Anya-10 Masha-8-lsm-43 Apr 2026

Then the image changed. It showed the surface. The outpost. But the outpost was dark, and the door to the airlock was open. Two small figures in oversized parkas were walking out onto the ice, hand in hand, following a trail of violet lights that led to a pressure crack in the glacier.

Masha was eight, with a mop of strawberry-blonde hair that stuck to her forehead and a habit of talking to the creaking walls. She believed the groaning of the permafrost outside was a white bear trying to tell them stories. She was the "little one."

Anya didn't answer. She just gripped her sister’s hand tighter and stared at the dark, silent pillar of LSM-43. It looked like nothing more than a dead machine now. But she knew, somewhere deep in the ice, it was still listening. And it was patient.

"You did the right thing," Masha said. "The bear outside says the ocean is lonely. But we're not lonely yet." Anya-10 Masha-8-Lsm-43

Now, only Anya, Masha, and LSM-43 remained.

The climate control log for Sector 7 read: All systems nominal. Population: Anya-10, Masha-8, LSM-43.

"He wasn't listening," Masha said simply. "He was demanding. You have to ask nicely." Then the image changed

They saw it. A vast, subterranean ocean, lit by hydrothermal vents glowing like red suns. Strange, translucent creatures with ribbon-like bodies danced in the black water. It was beautiful and utterly terrifying.

Anya yanked Masha back just as the iris of LSM-43 dilated fully. A beam of pale, liquid light shot out, not hot, but deep . It painted a moving picture on the far wall.

Most of the crew had called it the "Lament Configuration." It was a Geological and Atmospheric Sampler—a six-foot-tall pillar of brushed steel and weeping frost, buried in the center of the common room. It had no screen, no buttons, just a single iris-like aperture that opened once every hour to emit a low, resonant hum that vibrated in your teeth. But the outpost was dark, and the door

"It's singing again," Masha whispered, her face pressed against the frost-rimed window of their bunkroom. The common room below was dark, but the pillar’s iris was open, glowing a faint, deep violet. The hum was lower tonight, almost a lullaby.

Masha leaned forward. "LSM-43. Will you let us see the ocean?"