Lagrange Point

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Lagrange Point

[OTMES:TI=68|M=(58,45,30)|N=(34,25,70)|K=(0.3,0.5,0.2)|A=315|TL=0.3|STYLE=Literary_Science_Fiction|]

Dr. Eleanor Zhang was three hundred thousand kilometers from Earth when she first heard the signal. She was on the observation deck of Station L4, the space station at the Earth-Moon Lagrange Point 4, and she was staring at the stars when the radio started screaming.

The signal was not like anything Eleanor had ever heard. It was structured—that much was obvious from the first microsecond. It had rhythm, pattern, grammar. It was language.

Eleanor grabbed the headset and started recording. The signal was coming from outside the solar system. From very far outside. Eleanor did the math in her head—if the signal was traveling at the speed of light, it had been on its way for twelve thousand years.

Twelve thousand years. Whatever had sent this signal, it had been transmitting since before humans learned to plant crops. Since before the pyramids. Since before the last ice age.

Eleanor ran to the communications room. She had to tell someone. She had to tell Earth.

"Control, this is L4. I have a signal. Repeat, I have a signal from deep space. It's structured. I think it's—I think it might be intelligent."

Static. Then: "Copy that, L4. Sending the data to the surface. Stand by."

Eleanor stood by the communications console and waited. The signal continued, a relentless stream of information. Eleanor tried to decode it, but it was beyond her. It was beyond anyone. It was alien.

Three hours later, the phone rang. It was Dr. Okonkwo, the director of the station. "Eleanor, we've analyzed the signal. It's not just language. It's a map."

"A map? A map of what?"

"A map of their star system. And Eleanor—it's a map of us, too. They know where we are."

Eleanor sat down. She looked at the stars through the viewport. Somewhere out there, twelve thousand light-years away, someone was looking back. Had been looking back for twelve thousand years.

"What do we do?" Eleanor asked.

"We answer," Okonkwo said. "We answer, and we hope they're still listening."

Eleanor spent the next six months working on the response. She worked with linguists and mathematicians and artists, trying to create a message that would tell the aliens who humans were. It was the hardest thing she had ever done. How do you describe humanity in a single transmission? How do you compress the entire history of a species into a signal that will take twelve thousand years to arrive?

They worked and worked. They built a message that contained mathematics, music, art, a greeting in seventy languages. They built it and they sent it.

And then they waited.

Twenty-four thousand years. That's how long it would take to get a response. Eleanor would be long dead by then. Everyone she knew would be dead. The whole of human civilization might be dead.

Eleanor looked at the stars and smiled. She had done her part. The message was on its way. And somewhere, in a future she would never see, some alien intelligence would hear the voice of humanity for the very first time.

It was enough. It had to be enough.


[END OTMES:TI=68|STORY=Lagrange_Point|VARIANT=V07|]




© 2026 - Authored by Z R ZHANG...

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