As Makali walked around the corner of the Temple, headed for the depths of the habitat, she saw, scrawled on the rough, textured side of the Temple, these words: KAENU SUX.

At first she was offended. What kind of idiot thinks it’s proper to scrawl graffiti anywhere—and on an alien artifact? And to misspell the name!

But her second thought was more forgiving. It meant that the Keanu habitat was already feeling like home to some of them. Given that it was likely they would be spending a long time—possibly the rest of their lives here—that was vaguely comforting.

Her momentary satisfaction about Keanu and its human inhabitants quickly gave way to an emotion that was largely wonder (she was inside an alien spacecraft!) liberally spiked with fear (she had zero control over what was happening!).

Exhibit One: As she slipped away from the Temple, working her way through clumps and clusters of Bangalore and Houston people, some of them simply collapsed on the ground, she noted the bizarre way in which light kept changing.

The roof of the habitat—hell, it was so high you might as well call it the “sky”—contained several dozen long snaky shapes that seemed to provide illumination…but at a very low level, not much better than a summer twilight in Melbourne. (In fact, though it was difficult to tell, it appeared that fewer than half of the sky-snakes were actually lit.)

Suddenly, when Makali was halfway to the “wall” where the vege-fruit grew, the sky-snakes burst to life, a wave of bright light sweeping down the entire habitat, as if a swift-moving cloud had revealed the sun.

Fine, not so freaky; it was now dawn here in the habitat. Of all the humans who had been scooped up by the Objects, Makali considered herself—and should have been—the one best prepared to accept alien environments, life forms, means of communication….

But then, within seconds, the sweep of light repeated itself, another bright wave washing over the entire habitat.

And another. And a fourth, the last two coming so quickly that they overlapped—the third wave was still lighting the “north” end of the habitat, where the humans had emerged from the tunnels, when the fourth wave blew through.

And then, as if nothing had happened, the sky-snakes resumed their earlier level of activity…and the light returned to twilight.

It wasn’t hunger that made Makali want to hurry to the trees, get food, and return to the Temple.

It was a classic human emotion.

Fear of the unknown.

Makali Pillay’s father had been the space buff in the family. Senior Pillay’s favorite movie was The Dish, a charming account of the Australian astronomers who helped the crew of Apollo 11 transmit video of the first steps on the lunar surface to a worldwide audience of millions.

When his daughter was born just after The Dish reached theaters, it was natural for him to give her an astronautical name…Makali meant “moon.”

Makali had learned to share her father’s interest in space, to some degree. Given the books and movies and pictures lining the walls of their apartment above the restaurant, she had little choice.

But she didn’t necessarily share his interest in astronauts and space shuttles, nor ethnic pride in India’s accomplishments, including becoming the fourth spacefaring nation on the planet.

Makali had become fascinated by the possibilities of First Contact and alien life forms. Her father had balked at this: “I like the idea, too, but it’s still a science without a subject! You want to go to the U.S., fine! Go to the NASA Jet Propulsion Lab!”

Makali knew even then that although JPL had developed space probes for America and NASA for sixty years, it was not the home of exobiology.

Instead she had taken her double degree in biology and chemistry and gotten a fellowship at the NASA Astrobiology Institute in Houston.

It was there that she expanded her studies to include atmospheric physics and geology and even languages. She had spent six months at the South Pole searching for Martian meteorites and extremophiles.

It was there, also, that she escaped from her father’s control, dating one unsuitable man (by her father’s standards, that is) after another, and earning herself a slightly exaggerated reputation as a good-time girl.

Well, she had grown up in Melbourne, not Delhi. She looked like a resident of the subcontinent, if you ignored the blue eyes and the broad-shouldered build, a gift from years of swimming and surfing.

She had not been able to decide which was worse: to have been condemned to the stereotypical studious submissive Indian woman role, or to be considered an Aussie tart. Obviously the party-girl image had made it difficult to gain responsibility and authority—even as it opened other doors and encouraged male supervisors to welcome her arrival.

But, while she had indeed run through a lot of boyfriends in a decade, she never overlapped them…no one-night stands, either, allowing for some liberal interpretation of the standards. She had spent the past five months in a committed relationship with Cedric Houghton, a thirty-five-year-old bachelor credit specialist in Pearland, Texas, who was probably frantic about what had happened to her. (Because of her assignment to Bangalore, they hadn’t seen each other in a month…but they had video-chatted the night Venture and Brahma had landed on Keanu…which seemed, now, to have taken place a year in the past.)

Makali had been faithful to Cedric; even without the spur of a relationship, she would not have considered a relationship with any of her co-workers on the ISRO exo-intelligence panel.

Which was one of the reasons she had found Valya Makarova’s wanton behavior appalling, especially with a loathsome male specimen like Dale Scott, who had propositioned her several times. Never crudely; oh, no, compared to the very direct Aussie boys Makali had known in Melbourne, for example, Scott was a master of sophistication…he didn’t touch, he merely loomed. He didn’t leer, he only shared confidences, winks, ostensibly harmless data.

He never took no for an answer because there was never a question.

All of this behavior was inescapably obvious to Valya, yet she had continued to swoon every time Scott entered a room, like a lovesick teenager in her first sexual relationship.

Which made Makali, briefly and unhappily, wonder if Dale Scott’s bedroom skills were the reason for Valya’s erotic stupor….

Fortunately, the chaos of the discoveries from Keanu had driven all personal matters from Makali’s mind. She had been scooped up from the wreckage of Bangalore Control Center, and after surviving the initial shock of what had happened, she had spent the trip from Earth to Keanu silently evaluating the data—Keanu’s maneuvers at the time of the Venture and Brahma landings, the discovery of structures inside Vesuvius Vent, the habitat itself.

None of these had been a shock, frankly. Thanks to a bit of luck and data from underused and ill-funded Asian astronomers, ISRO and the Russians had detected unusual signals from Keanu long before its closest approach to Earth; hence the clandestine creation of an exo-intelligence panel staffed with the world’s experts who were not American citizens. Makali and the other members of the team had suspected that the human landing on Keanu was going to lead to First Contact.

So far, so good. What they had not anticipated—and who could have?—was the discovery of resurrected or reincarnated or reconstructed human beings inside Keanu. Makali believed, and there had been hints in what Zack Stewart said, that these creatures had been deliberately “created” by Keanu’s builders and operators in order to communicate with humans.

Perhaps that communication had been too easy—how else to explain the horrifying series of accidents that had led to, well, the bombardment of Earth by a pair of Keanu-launched Objects.


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