• The site has now migrated to Xenforo 2. If you see any issues with the forum operation, please post them in the feedback thread.
  • An addendum to Rule 3 regarding fan-translated works of things such as Web Novels has been made. Please see here for details.
  • The issue with logging in with email addresses has been resolved.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.

Extradimensional Logic Fortress Avalon [Male MC (kinda)] [Original Setting]

Created
Status
Incomplete
Watchers
30
Recent readers
0

In a world not unlike our own, the Extradimensional Logic Fortress Avalon appeared. Read as the Avalon and its mysterious Commander change the course of humanity's future.

This is just something to get me back into writing. Complete wish fulfillment. Don't expect any deeper meaning. But you will find references.
Prologue: First Contact New

Portal_Guy

On Hiatus.
Joined
Nov 23, 2021
Messages
203
Likes received
4,679
Something new from me. To get me back to writing.



January 1st, 2020

The new year dawned, not with the usual bleary-eyed hangover from worldwide celebrations, but with a collective, global gasp. It wasn't fireworks that held the world's attention, nor the resolutions hastily made and destined to be broken.

It was something else entirely, something impossible, hanging silently in the void 100,000 kilometers above Earth's familiar blue marble.

It was a ship. Or, more accurately, a sphere. A perfectly, impossibly smooth sphere, vast beyond comprehension, roughly the size of the continent of Australia. It simply… appeared.

No warning, no trajectory, no announcement. One moment, the space above Earth was the familiar canvas of stars and satellites; the next, it hosted a colossal, silent neighbour.

Panic, raw and primal, was the first global export. Stock markets plummeted faster than gravity could pull an apple. Phone lines jammed, internet bandwidth strained under the weight of a billion simultaneous searches for "giant sphere in sky."

News channels abandoned scheduled programming, throwing bewildered anchors in front of cameras with nothing but grainy satellite feeds and frantic, contradictory expert opinions.

"We are getting reports… unconfirmed at this stage… of an object… a very large object…" stammered a veteran newsman in London, his usual unflappable demeanor shattered.

"Is it an asteroid? A comet?" asked his co-anchor, eyes wide.

"The shape, Maria… astronomers are saying it's… perfectly spherical. And stationary relative to Earth's orbit. That's… not natural."

In Tokyo, screens showed citizens pouring into the streets, pointing upwards. In Rio, the beaches emptied as people sought shelter, unsure what the silent behemoth portended. In Washington D.C., the Pentagon became a hive of frantic activity, generals demanding answers that physicists and astronomers couldn't provide.

The most unsettling part? You didn't need a telescope. Day or night, the sphere was visible. During the day, it caught the sun's light, a gleaming pearl against the blue. At night, it eclipsed constellations, a perfectly circular hole punched in the fabric of the cosmos, faintly reflecting Earth's own city lights, appearing like a second, much larger, much closer moon. It was a constant, terrifying reminder of humanity's sudden, inexplicable vulnerability.

The panic, however, had a surprisingly short shelf life. Precisely five hours after its appearance, as global anxiety reached fever pitch, every screen, every speaker, every device capable of receiving a broadcast signal flickered.

Regular programming vanished, replaced by a single, static image: a test pattern, but one subtly different, cleaner, sharper than any terrestrial standard. Then, the image resolved.

It showed a man. Unremarkable, almost blandly so. He appeared to be Caucasian, perhaps in his early thirties, with neatly combed brown hair and unassuming features.

He wore a simple, plain grey jumpsuit, devoid of any insignia or rank. He sat in a minimalist chair against a neutral, off-white background.

There was nothing overtly threatening about him, yet the context of his appearance – hijacking every single broadcast medium on the planet simultaneously – sent a fresh wave of chills down the collective human spine.

He leaned slightly forward, his expression calm, almost placid. "Good day, people of Earth," he began, his voice a smooth, unaccented baritone. The audio quality was perfect, unnervingly so. "My name is Alan Crosby. I am a human person." He paused, letting the simple, yet bizarrely phrased statement hang in the air. "Please, do not be alarmed. The object you currently observe in your sky is mine. And I assure you, this is not an invasion."

He gestured vaguely, perhaps towards something off-screen. "What you are seeing is my… vessel. I call it the Avalon. It is, more accurately, an Extradimensional Logic Fortress, but 'space ship' is perhaps an easier concept for now." Another pause. "I understand this is… unexpected. Disruptive. But I want to be perfectly clear: This is not a hoax. This is not a staged event orchestrated by any of your governments or organizations. The Avalon is real. I am real."

He seemed sincere, his gaze steady. The sheer impossibility of it warred with the evidence hanging in the sky and the man speaking calmly from every screen. "The Avalon poses no immediate threat to you or your planet. Its presence is… necessary for my work."

He shifted slightly in his chair. "In the interest of transparency and… neighbourly relations, I would like to extend an invitation. I invite the designated leaders, or chosen representatives, from every nation on Earth to join me aboard the Avalon. Let us say, in three standard Earth days from now? Midday, Greenwich Mean Time, should provide a suitable synchronization point."

He offered a faint, almost imperceptible smile. "There is no need for complex travel arrangements. Simply have your chosen representatives gather at a suitable, open location – perhaps outside your primary government buildings. At the appointed time, transport will be provided. We will have a brief tour, a discussion. You will see that my intentions are… collaborative."

"Again," he reiterated, his voice gentle but firm, "do not be alarmed. This is an offer of understanding, not a prelude to conflict. I look forward to welcoming your representatives. Until then, please, try to remain calm."

The image held for a moment longer, then dissolved back to the strange test pattern, which in turn vanished, leaving behind screens filled with static, network logos, or stunned news anchors trying to process what had just happened.

Alan Crosby. Avalon. Extradimensional Logic Fortress. Human person. The words echoed in the sudden silence, leaving humanity with more questions than answers, and a three-day deadline ticking like a time bomb.

The intervening seventy-two hours were a blur of frantic diplomacy, emergency summits, and public debate. Should they go? Was it a trap? Could they afford not to go?

Conspiracy theories bloomed like algae in a polluted pond, ranging from alien deception to divine intervention to the ultimate reality TV show.

But the undeniable fact of the colossal sphere hanging overhead, and the sheer technological feat of the global broadcast hijack, tipped the scales. Refusal felt like impotence in the face of overwhelming power.

Acceptance, however terrifying, felt like the only viable path.

And so, on January 4th, 2020, at precisely 12:00 PM GMT, designated representatives from nearly two hundred nations stood in designated open spaces across the globe.

Presidents, Prime Ministers, Chancellors, Kings, Queens, high-ranking diplomats – they stood, often surrounded by nervous security details and banks of cameras broadcasting the moment live, squinting up at the sky or staring resolutely ahead, masks of strained composure barely concealing their apprehension.

There was no fanfare, no descending shuttlecraft, no shimmering tractor beam reaching down from the heavens. One moment, the French President was standing on the Champs-Élysées, the biting January wind whipping at his coat.

The next, the wind was gone, replaced by perfectly climate-controlled air, the familiar grey Parisian sky swapped for a ceiling of softly glowing, intricate light panels. The scent of ozone, faint but distinct, hung in the air. He wasn't in Paris anymore.

The same instantaneous transition occurred worldwide. The Japanese Prime Minister vanished from the grounds of the Kantei. The Brazilian President disappeared from the Palácio da Alvorada. The Kenyan representative, standing on the steps of Parliament Buildings in Nairobi, simply ceased to be there.

They reappeared, not scattered, but together, coalesced in a vast, breathtaking chamber. The floor beneath their feet was a polished, obsidian-like material that seemed to subtly shift and flow with patterns of light.

The walls soared upwards, curving into a vaulted ceiling dozens of meters high, composed of the same intricate, self-illuminating panels they'd glimpsed upon arrival. The air hummed with a low, almost subsonic thrum of immense, controlled power.

But it was the reception committee that truly stole their breath. Lined up in perfect formation were beings of impossible grace and beauty. They appeared female, human in form, but with a precision of movement, a symmetry of features, and an unnerving uniformity that spoke of artificial origin.

They were gynoids, clad in elegant, form-fitting attire that shimmered with an inner light, their expressions serene, welcoming, yet devoid of genuine emotion.

One stepped forward, her voice a melodious chime. "Welcome, honoured representatives of Earth. I am Unit 7. On behalf of Master Alan Crosby, we welcome you aboard the Avalon." She gestured gracefully. "Master Crosby regrets he cannot greet you personally at this moment, but he will join you shortly via holographic interface. Please, allow us to escort you."

The representatives, a kaleidoscope of national dress and stunned expressions, exchanged uneasy glances. The sheer opulence was staggering. It wasn't just futuristic; it was alien, yet disturbingly familiar, like a dream of unattainable luxury made manifest.

Gold-like tracery snaked across the walls, interwoven with pulsing fiber-optic strands. Floating sculptures, seemingly defying gravity, rotated slowly in alcoves, emitting soft musical tones. The air smelled faintly of exotic, unidentifiable blossoms.

"Did… did everyone experience that?" whispered the German Chancellor to her neighbour, the Italian Prime Minister, her voice tight with disbelief. "One moment I was in Berlin…"

"And I in Rome," he murmured back, his eyes wide as he took in the gynoid attendants. "Madre Mia… what is this place?"

Before more could be said, a holographic image flickered into existence at the head of the chamber. It was Alan Crosby, or rather, a life-sized, three-dimensional projection of him, clad in the same grey jumpsuit.

He looked identical to his broadcast appearance, calm and unassuming, yet his projected presence filled the vast hall. Simultaneously, miniature versions of his hologram appeared on floating displays before each representative, ensuring everyone had a clear view.

For the billions watching the live feed back on Earth – a feed Alan had generously provided, piped directly into the same global networks he'd hijacked earlier – the experience was translated seamlessly, either through dubbed audio or perfectly synchronized subtitles in their native languages.

"Welcome," Alan's voice resonated, both from the main hologram and the smaller displays. "Welcome to the Avalon. I trust your journey was… instantaneous?" A hint of dry amusement touched his tone. "Please, do not be alarmed by my wives." He gestured towards the gynoids. "They are my crew, my companions, and essential to the Avalon's operation. They will ensure your comfort."

The term "wives" landed with a thud, adding another layer of profound weirdness to the already surreal situation. Several representatives shifted uncomfortably.

"We have much to see," Alan continued, seemingly oblivious to their discomfort. "The Avalon is… extensive. To facilitate our tour, we will utilize the internal transit system. Please, follow Unit 7 and her sisters."

The gynoids moved with silent, synchronized grace, guiding the stunned delegation towards a set of wide, seamless doors that hissed open, revealing not a corridor, but a sleek, windowless train carriage waiting within a cylindrical tube.

The interior was plush, with comfortable seating arranged to offer views of large screens lining the walls. As soon as everyone was aboard, the doors sealed, and with a barely perceptible hum, the train accelerated.

But there was no sensation of movement, only the changing vistas on the screens, which activated to show the view outside the vacuum tube the train now sped through at impossible velocity.

The next two hours were a sensory overload, a relentless display of technological supremacy and unimaginable scale, all narrated by the holographic Alan Crosby, who remained projected within the carriage.

Gourmet food and exotic beverages, materialized by the gynoid attendants from discreet compartments, were served throughout, though many representatives found their appetites blunted by sheer astonishment.

The train shot through transparent sections of the vacuum tube, offering breathtaking, terrifying glimpses into the Avalon's inner workings. They saw colossal energy cores pulsing with contained starlight, vast hydroponic bays stretching for kilometers, bathed in artificial sunlight, growing unearthly but apparently edible flora.

They witnessed automated factories where robotic arms assembled complex machinery with blinding speed and precision, raw asteroids being processed in zero-gravity refineries, and shimmering containment fields holding… something indescribable, vast and complex, that Alan vaguely referred to as "logic engines."

They passed through simulated environments – lush rainforests teeming with bio-engineered fauna, serene zero-gravity gardens where water flowed in crystalline spheres, even a simulated cityscape that looked disturbingly like an idealized Earth metropolis, populated by more of the silent, graceful gynoids.

"The Avalon is entirely self-sufficient," Alan explained, his hologram gesturing towards a vast agricultural dome displayed on the screens. "We generate our own power, recycle all resources with near-perfect efficiency, and can synthesize any required materials. It is less a ship, more a… mobile habitat. A world unto itself."

The representatives, leaders accustomed to wielding global power, felt utterly dwarfed. Their nations' entire industrial outputs seemed like children's toys compared to the effortless, planetary-scale engineering on display. Whispers broke out.

"The energy required…" muttered the Russian representative, a stern-faced man usually immune to surprise. "It's astronomical."

"The materials science alone is centuries beyond us," added the representative from South Korea, her face pale. "Self-sufficient? He's built a portable, artificial planet."

Back on Earth, the livestream held billions captive. Pundits struggled for superlatives. Scientists scribbled equations, trying to grasp the physics implied by the visuals. Military analysts assessed the defensive and offensive capabilities hinted at by the energy cores and automated factories, their conclusions grim.

The tour wasn't just a tour; it was a demonstration, a calculated display of power so overwhelming it bordered on the incomprehensible.

As the tour concluded, the train slowed, gliding smoothly back into a reception chamber, similar but distinct from the first.

This one was configured more like a conference room, with a large, circular table dominating the center. The representatives were guided to seats, finding personalized holographic displays awaiting them.

Alan Crosby's main hologram materialized at the head of the table. The gynoids stood silently along the perimeter. The atmosphere shifted from awe to tense anticipation. The final hour, the promised discussion, had arrived.

Alan let the silence stretch for a moment, his holographic eyes seeming to meet each representative's gaze in turn. "You have seen a fraction of the Avalon," he began, his tone becoming more serious. "Enough, I hope, to understand the… context of our conversation."

He clasped his hands. "Let me be direct. There is nothing within your current, or projected future, technological capabilities – nothing you could conceivably develop within the next, say, ten million of your years – that could pose even a momentary inconvenience to the Avalon or myself. Your most powerful weapons would be less than gnats against this hull. Your most sophisticated cyber warfare attempts would be trivially bypassed."

The statement was delivered calmly, without malice, but its implications were chillingly clear. It wasn't a boast; it felt like a statement of fact, as undeniable as gravity.

"I am not here to conquer," he continued. "I am not here to dictate. I am offering you… collaboration. A chance for your species to engage with a reality far broader than you currently comprehend."

He paused. "However. While I do not demand recognition or fealty, I must state unequivocally that any attempt, by any individual, group, or nation, to undermine, interfere with, or threaten the Avalon or its operations, will be met with decisive and irreversible consequences. It would be… extremely foolish."

The translation software worked perfectly, delivering the message in each representative's native tongue, but the underlying meaning needed no translation. It was the politest, most technologically advanced threat in human history: Don't mess with me.

The representatives sat in stunned silence. What could they say? What leverage did they have? They were children playing with sticks in the face of a thermonuclear device.

Before the heavy silence could become suffocating, Alan shifted the topic. "But my presence here is not solely about warnings. I intend to be a… productive neighbour."

He brought up a holographic display showing Earth's orbit, cluttered with the swirling cloud of space debris accumulated over decades of human activity. "Your orbital environment is dangerously congested. This debris poses a significant threat to your current and future space endeavours, and even to the planet's surface."

"Beginning immediately," Alan declared, "the Avalon will commence systematic cleanup operations. We will collect all artificial debris currently in Earth orbit – defunct satellites, rocket stages, fragments, everything."

Another display shimmered, showing complex molecular diagrams. "Furthermore, the collected materials, along with other resources the Avalon can readily acquire, will be processed and refined to industrial-grade purity. Metals, polymers, silicates, rare earths. We will then offer these refined materials for sale back to Earth."

He anticipated their next question. "The pricing will be structured to be highly competitive, yet carefully calculated not to collapse your existing industries overnight. The goal is integration, not disruption. A stable transition."

The economic implications sent a ripple through the room and across the watching world. Access to vast quantities of refined materials, sourced from space debris and potentially elsewhere, sold at competitive prices? It was revolutionary.

"And the proceeds from these sales?" Alan continued, his expression unchanging. "Frankly, your planetary currencies hold little intrinsic value to me. Their worth is less than the air you are currently breathing aboard my vessel." A few representatives flinched at the casual dismissal of the entire global financial system.

"Therefore," Alan stated, "all revenue generated from these material sales will be transferred directly to non-governmental organizations on Earth dedicated to humanitarian aid, environmental restoration, medical research, and education. I will select organizations I deem genuinely effective and transparent, bypassing traditional governmental or corporate channels."

He waved a hand, and a complex, real-time ledger appeared in the holographic space. "All transactions – collection, processing, sales, and disbursements – will be recorded on a publicly accessible, cryptographically secured ledger. Absolute transparency will be maintained. You will see where every unit of currency goes."

He looked around the table again. "This is my initial proposal. A cleanup service, a resource provision, and a direct investment in your planet's well-being, funded by the byproducts of your own past activities. It is a gesture of goodwill, and a demonstration of the potential for mutually beneficial interaction."

He let his words sink in. Clean up their mess, sell it back to them cheaply, and give the money to charity, all while demonstrating untouchable power. It was audacious, baffling, and undeniably transformative.

"Thank you for your time and attention," Alan Crosby said, his hologram offering a slight nod. "This concludes our initial meeting. I hope it has been… informative."

Before anyone could formulate a response, ask a question, or even fully process the deluge of information, the faint scent of ozone returned. The opulent conference room dissolved.

The German Chancellor found herself back in the biting Berlin wind, the sounds of traffic suddenly loud in her ears. The Japanese Prime Minister was standing again on the Kantei grounds, his security detail rushing towards him with expressions of profound relief.

All across the world, the representatives were back exactly where they had started, the two-hour, twenty-minute journey to another world and back seemingly compressed into an impossible instant.

Above them, the Avalon remained, a silent, silver moon against the blue sky, a constant reminder that the rules of reality had irrevocably changed.

Thirteen months. One year and one month since the day the sky changed forever. The world had not ended. No alien invasion fleet had followed the Avalon. No demands for tribute or surrender had been issued. Life, in many ways, went on.

People still went to work, children still went to school, politicians still argued. But everything existed under the shadow, both literal and metaphorical, of the colossal sphere hanging 100,000 kilometers away.

Society had… adapted. Or perhaps, it had been forced to recalibrate its understanding of its place in the universe. The initial shock had subsided into a strange kind of normalcy, punctuated by the undeniable reality of Alan Crosby's ongoing activities.

He was, as promised, a man of his word. Almost immediately after the representatives' return, sophisticated, unmanned drones – presumably dispatched from the Avalon – began appearing in Earth orbit. They moved with impossible speed and precision, plucking debris ranging from large rocket bodies to tiny flecks of paint.

Satellites showed them working tirelessly, methodically clearing the orbital pathways. Within months, the near-Earth space environment was cleaner than it had been since the dawn of the Space Age. Astronomers rejoiced, satellite operators breathed sighs of relief, and the constant threat of Kessler Syndrome diminished significantly.

Then came the materials. Huge quantities of refined metals, polymers, and other industrial resources began to be offered on the open market. The transactions were handled through automated online platforms linked to a specific, heavily encrypted bank account established, seemingly overnight, within the global financial system.

It was an account no agency could crack, no government could freeze. The prices were, as Alan had promised, competitive – low enough to be attractive, high enough not to instantly bankrupt terrestrial mining and refining operations. Industries adapted, incorporating Avalon-sourced materials into their supply chains. Manufacturing costs for many goods saw a slight, but noticeable, decrease.

And the money? It flowed exactly as Alan had dictated. The publicly accessible online ledger, hosted on a server network that seemed impervious to any form of attack or censorship, showed every transaction in meticulous detail.

Billions of dollars, euros, yen, and other currencies were wired from the impenetrable bank account to hundreds of NGOs across the globe. Small environmental charities suddenly found their budgets quadrupled.

Underfunded medical research projects received massive, unsolicited grants. Humanitarian aid organizations were able to expand their reach dramatically. Verification was easy; the NGOs confirmed receipt of the funds, and the results of their enhanced activities became visible on the ground.

No one could argue with the transparency or the impact. Alan Crosby, the enigmatic owner of the planet-sized spaceship, was demonstrably cleaning up Earth's backyard and funding its charities.

But beyond these specific, verifiable actions? Silence. Utter, profound silence.

Governments, space agencies, scientific consortia, even private corporations had spent the past year attempting to open a dialogue. Formal diplomatic requests were transmitted on every conceivable frequency.

Powerful laser arrays beamed coded messages towards the sphere. Radio telescopes sent greetings and queries. International delegations drafted carefully worded invitations for further talks.

Every single attempt was met with the same response: nothing. No acknowledgement, no reply, no signal bounce-back that indicated reception but refusal. Just… silence.

Initially, the theory of advanced shielding – electromagnetic, radio, laser – was floated. Perhaps the Avalon was simply too advanced to receive their primitive signals? But that didn't hold water. Alan Crosby had effortlessly hijacked every broadcast on the planet to make his initial announcement and provide the livestream of the tour. He clearly possessed the capability to both send and receive signals across the electromagnetic spectrum, likely in ways Earth technology couldn't even fathom.

The conclusion became inescapable: Alan Crosby wasn't unable to hear them; he was actively choosing to ignore them. He had set the terms of engagement with his initial appearance and discussion. He was fulfilling his stated pledges regarding debris and materials. Beyond that, apparently, there was nothing further to discuss from his perspective.

And so, on February 1st, 2021, humanity found itself in a bizarre, unprecedented situation. They shared their solar system with an entity of unimaginable power and technology, an entity that was demonstrably real, active, and even passively benevolent in its specific actions. Yet, this entity remained completely aloof, unresponsive, its ultimate motives and long-term intentions a total mystery.

The Avalon hung in the sky, a constant, silent reminder of humanity's new reality – a reality where they were no longer the sole masters of their destiny, living under the gaze of a neighbour who cleaned their yard but refused to answer the door.

The silence from 100,000 kilometers away was perhaps more unnerving than any threat could have been. The world had changed, yes, but the strangest, most unsettling chapter of the Avalon's arrival was perhaps just beginning.

Chapter End

If you want to help support me and read future chapters earlier, you can check out my Patreon or ko-fi if you just want to drop a tip. Every dollar helps a lot, you will be making a difference. Especially at this moment in time. Please.
 
Chapter 1: The Silent Partner New
Tuesday, February 2nd, 2021

(08:03 EST / 13:03 UTC) Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland


Ben Carter leaned closer to the monitor, the glow reflecting off his glasses. The main display showed the orbital plot of near-Earth space, a serene blue sphere cradled by a sparse network of green operational satellite tracks and the occasional blinking icon representing one of them.

Gone was the angry red swarm of debris that had defined these plots for his entire career. It was still jarring, thirteen months later, to see it so… clean. Like a polluted river suddenly running clear, but without knowing who or what had installed the filter.

"Morning, Ben," mumbled Dave, one of his lead techs, sliding a steaming mug onto the edge of the console. "Anything exciting overnight?"

Ben grunted a thank you, taking a sip. Standard NASA-issue coffee, reliably mediocre. "Define exciting, Dave. The sweepers did their usual ballet. Consumed another defunct weather sat over the South Pacific, vacuumed up some micrometeoroid fragments near ISS altitude. Textbook."

'Sweepers'. That was the unofficial, internal nickname for the Avalon drones. Sleek, impossibly fast, utterly silent objects that had simply appeared in orbit the day after the Representatives returned. They moved with a fluid dynamics that defied conventional propulsion, maneuvering with g-forces that would liquefy a human pilot and shred any known terrestrial drone. They collected debris with pinpoint precision, using forces or fields no one understood, and then… vanished. Where they took the debris, how they processed it, remained total unknowns. They just did their job, cleaning up humanity's mess with silent, inscrutable efficiency.

Ben tapped a command, bringing up the detailed log for Sweeper Unit Designation AX-7. Its operational path was flawless, economical, predictable. It moved from one debris object to the next with minimal transit time, its projected path aligning perfectly with the actual telemetry feed – telemetry they could only passively observe, as the sweepers ignored any active scans or pings.

He frowned, scrolling back through the timestamped data logs from around 04:50 UTC. "Huh."

"Something?" Dave asked, pausing on his way to his own workstation.

"Probably just a sensor ghost," Ben murmured, magnifying a section of the telemetry graph. For less than three seconds, AX-7's energy signature – or rather, the faint disturbance it created in the background radiation that was their only way of tracking it – had flickered, pulsed erratically. Simultaneously, its apparent velocity vector shifted by a fraction of a degree before snapping back into alignment. It was tiny, almost within standard deviation limits for their long-range sensors. Almost.

"Weird," Ben said, mostly to himself. He flagged the data point. "Run a diagnostic on Sensor Array Delta-Prime when you get a chance. Might be developing a jitter."

"Will do," Dave said, already moving off.

Ben stared at the flagged point for another moment. A sensor ghost. Almost certainly. But with Avalon, 'almost certainly' felt different. Everything about it existed just beyond the edge of their understanding. You couldn't dismiss anomalies lightly, even tiny ones. He made a mental note to check the logs for other sweepers operating in the same quadrant at that time. Probably nothing. Still.



(10:37 EST / 15:37 UTC) Department of State, Washington D.C.

Dr. Evelyn Reed stared at the spreadsheet, the numbers blurring slightly. It detailed the fourth quarter disbursements from the 'Avalon Fund' – the untraceable, unfreezable bank account Alan Crosby used to funnel proceeds from his recycled space materials back to Earth. Billions. Flowing seamlessly into the accounts of hundreds of NGOs worldwide. Environmental groups in Indonesia, medical research labs in Germany, literacy programs in Nigeria, disaster relief in Central America.

Her job, in part, was to analyze the geopolitical impact. Did the funding destabilize local governments by empowering NGOs? Did it create dependencies? Was there a pattern, a hidden agenda, in the recipients Crosby chose? So far, the answer seemed to be… no. The choices appeared genuinely altruistic, diverse, and focused on demonstrable need and efficiency, just as he'd claimed.

The transparency was absolute; the public ledger online was updated in real-time, its cryptographic security baffling the NSA's best minds. Crosby wasn't just powerful; he was meticulously, almost performatively, honest in his stated operations. Which only made the why more maddening.

Her desk console chimed softly. A secure message from Director Evans, head of the Avalon Coordination Group. Subject: Draft Comms Strategy - Final Review.

Evelyn sighed, rubbing her temples. Another one. She opened the attached document. It was the seventeenth iteration of a formal diplomatic note requesting open dialogue with Mr. Crosby. Polite, respectful, referencing the "mutually beneficial activities" of the debris cleanup and material sales, emphasizing shared interests in "stable space operations and planetary well-being." It was carefully crafted by teams from State, NASA, and even DoD liaisons, wordsmithed to be as non-threatening and appealing as possible.

And it would achieve precisely nothing. Just like the previous sixteen attempts. Just like the laser-beamed messages, the radio signals broadcast from Arecibo before its collapse, the UN resolutions politely requesting contact. All met with the same deafening silence from the Australia-sized sphere hanging 100,000 kilometers away.

"Anything promising in the latest masterpiece?" asked Mark Chen, her deputy analyst, leaning over the partition between their sterile, modern cubicles. His tone was laced with the familiar cynicism that permeated the ACG.

"Hope springs eternal, Mark," Evelyn replied dryly, scrolling through the document. "This version includes slightly more groveling and a renewed emphasis on potential collaborative research opportunities."

"Ah, the 'please share your magic space tech' angle. Bold," Mark quipped. "Think he'll finally answer?"

"About as likely as him showing up for the State of the Union," Evelyn said. She typed a brief comment – No substantive changes recommended. Proceed as planned. – and sent it back up the chain. It felt like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic, if the iceberg was a silent, perfectly spherical god who occasionally tossed you a high-quality life raft while ignoring your distress calls.

The sheer impotence was the hardest part. Governments, global institutions, the entire framework of international relations – rendered utterly irrelevant. They weren't dealing with another nation, or even a conventional non-state actor. They were dealing with… Alan Crosby. A self-proclaimed "human person" with technology that defied physics, who operated with the casual omnipotence of a deity, cleaning their orbit and funding their charities while treating the combined powers of Earth like bothersome background noise.



(13:12 EST / 18:12 UTC) Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland

Ben ate his sandwich – turkey and swiss on rye, predictably bland – at his desk, running cross-checks on the AX-7 anomaly from the morning. Sensor Array Delta-Prime diagnostics came back clean. No jitter. He pulled data from Arrays Gamma and Epsilon, which also had line-of-sight to that sector of orbit at the relevant time. Their resolution wasn't as high, but… there it was. A faint, corresponding flicker in the background radiation, lasting barely two seconds, precisely correlating with the AX-7 log timestamp.

It wasn't a sensor ghost. It was real. Something had happened.

What, though? An energy discharge? A course correction executed so rapidly it barely registered? Interaction with another object? He checked the logs for other tracked objects – satellites, other sweeper units. Nothing else was within thousands of kilometers. He ran simulations. No known natural phenomenon – solar flares, cosmic rays, magnetospheric interference – matched the signature profile.

He leaned back, chewing slowly, staring at the superimposed data streams. It was a tiny ripple in an ocean of data, insignificant by any pre-Avalon standard. But now? Everything related to Avalon tech was significant. The sweepers moved with impossible grace, their energy signatures incredibly faint and stable. This brief instability, this flicker… it was like noticing a single, momentary tremor in a mountain that wasn't supposed to move.

He typed a quick, encrypted message to Dr. Aris Thorne in the Astrophysics division, attaching the correlated data logs.

Subject: Unusual Energy Fluctuation - Avalon Sweeper AX-7 - 04:50 UTC Feb 2. Correlated across three arrays. Any thoughts? - Ben Carter, OEO.

Thorne was one of the few cleared to actively study Avalon sensor data. Maybe she'd seen something similar. Probably not. Probably just another data point for the ever-growing "Avalon - Unexplained Phenomena" file. He finished his sandwich, the taste as unsatisfying as the conclusion.



(15:05 EST / 20:05 UTC) Department of State, Washington D.C.

The secure video conference grid filled Evelyn's monitor. Faces from DoD, NASA, Treasury, Commerce, DHS, ODNI. The weekly ACG Interagency Sync. Director Evans cleared his throat, bringing the virtual meeting to order.

"Alright people, let's keep this efficient. Updates since last week. NASA, Dr. Peters, anything new on sweeper activity or observations of the primary object?"

Dr. Peters, Ben Carter's ultimate boss's boss several times removed, adjusted his glasses. "Activity remains consistent, Director. Debris removal is proceeding nominally. Passive scans of the Avalon sphere show no change in energy output or detectable emissions. Still remarkably… quiet."

Quiet. The understatement of the millennium, Evelyn thought.

General Mallory from DoD spoke next, his voice gravelly. "Our tracking remains unchanged. No hostile indications. We continue refining contingency protocols, but frankly, Director, our options remain… limited." Limited was code for nonexistent. No weapon on Earth could scratch the Avalon, according to Alan Crosby himself, and every analysis suggested he wasn't bluffing.

The Treasury liaison discussed the minor, stabilizing effect of Avalon materials on certain commodity markets. Commerce echoed the lack of major disruption to domestic industries. DHS reported no credible Avalon-related domestic threats, just the usual background noise of cults and conspiracy theorists.

Then it was Evelyn's turn. "State Department update: Draft communication seventeen is ready for transmission. We've also analyzed the Q4 funding disbursements – patterns remain consistent with previous quarters, broadly humanitarian and environmental, no obvious geopolitical bias detected. We received informal inquiries from the Japanese and German missions regarding potential coordinated communication efforts; we advised maintaining current individual national protocols per standing guidance." Translation: Everyone was trying everything, and nothing was working.

Director Evans nodded grimly. "So, status quo. No response from Crosby. No change in Avalon's posture. Continued cleanup and funding." He sighed, a sound amplified by the microphone. "Anyone have anything actually new? Any novel approaches? Any crack in the silence?"

The virtual faces remained impassive. No one did. What could they do? Alan Crosby held all the cards, and he wasn't even acknowledging the game existed. They were ants discussing the boot hanging over their hill.

"Very well," Evans concluded after a moment of silence. "Maintain current monitoring postures. Continue analysis. Report any deviations immediately. Meeting adjourned." The screens blinked out one by one, leaving Evelyn staring at her own reflection in the dark monitor. Another hour spent confirming their collective helplessness.



(18:48 EST / 23:48 UTC) Leaving Goddard / State Department

Ben Carter zipped up his jacket against the chill February evening air as he walked across the Goddard parking lot. The sky was clear, stars beginning to prick the darkening canvas. He didn't know exactly where Avalon was at this moment – its orbital parameters weren't public, though doubtless tracked by classified military assets – but he knew it was up there. Silent.

Watching? Working? Ignoring? He thought about the energy flicker from AX-7. A tiny, unexplained ripple. What did it mean? Probably nothing. But the not knowing gnawed at him more than the cold.

Miles away, Evelyn Reed hailed a cab outside the imposing Truman building. The streets of D.C. were slick with melted snow. As the cab navigated the evening traffic, she idly scrolled through a news feed on her phone. An article highlighted a small clinic in rural Peru, now able to afford new equipment thanks to an 'anonymous donation' traceable back to the Avalon Fund. Good news, undeniably.

People helped. Lives improved. Funded by a man who could casually dismiss the entire global economy, who ignored the governments of the world, whose motives remained utterly opaque. Was it benevolence?

A complex experiment? Or something else entirely? She leaned her head back against the seat, tired to her bones. The silence from space felt heavier than any words could. The partnership, such as it was, remained profoundly, unnervingly one-sided.

Chapter End

If you want to help support me and read future chapters earlier, you can check out my Patreon or ko-fi if you just want to drop a tip. Every dollar helps a lot, you will be making a difference. Especially at this moment in time. Please.
 
Chapter 2: Terrestrial Views New
Saturday, February 6th, 2021

(19:05 EST / 00:05 UTC Feb 7th) Arthur Pendelton's Backyard, Small Town USA


The satisfying click of the latches on his telescope case echoed slightly in the cold, still air. Arthur Pendelton breathed out, a plume of white mist momentarily obscuring the deepening twilight sky. Above, Venus gleamed, a brilliant herald of the celestial display to come. But Venus wasn't his target tonight. Nor Jupiter, nor the Orion Nebula slowly rising in the east.

His quarry was the interloper, the impossible neighbour.

He carefully lifted the optical tube assembly of his 12-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain onto the heavy equatorial mount bolted to the concrete pier inside his small, roll-off roof observatory shed.

Years of practice made the movements fluid, precise. Attaching the counterweights, connecting the power cable for the tracking motor, selecting the first eyepiece – a wide-angle 32mm Plössl for initial acquisition. Each step was a familiar ritual, a grounding routine before confronting the extraordinary.

The sky conditions were excellent. Crisp, cold air meant stable seeing, minimal atmospheric turbulence. Transparency was high. A perfect night for observation. A perfect night to stare at the featureless face of the greatest mystery humanity had ever encountered.

He slid the roof back, revealing the darkening sky, already peppered with familiar constellations. And there, high overhead, impossible to miss, was Avalon. Not twinkling like a star, but shining with a steady, reflected light, a perfect silver disc against the indigo backdrop.

Even naked-eye, it looked… wrong. Too perfect. Too still.



(19:47 EST / 00:47 UTC Feb 7th) Alex 'AJ' Jenkins' Apartment, Mid-Sized City

>> User_TruthSeeker99: Dude, it's obviously swamp gas reflecting off a weather balloon. Classified project. Nothing to see here.

AJ snorted, spraying crumbs from the half-eaten bag of chips balanced on his lap. He hammered out a reply on his sticky keyboard, the clatter loud in the small, dimly lit apartment.

>> User_RealityCheckMate: lol ok fedboi. keep shilling for the lizard ppl. swamp gas the size of australia? weather balloon ignoring orbital mechanics? GTFO.

He hit enter with a flourish, leaning back in his worn office chair. The glow of the monitor illuminated piles of empty energy drink cans, discarded takeout containers, and stacks of printouts covered in highlighted text and scribbled notes.

He was deep in a thread on DeepSky Anomaly Watch, one of the less… moderated forums dedicated to Avalon theories. The thread title, "AVALON - Real Talk - No Globetard Skeptics Allowed," set the tone.

He scrolled down, past arguments about holographic projections, alien alliances, and the precise dimensional frequency Alan Crosby was broadcasting on. Honestly, some of these guys were almost as clueless as the mainstream media. Swamp gas? Pathetic.

Didn't they listen to Crosby? "Extradimensional Logic Fortress." The clues were right there if you weren't too brainwashed by the official narrative to see them. AJ took another swig of lukewarm soda. At least here, people got it. Mostly.



(21:32 EST / 02:32 UTC Feb 7th) Arthur Pendelton's Observatory

Arthur leaned into the eyepiece, his breath held. He'd centered Avalon easily – its brightness and apparent size made it an unmissable target. Now, he worked his way up through magnifications: 25mm, 15mm, finally settling on the high-power 9mm Nagler. He adjusted the focus knob with minute precision.

The image swam into sharpness. A perfect circle of light filled the eyepiece view. And it was… smooth. Utterly, impossibly, flawlessly smooth.

He knew, intellectually, that 100,000 kilometers was a vast distance. Even an object the size of Australia would present challenges for ground-based amateur scopes.

But he could resolve cloud bands on Jupiter, the Cassini Division in Saturn's rings, the polar caps of Mars. He could see texture, detail, variation on celestial bodies vastly farther away.

Avalon offered nothing. No craters. No mountains. No subtle shading variations suggesting different materials or topography. No seams or panel lines from construction. No glittering lights or visible structures. No exhaust plumes. No docking bays. No antennae arrays.

Just… perfect, uniform, spherical smoothness, reflecting the sun's light with unwavering consistency across its visible face.

He tried a polarizing filter, hoping to detect variations in the light's reflection that might hint at different surface materials or structures. Nothing. The filter simply dimmed the image evenly. He tried a light pollution filter, though it wasn't strictly necessary out here. No effect beyond a slight color shift.

Was it rotating? It had to be, didn't it? Everything in space rotated. But if it was, it was either rotating incredibly slowly, or it was in perfect synchronous rotation, keeping the same face towards Earth. And if that face was perfectly uniform, how could you tell? Maybe the probes the space agencies hadn't sent could have told them.

He remembered the brief flurry of news a few months back – NASA proposing a close-flyby observation mission, followed by a quiet cancellation with vague explanations about "resource allocation" and "mission priorities." More likely, Arthur suspected, they simply didn't dare get close enough to provoke Crosby.

He pulled back from the eyepiece, blinking. The sheer wrongness of it was profound. It wasn't just alien technology; it was alien geometry, alien physics made manifest. He sketched the view in his logbook – a perfect circle.

Under 'Observations,' he wrote, for the hundredth time: "Avalon. Surface remains perfectly uniform, devoid of any discernible features at 300x magnification. Seeing: Excellent. Transparency: Excellent." It felt inadequate, like describing the Mona Lisa as 'paint on canvas'.



(23:08 EST / 04:08 UTC Feb 7th) Alex 'AJ' Jenkins' Apartment

AJ paused mid-scroll. A new post, long and dense, by a user named VibeShiftOracle.

>> User_VibeShiftOracle: People, you're missing the frequency! Crosby TOLD US - "Extradimensional". It's not about physical space, it's about VIBRATION. Avalon isn't just *in* orbit, it's PHASED into our reality stream. The smooth appearance? It's because our baseline dimension can only perceive the resonance shell! The real structure exists on a higher harmonic plane. Think Tesla, think ley lines, think Schumann resonance! The recent uptick in seismic activity? The weird animal behaviors? It's all connected! Avalon is tuning our planet, preparing it for... something. Crosby isn't just cleaning space junk; he's cleaning our *vibrational field*. The materials he sells back? They're encoded with the new frequency!

AJ read it again. Vibrational fields? Harmonic planes? It sounded like New Age woo… but the connection to Crosby's "Extradimensional" line… and the seismic activity had been weird lately, hadn't it? He opened another tab, quickly searching for recent earthquake news. There was that cluster near Tonga… and the odd whale strandings…

He started typing furiously, ideas sparking.

>> User_RealityCheckMate: @VibeShiftOracle HOLY S*** DUDE I THINK YOU'RE ONTO SOMETHING. Remember Crosby's first broadcast? The weird test pattern? Maybe THAT was the initial frequency key! And the materials - has anyone analyzed them for resonant frequencies? The NGOs getting the money - are they located near known energy vortexes?? We need to cross-reference the funding ledger with ley line maps! This could be IT!

He felt a familiar thrill, the buzz of connecting disparate points into a grand, hidden pattern. This felt bigger than just aliens or time travel. This felt… fundamental. He quickly saved VibeShiftOracle's post and started searching for ley line maps and the locations of NGOs funded by Avalon. The official story was just a smokescreen. The real action was vibrational.



(01:10 EST Feb 7th / 06:10 UTC Feb 7th) Arthur Pendelton's Backyard / AJ's Apartment

Arthur carefully placed the dust cap back on his telescope, the faint glow from his red flashlight barely illuminating the shed's interior. Logbook updated, equipment secured. He rolled the roof closed, the mechanism rumbling softly in the quiet night. Stepping outside, he looked up one last time.

Avalon hung there, serene and silent, a perfect silver coin cast upon the velvet cloth of night. Beautiful. Terrifying. Utterly enigmatic. He felt a familiar mix of profound wonder and deep cosmic loneliness. What were you? Why were you here?

The questions echoed unanswered in the vast silence, just like humanity's signals beamed pointlessly towards the sphere. He sighed and headed inside, the cold finally seeping into his bones.

AJ, meanwhile, was three energy drinks in, eyes wide, fingers flying across the keyboard. He had found a map overlaying ley lines with major cities and was now cross-referencing it with the Avalon Fund's public ledger.

See! See! The environmental group in Glastonbury! The research lab near Sedona! It fits! It all fits! he typed into the forum, sharing screenshots. He barely registered the time or the sleeping city outside his window. He was awake. He was connected.

He was onto the truth, riding the wave of revelation with his anonymous brethren across the glowing web. The silence from Avalon wasn't absence; it was just a frequency they were only now beginning to hear.

Chapter End

If you want to help support me and read future chapters earlier, you can check out my Patreon or ko-fi if you just want to drop a tip. Every dollar helps a lot, you will be making a difference. Especially at this moment in time. Please.
 
I don't what is going on because I don't see mc or si doing something or any unusual thing happened on earth. Or mc motivation or objective in earth.

So I will wait for explanation I future chapter.
 
I don't what is going on because I don't see mc or si doing something or any unusual thing happened on earth. Or mc motivation or objective in earth.

So I will wait for explanation I future chapter.

Hey, thanks for leaving behind a comment. But I'm just gonna say it straight up, the story will be told via peripheral narrative; meaning that the story will be told from the perspective of those affected by the main subject of the story (the Avalon/Alan Crosby).

There will be interludes later on that will show glimpses of perspective from our so called 'main character/s' but for most of the story, the narrative will be delivered from those affected by them.

I understand this can be unusual or a turn off, so I understand if it's confusing.
 
Chapter 3: Ripples on Distant Shores New
Monday, September 13th, 2021

(10:03 JST / 01:03 UTC) Tanaka Precision Manufacturing, Osaka, Japan


The rhythmic clang of the power press section echoed through the cavernous main floor of Tanaka Precision Manufacturing, a familiar industrial heartbeat. But here, in Receiving Bay 3, an unusual quiet had settled.

Forklifts sat idle, their drivers leaning against nearby support columns, watching. A wide section of the reinforced concrete floor, marked with broad yellow hazard stripes, stood empty under the harsh glare of high-bay sodium lamps.

Mr. Kenji Tanaka stood beside his floor manager, Yamada Hiroshi, both men in crisp, grey company jackets over their shirts and ties. Tanaka held a slim datapad, displaying the order confirmation from avalon.one. Yamada held a clipboard, ready to check the physical manifest, a habit ingrained from decades of dealing with fallible human logistics.

"Scheduled arrival window begins now, Yamada-san," Tanaka stated, his voice calm and even, betraying none of the residual strangeness he still felt about this process, five months after they'd started receiving shipments this way.

Yamada nodded, adjusting his hard hat. "Hai, Tanaka-shacho. Zone is clear. Personnel briefed." He glanced around at the waiting workers. "They still find it… noteworthy."

Tanaka allowed himself a small, tight smile. "Efficiency is always noteworthy, Yamada-san. Remember the delays we faced last year with the Chilean copper? Or the inconsistencies in the Siberian nickel shipment?"

He tapped the datapad displaying the avalon.one order: Item: TAV-Ti6Al4V-Ingot-Std. Quantity: 20 Metric Tons. Purity Grade: 99.998%. Delivery Coordinates: Lat/Long/Alt Confirmed. ETA: 13-SEP-2021 10:05 JST +/- 5 min. "This source has provided precisely what we ordered, exactly when requested, with zero deviation in quality, every single time for five months. That is more than noteworthy; it is revolutionary."

It was also utterly baffling. He remembered the initial discussions, the deep skepticism from his board, the unease among his senior engineers. Buying critical raw materials from an unknown entity residing in a giant sphere in the sky, ordered via a minimalist website and delivered by… well, by this.

He'd pushed it through based on the impeccable sample analysis reports from independent labs and the undeniable cost savings. A gamble, perhaps, but one that was paying off handsomely.
Their competitors, still reliant on fluctuating terrestrial commodity markets and complex shipping routes, were struggling to match Tanaka Precision's pricing on components requiring these high-grade alloys.

He'd navigated to avalon.one himself just yesterday to place this order. The interface was stark, functional. No marketing, no 'About Us', just searchable catalogues of materials – metals, polymers, composites, industrial gases – listed with detailed specifications, purity levels, current pricing, and available quantities that seemed practically infinite.

Select item, select quantity, input delivery coordinates (their pre-registered Receiving Bay 3, triple-checked), authorize payment transfer from their corporate account to the impenetrable Avalon Fund account. Confirmation was instantaneous. No shipping estimates, no tracking numbers. Just a delivery window.

Yamada shifted his weight. "Still… Shacho… the method…"

"Is not our concern," Tanaka finished firmly, though not unkindly. "Our concern is the result. Purity, consistency, price, reliability. On those metrics, Avalon Materials surpasses every other supplier we have ever dealt with." He looked at his watch. 10:05 JST.

There was no sound. No warning shimmer, no flash of light, no Star Trek transporter beam. One moment, the yellow-striped concrete floor was empty. The absolute next instant, occupying the exact center of the zone, stood twenty metric tons of Grade 5 titanium alloy ingots, stacked four high on standardized pallets, gleaming dully under the warehouse lights. Perfectly aligned, perfectly stable. As if they had always been there.

A collective intake of breath hissed from the watching workers. Even after months, the sheer instantaneity of it was unnerving.

Yamada blinked, then immediately stepped forward, clipboard raised. "Okay! Verification team, move in! Standard checks!"

The practiced routine took over. Workers approached, running scanners over barcode-like markings etched directly onto the ingots – markings that presumably corresponded to the avalon.one order details. Others prepared electromagnetic calipers for dimension checks. Small sample drills were readied for rapid spectrometry analysis, a redundant check Tanaka insisted on, though every previous sample had matched the stated 99.998% purity exactly.

Tanaka watched them work, his expression impassive. He'd been present for the very first test delivery months ago, half-expecting a catastrophic failure, a pile of slag, or nothing at all. They'd cleared the entire factory yard then, unsure if the delivery system required open sky. It didn't.

The second test delivery materialized inside this bay just as precisely, seemingly passing through the thick steel roof as if it weren't there. Avalon's only stipulated requirement, communicated through a simple text prompt during the coordinate confirmation on the website, was that the target ground space be physically clear of obstructions and personnel.

"Manifest count correct, Shacho," Yamada reported, ticking his clipboard. "Twenty tons on the mark."

"Dimensions within tolerance," called out another team leader.

"Excellent," Tanaka said. "Begin transfer to Processing Line 4 immediately. We have the Mitsubishi aerospace contract components scheduled for milling this afternoon." He turned back to Yamada. "See, Yamada-san? Perfectly efficient. No shipping containers, no customs delays, no fuel surcharges. Just… the materials we need, exactly where and when we need them."

Yamada nodded slowly, watching a forklift carefully lift the top pallet. "Hai, Shacho. It is… very efficient." He paused. "Do you ever wonder… how?"

Tanaka looked at the gleaming stack of titanium, metal refined from defunct satellites and orbital junk, now destined to become part of a cutting-edge aircraft.

He thought of the silent sphere hanging in space, the enigmatic Alan Crosby, the complete lack of communication beyond the automated website interface.

He considered the impossibility of teleporting twenty tons of metal instantly across 100,000 kilometers.

"I wonder about maintaining our competitive edge, Yamada-san," Tanaka replied smoothly, turning away from the delivery zone. "I wonder about meeting our production targets and exceeding client expectations. The 'how' is Avalon's business. The 'what' – high-quality, cost-effective material – is ours. Let's focus on that."

He compartmentalized the impossibility, filed it away under 'Supplier Eccentricities,' and focused on the numbers, the schedules, the tangible benefits to Tanaka Precision Manufacturing. The rest was just noise.


(15:12 BST / 14:12 UTC) Avalon Orchard Project Site, Glastonbury, UK

"Right then, bit more compost around the base of this one, eh?" Rowan Davies knelt beside a newly planted apple sapling, its thin trunk barely thicker than their thumb. They gently firmed the soil, the damp, earthy smell pleasant in the mild September afternoon air.

Around them, a dozen volunteers – a mix of Glastonbury locals, young and old – were similarly engaged, tending to rows of young trees staked out across the gently sloping field. In the distance, Glastonbury Tor rose iconic against a sky streaked with high, thin clouds.

"Looking good, Rowan!" called out Margaret, a retired primary school teacher with seemingly boundless energy, carefully watering another sapling nearby. "Feels good to finally get these Blenheim Oranges in the ground."

"Doesn't it just?" Rowan smiled, standing up and brushing soil from their trousers. "Thanks again for organizing the Saturday crew, Margaret. We wouldn't have got nearly this much done without them."
This three-acre plot, 'Windmill Field,' had been secured by the Avalon Orchard Project just three months ago, purchased outright thanks to the first major grant payment that had appeared, astonishingly, in their modest charity bank account.

The source, confirmed via the cryptic but publicly verifiable online ledger everyone was talking about, was the 'Avalon Fund'. Space money. Funding community orchards in the Vale of Avalon itself. The irony wasn't lost on anyone here, least of all Rowan.

"It's amazing what a bit of funding can do," Margaret said, coiling her hosepipe. "We talked about acquiring this field for years, but Wessex Water wanted a fortune." She lowered her voice slightly. "Still feels a bit strange, though, doesn't it? Where it comes from?"

Rowan nodded, leaning against a fence post. "It is strange, Margaret. No denying that. But look." They gestured around at the field, at the volunteers chatting as they worked, at the neat rows of saplings promising future harvests. "Whatever Mr. Crosby's reasons, the money's doing good work here. More trees, more biodiversity, community engagement… That's what we have to focus on, I reckon."

"True, true," Margaret conceded. "Can't argue with results. Just hope it keeps coming!"

Rowan shared the hope, though a flicker of unease always accompanied it. Relying on a silent, unknown benefactor halfway across the solar system felt inherently precarious. But the grant agreement, accessed via a secure link provided after the first transfer, was straightforward – funds provided for ecological and community benefit, with the only requirement being continued transparent reporting of expenditures, easily done through their standard charity filings which the Avalon Fund system somehow monitored. No demands, no interference.

Their phone buzzed in their pocket. Rowan pulled it out, glancing at the screen. An email notification with the subject line: "Urgent Query - Avalon Orchard Energetics." Rowan sighed inwardly. Another one.

"Excuse me a moment, Margaret." They walked a little way off, leaning against an old stone wall, and opened the email.

To: info@avalonorchardproject.org.uk
From: CosmicResonanceSeeker@protonmail.com
Subject: Urgent Query - Avalon Orchard Energetics
Greetings Keepers of the Glastonbury Node,
I have been following the energy shifts closely since the Arrival and monitoring the disbursement patterns from the Avalon Fund via the public ledger. It is NO coincidence that your project, situated in the powerful Avalon heart chakra vortex AND bearing the benefactor's name, has received significant energetic investment.
My research, corroborated by others on the DeepSky Anomaly Watch forums, indicates that the materials Crosby processes carry specific extradimensional frequencies. By funding projects like yours, especially those involving the grounding and growth of living systems (trees!) near major ley line convergences (Glastonbury!), he is clearly anchoring these beneficial frequencies into Gaia's grid.
My question is: Have you begun monitoring the vibrational output of the saplings planted with Avalon Fund resources? Are you performing Kirlian photography or dowsing assessments? It is VITAL that we understand how these frequencies are integrating. Are the apples expected to carry enhanced healing properties attuned to the new dimensional harmonic? Please share any data you have. This is bigger than just 'community orchards'. This is planetary ascension.
In light and resonance,
CRS


Rowan read it through, a familiar mix of weariness and faint amusement washing over them. This was the third email like this they'd received this month. Since their project, name and location broadcast via the public funding ledger, had started appearing on certain… online forums, the inquiries had trickled in. Ley lines, vibrational frequencies, healing apples, planetary ascension. It seemed AJ Jenkins and his online friends were busy.

They drafted a polite, standard reply:

Dear CRS,
Thank you for your interest in the Avalon Orchard Project. Our focus is on establishing community orchards to enhance local biodiversity, promote sustainable food practices, and provide educational opportunities for the Glastonbury community. We use standard horticultural methods and ecological principles.
While we appreciate all perspectives, our project does not currently involve vibrational monitoring, Kirlian photography, or dowsing. Our resources are dedicated to the practical aspects of tree planting, soil health, and community engagement. Information about our activities and progress can be found on our website.
Thank you again for your interest.
Sincerely,
Rowan Davies
Volunteer Coordinator, Avalon Orchard Project


They hit send, pocketing the phone. It was tempting sometimes to just ignore them, but the project relied on community goodwill. Better to be polite and gently redirect. Still, the sheer strangeness of it… Planting apple trees, funded by 'space money' traced back to a giant sphere, fielding emails about extradimensional frequencies, all under the shadow of Glastonbury Tor.

Rowan looked towards the iconic hill, a place steeped in myth, legend, and its own 'Avalon' connections long before Alan Crosby arrived. Maybe the Cosmic Resonance Seekers weren't entirely wrong about Glastonbury being a strange attractor. It certainly felt that way sometimes.



(09:35 EAT / 06:35 UTC) Sahel Regenesis Initiative HQ, Nairobi, Kenya

Dr. Aisha Khan adjusted the angle of her webcam, smoothing the lapels of her jacket. On her main monitor, the face of Ms. Genevieve Dubois, Senior Programme Officer for the European Development Fund, smiled back politely from Brussels.

Behind Dr. Khan, a large screen displayed stunning, time-lapsed satellite imagery showing a vast swathe of formerly degraded land in northern Mali transforming from barren brown to mottled green over the past twelve months.

"…and as you can see, Ms. Dubois," Dr. Khan was saying, gesturing towards the screen, her voice calm and professional, "the results from Project Acacia Spear have exceeded even our most optimistic projections. Reforestation rates are up 400% year-on-year, groundwater retention has improved measurably, and initial community feedback on the agroforestry integration has been overwhelmingly positive."

"The results are indeed impressive, Dr. Khan. Truly remarkable," Ms. Dubois acknowledged, though her smile seemed a fraction tighter than before. "The EDF has always admired SRI's efficiency, but this scale of progress… it's unprecedented." She paused, consulting some notes off-screen. "Which brings us, inevitably, to the funding question."

Aisha kept her expression neutral. She'd known this was coming. Since SRI had started receiving multi-million dollar quarterly transfers from the Avalon Fund – amounts that dwarfed their previous operating budget – the traditional donor community had reacted with a mixture of awe, envy, and deep suspicion.

"As you know, Aisha," Ms. Dubois continued, adopting a more collegial tone, "the EDF values partnership and transparency. We've been a supporter of SRI for many years. But the sheer scale of funding you are now receiving from this… Avalon entity… raises certain questions regarding long-term sustainability and, frankly, accountability beyond the automated ledger."

"SRI remains fully committed to transparency, Genevieve," Aisha replied firmly. "Every shilling received from the Avalon Fund, and every shilling spent, is meticulously documented and publicly available not only on the Avalon ledger but also in our own independently audited financial reports, which we continue to provide to all our partners, including the EDF. Our accountability is to the communities we serve and the ecosystems we restore."

"Of course, Aisha, your organization's integrity is not in question," Ms. Dubois said quickly. "But the source itself… it remains a complete unknown. No communication, no stated long-term commitment, no organizational structure we can engage with. What happens if Mr. Crosby simply… stops? The dependency SRI is developing…"

"Is a calculated risk we are managing carefully, Genevieve," Aisha countered, keeping her voice steady. "We are using this unprecedented opportunity to build lasting infrastructure, establish resilient ecosystems, and empower local communities with sustainable skills. These benefits will endure even if the funding were to cease tomorrow. Frankly, the alternative was decades of incremental progress constantly hampered by funding shortfalls, while desertification claimed more land and more lives. This funding, whatever its origin, is allowing us to make a generational difference now."

She didn't voice the deeper unease she felt daily. The profound weirdness of it all. The silent, godlike power hanging in the sky, showering resources onto select charities like divine manna, bypassing all human institutions.

Was it benevolence? An experiment? A form of incomprehensible bookkeeping? She pushed those thoughts down. Her job was to use the tool she'd been given, regardless of who forged it.

"We understand the EDF's position," Aisha continued smoothly. "And we hope our proven results and unwavering commitment to transparency will allow our long-standing partnership to continue. We still value the EDF's expertise and collaboration, particularly in navigating regional policy frameworks."

Ms. Dubois sighed softly. "Your results speak for themselves, Aisha. Let us revisit this in our next quarterly review. For now… congratulations on the success of Acacia Spear." The call ended, leaving Aisha staring at the satellite images again.

Green shoots reclaiming the desert, funded by a mystery wrapped in an enigma, delivered from the void. She felt a familiar wave of conflicting emotions: immense gratitude, crushing responsibility, and a chilling sense of existing entirely at the whim of something utterly beyond her comprehension.

Later that morning, she met with her senior operations team. They huddled around a large map of the Sahel, discussing the logistical challenges of the next phase of expansion – procuring drought-resistant seeds in massive quantities, training hundreds of new field staff, coordinating water resource management across vast distances.

"The main challenge is still transport in the Agadez region," reported Kenza, her Head of Operations. "The road infrastructure is poor, and the scale we need now…"

"What about local air transport?" Aisha suggested. "With the new budget…"

"Possible, but expensive, even for us now," Kenza mused. "And runway conditions are variable."

Aisha tapped the map thoughtfully. They had the money. They had the mandate from the silent sky-benefactor. They just needed to solve the earthly problems of getting resources from A to B across one of the planet's harshest environments. Compared to the source of the funds, maybe logistical challenges weren't so daunting after all.

"Let's explore the air transport option further, Kenza," she decided. "We have the means. Let's find the way." The work was too important to be deterred by mere earthly obstacles, even if the helping hand reached down from impossibly far away.


Chapter End

If you want to help support me and read future chapters earlier, you can check out my Patreon or ko-fi if you just want to drop a tip. Every dollar helps a lot, you will be making a difference. Especially at this moment in time. Please.
 
Chapter 4: Mass Discrepancy New
Wednesday, November 17th, 2021

(14:00 UTC)


The sleek graphic resolved on screens across the globe: "Global Insights Forum Presents: The Avalon Economy – Resources, Realities, and Riddles."

Below the title, three video feeds faded in. Center screen was Elias Vance, a seasoned science journalist known for his calm demeanor and incisive questions, broadcasting from a studio in London (14:00 GMT).

To his left was Dr. Lena Vogel, Senior Fellow at the Kessler Institute, her expression composed, framed by bookshelves in her Berlin office (15:00 CET). To his right was Dr. Samir Khan, Professor of Aerospace Engineering at Carleton University, appearing sharp and focused from his Ottawa office, despite the early hour there (09:00 EST).

"Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening to our viewers around the world," Elias Vance began, his voice smooth and measured. "Welcome to this special edition of the Global Insights Forum. It has been nearly two years – twenty-two months, to be precise – since the arrival of the object known as Avalon, and the subsequent appearance of its commander, Alan Crosby. In that time, the world has witnessed unprecedented events: the systematic cleanup of Earth's orbital debris, the establishment of a global market for competitively priced, high-purity materials sourced from Avalon, and the distribution of billions in proceeds to non-governmental organizations worldwide via a remarkably transparent public ledger."

He paused, letting the weight of those facts settle. "These actions have had tangible, undeniable impacts – stabilizing certain commodity markets, boosting humanitarian efforts, altering industrial supply chains, and, of course, clearing our orbital pathways. Yet, fundamental questions remain unanswered. Avalon itself remains silent, its commander unseen since his initial broadcast, its technology operating on principles far beyond our current understanding. Today, we want to focus on one specific, critical question that has emerged from careful analysis: the question of resources. Where do the materials sold by Avalon actually come from? Was the orbital debris cleanup, as initially assumed by many, the primary source? And if so, is it sustainable?"

"To help us unravel this complex issue, we are joined by two leading experts who have examined this question from different but complementary angles. Dr. Samir Khan, joining us from Ottawa, is a renowned expert in space systems engineering and orbital debris modeling. His work prior to Avalon's arrival was instrumental in quantifying the challenge of space junk, and he has closely followed the cleanup process. Welcome, Dr. Khan."

Samir Khan gave a slight nod. "Thank you for having me, Elias."

"And Dr. Lena Vogel, joining us from Berlin, is a Senior Fellow at the Kessler Institute, specializing in resource economics and the analysis of global supply chains," Vance continued. "Dr. Vogel recently co-authored a significant report examining the economic footprint of Avalon Materials and questioning the long-term viability of orbital debris as its sole source. Welcome, Dr. Vogel."

Lena Vogel inclined her head. "A pleasure to be here."

"Thank you both," Vance said. "Dr. Khan, perhaps we could begin with you. To understand the potential resource pool, we first need to understand the scale of the orbital debris problem as it existed before Avalon's intervention. Could you give our audience a sense of the numbers involved?"

Samir Khan leaned slightly forward. "Certainly, Elias. Before January 2020, the situation in Earth orbit was becoming increasingly precarious. Decades of space activity had left behind a significant amount of artificial material. When we talk about 'debris,' we mean everything from large, intact objects like defunct satellites and spent rocket upper stages, down to smaller fragments created by collisions or explosions – nuts, bolts, flecks of paint, frozen coolant."

"And the total amount?" Vance prompted.

"Quantifying it precisely is challenging," Khan explained, "as tracking becomes difficult for objects smaller than about ten centimeters. However, based on radar tracking, optical surveys, and statistical modeling calibrated against known launch masses and fragmentation events, the international space surveillance networks estimated the total mass of trackable artificial objects – those larger than roughly ten centimeters – to be in the region of 8,500 to 9,500 metric tons by late 2019. Let's use 9,000 tons as a reasonable working average for discussion."

"Nine thousand tons," Vance repeated. "It sounds like a lot."

"In absolute terms, yes," Khan agreed. "But consider the scale of global industry. Nine thousand tons is roughly the amount of aluminum produced globally every hour, or the amount of steel produced every few minutes. It's significant in the context of orbital hazards, but relatively small as a potential long-term industrial resource pool."

"And what was this debris primarily made of?" Vance asked.

"The composition reflects what we've launched into space," Khan elaborated. "The largest portion by mass would be aluminum alloys, used extensively in satellite structures and rocket bodies. Significant amounts of stainless steel, titanium alloys, particularly in rocket stages. Various composites, plastics, ceramics for thermal protection and electronics. Wiring containing copper. Trace amounts of more exotic materials – gold for coatings, specialized metals in sensors or power systems. But the bulk materials, the vast majority of that estimated 9,000 tons, are aluminum, steel, and titanium alloys, along with non-metallic components."

"So, if Avalon's goal was simply to recycle this material," Vance clarified, "that 9,000 tons, composed mostly of common aerospace metals, represents the maximum potential input?"

"Essentially, yes," Khan confirmed. "Of course, there are complexities. Processing efficiency – you can't recover 100% of material. Some material might be too fragmented or degraded. Some non-metallic components might be less valuable or harder to repurpose. But as an order-of-magnitude estimate of the total available mass from that initial debris field, 9,000 tons is the figure grounded in decades of observation and modeling. And we know, from tracking data provided by various space agencies, that Avalon's 'sweeper' drones were incredibly efficient. By early to mid-2021, the population of trackable debris had plummeted dramatically. The cleanup of that specific, pre-existing debris field was largely completed within about 12 to 18 months."

"Meaning that particular resource pool, the legacy debris, was effectively depleted by mid-2021?" Vance pressed.

"Correct," Khan stated firmly. "While new debris is unfortunately still generated by ongoing operations, the vast historical accumulation that represented that ~9,000-ton figure was demonstrably removed from orbit by Avalon's activities, mostly within the first year and a half."

"Thank you, Dr. Khan. That provides crucial context on the supply side," Vance said, turning his attention. "Dr. Vogel, let's turn to the output. Your work at the Kessler Institute analyzed the economic footprint of Avalon Materials. How did you approach estimating the amount of material Avalon was actually supplying to the market, and what did you find when you compared it to Dr. Khan's figures?"

Lena Vogel adjusted her glasses, her gaze direct. "Thank you, Elias. Our approach was necessarily indirect, as Avalon provides no direct data on its production or sales volumes beyond the financial transfers recorded on the public ledger for its NGO donations – which only tells us revenue, not tonnage or material type. Therefore, we had to infer the scale of material flow by observing its effects on the global market."

"How does one do that?" Vance asked.

"We used a multi-pronged approach," Vogel explained, her voice precise. "First, we monitored global prices for key industrial commodities offered by Avalon – high-purity aluminum, titanium alloys, certain polymers, rare earths. We observed that after an initial adjustment period in 2020, prices for these specific grades stabilized at levels consistently slightly below traditional suppliers, but they did not collapse, suggesting Avalon was managing supply to match a significant, but not overwhelming, portion of market demand, aligning with Mr. Crosby's stated intent."

"Second, we analyzed import/export data and industry reports from sectors known to be early adopters of Avalon Materials – aerospace, high-end manufacturing, medical devices. Companies like Tanaka Precision Manufacturing in Japan, which you profiled recently, provide anecdotal evidence, but aggregating data from industry associations and trade statistics allowed us to estimate the market share Avalon materials were capturing for specific applications globally."

"Third," she continued, "we developed econometric models incorporating these price signals and market share estimates to infer the likely tonnage being absorbed by the global economy. It's an estimate, of course, with inherent uncertainties. We ran models with conservative and aggressive assumptions about market penetration and material substitution rates."

"And the conclusion?" Vance prompted.

"The conclusion was robust across all reasonable models," Vogel stated clearly. "By mid-2021, our analysis indicated that the cumulative tonnage of diverse, high-purity materials supplied by Avalon since the beginning of its operations had already reached a level that was highly challenging, if not impossible, to reconcile with the estimated maximum yield from the ~9,000 tons of orbital debris Dr. Khan described."

"Could you elaborate on 'challenging to reconcile'?"

"Certainly," Vogel said. "Consider the variety. Avalon offers not just bulk aluminum and steel, but highly refined titanium alloys, specific rare earth elements, complex polymers – materials that were present in the debris field, yes, but often in smaller quantities or requiring complex separation and refinement. To consistently supply the inferred volumes of all these different materials, purely from that initial 9,000-ton mixed feedstock, implies near-perfect processing efficiency and material separation capabilities far beyond our own. More critically, even assuming such perfect efficiency, the sheer total mass required to sustain the observed market presence beyond mid-2021 appeared to exceed the initial debris input."

She paused, letting the implication land. "We termed this the 'mass discrepancy'. The output seemingly exceeded the plausible input from the stated source. Therefore, the logical conclusion, based on economic and market data, is that Avalon's material supply is not solely, or perhaps even primarily, derived from the recycled orbital debris."

Vance leaned forward. "A significant conclusion. Dr. Khan, hearing Dr. Vogel's analysis of the output, how confident are you in the input figures? Is there any possibility the estimates of orbital debris were drastically underestimated?"

Samir Khan shook his head slightly. "Highly unlikely, Elias. While there are always uncertainties in modeling, the estimates for objects larger than ten centimeters – which constitute the vast majority of the mass – are based on decades of tracking data from multiple independent networks globally. These networks generally agree within a reasonable margin of error, perhaps ten to fifteen percent. To bridge the gap suggested by Dr. Vogel's analysis would require the actual debris mass to have been several times larger than estimated, perhaps 30,000 or 40,000 tons or more. There is simply no observational evidence to support such a figure. We didn't suddenly misplace the equivalent mass of several hundred large satellites."

"So, the input number is relatively firm," Vance summarized.

"As firm as orbital mechanics and observational data can make it, yes," Khan confirmed.

"Dr. Vogel," Vance turned back to the economist, "acknowledging Dr. Khan's figures on the finite debris pool, what then are the most plausible alternative or supplementary sources Avalon might be using, based purely on the economic and material evidence?"

"Based purely on the evidence of what is being supplied and the consistency of that supply," Vogel answered carefully, "the most parsimonious explanation is direct synthesis of materials. Avalon appears capable of producing specific elements and alloys to high purity on demand, likely using energy-to-matter conversion or some form of advanced molecular assembly far beyond our current theoretical or practical capabilities."

"Synthesis," Vance mused. "Creating materials essentially from energy?"

"That would be one interpretation consistent with the observations," Vogel allowed. "Another possibility often raised is asteroid mining. However, large-scale asteroid mining operations would presumably involve observable infrastructure, transport activities between the asteroid belt and Earth orbit, and processing facilities near Avalon. To date, despite intense astronomical observation, no such activity has been detected. Furthermore, asteroid compositions vary; relying solely on mining might not easily explain the consistent availability of such a wide variety of specific, high-purity materials Avalon offers. Direct synthesis seems a more flexible explanation for the observed market output, however technologically staggering it may be."

Samir Khan added, "From an engineering perspective, large-scale material synthesis on the implied scale presents energy requirements that are astronomical by our standards. The power generation capabilities of Avalon, hinted at during the initial tour broadcast, must be truly immense, likely involving contained fusion or perhaps physics we don't yet understand, such as zero-point energy extraction or something related to Mr. Crosby's 'extradimensional' claim."

"Which brings us to the technological implications," Vance said. "Both of you, what does this 'mass discrepancy' and the likely conclusion of material synthesis tell us about Avalon's technological level relative to our own?"

"It tells us the gap is not merely quantitative, but qualitative," Khan stated immediately. "We are not talking about technology that is simply fifty or a hundred years ahead of us. The ability to efficiently clean debris orbits, the drone propulsion systems that defy known physics, the apparent capability for large-scale material synthesis, and indeed, the construction of a habitat the size of Avalon itself – these suggest a mastery of physics and engineering potentially millennia, if not orders of magnitude, beyond our current state. It forces us to confront the reality that we are dealing with what Arthur C. Clarke famously described: a technology sufficiently advanced as to be indistinguishable from magic."

Vogel nodded in agreement. "Economically, it means Avalon operates outside the traditional constraints of resource scarcity that govern our entire global system. If they can synthesize materials on demand, the cost structure is likely dominated by energy and process complexity, not raw material acquisition. This allows them to set stable, competitive prices independent of terrestrial mining fluctuations or geopolitical supply risks. It makes Avalon a uniquely reliable, but also uniquely opaque, player in the global market. We benefit from the stability, but we have zero visibility into their production methods, costs, or long-term capacity."

"This leads us to some questions submitted by our audience," Vance said, looking down at his monitor. "Here's one that encapsulates a common theme: 'Given this apparent ability to synthesize materials, why did Avalon bother cleaning up the space debris at all? And why sell the materials back instead of just giving them away, especially if, as Mr. Crosby claimed, our money is almost worthless to him?' Dr. Vogel?"

"That touches upon the core enigma: motive," Vogel replied. "From a purely economic standpoint, the debris cleanup followed by material sales seems… performative. Perhaps it was intended as a tangible demonstration of capability, a non-threatening first interaction. Cleaning up our mess and selling it back, even cheaply, establishes a transactional relationship, however one-sided. The recycling aspect might have been chosen specifically because it was relatable, based on a finite, understandable resource, before transitioning to less comprehensible methods like synthesis. As for the revenue going to NGOs – it achieves a stated benevolent outcome while bypassing governmental structures and reinforcing Avalon's independence. It allows Crosby to exert influence and demonstrate goodwill without engaging directly with established powers. It's economically rational if the goal is demonstrating power, establishing a specific kind of limited interaction, and building a certain global perception, rather than maximizing profit in a conventional sense."

Khan added, "The cleanup also had a clear, practical benefit for all spacefaring nations, removing a shared hazard. It could be seen as a gesture of goodwill, or perhaps simply 'tidying the neighborhood' from Avalon's perspective before commencing other operations. It established Avalon as an entity capable of large-scale, beneficial action in the near-Earth environment."

"Another question," Vance continued, "'What are the primary economic risks associated with industries becoming reliant on Avalon materials, given the source is so unknown and uncommunicative?'"

"The primary risk is dependency without transparency or recourse," Vogel stated starkly. "Companies like Tanaka Precision benefit greatly now from the price stability and quality. But what if Avalon's priorities change? What if Mr. Crosby decides to cease sales, or drastically alter prices, or restrict access to certain materials? There is no negotiation possible, no contract enforcement mechanism, no competing supplier using similar methods. Industries adopting these materials gain efficiency but lose supply chain security in the traditional sense. They become dependent on the continued, silent, and potentially arbitrary goodwill of an entity they cannot influence or even communicate with. It's a unique and potentially fragile form of dependency."

"And a final question," Vance said. "'Is there any possibility, however remote, that we are fundamentally misinterpreting Avalon's actions? Could the materials not be synthesized, the debris estimates be wrong, or the economic models flawed?' Dr. Khan?"

Samir Khan considered for a moment. "Science always allows for the possibility of error or misinterpretation. Could the debris estimates be off by a factor needed to explain the discrepancy? As I said, extremely unlikely based on corroborating data. Could Dr. Vogel's economic models be flawed? I am not an economist, but her conclusions seem robust across various assumptions. Could the materials not be synthesized but come from another source, like rapid, unseen asteroid processing? Perhaps, but that requires assuming another set of incredibly advanced, stealthy technologies. Could we be misinterpreting Avalon's actions entirely? Yes. We are interpreting them through the lens of human economics, resource management, and technology. Avalon's 'logic' – Mr. Crosby used the term 'Extradimensional Logic Fortress' – might operate on principles entirely alien to us. Synthesis seems the best fit for the observed data using our understanding, but it remains an interpretation of the actions of a truly alien actor."

Vogel added, "I agree with Dr. Khan. Our conclusions are based on the best available evidence interpreted through established methodologies. The mass discrepancy is a data-driven finding. The inference of synthesis or other advanced sources is the most logical explanation within our current scientific and economic frameworks. But we must always acknowledge we are observing an entity that has demonstrated capabilities far outside those frameworks. Humility in the face of such an unknown is essential."

"Humility in the face of the unknown," Vance echoed thoughtfully. "A fitting note on which to conclude. We asked today about the source of Avalon's resources. Through the careful analysis of Dr. Khan and Dr. Vogel, combining space systems data and economic modeling, the conclusion seems clear: the initial debris field, while significant, is insufficient to explain the ongoing supply of materials to Earth. Avalon is almost certainly employing methods far beyond our own, likely direct synthesis, drawing on energy sources we can barely comprehend."

"This confirms Avalon's staggering technological superiority but deepens the mystery of its purpose. It acts, it provides, it cleans, it funds – all while remaining utterly silent, its commander a fleeting image from nearly two years ago. We are left analyzing the ripples, unable to see the stone thrown into our pond."

"My sincere thanks to Dr. Samir Khan and Dr. Lena Vogel for sharing their invaluable expertise and insights with us today. And thank you to our global audience for joining this Global Insights Forum." The graphic reappeared, and the video feeds faded out, leaving viewers worldwide to ponder the analyst's equation and the vast, silent enigma it described.

Chapter End

If you want to help support me and read future chapters earlier, you can check out my Patreon or ko-fi if you just want to drop a tip. Every dollar helps a lot, you will be making a difference. Especially at this moment in time. Please.
 
This is pretty cool. I'm glad I managed to catch this one due to all the interesting reactions and RL-analogues in this sci fi scenario. I especially like the recurring existential dread and questioning all the characters have going on.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top