Masha gasped.
The adults had been afraid of it. They said it was listening. Then the supply ship didn't come. Then the heating elements in the east wing failed. Then the adults stopped getting out of their bunks. One by one, they walked out into the -60°C white and never came back.
Then the image changed. It showed the surface. The outpost. But the outpost was dark, and the door to the airlock was open. Two small figures in oversized parkas were walking out onto the ice, hand in hand, following a trail of violet lights that led to a pressure crack in the glacier. Anya-10 Masha-8-Lsm-43
She walked over to the main power conduit, her small hands gripping the emergency cutoff valve. "I'm sorry, LSM-43," she said, her voice barely a whisper. "You can keep your ocean. We're staying in the cold."
"LSM is a machine. It samples isotopes. It doesn't like anything." Masha gasped
Anya didn't answer. She just gripped her sister’s hand tighter and stared at the dark, silent pillar of LSM-43. It looked like nothing more than a dead machine now. But she knew, somewhere deep in the ice, it was still listening. And it was patient.
The common room was a cathedral of silence and frost. The violet light from the LSM-43 cast long, skeletal shadows. Masha stood directly in front of the aperture, her small face bathed in that alien glow. Then the supply ship didn't come
"It's singing again," Masha whispered, her face pressed against the frost-rimed window of their bunkroom. The common room below was dark, but the pillar’s iris was open, glowing a faint, deep violet. The hum was lower tonight, almost a lullaby.
"Get away from the window, Masha. Cold seeps through the glass." Anya was tightening a bolt on their last functioning air scrubber. Her fingers were clumsy with fatigue.