It looked nothing like the rugged, six-wheeled R490. The R492 was a sphere. A perfect, seamless sphere of a material that seemed to drink light. It was roughly two meters in diameter, floating a few centimeters above the cradle’s base. There were no ports, no hatches, no seams. No engine, no cockpit, no visible means of propulsion or control.
He looked at the external monitors. Hila’s surface was writhing. Mountains of ice had twisted into spirals. The frozen methane lakes were boiling, but not with heat—with information . Every bubble that burst released a perfect geometric shape, a new prime number, a line of poetry in a language that did not exist. The R492 was not destroying Hila. It was translating it.
Kaelen pulled up the ancient, partial file that had been buried under seventeen layers of encryption on the Corps’ dark archive. The Unisim R492 was designed for a single purpose: unisim r492
But it was too late. The sphere had already moved on, seeking the next lonely outpost, the next frozen moon, the next engineer who would look at its perfect, seamless surface and ask, “What is it?”
Mira was the first to change. She began speaking in equations. Not writing them—speaking them, her voice a monotone stream of tensor calculus and topological manifolds. She stopped eating. She stopped sleeping. She stood by the sphere, her reflection warping on its lightless surface, and she whispered, “It’s beautiful. It’s the answer to the question we never knew to ask.” It looked nothing like the rugged, six-wheeled R490
“Granted. Awaiting delivery of Unisim R492. Do not unpack prior to arrival of Senior Logistics Officer. Do not scan. Do not query. ETA: 72 hours.”
He ran. The corridors were wrong. The angles were off. A hallway that should have been thirty meters long now stretched for a kilometer, then folded back on itself. He passed a mirror and saw his own face, but his eyes were made of polished obsidian, and they were crying liquid starlight. It was roughly two meters in diameter, floating
Panic set in. Kaelen’s training kicked in—he had one option. The emergency override. A physical lever, hidden behind a lead-lined panel in the reactor core. Pulling it would flood the cargo bay with neutron radiation, theoretically collapsing the quantum coherence of any Unisim device. Theoretically.