[Carter Residence, New York — September 2010, Morning]
The television was on and the world was doing its best to explain itself.
Ethan sat on the sofa with Didi settled comfortably against him, his legs stretched out on the coffee table, her arms looped around his torso, the morning light coming through the curtains in soft, unhurried lines across the floor.
The broadcast had been running for what the ticker in the bottom corner indicated was its fourth consecutive hour, and the studio had the particular energy of a team that had co in expecting a slow news day and was now dealing with sothing their entire professional frawork was not equipped to handle.
The network logo sat in the upper left corner of the screen. Below it, the chyron read: GLOBAL ATMOSPHERIC CRISIS: WHAT HAPPENED YESTERDAY? and had apparently been running unchanged since approximately two in the morning.
The anchor was a woman in her late thirties nad Sandra Reeves. She had the composure of soone who had covered wars and elections and had learned that the cara rewarded stillness.
Her hair was perfect. Her suit was navy. Her expression was professionally neutral in a way that, if you looked carefully, was working slightly harder than usual.
Behind her, the studio had erected a display wall showing a rotating globe covered in red and orange indicator points, each one marking a location where yesterday’s atmospheric event had registered on monitoring equipnt.
There were a lot of indicator points. They covered every continent. Several of them were in the middle of oceans where there were no monitoring stations, which ant the readings had co from ships and aircraft and, in three cases, from instrunts on research platforms that had been recording other things entirely when the event began.
"Good morning," Sandra said to the cara, with the tone of soone acknowledging that the word good was doing a lot of work this particular morning. "If you are just joining us, we are continuing our coverage of yesterday’s unprecedented global atmospheric event. With in the studio are Dr. Patricia Holloway, director of the Global Atmospheric Research Institute, Professor Jas Okafor of the University of Edinburgh’s Departnt of Earth Sciences, Dr. Raymond Chu, senior researcher at the National Weather Service, and Dr. Kevin Marsh, astrophysicist and senior fellow at the Baxter Foundation’s independent research division."
She turned slightly to face the panel. "Dr. Holloway, let’s begin with the basics. What do we know for certain about what happened yesterday?"
Dr. Patricia Holloway was a compact woman in her fifties with short grey hair and the direct manner of soone who had spent thirty years defending data against people who didn’t want to hear it. She had a tablet on the desk in front of her and had been looking at it between segnts with the focused expression of a person receiving updates she was not entirely happy about.
"What we know for certain," she said, "is this. At approximately ten forty-seven PM Eastern Standard Ti, atmospheric monitoring equipnt across all seven continents and all major ocean regions began registering simultaneous and severe disruptions. The disruptions included thunderstorm formation at a scale and speed that is not physically consistent with normal convective processes. Wind speeds exceeding anything our equipnt was rated to asure before the equipnt failed. Temperature anomalies spanning a range of roughly sixty degrees Celsius within localized areas. And a complete, simultaneous failure of weather monitoring infrastructure across forty-two countries within a four-minute window."
Sandra nodded. "And the duration?"
"The primary event lasted approximately ninety minutes," Holloway said. "After that, conditions normalized. Rapidly, which is itself abnormal. Atmospheric events of this magnitude do not simply stop. They dissipate over hours or days. This one ended."
She paused. "It ended like soone turned off a switch."
"And casualties?" Sandra asked.
"None confird worldwide," Holloway said. "Zero fatalities and zero serious injuries directly attributable to the event."
Sandra let that sit for a mont before she continued. "Professor Okafor, in your assessnt, what does the absence of casualties tell us?"
Professor Jas Okafor was tall, choosing words with the deliberateness of soone who understood that what he said on cara would be quoted. "It tells us sothing very important," he said.
"An atmospheric event of this scale—producing conditions this severe across populated areas on every continent simultaneously—should have been catastrophic. Tornadoes tearing through city centers. Storm surges battering coastlines. Aircraft being brought down by violent wind shear.
But none of that happened. The damage never ca. Even airplanes remained safe, flying near the storm without issue."
He folded his hands on the desk. "Either the event was contained in a way we do not understand, or sothing actively prevented harm from occurring. Neither explanation has a comfortable ho in current scientific literature."
"You’re suggesting it was controlled," Sandra said.
"I am suggesting," Okafor said carefully, "that the data is consistent with that interpretation. I am not prepared to go further than that without more analysis."
Ethan looked down at Didi. "Controlled. He’s not wrong."
"He is being very precise about it," Didi said.
"Scientists are like that," Ethan said. "It takes them a while to say the obvious thing."
"So what is it consistent with?" the anchor asked.
Okafor paused. "We don’t know yet."
Dr. Raymond Chu leaned toward his microphone. He was younger than Holloway and Okafor, mid-forties, with the energy of a man who had an opinion and had been waiting for a gap in the conversation. "I want to offer a different frawork," he said. "Because I think my colleagues are so focused on the data that they are missing the larger picture."
Holloway turned to look at him with an expression she kept carefully neutral.
"The scale of this event," Chu continued, "the global reach, the simultaneous onset, the zero casualties, the fact that it ended cleanly, these are not the characteristics of a natural phenonon or a man-made one. These are the characteristics of a deliberate act by an intelligence operating at a level we cannot asure."
He paused for effect. "I believe we received a ssage yesterday. And I believe the sender was not human."
The studio was quiet for exactly two seconds.
"Raymond," Holloway said.
"Patricia," he said back.
"That is not a falsifiable claim," she said.
"Not everything requires falsifiability to be true," Chu said.
"Everything on an atmospheric science panel does," she said, and her tone remained professional in the way that a very sharp knife remains a kitchen utensil.
Didi made a quiet sound that was almost a laugh. "She’s not wrong either," she said.
"They’re both not wrong," Ethan said. "That’s what makes it funny."
Sandra held up a hand between the two panelists with the practiced ease of soone who had moderated this exact exchange before, just with different subject matter. "Dr. Chu, when you say the sender was not human, are you speaking in a theological context or a scientific one?"
Chu straightened. "I am speaking in a practical one," he said. "The evidence points to an intelligence. The scale of the intelligence required to produce this event exceeds anything human civilization has produced. I am simply following the evidence to its logical conclusion."
"Which is?" Sandra prompted.
Chu looked directly at the cara. "God," he said. "Or sothing functionally equivalent."
The studio was quiet again, this ti for three seconds.
Okafor cleared his throat. "I would like to go on record as not endorsing that conclusion," he said.
"Noted," Chu said pleasantly.
Didi tilted her head and considered the screen. "He is not entirely wrong either," she said.
Ethan looked at her. "Don’t encourage him."
"I am simply stating my opinion," she said.
The fourth panelist, Dr. Kevin Marsh, had been quiet through most of the exchange, making notes on a pad in front of him with the focused attention of soone waiting for the conversation to reach the point he actually wanted to discuss.
He was younger than the others, early forties, had the restlessness of a researcher who spent most of his ti looking at things very far away and found close-range debates slightly frustrating by comparison.
Sandra turned to him. "Dr. Marsh, you’ve been quiet. The Baxter Foundation released a preliminary statent this morning indicating that your instrunts recorded sothing in the outer galaxy during the event window. Can you walk us through that?"
Marsh set down his pen. "Yes," he said. "At approximately the sa ti as the atmospheric event began here on Earth, our deep-space monitoring array recorded an energy release in the outer regions of the Milky Way galaxy. The release was," he paused, consulting his notes, "significant."
"Significant how?" Sandra asked.
"It exceeded a supernova," Marsh said flatly.
The studio absorbed this.
"It exceeded," Sandra repeated slowly, "a supernova."
"By several orders of magnitude," Marsh said. "The event lasted approximately eleven minutes. During that window, the energy output registered by our array was greater than the total luminosity of the galaxy for a asurable interval."
He looked up from his notes. "I want to be precise here because precision matters. We have not seen anything like this. We have no theoretical frawork that predicts it. We have no natural phenonon in our catalog that produces it."
"And you believe this is connected to the atmospheric event on Earth?" Sandra asked.
"The timing is simultaneous," Marsh said. "The probability that two events of this magnitude occurring at the sa mont are unrelated is, in my assessnt, effectively zero."
Okafor leaned forward. "Kevin, what was the energy signature? What type of radiation are we talking about?"
"That is where it gets interesting," Marsh said, and sothing in his voice shifted to the particular register of a scientist who has found a result that keeps him up at night. "The signature does not match any known radiation type. It is not electromagnetic in any band we asure. It is not gravitational wave emission. It is not neutrino flux. It is sothing else. Our instrunts registered it, recorded it, and then produced readouts that our analysis software flagged as potential equipnt error because the values were outside its operating paraters."
"But it wasn’t equipnt error," Sandra said.
"No," Marsh said. "We cross-referenced with three independent arrays in different countries. They all had sa readings, signature and anomaly."
He sat back. "Whatever produced that release, it was in the outer galaxy. And it was moving."
"Moving?" Sandra asked.
"The release point shifted outward during the eleven-minute window," Marsh said. "The energy source passed beyond the galactic boundary during the event. Whatever it was, it left the galaxy. And then the energy dispersed."
He looked at the cara. "We are still processing the data. But I will say this. If you are asking whether this was a natural event, my current answer is no. I do not know what it was. But it was not natural."
The studio had the quality of a room in which four professionals were each quietly recalibrating.
Sandra turned back to face the cara. "We will take a short break and continue our coverage. When we return, we’ll be speaking with General Marcus Webb of international security public liaison office regarding whether any governnt or international body has issued an official response to yesterday’s events."
The broadcast cut to a comrcial for a car manufacturer. A very normal car driving down a very normal road under a very normal sky.
"They are very thorough."
"They are very confused," Ethan said. "Which is a reasonable response to what happened."
The sound of a door opening ca from the hallway.
Jean Grey erged from her room with her red hair in total disarray, one cheek slightly creased from the pillow, wearing an oversized shirt and moving with the careful energy of soone who was awake but had not fully committed to the decision yet.
She looked at the television, looked at Ethan and Didi on the sofa, and lifted one hand in a small wave.
"Morning," she said.
"Morning," Ethan replied.
"Good morning, Jean," Didi said pleasantly.
Jean disappeared into the kitchen. The sound of cabinet doors and the coffee maker followed. She reappeared two minutes later with a mug, crossed the living room, bent down and kissed Ethan on the mouth with the ease of long habit, then straightened and settled onto the sofa beside them.
The broadcast ca back. Sandra Reeves composed herself with the ease of long practice and looked at the cara.
"Welco back," she said. "And joining us now from Washington is General Marcus Webb of international security public affairs division. General Webb, has the governnt issued an official position on yesterday’s events?"
General Webb appeared on a split screen from what looked like a press briefing room. He was a broad-shouldered man in his late fifties with the careful expression of soone who had been briefed on exactly how much he was allowed to say. "The governnt is aware of yesterday’s atmospheric event and is conducting a full assessnt in coordination with international partners," he said. "At this ti we are not in a position to confirm or deny any specific cause or origin."
"Are you ruling out extraterrestrial involvent?" Sandra asked.
Webb’s expression did not change. "We are not ruling anything in or out at this stage of the assessnt."
"Are you ruling out a super-powered individual?" she pressed.
A pause. One beat longer than the ones before it. "We are not ruling anything in or out," Webb said again, and this ti it landed slightly differently.
Dr. Chu pointed at the split screen. "That pause," he said. "Did everyone catch that pause?"
"Raymond," Holloway said.
"I’m just noting the pause," Chu said.
Jean looked at the television and the ongoing panel discussion and a slow smile crossed her face.
"That’s you," she said, pointing at the screen with her mug.
"Technically it was the Phoenix," Ethan said.
"Your Phoenix," Jean said.
"Fair point."
Jean cradled her coffee mug and watched the screen with a small, private smile. "They are going to be studying this for years," she said.
"Decades," Ethan said.
Jean looked at Didi. "What did we miss last night?"
"So much so that Ethan didn’t hold back—he displayed his full power. I think it was the first ti he’s ever used that much," Didi said pleasantly. "It was very impressive."
Jean chuckled. "Wow, it must have been incredible. Too bad I missed it," she said, shaking her head before taking a sip of her coffee.
Ethan looked at the mug. "Go easy on that," he said.
Jean lowered the mug and gave him a look. "Ethan."
"You’re pregnant."
"I am weeks pregnant," she said, with the precise enunciation of soone who had prepared for this conversation. "I am not giving birth tomorrow. I can have coffee."
She tilted her head. "I’m sothing of a doctor myself, you know."
Ethan shook his head with a small smile and said nothing further, which Jean accepted as victory.
"We went to bed because it was getting late," she said, settling back against the cushions. "And we have preparations to make. Baby announcent party, decorating, the whole thing. We wanted to be rested."
She glanced at the television again. "We did not expect to wake up to four scientists arguing about God and aliens on the morning news."
"Life is full of surprises," Ethan said.
Jean smiled and then looked at him more carefully. She read sothing in his tone and her expression shifted slightly, the easy humor pulling back just enough to make room for attention.
"Ethan," she said. "What are you thinking about?"
He looked at her for a mont. "The cores," he said. "After everyone is up this morning, I want all of you to take them."
Jean was quiet. Her eyes stayed on his face.
"Don’t worry," he said, before she could fra the question. "I just want you all strong enough to handle yourselves. After last night, after everything that ca with it, I don’t want to wait anymore. That’s all."
She held his gaze for another second, reading what he wasn’t saying as clearly as what he was. Then she nodded and leaned her head against his shoulder.
Jean held his gaze and nodded once. She leaned her head back against his shoulder, looked at the screen as it returned from comrcial, and took a careful, asured sip of her coffee, then reached across and took his left hand, the one resting free at his side, and held it in both of hers.
He squeezed her fingers and kissed the top of her head. His right hand rested on Didi’s shoulder and moved in a slow, easy caress.
The television continued its debate. Outside, the morning was quiet and the sky over tropolis was clear and ordinary, carrying no trace of what had moved through it the night before.
The three of them sat together and let the morning co in at its own pace.
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