Chapter 589: Information On The Curious Civilisation
Chapter 589: Information On The Curious Civilisation
Lucy immediately did as told, as she accessed the Array’s Nexus or Core, and pulled up every single information related to the civilisation that revisited 400 years ago.
The holographic display shifted and the catalog entry for the civilization expanded across the holographic space, organizing itself into sections as Lucy processed the array’s data and rendered it in a format that could be read rather than simply stored.
Liam leaned forward slightly.
"For designation," Lucy said. "The array catalogs them as Verath. Self-designation — the array has recorded their communication systems but the translation approximation is imprecise. The closest equivalent in any human language is something between ’the continuous’ and ’those who remain.’ The array notes the distinction is meaningful in their culture but the nuance doesn’t survive translation cleanly."
"Their biology."
"Non-carbon. Silicon-nitrogen hybrid chemistry, operating in temperature ranges approximately four times wider than carbon-based life tolerates. No liquid solvent dependency — their cellular equivalent uses a pressurized gas medium. They are bilaterally symmetric, six-limbed, with a distributed neural architecture — no central brain structure. Decision-making and consciousness are distributed across the full body network." She paused. "Lifespan is not documented with precision. The array’s oldest confirmed record of an individual Verath spans 40,000 years. Whether that represents a ceiling or an outlier is not established."
Liam said nothing.
"Civilization age," Lucy continued. "The Verath home system is approximately 3.2 billion years old. Their recorded civilizational history begins 1.4 billion years ago. They survived the universal war, though the array notes significant population reduction during that period — approximately 60 percent of their total civilization lost across the conflict and its immediate aftermath."
"They rebuilt."
"Over approximately 200 million years, yes. The array’s record of their development post-war shows a consistent pattern of slow, deliberate expansion with long consolidation periods between each phase. They do not expand faster than their infrastructure can support. They have never overextended and collapsed."
Liam absorbed this. A civilization that was 1.4 billion years old, had survived the universal war, and had never made a strategic mistake significant enough to collapse them. That was not an accident. That was a philosophy expressed across geological time.
"Tier classification."
"Tier two, confirmed. They achieved interstellar travel approximately 900 million years ago. Their current operational range covers approximately 200 star systems, all within a 1,400 light year radius of their home system. They have not pursued tier-three capability despite having the developmental age that would suggest it as achievable."
"Why not?"
"The array doesn’t record their internal reasoning. What it records is behavior. They have declined three documented opportunities to acquire tier-three technology through contact with more advanced civilizations. They have maintained tier-two for 900 million years without apparent effort to exceed it." Lucy paused. "The array’s inference, based on their behavioral pattern across 47 documented interactions with other civilizations, is that they consider tier-two to be their chosen ceiling, and not a limitation."
Liam looked at the display for a moment. "A civilization 1.4 billion years old that chose to stay at tier two."
"Yes."
"What do they want with Earth?"
Lucy pulled a secondary layer forward. "Their first cataloguing of the solar system was approximately 6,000 years ago. The array’s record shows a single observation pass — one vessel, no surface approach, data collection consistent with their standard survey methodology. No contact with any life form on Earth during that visit."
"The second visit. 3,000 years ago. It was more extended with three vessels. They maintained observation for approximately 40 years before withdrawing. The array records their data collection during this period as significantly more detailed than the initial survey — atmospheric composition, surface civilization development, biological diversity, electromagnetic signature analysis." She paused. "They were specifically interested in the human civilization developing at that time. The array records their data as flagging several anomalies in human developmental pace that they cross-referenced against their historical records of other civilizations."
"What anomalies."
"The rate of cultural and technological change. Human civilization’s developmental pace from approximately 5,000 years ago to 3,000 years ago was inconsistent with what their models predicted for a species of Earth’s age and environmental complexity. They catalogued it as a statistical outlier and flagged it for continued monitoring."
Liam was quiet.
"The third visit. 400 years ago."
"Single vessel. Short duration — approximately six months. The array records this as a targeted reassessment rather than a general survey. They were specifically checking the anomaly they had flagged 3,000 years earlier." Lucy paused. "The rate of human development had accelerated further rather than normalizing. Their record notes this as highly unusual — most statistical outliers they have observed in their 900 million years of interstellar operation eventually normalize toward the mean. Human development moved in the opposite direction."
"They flagged it again?"
"They elevated it. The array records a notation added to their Earth catalog entry after the 400-year-ago visit. The notation is in their language and the translation approximation is imprecise, but the closest rendering is: this world requires watching. Something here is not following expected patterns and the deviation is increasing."
Liam looked at the display. At the solar system’s position in the quiet outer arm. At the Verath’s home system, 1,200 light years away, marked with their operational range extending like a sphere of catalogued space around it.
"They’re going to come again," he said.
"The array’s projection based on their visit interval pattern suggests the next assessment is overdue. Their previous intervals were 3,000 years and then 2,600 years. The current gap since their last visit is 400 years, but the anomaly flag they elevated after that visit typically triggers a reassessment interval of 200 to 500 years in their documented behavioral pattern."
"So they’re due."
"Within the next century by the array’s projection. Possibly significantly sooner given the current state of Earth’s development."
Liam was quiet for a long moment, looking at the display.
The current state of Earth’s development. A lunar base visible from orbit. Spacecraft landing at civilian airports. A clinical trial with six billion viewers. A platform with six billion registered users built in six months. Medical technology rewriting the limits of what the human body could suffer and survive.
If three visits across 6,000 years had elevated their monitoring flag to something requires watching, he had a reasonable estimate of what the next visit would find.
"What is their standard protocol when they observe a civilization they’ve flagged as anomalous?" he asked.
Lucy paused fractionally. "Continued observation until they determine the source of the anomaly. If the source is internal — native development exceeding their models — they typically initiate contact at what they assess as an appropriate technological threshold. If the source is external — assistance from a higher-tier entity — their protocol is different."
"How different?"
"They withdraw and report to the entity they consider responsible for managing contact with that region. The array doesn’t specify who that entity is for this region."
Liam looked at the display for a moment longer. Then he looked at Lucy.
"They’re going to find both," he said.
Lucy met his gaze and waited.
"When they come back, the internal anomaly they’ve been tracking is going to be worse than anything their models have encountered. A lunar base. Spacecrafts and other things. By any metric they use to measure civilizational development, Earth has moved further and faster than anything their records show for a species this young." He paused. "That flag they elevated 400 years ago is going to look conservative."
He looked at the display.
"But they’re also going to find me. And they’re experienced enough to recognize the difference between a civilization developing faster than expected and a civilization that has had help from something outside their region." He looked at Lucy. "The technology underpinning everything Nova Technologies has built doesn’t have its origin in Earth’s native development. A civilization that has spent 900 million years observing other civilizations is going to see that. They’re going to see the anomaly and they’re going to see the intervention and they’re going to understand that both are real simultaneously."
"Their protocol branches on that distinction," Lucy said.
"Exactly. Internal anomaly — they initiate contact. External assistance — they withdraw and report to whoever manages this region. But both being true at the same time?" He shook his head slowly. "I don’t think their framework has a branch for that. Which means the next visit doesn’t follow a script they’ve run before. And I need to be ready for it before they arrive."
Liam thought about his options and they were very limited. He thought of something and looked at Lucy.
"Bring up everything the Array has on Earth. I want to know everything," he said.
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