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488122.930_52b5daef_139445_ww File

Silas jacked the drive into his isolation rig, his fingers dancing over a haptic deck to bypass the initial encryption layers.

The first part of the string, 488122.930 , was easy enough to translate once he ran it through a basic astro-navigational parser. It was a time-stamped spatial coordinate pointing directly to the edge of the Oort cloud, logged exactly forty-two years ago. 488122.930_52b5daef_139445_ww

The Aegis-7 hadn’t been destroyed. According to the "ww" logs—the black box transmission data—the ship had found something at those exact coordinates. The screen flickered, rendering a jagged, wireframe 3D map of an object the ship had pulled into its cargo bay. It wasn't an asteroid. It was a perfectly smooth, geometric monolith that emitted a localized field defying standard laws of mass. Silas jacked the drive into his isolation rig,

Because this exact string does not yield any established public records or context, it reads like a piece of encrypted data from a hard drive or a classified asset tag. The Aegis-7 hadn’t been destroyed

The audio cut to static. Silas sat back in his chair, the blue light of the monitor reflecting in his eyes. He looked at the string again. It wasn't just a random sequence of numbers and letters. It was a digital tombstone, floating in the dark, waiting for someone foolish enough to answer its call.

The last file in the directory was an audio log, heavily corrupted but still intelligible. A voice, brittle and terrified, filtered through Silas’s speakers.

"This is Commander Vance. The coordinates are locked. I am tying the ship's navigation to my own neural signature using protocol 52b5daef . If anyone is reading this log, do not come looking for us. We aren't alone out here, and the artifact... it's waking up."