Opening the book…
Chapter 1 — The Relic
The carrier came round at 02:47:12, and Erika logged it the way she logged everything now — by hand, in the green book, because nobody read the green book and it was the only part of the shift that still felt like work.
She wrote the time, the amplitude, the line that never changed. Tone present. No depth. Within tolerance. Four words and a figure that hadn’t moved since November. The carrier came round on its schedule the way a clock comes round, and there was about as much for a person to do with it. She watched the trace lift and settle on console one anyway, because watching it was the job, and she’d taken the night shifts on purpose so the watching would be hers and not shared.
Down the long room the working lights were off over two-thirds of the racks. Only her end was lit: console one, the carrier monitor; console two, the depth string she still kept calibrated out of habit; and the green-shaded lamp at the log desk she’d brought from home her first winter and never given back. Along the far wall the draw-cabinets stood with their doors off, the big copper bus-bars unbolted and laid on the floor on blankets, tagged. A contractor crew came in days and worked through them, and every morning there was less. The first cabinet was down to a shell now, its guts on a pallet under a yellow sticker — ASSET 4471-C — HOLD — pressed on before someone went home.
In April she would leave. The letter sat in the desk drawer in her room, read enough times the fold had gone soft: the permanent post at Tromsø, the desk and the appointment that wouldn’t run out from under her, a department with the lights left on. She had wanted it the way you want a thing you’ve trained yourself not to expect. She would go south in the spring, and the carrier would come round at 02:47 for whoever sat the desk after her.
A few minutes later she got up and walked the floor, because the second half of a night shift went better if you moved through it, and because the coffee in the mess was an hour old and she wanted a reason to throw it out. She went past the dark racks with her boots loud on the concrete, and at the midpoint of the room she stopped, the way she always stopped, and looked at the thing in the middle that nobody touched.
The rig sat under a tarp on its raised pad, behind a rope on stanchions that meant not in service and that everyone now stepped over without thinking. De-energised eighteen months, the coupling stage cold, the feeds capped, the great toroidal frame of it under the grey tarp like furniture in a house being sold. She put her hand flat on the tarp where the frame was, the way you’d touch a cold stove to be sure. Nothing, of course. A small private foolishness she’d never owned to anyone. Then she went and threw out the coffee.
The thing on console two she found when she came back with the coffee.
The depth string was up off the floor. Not far — a hand’s width of trace where there should have been a flat green line. The depth string read the coupling stage, and the coupling stage had been dead eighteen months; what it had read for all that time was nothing, a flat line she initialled twice a shift out of ritual.
Now there was a hand’s width of something on it.
She set the coffee down without drinking it and pulled the chair in. The trace wasn’t noise. Noise was a hash, a fuzz of nothing; she’d looked at enough of it. This had a shape — a slow lift, a plateau, a slower decay, and an interval before it came again, low and regular and the same each time. She went back through the buffer: it had been doing it since about 03:04, while she’d been in the mess pouring coffee.
She distrusted the instrument first — training and temperament both; you assumed the fault was yours before you assumed the universe had done something interesting, because the universe almost never had and the instrument almost always was. She checked the depth string’s own reference. Good. She checked its temperature compensation — a drifted thermocouple could draw a slow clean curve like that, and had, in February, fooled her for an afternoon. The compensation held. She swapped to the raw channel, before the conditioning, and the lift and the plateau and the decay were there in the raw too: smaller, uglier, the same.
The panel on console two said the coupling stage was four degrees above the hall — exactly what a dead mass of metal in a cold room would read. A cold stage could not produce a phase signature; there was nothing in it to produce one, the feeds capped, the drive long gone, the frame she’d put her hand on an hour ago and felt nothing through. And the depth string, which read that dead stage, was drawing her a slow clean curve.
“All right,” she said, to the room, which gave her nothing back. “What are you.”
Next she looked for the boring answer. A truck on the perimeter road, a generator cycling, the contractors’ work coupling vibration up through the pad — anything that moved would do it, and most things that did it were that dull. She brought up the floor seismics, the three geophones grouted into the slab and left running because pulling them cost a work order nobody would sign. Quiet: a flat green hash. Nothing on the perimeter road; the gate camera showed the same crust of untracked snow it had shown for a week. The contractor crew had badged out at 18:40, all four, the lead last. Since then the access log showed two people in the building and no others — herself, here on the floor, and Adi, three rooms off in the isolation bay, badged into the bay and sealed in for the long run he’d flagged it for: forty hours, thermally quiet, the door not to be opened.
So there was nothing near console two that could feed a hand’s width of phase into a string that read a dead stage. She rolled the chair down and brought up the load page — the rig’s own diagnostics, what the stage drew and delivered, kept alive only for the contractors and the removal file. It had read zero for eighteen months, because a de-energised stage drew nothing and delivered nothing. She brought it up to put one more zero in the log and close the book.
The load wasn’t zero.
It was small — so small that for a moment she took it for the floor of the instrument, the lowest thing it could read, the number that means nothing, expressed as a number. But it wasn’t sitting at the floor. It was a step above it, and — she made herself watch, a full minute, to be sure — it was moving. Up a little, down a little, low and regular, in step with the depth string, on a rig that nothing in the building was driving.
A real, nonzero load. On equipment that was not transmitting and could not.
Erika sat very still. It was nearer the thing she had felt as a child the one time the northern light came down low over the house in a curtain, and her mother came out onto the step in her nightdress to look at it with her, neither of them speaking.
Then she remembered the schedule.
She pulled the decommission plan up out of the removal file because something in it had snagged at her, and there it was, two lines down: ASSET 4471 — diagnostic & monitoring chain, depth string inclusive — isolate at conclusion of night shift, 06:00, tie to cabinet 4471-C strip-out. The contractors had the load page and the depth string cabled through the same routing bay they were gutting. When the day crew killed the chain at six and the crew came in to finish 4471-C, the live trace stopped. Not archived clean — cut mid-event, the way you pull a plug. Whatever this was, in a little over two hours it would be a line in her green book and a buffer that ended without ending, and a postdoc who’d been alone with it.
She brought up the night line. The unit lead answered on the fourth ring with the flat voice of a man who’d been asleep an hour and was reaching for the version of himself that handled calls.
“Magnusdóttir. It’s twenty to four.”
“I have a nonzero load on the rig diagnostics. The depth string’s reading phase on the coupling stage. Periodic, clean, since oh-three-oh-four. The stage is cold and capped and nobody’s near it.”
A pause that was him sitting up. “You’re on the chain that strips out today.”
“I know. That’s why I called now.”
“Right.” She could hear him deciding to be reasonable, which was worse than if he’d been short. “Erika. You’ve got a crew that’s been three days inside that routing bay pulling bus-bars off the draw-cabinets. They’ve got the 4471-C harness open. You move a copper bar that’s been carrying nothing for eighteen months, you get a transient on every string that shares the bay — induced, capacitive, whatever you like. We saw it on the perimeter strings the first week and we logged it and moved on. It’s cross-feed from the strip-out. It’s the building coming apart around the instrument.”
“The crew badged out at 18:40. There’s nobody in the bay. I checked.”
Another pause. He hadn’t known that, and she heard him fit it in and decide it didn’t move him. “Then it’s a settling transient off this morning’s work. Bars relaxing on the blankets, a connector cooling. It’ll wash out. Look — I’m not going to wake the contractor engineer and tell him to stop a strip-out that’s on the critical path because a dead rig twitched on a string we’re decommissioning anyway. Log it. Note it for the morning. Let the isolation go ahead at six and we’ll pull the buffer and look at it over coffee like people.”
Every cause he’d named could draw exactly the curve on her screen, and he had eighteen months of dead rig and a removal schedule on his side, and she had ninety minutes of trace and a feeling she could not put in a log. If she’d been him, woken at twenty to four, she’d have said the same.
“The contractors are gone,” she said. “If it’s their work, it should be decaying. It’s not decaying. It’s steady. Same amplitude, same interval, ninety minutes.”
“Steady’s what a settling transient does before it stops.”
“Then give me the chain till the morning crew. Don’t isolate at six. Let it run on the buffer, full rate, and if it’s washed out by eight you can tell me I cost the strip-out two hours and I’ll wear it. If it’s still there at eight you’ve got it on record instead of cut off mid-curve.”
“I can’t slip the strip-out, Erika. It’s tied to the cabinet, the cabinet’s tied to the lift booking, the lift’s booked Thursday. You slip the chain isolation, the crew can’t close 4471-C, and that’s a week. Over a transient.” The line stayed open a moment. “Log it well. I’ll see it at eight.”
“At least let me pull the chain off the isolation manually before six, so the buffer closes clean instead of cut.”
“And the safety officer asks me at nine why a postdoc was reaching into a decommission chain at four in the morning, and now we’re both writing it up.” A breath, the sound of a man lying back down. “It’s a dead rig, Erika. It’s been dead eighteen months. Let the chain go at six, get some sleep when the day crew’s in, and we’ll look at the buffer together — it’ll be a connector cooling and you’ll have lost nothing but a quiet morning.”
She could have left it there.
“Goodnight,” she said.
“Goodnight. Log it well.” The line went to the soft tone of a call ended from the other side.
She sat with her hand still on the phone and the load page moving its small regular distance, up and down, in front of her.
She logged it well, because the log came first: the start time, the shape, the reference check, the comp check, the raw channel, the seismics, the access log, the cold-stage reading, the nonzero load, the call and the time of the call and what the unit lead had said and what she’d said back. All of it, dated and initialled, the way you build a thing so that a tired person at four in the morning cannot be the explanation.
And it wasn’t enough. The unit lead’s whole case rested on one thing: the building coming apart around the instrument. The strip-out. The harness. The bay three days open. If the load was cross-feed from the dismantling, then killing the chain at six was correct and she was a postdoc who’d spooked herself on a dead floor. There was one way to take the strip-out off the table, and it was sitting in the access log.
The crew had badged out the evening before. The bay was sealed. Nothing in it had moved since. Erika brought up the bay’s own environmental string — temperature, the connector telltales on the open 4471-C harness, all of it logged because the removal file wanted it logged — and laid the last nine hours over the load on console two. If the load were riding the strip-out, it would track something in that bay: a connector cooling, a bar relaxing, a draught when the door last cycled. The cheap explanations all left a fingerprint, and the fingerprint would be in that bay, and she set the traces one over the other to find it.
Nothing in the bay moved with the load. The connector telltales sat flat. The bay temperature decayed the smooth dull decay of a room going cold and empty, no step, no twitch, no interval. And the load on the rig’s own chain went up and down on its own clean schedule, in step with the depth string and with nothing in the routing bay at all. It wasn’t tracking anything in that bay. Whatever it was, it didn’t behave like the strip-out.
She still didn’t trust it, because she was about to spend her standing on it. So she turned the strip-out’s own record into a test. The contractors had logged every bar they’d pulled and the hour they’d pulled it, three days of it, in the removal file. If the dismantling fed this string, the channels should have moved when the metal moved — a step on Monday when they took the first bus-bar off, a step yesterday at the big one. She laid three days of depth and load history against the strip-out log, bar by bar, the slow way. The channels hadn’t stepped at any of them; through three days of men pulling copper out of the bay next door the chain had held its flat line — until 03:04 tonight, nine hours after the last of them badged out, with every telltale in the open harness dead still. The dismantling hadn’t made this. It never had.
Twice more she ran the comparison, and twice more it held: the dismantling wasn’t driving the chain, and the seismics had already put paid to anything mechanical. What it was she could not yet say — both strings ran through the same open routing bay, and an instrument that strange deserved more suspicion than one night could give it. But cutting the chain at six would take the only live record of it down with the strip-out, and that she could not undo.
Six o’clock was the chain, and it was coming. After six it was a buffer that ended mid-curve and an argument she would lose at a conference table in spring with one foot already in Tromsø.
There was a way to stop it, and she had the credentials for it, and it was not hers to use lightly. She brought up the decommission system and found the line — ASSET 4471 — diagnostic & monitoring chain — isolate 06:00 — and beside it the field that no monitoring postdoc on a wind-down crew was ever supposed to need: the emergency technical hold. A hold under her own login froze that step. It would not slip a lift booking quietly in a file. It raised a flagged condition on a decommissioning asset, which woke the duty escalation, which meant the unit lead a second time and the contractor engineer and a regional safety officer she’d met once, and a form with her name across the top of it in the morning that said a postdoc had stopped a scheduled strip-out on her own authority over a reading her own unit lead had assessed as cross-feed.
The one person three rooms away who could tell her in ninety seconds whether this was a fault in his own hardware or something else was sealed in the bay with his headphones on, mid the forty-hour run she’d cost him if she opened the door. She didn’t open it. It stood badly enough between them already — the one post off Svalbard they’d both wanted, that she’d got and hadn’t told him, that he’d heard from someone in Tromsø before she found the words — and whatever this was, it wasn’t his to wear, and she could not lay it at his feet tonight of all nights and watch him be careful with it.
She put her finger on the hold field and read the warning it raised — this action raises a formal incident and notifies all parties on the decommission — and held there a moment with the load going up and down at the edge of her eye.
Then she placed the hold under her own credentials, and typed the reason in the box because the box made you, plainly, the way she’d type it at the table in the morning: Nonzero periodic load on de-energised stage, independent of strip-out per bay string. Chain not to be isolated until verified. She entered her login and confirmed it.
The screen took a beat. Then the field went amber and the line that had said isolate 06:00 now said HOLD — E. MAGNUSDÓTTIR — INCIDENT 4471-0307. Down in the desk the night line woke and began to ring the unit lead’s number again, this time not on her account. Somewhere across the dark settlement a second phone would be starting, and a third. And on the bay door three rooms off — she knew the routing, she’d helped wire the notifications herself, every party on the asset, the bay included because the bay shared the chain — a small amber telltale would have begun to blink beside the seal where Adi sat forty hours deep — reaching him whether she opened the door or not.
Erika took her hand off the keyboard. The load page kept its small regular distance, up and down, on a dead rig that had produced a real load, and her name was on it now, in amber, where the unit lead and the contractor engineer and the regional office could not switch it off in the morning without also deciding what to do about her.
She picked up the green book, and wrote the time the hold went in.