Leah Qadir woke to the familiar blue-green glow that seeped through the algae panes above her bunk, a tired aurora painted by the facility’s farm lights. Her cabin walls ticked as the ice shifted far overhead, a deep, whale-like groan that said the moon itself was turning in sleep. She rolled upright and pushed off the mattress, bare toes finding the warmed strip along the floor. Coffee hissed into a steel cup. Before she took a sip, she laid her palm on the bulkhead, feeling for tremors under the hum of pumps and circulators. Calm. Only the soft pulse of Europa’s ocean pushing against their steel ribs.
“Morning,” Suri called from the corridor, hair braided tight, a smear of nutrient paste across one cheek like war paint. “You’re late for farm calibrations.”
“I’m on sonar today,” Leah said, stepping out with her cup. “Kieval took hydrochem.”
Suri snorted. “Kieval breaks anything shaped like a filter. Save us, Leah.” She plucked the paste from her face and touched her fingertip to the algae pane, leaving a faint, milked line that the biofilm began to eat. “Did you dream again?”
Leah glanced at her but didn’t answer. Dreams weren’t records; they were fragments of sound, a braided hum she could almost taste, like salt and lilacs. She drank and let the bitterness plant its flag on her tongue.
The corridor opened onto the central spine, a clear tube arcing through the hydroponic dome. Fish flashed silver beneath, schooling around the bladed stems of kelp that swayed in slow motion. Above, through a warped window, the ice ceiling showed as a winter cloud frozen mid-boil. Somewhere beyond that, Jupiter’s storms wheeled like gods in red.
Jonas waved from Sonar Bay Two, his sleeves rolled to his elbows. “You’re up,” he said, grinning. “You always look like a legend when you’re late.”
“I look like my coffee’s still assembling molecules,” Leah said, setting the cup beside the console. She slid into the seat and pulled the headband around her ears. The array lit: a waterfall of speckled green, echoes of their own hull, the slow hiss of the deep. She began to pulse the ping sequence, a ladder of tones that fanned out through brine and pressure and returned as data.
The first hours were routine: mapping an ice pillar that had drifted, logging the feeble ache of a distant vent, filing a note about an odd silicate bloom. The ocean was a cathedral of weight and patience. Leah tuned her pings a fraction, then a fraction more, changing timbre to thread between mineral seas and pockets of methane. She breathed when the ocean breathed through the speakers. It steadied her in a way nothing surface-side ever had.
“Leah.” Jonas leaned closer, voice low. “Corporate sent a brief. Meeting in an hour. Something about the thermal bore.”
She made a face and switched channels. The bore was a promise and a threat, a mile-long heated spine under assembly that would drink Europa’s warmth and sell it to the outposts. Profits climbed on its ladder; so did cracks. “Who’s attending?”
“Everyone,” Jonas said. “Even Kiefer.”
Leah’s focus snagged on a shimmer that wasn’t hull or fish. A harmonic. A second voice in the static, faint as a finger on glass.
She stilled the room with her hand. “Hold.”