data sets.”
He glanced at Amir.
“If he saw something before this purge, it won’t be in the headlines. It’ll be in the field behavior.”
Amir nodded. “And if the purge protocol is still embedded?” Reid’s gaze settled on the central console. “Then we are not restoring a machine,” he said quietly. “We are negotiating with one.”
The projection dimmed gradually until the chamber dissolved back into the flat surface of the command table. For a moment no one moved. The hum of active diagnostics and the faint resonance of the cooling systems filled the room in place of the recorded screams.
Elena exhaled slowly. “That wasn’t an accident.”
“No,” Amir replied, his voice lower now, stripped of earlier curiosity. “It executed exactly as it was designed to.”
Reid expanded the event log across the primary display, drawing the metadata into layered panes so he could examine time stamps, override permissions, and command hierarchies simultaneously. The file was labeled unsanctioned, yet the architecture behind it was anything but improvised. Access controls had been locked during the purge cycle. Manual intervention pathways were suspended until completion. Environmental isolation systems were prioritized over personnel safety.
He magnified the header string and traced the revision history. Segments had been altered — not erased entirely, but rearranged. Time stamps shifted. Cross-references partially severed. Enough to satisfy a formal review. Not enough to satisfy someone looking carefully.
“There are edits in this report,” he said finally. “Sequencing errors that shouldn’t exist in a locked archive.”
Amir stepped closer, studying the layered panes. “Meaning someone scrubbed it?”
“Or redirected attention,” Reid answered. “This reads like a summary written after the fact.” A low vibration moved through the floor panels beneath them — distant but deliberate. It was not internal machinery. It was external propulsion.
Reid lifted his eyes briefly toward the ceiling, calculating the direction and duration. A transport departure. He returned his attention to the console without comment and closed the purge archive.
“We don’t begin with ignition,” he said, not sharply, but with quiet certainty. “We begin with what Rowan accessed before shutdown.”