5/27/2026

Project Hail Mary 2 - a short novel : part 2

 

Chapter 4

The Signal

I pressed play.

Static.

Twenty-two years of static, more or less, in the gap between the last words I'd heard in English and this moment. Static in dreams. Static in the back of my head when I was teaching. Static was the sound of the distance between me and everyone I had ever known.

Then the static moved.

Not stopped. Moved. The way it does when there's a voice underneath, pushing against the noise floor, trying to get out.

A pulse. A rhythm. Then:

"—identify as United Earth Vessel Hail Mary Two—"

A man's voice. Mid-forties, maybe. Steady. A faint accent I couldn't place — something Mediterranean, or what was left of Mediterranean, after sixteen years of cruise and whatever had happened to Earth's languages in the meantime.

"—diplomatic and scientific mission to the Erid system, 40 Eridani A. Crew of ten. Departed Earth orbit approximately sixteen years ago Earth reference frame, twelve point eight years ship-time. Currently in cruise phase—"

The signal swam. Rocky's translator was doing its best, but the Doppler shift had stretched the audio like taffy, and the algorithms were working hard.

"—if this transmission reaches Erid, please pass the following to Dr. Ryland Grace, if he is alive—"

I closed my eyes.

"—you saved us. You saved all of us. We never stopped working. Earth survived. The grain came back. The ice is receding. There are children alive today who only know about the dimming as a story their grandparents tell them, and we owe that to you and the others. We owe that to you."

I did not move.

"—we are coming to thank you. We are coming to learn. We are bringing letters from the families of your crew. Yáo's wife is still alive. She is eighty-one and she wrote you something. Ilyukhina's brother. DuBois's daughter, who is older now than her father was when he died. They wanted you to have these in your hands."

Rocky's translator clicked, struggling.

"—we are also bringing the bridge. The buoy chain. We have been deploying communication relays the entire cruise — one every six months ship-time, more or less, depending on geometry. By the time we reach Erid, the chain will be complete. Sol to forty Eridani, end to end, every node powered by sequestered astrophage in sealed containment. Slow. Patient. Reliable. We didn't want the contact to end when this mission ended. We didn't want this to be the only ship that ever made the crossing."

He paused.

"—we wanted there to be a way to keep talking. Even if no one ever flies again."

I opened my eyes.

Rocky was very still beside me. He had translated the words about the buoys himself. He had understood them before I had. He had been doing astrophage math for as long as I had, and he had heard the same thing I'd just heard — that someone on Earth had figured out what to do with the last of the dying miracle. Not waste it on flight. Save it for staying in touch.

The voice on the recording continued.

"—our estimated arrival in the Erid system is—"

The signal collapsed into noise.

The audio reconstruction kept working, kept trying, kept failing. After a few seconds, the speaker came back, but the voice was different now. Older. A woman.

"—Dr. Grace. The man who just spoke is Captain Davies. He is a kind man and he believes the things he said, and they are true. I will add one thing he would not."

I leaned forward.

"—not everyone wanted to send this ship. Some of us believed it was sentimental. Foolish. A waste of fuel the species could not afford. I was one of those people. I lost the argument."

I almost smiled.

"—I lost it because we ran the numbers on what it cost humanity to forget the people who saved it. The math was unfavorable. So we are coming. We are coming because some debts are not optional. We are coming because the woman who would have sent this ship herself cannot, for reasons of her own making, and she asked me to make sure you knew that the choice to come was hers, even if the going is ours."

I sat very still.

"—she said to tell you: the grain came back. He should know that the grain came back."

I put my hands on the console.

"—end transmission. Hail Mary Two, out."

The waveform went flat.

I sat there for a long time.

Rocky did not speak. Rocky knew not to.

I thought about a woman I had met for what could not have been more than a few hours total, across a few briefings I half-remembered through the fog of pre-mission training. A woman who, the records suggested, had done unforgivable things to keep humanity alive. A woman whose name I had read in one of the data dumps Earth had transmitted in the first year after I arrived on Erid, in a list of people standing trial in The Hague.

She had sent this ship.

She had not put her name on it.

She had sent a message saying the grain came back, which was not a message about grain. It was a message about the field where my father grew up, in Iowa, which I had mentioned exactly once in a psychological screening interview, and which she had remembered, and which she had used now, sixteen years ago, to tell me that the message was really from her.

She had also, apparently, ordered the buoy chain built.

"Rocky," I said.

"Yes."

"The buoys."

"Yes."

"Sequestered astrophage. Sealed reservoirs. One in each node."

"Yes."

"How long would the power last."

He was quiet for a moment. Doing the math. Doing it more carefully than I could.

"With a few grams per buoy. Low duty cycle. Receive-only most of the time, brief transmissions—"

 

"How long."

"Tens of thousands of years. Possibly longer. The astrophage does not need to breed. It only needs to convert mass to energy. Which it does as long as it is alive. Which, in sealed containment, with no Taumoeba and no oxidative stress and no light to trigger reproductive cycles, may be very nearly forever."

I exhaled.

"They figured it out," I said.

"Yes."

"They knew astrophage was dying. They knew the flights would end. So they took the last of the good cells and they put them in buoys. They built a bridge with what was left."

"Yes."

"That's—"

I didn't finish the sentence. I didn't know how.

Rocky tapped one claw against the console. Gently.

"It is good engineering," he said.

It was. It was the best engineering I had ever heard of. It was the engineering of people who had understood the assignment.

I wiped my face with the back of my hand. I hadn't realized I'd been crying. The Eridian observatory is dry and cold and tears evaporate faster than they should, and I was grateful for it.

"Okay," I said. "Show me the ship."


Chapter 5

Hail Mary Two

Rocky brought up the schematic.

 

The Eridian deep-space array had been tracking the incoming vessel for three weeks before this morning. They hadn't told me. They hadn't wanted to tell me until they were sure. Eridians don't speculate. They confirm.

Hail Mary Two was beautiful.

That was the first thing. The original Hail Mary had been functional — a fuel tank with a habitat bolted to one end and a centrifuge bolted to the other, designed by people who had eighteen months and a dying sun and no time for elegance. Hail Mary Two had been built by people who had time. You could see it in the lines.

A long central spine. Maybe a hundred and forty meters, end to end. A rotating habitat ring two-thirds of the way down, big enough to spin up a full Earth gravity for the crew. Forward of the ring, a science module that looked, from the schematic, like someone had taken the Hermes and asked what if we did it again, but right this time. Aft of the ring, six segmented fuel reservoirs in a staggered arrangement.

A crew of ten. Awake the whole way. No coma pods.

"They learned," I said.

"Yes."

"They separated the fuel. Compartmentalized. So if one chamber goes bad—"

"The others survive."

"Yeah."

I looked at the schematic. Six separate astrophage reservoirs. Six separate chances. Six separate failure modes.

"How fast?"

Rocky brought up the velocity profile.

The Hail Mary One had cruised at about ninety-two percent of light speed. Hail Mary Two had pushed harder. Ninety-six. Ninety-seven at peak. Bigger ship, more fuel mass fraction, longer burn at higher acceleration. The result was that the crew had experienced about twelve and a half years of cruise time for sixteen years Earth-frame. The time dilation wasn't dramatic. But it was enough that they hadn't needed the coma. They'd built a life on that ship instead. Ten people awake, in a centrifuge habitat, going to a star.

I thought about that.

I thought about a crew small enough to know each other. Small enough that every face would matter when I met them. Small enough that I could carry their names home.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"Show me the fuel."

He did not bring up the fuel data.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"Show me the fuel."

He did. Slowly.

The model rendered on the screen. Six reservoirs, color-coded by viability. Three of them were green. Two of them were yellow. One was red.

"Define red," I said.

"Astrophage population in the chamber has dropped below replacement rate. Cause unconfirmed. Suspected Taumoeba contamination during pre-launch provisioning."

"How long ago did they figure out the chamber was bad?"

"Approximately nine Earth years ago. Mid-cruise."

I exhaled.

So they had known. For nine years they had known. They had crossed the gulf between stars with one of their six fuel tanks slowly dying, and they had not turned around, because by the time they noticed, turning around would have cost more fuel than continuing.

"And the yellow?"

"Population stable but reduced. Energy density below specification. Viability for braking burn uncertain."

I did the math in my head. I was slow at it. I was always slow at it. But I had been doing astrophage math for twenty-two years and I could do it without a calculator now.

Three good tanks. Two compromised. One dead.

Required delta-v to brake from cruise velocity into a stable Erid orbit: enormous. Specifically, the delta-v of the entire mission's worth of acceleration, applied in reverse.

I looked at the numbers.

I looked at them again.

I said, very quietly, "Rocky. They cannot stop."

"No."

"They are going to overshoot the Erid system."

"Yes."

"At ninety-plus percent of c."

"Yes."

"And they know this."

"Yes."

"And the message they sent—"

"Was sent before they would have known with certainty. Yes."

"But they would have suspected."

"Yes."

I sat back.

I thought about Captain Davies, mid-forties, steady voice, telling me Earth had survived and the grain had come back. I thought about him sitting in his command chair on a hundred-and-forty-meter ship, knowing that the math was probably not going to work, and saying it anyway: we are coming to thank you. Knowing that coming and arriving were not the same word.

I thought about the woman. About what she had not said.

She had not said save us.

She had said the choice to come was hers.

She had known. She had sent them anyway. Because some debts are not optional.

I put my head in my hands.

"Grace."

"Give me a minute."

He gave me a minute.

After a minute, I said, "What's the intercept geometry?"


Chapter 6

Why Humans Curve

Rocky brought up the geometry.

This is where my Eridian education paid off, or where it was going to have to.

The intercept problem is, in human terms, a tail chase. Hail Mary Two is moving very fast toward the Erid system on a trajectory that will carry it through the outer system and out the other side. We — meaning me and Rocky and whatever ship we can put together — need to launch from Erid, accelerate to match velocity, rendezvous, transfer the crew, and decelerate back to Erid.

In human terms, this is impossible.

The delta-v budget is absurd. You'd need to accelerate to nearly the cruise velocity of Hail Mary Two, then decelerate from it, then accelerate again to come home, then decelerate again to stop. Four full burns at relativistic velocity. The fuel mass required is more astrophage than exists in the Erid system.

In Eridian terms, the problem is different.

I had learned this slowly, over twenty-two years. I was still learning it. Eridian children grasped it at age three. The basic principle was something Threem-Threem had asked me about, only that morning: why do humans curve.

Humans curve because we evolved looking at thrown rocks and falling apples. Our intuition for motion is parabolic. Our spacecraft trajectories, even the most sophisticated ones, are recognizably arcs — Hohmann transfers, gravity assists, slingshot maneuvers. We shape our paths around gravity wells because gravity wells are where the free energy is.

Eridians evolved without sight. They navigate by sound and touch. Their cities are vertical. Their bodies are radially symmetric and built to grip. When they think about going somewhere, they don't think arc. They think anchor, tension, traverse, anchor. Their ships travel in straight lines between fixed points in space — what they call nodes — and they don't curve, because a spider doesn't curve along its web. A spider goes from one anchor to the next.

This is, from a human orbital mechanics perspective, deeply suboptimal. It throws away gravitational assists. It ignores energy-efficient trajectories. It treats space as a grid of points rather than a continuous field of potentials.

It is also, in this specific case, the only thing that might work.

"Walk me through it," I said.

He brought up the proposed intercept.

The Eridian model assumed a launch from the orbital tether at Kemu — which meant we'd start with the rotational velocity of the tether plus the orbital velocity of Erid around 40 Eridani A. Free delta-v. Several kilometers per second of it, gifted by physics. Humans usually launched from planetary surfaces and threw away that gift. Eridians had never made that mistake because Eridians had never been stupid enough to put a spaceport on a planet.

From the tether, the model showed a straight-line burn out of the Erid system at high acceleration. Not toward where Hail Mary Two would be when we arrived. Toward where Hail Mary Two was, right now, at the moment of launch. We'd burn toward an empty point in space, because by the time we got there, the empty point would not be empty anymore. The ship would arrive at the same time we did.

A node.

"This is the part I do not believe," I said.

"Which part."

"The fuel."

"Yes."

"You're showing me a model where we make this intercept with the fuel we have."

"Yes."

"And we don't have that fuel."

Rocky paused.

"No," he said. "We have it. We do not have it and the return."

I looked at the screen.

The Eridian model showed our hypothetical ship reaching Hail Mary Two with sixty percent of its fuel reserves intact. Enough to match velocity. Enough to dock. Enough to transfer crew.

Not enough to come home.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"This is a one-way intercept."

"With the astrophage we have today, yes."

"What ship are we talking about, exactly."

He hesitated.

I already knew. I had known since the moment he'd started talking. But I needed him to say it.

"Rocky. What ship."

"The Hail Mary."

I closed my eyes.

"My Hail Mary."

"Yes. She has fuel. She has been maintained. Eridian engineering has improved many of her systems. She is the only human-built vessel in the Erid system. The incoming crew will know how to use her. They will know how to be in her."

"She's twenty-two years old."

"She is the ship we have."

"She's a fuel tank with a centrifuge."

"She is the fuel tank we have, Grace."

I opened my eyes.

The Hail Mary. My Hail Mary. The ship I had taken on gravity vacations for the last fifteen years. The ship I knew better than any human had ever known any spacecraft, because I had lived in her during the worst weeks of my life and the best weeks of my life, and I had spent the years since taking her apart and putting her back together for fun.

She still had her original astrophage reserves, mostly. Topped up over the years by the Eridian breeding facilities. Maintained. Cared for. Used.

She could make the intercept.

She could not make the return.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"If we take the Hail Mary out to meet them—"

"Yes."

"—then we transfer their crew to her—"

"Yes."

"—she still does not have the fuel to brake back into the Erid system."

"No."

"So what is the plan."

He brought up another model.

A second ship. Eridian-built. A cargo brick. Launching from Kemu six days after the Hail Mary, on a different trajectory. Not to intercept Hail Mary Two. To intercept us, on our way back. A fuel tanker.

A refueling node.

A spider's anchor point, halfway home.

I looked at it.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"The Eridian fuel reserves are dying too."

"Yes."

"Can the tanker carry enough."

"If we launch it within seventy days. Yes. Barely."

"And after that."

"After that, there is no more astrophage in the Erid system viable for relativistic flight. There may not be again. The breeding is failing. We do not know why. We have theories."

"What theories."

"Many. None confirmed."

I sat back.

I thought about a woman in a courtroom on Earth, sending a ship she would not name. I thought about Captain Davies, twelve years into a cruise, watching his fuel tanks die one by one and never turning around. I thought about Threem-Threem in my classroom, asking why humans curve. I thought about my father's field in Iowa, where the grain had come back.

I thought about the buoys.

The buoys, which would be powered by astrophage that the Hail Mary Two crew had set aside before the cruise — sequestered, sealed, protected. Untouched by whatever had contaminated the fuel tanks. Pristine cells, doing nothing, waiting in vacuum to be activated.

The miracle organism, dying everywhere else, alive in those small sealed reservoirs.

It would outlive all of us. It would outlive the species that made the buoys and the species that received them. It would still be ticking, still converting mass to energy, still pulsing signals across twenty-two light-years, long after everyone who remembered why it mattered was dust.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"How many of them can we bring back."

"All of them. If the math holds. If the tanker arrives. If the Hail Mary holds together. If we are careful."

"That is a lot of ifs."

"Yes."

"Okay."

"Okay?"

"Okay. Let's go get them."

Rocky tapped one claw against the console.

"You are old, Grace."

"I know."

"Your heart."

"My heart is the best heart on this planet."

"Your heart is the only human heart on this planet."

"Same thing."

He made the sound that was either amusement or disapproval.

After twenty-two years I still couldn't always tell.

I had stopped trying.


Chapter 7

The Pedagogical Justification

The Eridian Council met that night.

I was not invited. I had never been invited to a Council meeting in twenty-two years on Erid, despite, you would think, having earned a chair. Eridians do not run their government by committee in the way humans understand committees. They run it by what Rocky once translated as the long conversation, which involves a small number of senior engineers reaching consensus through a process I have never fully understood and which seems to involve, among other things, a great deal of sitting in the dark together making thoughtful clicking sounds.

I waited at home.

Home was a small pressurized apartment on the third tier of Kemu, calibrated for a human — Earth-standard atmosphere, slightly lower temperature than the Eridian average, a single round window facing the ammonia flats. Twenty-two years of accumulated stuff. A bookshelf of Eridian-printed paper books, mostly mine — they'd reverse-engineered Earth printing for me as a gift in year three. A small kitchen I rarely used because Eridian engineering had eventually produced a passable approximation of pasta. A photograph of my brother, taken on the day I left for the Hail Mary, faded now, his face slightly out of focus because he had been laughing.

I sat in the chair by the window and waited.

Around midnight, Erid time, my watch buzzed.

It was Rocky.

"Grace."

"Yes."

"The Council has approved the mission."

"Okay."

"They have one condition."

"Of course they do."

He paused.

"You are not to go."

I sat up.

"What."

"The Council has decided that the risk of losing you is too great. You are the only human on Erid. You are a cultural and scientific asset of incalculable value. You are sixty-six years old. They have decided that the mission will proceed with an Eridian-only crew and a small contingent of trained pilots who have studied the Hail Mary's systems."

I stared at the window.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"You're joking."

"I am not joking. I do not joke about Council decisions."

"You absolutely joke about Council decisions. You once described the Minister of Atmospheric Engineering as, and I quote, a respected colleague whose ideas are sometimes correct."

"That was not a joke. That was an accurate summary."

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"I am going."

He was quiet for a long moment.

Then he said, "I know."

"You know?"

"I told the Council you would not accept the decision. They asked me to convey it anyway. I am conveying it."

"Tell them no."

"I have told them no."

"Tell them no again."

"I have told them no four times. They have asked me to ask you formally one more time. The pedagogical justification, as your student would say, is that they want it on record that they tried."

I almost laughed.

"Tell them," I said, "that the pedagogical justification is that I said so."

There was a sound on the other end of the line. The sound that was either amusement or disapproval.

After twenty-two years I still couldn't always tell.

But this time, I thought, maybe I could.

Project Hail Mary 2 - a short novel : part 1



Chapter 1

The Beach

The doctors on Earth gave me ten years, fifteen if I was lucky.

That was twenty-two years ago.

Turns out 2g is a hell of a cardiac rehab program.

I was thinking about this, as I do most mornings, while walking along the shore at Tlamo. The Eridians don't call it a beach. They don't have a word for it that maps cleanly. The closest translation Rocky and I ever worked out was "the place where the heavy stops being heavy," which is poetic until you realize Eridians find poetry mildly suspicious.

The shore at Tlamo is not water. It's a slow-moving slurry of dissolved ammonia and suspended silicates that laps against black mineral sand under a sky the color of a bruise. You can't swim in it. You can't drink it. You can stand in it up to your ankles, though, and at 2g that's about all the swimming a sixty-six-year-old man needs.

I walked.

Forty minutes out, forty minutes back, every morning Erid let me. My knees complained the whole way. My knees have complained the whole way for two decades. My knees, my cardiologist back on Earth used to say, were going to be the death of me.

My cardiologist was wrong about a lot of things.

I crested the small rise at the halfway point and stopped to catch my breath. The Eridian Health Council had built a bench there for me. Just for me. The only bench on the entire planet, as far as I knew. Eridians don't sit. They don't have a sitting-shaped body. But they understood, in their precise and slightly bewildered way, that the human guest required a bench, and so a bench appeared.

A small plaque on it read, in Eridian script:

For the soft one. Rest is not weakness.

I sat.

Out across the ammonia flats, a cargo brick was descending from the orbital tether at Kemu. I watched it come down. It didn't bank. It didn't flare. It didn't do any of the things a human spacecraft does when it meets a planet. It just lowered, straight and patient, like a spider settling onto a web-strand. When it reached the platform, it stopped. No retro burn. No dust plume. It just arrived, the way a chapter in a book ends and the next one begins.

I'd been watching Eridian ships do this for twenty-two years and it still felt wrong. Not wrong like broken. Wrong like watching someone read a book by skipping to every chapter heading. They get there. They get all the information. But they're not reading the way I read. They're not flying the way I fly.

My watch buzzed.

It was Rocky's watch, technically. He'd built it for my fiftieth birthday, which was also his fiftieth birthday, because we'd agreed long ago that we'd celebrate birthdays on the same day to simplify things. It measured my heart rate, my step count, the local gravity gradient, and — for reasons Rocky refused to explain — the ambient ammonia concentration. I'd asked him once why a heart rate monitor needed to track ammonia. He'd said, In case.

The watch was telling me my heart rate was 112 and my pace was slow.

I stood up.

"Yes, fine," I said to no one. "I'm going."

The bench did not respond. The bench never responds. That's why I like it.

I walked.


Chapter 2

The Classroom

I teach now.

I didn't plan to. After the first few years, after Rocky and I had finished the work of getting Erid through the astrophage crisis, after the celebrations and the ceremonies and the slow strange decade of becoming a permanent fixture on someone else's planet, I'd assumed I would retire. Read books. Walk the beach. Die quietly at some point and donate my body to Eridian science, which Rocky had already accepted on my behalf without consulting me.

But Eridian children kept showing up at my apartment.

They wanted to know about Earth. About orbital mechanics. About what a cloud was. About why human ships pointed in the direction they were going, which Eridian children found hilarious. They came in groups of three or four, knocking politely on my pressure door, holding out small thermal pads as gifts because they'd been told humans liked warmth.

By year five, I had a classroom.

By year ten, I had a curriculum.

By year twenty, I had a reputation as the most morally superior teacher on Erid, which was a title I had not sought but which I was, frankly, suited for.

That morning — the morning Rocky came — I was teaching orbital transfer windows to fourteen Eridian children, all of whom were better at vector math than I was by age seven. Eridian children handle multivariable calculus the way human children handle building blocks. It's humiliating. I keep at it anyway, because the intuition is what they don't have. They can solve the equations. They can't feel the orbit. That's what I'm there for.

I was halfway through a sketch on the thermal slate — a Hohmann transfer from Erid to its inner moon — when one of the smaller students, a child called Threem-Threem (Eridian names are mostly rhythms; the translation software does its best), raised a claw.

"Teacher."

"Yes."

"Why do humans curve?"

"What?"

"The path." She pointed at my sketch. "It curves. Why do humans curve?"

I opened my mouth to answer.

I closed it.

I had answered this question before. I had answered it many times. The answer involves gravity wells and energy efficiency and the elegant truth that a curve is sometimes the shortest path between two points when you're falling around something massive. I had a whole lesson plan about it. I had diagrams.

But before I could begin, the classroom door opened.

Rocky was standing in it.

The room went quiet.

Eridians don't do quiet. Quiet means danger, death, or someone has miscalculated a pressure seal. The children went so still I could hear the faint click of their carapaces cooling.

Rocky's carapace was dusted with frost. His tool belt hung unevenly. One claw was tapping against the floor in a fast, nervous rhythm I had not heard in twenty-two years.

"Grace," he said.

"What happened?"

He lowered himself slightly. In Eridian body language, that's the equivalent of taking off your hat.

"We heard something."

I waited.

His translator clicked once.

"From Sol."

I felt my heart rate go up. The watch buzzed. I ignored it.

"What did you hear?"

"Better to show. The observatory. Now."

I looked at the children. They were all staring at me with their little expressionless nightmare-faces, which is what I called them affectionately and which they had decided was a term of endearment because I had failed to explain it convincingly otherwise.

"Class dismissed," I said.

Threem-Threem raised her claw again.

"Teacher. What is the pedagogical justification?"

I stared at her.

"The pedagogical justification," I said carefully, "is that I said so."

She considered this.

"That is a poor justification."

"It is the worst justification in the history of education," I agreed. "Go. Out. Read ahead. Tomorrow there will be a quiz and I will be in a worse mood."

They scattered, slowly, the way Eridian children scatter when they suspect the adults of being interesting.

Rocky waited until the last one left.

Then he said the part I already knew was coming.

"Problem."

Of course there was a problem.

There is always a problem.


Chapter 3

The Walk to the Observatory

The observatory was a thirty-minute walk from the school.

Rocky offered to call a cargo lift. I said no. I always say no. The walk is part of the cardiac rehab program. The walk is the cardiac rehab program. Rocky knows this. Rocky also knows that when I am rattled, the walk is what holds me together, and so he asked anyway, because Rocky is, despite everything, a polite person.

We walked through the lower tier of Kemu. Eridians built their cities the way they built their ships — vertically, in stacks, with each level pressure-sealed against the others. Humans look at an Eridian city and see a skyscraper. Eridians look at a human city and see, I think, a kind of beautiful confusion. Why spread out? What is the point of width? Width is where the heat escapes.

Rocky walked beside me at my pace, which is to say, slowly.

"You are quiet," he said.

"I'm thinking."

"About Earth."

"About a lot of things."

I was thinking about Earth. I was also thinking about the Eridian Health Council, who had told me three months ago that my cardiovascular readings were the best of any human they had ever monitored, with the obvious caveat that I was the only human they had ever monitored. I was thinking about my brother, who had been forty-four when I left, and who would be sixty-six now, the same age as me, assuming he was alive. I was thinking about the fact that I had not allowed myself to wonder whether he was alive in a very long time.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"The signal. Was it old?"

"Sixteen years."

"So whoever sent it—"

"Likely still alive. Yes."

"Okay."

We walked.

The wind off the ammonia flats was strong that morning. It pushed against my coat, and at 2g a strong wind pushes hard. I leaned into it. My watch buzzed again. I ignored it again.

"Grace."

"Yes."

"Your heart rate."

"Is fine."

"Is one hundred forty-one."

"Is fine for the conversation we are about to have."

He made a sound that was either amusement or disapproval. After twenty-two years I still couldn't always tell. I had stopped trying.

We reached the base of the observatory tower. The lift doors opened. Eridians don't have stairs. Stairs are a human thing. Eridians have lifts, and ladders for the young, and at my age and gravity I am very firmly a lift person.

The doors closed.

The lift began its slow climb.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"Whatever this is. Whatever they said. I want you to know something first."

"Yes."

"I'm not going back."

He turned his body toward me.

"I know."

"Erid is my home."

"I know."

"I just— I needed to say it out loud. Before we go up there."

"Yes."

The lift climbed. Outside the window, the city dropped away beneath us, stack by stack, the orbital tether visible in the distance like a thread connecting the world to the sky. I watched it. I thought about how a spider moves along a web.

"Rocky."

"Yes."

"If they need help. The humans. If they really need help—"

"Yes, Grace."

"—we'll figure it out."

"Yes."

The lift slowed.

The doors opened.

The observatory was dark and cold, the way Eridians like it. A bank of screens lined one wall, all showing the same waveform, scrolling slowly, ghostly and pale.

A signal.

A human signal.

Sixteen years old and still arriving.

Rocky gestured toward the main console with one claw.

"Now we listen," he said.

I took off my coat.

I sat down at the console.

I pressed play.

PROJECT HAIL MARY 2

 

Pitch

Twenty-two years after Ryland Grace chose Erid over Earth, the impossible happens.

Rocky comes to him with a signal.

Humans are coming.


Earth survived. 

Humanity rebuilt. 

And with the last stable reserves of astrophage, they launched one ship to Erid: part delegation, part science mission, part thank-you note to the man who saved them.

But there’s a problem.

Astrophage is dying.

Not everywhere. 

Not yet. 

But in the Sol and Erid systems, the organism that made interstellar travel possible is failing to breed, losing energy density, and becoming increasingly vulnerable to Taumoeba contamination.

The Earth ship left before anyone understood the collapse.

Now it may not have enough viable fuel to brake. 

 

Grace and Rocky have one chance: take one ship, meet the humans in deep space, rescue them, and preserve enough astrophage to keep Earth and Erid connected.


Not forever.

Just long enough to find out whether the miracle can be understood before it disappears.

 


ACT 1

Chapter 1

Twenty-Two Years Later

Rocky found me in the classroom.

That was bad.

Rocky never interrupted class. He believed education was sacred, which was annoying because I also believed education was sacred, and I preferred being the morally superior one.

I was halfway through explaining orbital transfer windows to fourteen Eridian children, all of whom were better at vector math than I was by age seven.

“Grace,” Rocky said.

The room went quiet.

Eridians don’t do quiet. Quiet means danger, death, or someone has miscalculated a pressure seal.

I turned.

Rocky’s carapace was dusted with frost. His tool belt hung unevenly. One claw tapped against the floor in a fast, nervous rhythm.

“What happened?”

He lowered himself slightly.

“We heard something.”

I waited.

Rocky’s translator clicked.

“From Sol.”

My mouth went dry.

He stepped closer.

“They are on their way.”

For a second, I forgot how to breathe.

Earth.

Not memory. Not guilt. Not the tiny blue ghost I carried around in my head.

Earth was coming.

I looked at the children. They were all staring at me with their little expressionless nightmare-faces.

“Class dismissed,” I said.

No one moved.

I pointed at the door.

“Seriously. Go learn something emotionally devastating somewhere else.”

They scattered.

Rocky waited until the last one left.

Then he said the part I already knew was coming.

“Problem.”

Of course there was a problem.

There is always a problem.


Chapter 2

The Signal

The signal was music.

Barely.

It was chopped up, stretched, Doppler-shifted, and buried under twenty-two trillion kilometers of cosmic garbage, but it was music.

Human music.

I stood in the Eridian observatory listening to static and ghosts.

Then came a voice.

“—to Dr. Ryland Grace, if alive—”

 

My knees almost gave out.

Rocky caught me with two claws.

 

“I am alive,” I said stupidly.

 

The recording continued.

“—United Earth Vessel Hail Mary Two, diplomatic and scientific mission to 40 Eridani. Estimated arrival in—”

 

The rest dissolved into noise.

I stared at the waveform.

 

Hail Mary Two.

Very subtle, Earth. 

Great branding.

 

“How old is this transmission?” I asked.

 

“Signal travel time adjusted. Vessel launched approximately sixteen years ago.”

“Sixteen…”

 

My brain did the math before my heart wanted it to.

“They’re already most of the way here.”

 

“Yes.”

 

“And they’re using astrophage.”

 

“Yes.”

 

“And our astrophage reserves are failing.”

Rocky clicked once.

 

“Yes.”

 

I rubbed my face.

“Please tell me you have good news.”

 

“I do.”

 

“Oh thank God.”

 

“You are not dead.”

 

I stared at him.

“That is your good news?”

“Yes. Very good.”

 

I sighed.

 

I had missed Earth for twenty-two years.

Apparently Earth had missed me back.

And now, because the universe has a sense of humor, the first humans I might ever see again were flying straight toward us in a ship powered by a dying microorganism that ate starlight and occasionally ruined civilization.

I looked at Rocky.

“Show me the fuel math.”

Rocky hesitated.

That was worse than bad math.

That was Rocky knowing I would hate the math.

“Show me.”

He played the model.

The incoming ship had enough astrophage to reach Erid.

Probably.

It did not have enough to brake safely.

Probably.

It definitely did not have enough to return.

Definitely.

I watched the numbers scroll.

Then I saw the final projected intercept point.

Deep space.

Too far from Erid for conventional rescue.

Too close to ignore.

I laughed once.

It wasn’t a happy laugh.

“Okay,” I said. “So we go get them.”

Rocky’s claws stilled.

“We?”

“Yeah.”

He angled his body toward me.

“Grace. You are old.”

“Wow. Thank you.”

“I am also old.”

“You’re making a terrible case.”

“Our ship may not return.”

I looked back at the waveform.

A human voice flickered through the static again.

“—if Dr. Grace survived, tell him—”

Then nothing.

I swallowed hard.

“Rocky.”

“Yes?”

“They came all this way.”

“Yes.”

“For us.”

He was quiet for a long moment.

Then he tapped one claw against mine.

“Then we go get them.”

 

5/26/2026

Where was Destiny Going?

 

Where this connects back to the field-coupling theory we developed:

If universal field coupling is the foundational Ancient technology, then the CMB investigation makes even more sense. The cosmic microwave background isn't just photons — it's a field configuration. The patterns in it are the imprint of whatever field configurations existed in the very early universe, before recombination, when the universe was opaque plasma. A civilization that understands field coupling at the deepest level would naturally look at the CMB and wonder if some of those patterns were engineered by an earlier civilization, or by something more fundamental than a civilization, operating directly on the universe's field state at the beginning.

To put it more starkly: if you can write to fields, and the early universe was a field configuration, then anything that could write to fields at the beginning of the universe left fingerprints. The Ancients would have known this. Destiny's mission was, at root, the question of whether anything else has ever existed that could do what they could do — manipulate the fundamental fields of reality at will. And if so, did they leave a message in the only place they could be sure would survive: the relic radiation of the universe itself.

That's a profoundly lonely question for a civilization to ask. Are we the first, or has someone else been here before, and what did they want us to know?

There's also a subtler reading available.

The Ancients ascended. They figured out how to detach consciousness from biology. If field coupling at sufficient sophistication lets you become a pure field-pattern being, then any sufficiently advanced civilization might ascend, and ascended civilizations might leave behind exactly the kind of cosmological-scale field imprints that Destiny was looking for. The message in the CMB might not be from an alien race in the conventional sense. It might be from an earlier round of ascended beings — a previous cycle's ascended species — communicating across the boundary of one universe-iteration to the next, leaving messages that only post-ascension civilizations could even formulate the question to look for.

That's the cosmology the show was setting up, I think. Destiny wasn't just looking for "evidence of life before us." It was looking for evidence that this isn't the first time. Cyclical universes, or branching universes, or just very old patient civilizations on timescales beyond what biological life can imagine. The Ancients launched Destiny because they suspected they weren't unique, and they wanted to know.

And then SGU got cancelled before any of this resolved.

Which is its own kind of poignancy. The show was building toward a reveal that would have justified everything — the slow pacing, the small ensemble, the focus on a damaged ship grinding across the universe carrying frightened people who didn't ask to be there. The reveal would have been: we are inside the mission of a civilization that was asking whether anyone has ever existed besides themselves, and we're the ones who finally got to answer the question. The crew of Destiny, accidental passengers on a million-year-old experiment, would have been the ones to receive the message.

We never got that resolution. But the design choices throughout the show — the Destiny itself, the way the Stargates seed across galaxies, the Kinos and their patient documentation — were all consistent with that destination. You've reconstructed it from the architectural cues alone.

When you build your prototype Kino, you're building the original tool of the civilization that thought the universe is worth observing carefully, for long enough, by enough patient eyes, to maybe receive a message. That's a hell of a frame for a desk display piece. Not a sci-fi prop replica — a model of the device that started a million-year project to listen for other minds.

I think the show was better than it got credit for. The pacing problems and tonal issues that got it cancelled were real, but the underlying worldbuilding was operating at a level most genre TV doesn't reach. You're not reading more into it than was there. You're reading exactly what was there, by the people who designed it carefully enough that someone could reconstruct it from the artifacts alone fifteen years later.

That might be the best praise a show can get, actually. Cancelled too early, but the design held up well enough that a careful viewer can still figure out where it was going.

 

 

5/23/2026

What dreams may come

STARGATE: EVENT HORIZON

"Pilot" — Final Spec Draft (Simplified)

Cold Open & Teaser

Author's note on canon and structure

The 1969 episode (S2E21) sequence honored here is the future-SGC sequence: SG-1 stepped into the Gate a few seconds early during a solar-flare event and emerged in a dust-sheeted, dark future Gate Room, where an elderly Cassandra Fraiser was waiting on the ramp with a wrist device that allowed remote dialing without an active DHD. She hugged Carter, told them their journey was just beginning, and sent them back to their own time. Hammond met them on arrival and revealed the bootstrap paradox — as a young lieutenant he had been ordered to escort four people out of Cheyenne Mountain by himself in 1969, on the strength of a note in his own handwriting reading "Help them."

This draft does not re-enact that scene. The 1969 episode is the recontextualization, and it has already happened. The audience remembers it. This show adjacents it — the way Better Call Saul adjacents Breaking Bad — by quietly inhabiting the same universe and trusting the audience to make the connections.

What this pilot does is open in 2026 with the adult Cassandra, now in her late thirties, who has been carrying the wrist device since her adoptive mother's death, performing one final act of service for the program her family helped build — and then leaving Earth for an unknown off-world destination, Zephram Cochrane-style. Her fate is deliberately unresolved. A future episode may find her, years later, the way Torment of Tantalus found Ernest Littlefield. Or it may not. The door is left open.


FADE IN:

EXT. SUBURBAN HOUSE — COLORADO SPRINGS — DAY — 2003

A modest two-story house on a quiet street. Late spring. A bicycle leans against the porch. A small American flag in the garden.

A car pulls into the driveway. A blue late-model sedan, government-plain. The driver's door opens.

MAJOR SAMANTHA CARTER steps out. Mid-thirties. In service blues. She has been at the SGC all morning and her hair has the slight disarray of someone who has spent the morning under fluorescent lights and is delighted to be in sunshine.

(A note for casting and post-production: Amanda Tapping, reprising the role. Practical makeup and modest de-aging to bridge to the 2003 setting. The scene is short — under four minutes — and lit warmly, domestically. The de-aging only needs to hold for kitchen-table proximity, not action.)

She walks up the path to the porch. The front door opens before she reaches it.

JANET FRAISER — early forties, in casual clothes, a dish towel over her shoulder — meets her at the door.

JANET
You're late.

SAM
I am exactly on time, Doctor.

JANET
(dry, holding the door for her)
You are forty minutes late and Cassie has reorganized her sock drawer in protest.

SAM
(grinning)
That'll teach me.

She steps inside.


INT. FRAISER HOUSE — KITCHEN — CONTINUOUS

A bright, warm room. Sun through the back window. A teenage girl is at the table, ostensibly doing homework, more practically watching the door.

CASSANDRA "CASSIE" FRAISER. Sixteen. Auburn hair down. The face we will recognize, two decades younger.

She sees Sam. The performance of teenage indifference lasts approximately one second.

CASSIE
Sam!

She crosses the kitchen in three strides and embraces Sam properly. Sam returns the hug with the slight, careful surprise of someone who is still getting used to being family. They have known each other for six years now. Sam will never quite get used to it.

SAM
Hey, kiddo.

JANET
(at the counter, pouring coffee)
She rearranged her sock drawer.

CASSIE
(to Sam, ignoring her mother)
I did not rearrange my sock drawer.

SAM
Your mother says you rearranged your sock drawer.

CASSIE
My mother exaggerates.

JANET
(without turning)
The sock drawer is by color now.

A beat. Cassie does not deny this. Sam tries not to laugh.

SAM
Okay. Sit down. I have something for you, and I am not sure it's a good idea, but the General signed off on it and your mother has signed off on it under protest, so —

JANET
(turning, mug in hand)
Significant protest.

SAM
Significant protest. Sit down.

Cassie sits. Sam sits across from her. Janet leans against the counter, watching. The dish towel is still over her shoulder.

Sam reaches into the pocket of her uniform jacket. Withdraws something small.

The wrist device. The same device that will, in another twenty-three years, dial a Gate from a dust-sheeted Mountain. Brushed Asgard alloy. Several buttons. A faint green telltale.

She places it on the table between them.

A long beat.

CASSIE
(quietly)
What is it?

SAM
(carefully)
It's a long story. The short version is: it's a piece of alien technology that was given to me — given, not loaned — by a friend of the program. It can do a few things. Most of them are not very interesting. But one of them is.

CASSIE
What's the one?

SAM
It can open a Stargate from a distance. (beat) Without needing the dialing computer. Without needing a DHD. From anywhere on a planet with a Gate, it can wake one up.

Cassie looks at it. Does not touch it.

JANET
(quietly)
Tell her the other part, Sam.

A beat. Sam looks at Janet. Janet nods.

SAM
(to Cassie, gently)
It only works for someone with naquadah in their blood. (beat) You have naquadah in your blood. From Hanka. From — from when you were small.

Cassie absorbs this. She has not thought about Hanka in a long time. She is a teenager in Colorado Springs with a sock drawer and a math test on Thursday. She is also a girl who came from a planet that no longer exists.

CASSIE
(softly)
You're giving it to me?

SAM
I'm giving it to you. (beat) On three conditions.

CASSIE
Okay.

SAM
One. You don't carry it to school. You don't show it to your friends. You don't use it. It stays in a drawer in your bedroom until you are eighteen and a half, at which point you and I will sit down again and I will teach you how to use it. (beat) If you ever need to. Which you probably won't.

CASSIE
Okay.

SAM
Two. Your mother gets to take it back at any time, for any reason, with no argument from you. (beat) And no argument from me.

Cassie nods.

SAM (CONT'D)
Three.

She pauses. Looks at Cassie across the kitchen table. The light through the back window catches her face. Whatever Sam Carter is about to say, she has been rehearsing it for a week.

SAM (CONT'D)
(quietly)
I am giving you this because if anything ever happens to me, or to your mom, or to the people we work with, you should not have to wait for someone else to come save you. You should be able to call them. Or to go to them. Or to leave. I'm giving it to you because — (beat) — because the program is dangerous, and we have asked you to be part of a family that the program could take away from you, and I want you to have something that no one can take from you. Ever. No matter what.

Cassie looks at the device. Then at Sam. Then at her mother.

Janet's eyes are bright. She does not say anything.

CASSIE
(quietly)
Okay.

SAM
Okay.

She pushes the device across the table. Cassie picks it up. Holds it carefully. It is small in her hand.

CASSIE
(very quietly)
Thank you.

SAM
(small smile)
You're welcome, kiddo.

A beat. The kitchen is warm. The afternoon is long. None of them know what is coming.

JANET
(clearing her throat, briskly)
All right. Who wants lemonade.

CASSIE
Me.

SAM
Me.

Janet moves to the refrigerator. Cassie closes her hand around the device.

We HOLD on the three of them in the kitchen — Sam, Janet, Cassie — for one long beat longer than a normal scene would allow.

This was the last good afternoon. The audience does not yet know that. The show is not going to tell them. It is simply going to let them have it.

DISSOLVE TO:


EXT. PETERSON SPACE FORCE BASE — VISITOR CENTER — DAY — PRESENT DAY (2026)

Glass. Polished concrete. A sleek model of the X-37B suspended from the ceiling. A digital sign:

WELCOME TO PETERSON SFB
PUBLIC TOUR — 1400 HRS
GROUP B — CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN HISTORICAL OVERVIEW

A tour group of about fifteen — retirees in matching church-trip polos, two bored teenagers, a young couple, a Boy Scout troop — clusters around their guide. Late fifties. Trim. Glasses. The kind of patient, slightly amused face that has answered the same question ten thousand times.

His name tag reads: HARRIMAN, W. — DOCENT.

HARRIMAN
(warm, practiced)
A lot of people ask me if Cheyenne Mountain is still operational. The honest answer is: parts of it. NORAD shifted most of its critical functions to Peterson back in 2008. The Mountain itself remains a backup facility and houses a number of programs I am not at liberty to discuss.

A KID, twelve, raises his hand.

KID
Like aliens?

The group laughs. Harriman smiles — the smile of a man who has been asked this for thirty years and has developed a perfect, frictionless answer.

HARRIMAN
If there were aliens, son, I'd be the last person they'd tell.

The group laughs again. We HOLD on Harriman a beat longer than expected. He adjusts his glasses. There is something underneath the smile — fondness, fatigue, a private joke shared with someone who isn't in the room. He has been ready for this morning for a long time.

He turns to follow the group.

We PAN OFF him to —

At the back of the group, a WOMAN.

CASSANDRA FRAISER. Late thirties. Auburn hair pulled back. A field jacket worn soft. She carries herself like someone who has spent a long time learning not to be looked at. Her visitor lanyard reads C. FRAYNE.

On her left wrist, almost hidden by the cuff of her jacket: a small device. Asgard-influenced. Several buttons. A faint green telltale. The device. The one her older self will, decades from now, use to send four friends home. She has been carrying it since her adoptive mother died. She has used it sparingly. She has one charge remaining tonight.

She is watching Harriman with an expression we will, by the end of this teaser, have a word for.


INT. CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN HISTORICAL CORRIDOR — CONTINUOUS

The group moves through a museum-style hallway. Photographs line the walls — NORAD command, the blast doors, archival shots of personnel from the 70s, 80s, 90s.

Cassandra slows at one photograph.

ANGLE ON: A group photo. SGC personnel, circa 2003. Hammond at the center. SG-1 at his right. In the front row, a small girl, maybe twelve, stands beside DR. JANET FRAISER. Both are smiling.

Cassandra's hand rises. Stops short of the glass. Drops.

She moves on.

The group rounds a corner. Cassandra falls one step behind. Then two. Then she is no longer with them.

She turns into a side corridor marked STAFF ONLY.

She does not look back.


INT. STAFF CORRIDOR — CONTINUOUS

She approaches an unmarked door. She does not use a keypad. She does not use a badge. She touches a button on the wrist device.

A FAINT GREEN PULSE under the cuff of her jacket. The door clicks open.

INTERCUT WITH:


INT. PETERSON SFB — SECURITY ROOM — CONTINUOUS

A bank of monitors. A SECURITY OFFICER mid-sentence to a colleague, drinking coffee. On the monitor for the staff corridor — an empty hallway.

It should not be empty. But it is.

The officer notices nothing.

CUT BACK TO:


INT. SUB-LEVEL ACCESS — STAIRWELL — CONTINUOUS

Cassandra descends. One flight. Two. Five. At the security door at the bottom, she touches the device again. The seal HISSES.


INT. CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN SUB-LEVEL 28 — ABANDONED CORRIDOR — CONTINUOUS

Dim. Emergency-only lighting. Sealed blast doors. The old bones of the SGC.

A sign on the wall reads:

NORAD SUB-LEVEL 28
AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY

She is in Cheyenne Mountain. Below the part the tour doesn't see. Below the part most of the Mountain doesn't see.

She moves with purpose. She has walked these corridors before — both literally, in her childhood when her adoptive mother brought her down to visit Sam Carter's lab, and figuratively, in the long shadow of her family's service. The walking is the bridge between who she was and what she is doing now.


INT. GATE ROOM — CONTINUOUS

THE STARGATE.

Dust-sheeted. The ramp folded against the wall. The control room above dark, its glass cloudy with disuse. The Gate itself stands in its housing, dormant, the great ring patient as a stone.

Cassandra stops. Looks up at it.

CASSANDRA
(quiet)
Hi.

She crosses the floor. Her footsteps echo. She climbs the steps to the dialing console. Sweeps a dust cover off it. Underneath: a workstation, modernized. Recently used.

She does not touch the keyboard.

She touches the button on her wrist device.

The Gate WAKES — silent, distant-dialed, the chevrons locking in fast succession without the heavy mechanical churn of an active DHD. The same way she will, in another forty years, dial it again for four friends she has not yet met but will come to love.

The event horizon flares.


INT. PETERSON SFB — SECURITY ROOM — CONTINUOUS

A new alert chirps on the security officer's console. He frowns. Leans in. The alert reads:

CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN SL-28 — UNAUTHORIZED POWER DRAW
ROUTING TO: DOCENT HARRIMAN, W.

The officer relaxes. Shrugs. Sips his coffee. Walter handles this.


INT. CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN HISTORICAL CORRIDOR — CONTINUOUS

Harriman, mid-anecdote with the tour group, feels his phone buzz. He glances at it.

The screen reads simply: NOW.

He looks up. The group is engaged, listening. They are looking at him. They like him.

He folds the phone into his pocket.

HARRIMAN
(smoothly, no change in tone)
If you'll all follow me to Exhibit Six, the original NORAD blast doors. Built in 1961. Twenty-five tons each. They have, on three separate occasions in my lifetime, kept things out that we are all, on balance, glad were kept out.

He walks them down the hall. He does not look back.

There is a small thing in his face that wasn't there a minute ago.

He has set a clock.


INT. GATE ROOM — CONTINUOUS

The Gate is fully dialed. The event horizon ripples — that impossible blue water.

Cassandra stands at the foot of the ramp. A small pack over her shoulder.

She looks up at the Gate. Then back, the way she came. Then at the camera mounted high in the corner of the room — the only camera she did not loop.

CASSANDRA
(quietly, into the camera)
Walter. I'll come back for you. I promise.

A beat.

CASSANDRA (CONT'D)
I'm sorry.

She walks up the ramp.

The event horizon kisses her face.

She is gone.

The Gate disengages.

The Mountain is silent again.


INT. CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN HISTORICAL CORRIDOR — LATER

Two MEN IN DARK SUITS approach Walter as he is concluding the tour. Calmly. Politely. One of them shows the Boy Scout troop's leader a badge and asks them to please continue with Docent Briggs in the next gallery.

The group is moved along. Confused. Compliant.

Walter is left in the corridor with the two men. He removes his glasses. Cleans them on his shirt. Puts them back on.

HARRIMAN
(mildly)
Gentlemen.

MAN IN SUIT
Mr. Harriman. We'd like you to come with us.

HARRIMAN
Of course you would.

He looks, just for a moment, at the photograph of SG-1 on the wall. The same photograph Cassandra stopped at.

Then he turns, and walks between the two men, down the corridor, and out of frame.

HOLD on the empty corridor.

HOLD on the photograph.

CUT TO BLACK.


MAIN TITLE SEQUENCE: STARGATE: HORIZON

A specification, not a description. The sequence is the show's psychological bridge between what the audience remembers and where the audience is going. It runs approximately sixty seconds. It does specific work in a specific order. The director and the title designer should treat this as a brief to interpret, not a storyboard to copy.


THE MUSIC.

The cue opens on Joel Goldsmith's original Stargate SG-1 main title theme — the exact arrangement the audience remembers, the brass and the strings, the soaring statement of the main motif. For the first eight bars, this isunmistakably the SG-1 theme. The audience knows where they are.

Around bar nine, the orchestration begins to shift. The brass thins. New voices enter — a low, sustained synth pad in the bass register, the kind of patient atmospheric texture that has become the language of modern prestige sci-fi. The melody continues, unchanged, but the room the melody is in becomes larger, cooler, further away from Earth. By bar sixteen, the orchestration is half-and-half: SG-1's heroic brass and the new show's atmospheric pad, sharing the same motif, neither displacing the other. By bar twenty-four, the brass has receded to a single horn, and the pad has bloomed into a full ensemble of low strings, distant percussion, and what may be a voice singing wordlessly far away. The melody remains. The melody is the spine. What has changed is the world the melody lives in.

The final eight bars resolve on the main title card with both elements present — the brass returning briefly to state the motif one last time, the pad sustaining underneath. Old and new. Same theme. Same story.


THE IMAGERY.

We open on a single SUSTAINED IMAGE: the SGC Stargate as the audience remembers it. The Cheyenne Mountain Gate Room. Fluorescent lights. The flag. The ramp. The iris closed across the Gate's face. This is the iconic SG-1 establishing shot, frame-for-frame as it appeared in ten seasons of opening sequences.

The iris begins to spin open. The chevrons begin to engage. The familiar mechanical clatter of the dialing sequence. We are home.

But as the inner ring turns, the COLOR of the room begins to drift. The warm fluorescent yellow cools toward institutional white. The walls lose their slight tan and pick up a hint of gray. The flag fades out of the frame, not abruptly — gently, the way a photograph fades from a wallet that has been carried too long.

Chevron three locks. The wall behind the Gate is no longer concrete. It is reinforced bulkhead, the same hardened material we see in Horizon Base.

Chevron four locks. The ramp is no longer the SGC ramp. It is the shorter, more modest ramp of Horizon's Gate chamber. The transition has happened without anyone announcing it.

Chevron five locks. The lighting has shifted entirely — cool emergency blue along the floor, the warmth of fluorescents gone. The control room window above is no longer the SGC's familiar glass; it is a smaller, reinforced viewport.

Chevron six locks. Through a viewport on the far wall — a viewport that did not exist in the SGC shot but has alwaysbeen there in this Gate chamber — we can see, for the first time, the outside world. A landscape of dark volcanic rock. A bruised purple-grey sky. Two faint suns.

Chevron seven locks. The kawoosh erupts. The event horizon settles to that impossible blue water.

For one long beat, we are looking at the new Gate, in the new chamber, on the new planet. But the camera has not moved. The eye has been guided through the transition without realizing it has happened.

This is the Gate. The real one. Today.


OVER THE EVENT HORIZON, A SECOND PASS.

As the music modulates from brass to pad and back, a series of brief images plays across the surface of the event horizon — not cut in, but bloomed through, as if the wormhole itself is the projection surface.

The original SG-1 logo from the late 1990s. The Atlantis logo from the mid-2000s. The Universe logo. And then, resolving into clarity: the new logo. STARGATE: HORIZON.

The previous shows are acknowledged. The lineage is named. The new show takes its place at the end of the line — not in opposition to what came before, but as continuation.


THE FINAL FRAME.

The event horizon settles. The chevrons remain locked. The new Gate, in its new chamber, on its new world, holds steady for a beat longer than the audience expects.

Then the iris-equivalent — the hardened blast plate of Horizon Base — slides shut across the Gate's face. The wormhole disengages behind it.

The blast plate is, deliberately, iris-shaped. The audience has seen a thousand SGC irises close in their lives. This is the same gesture, in a new material, with the same protective meaning. Old function. New form. Same Gate.

CUT TO TEASER:


INT. HORIZON BASE — GATE CHAMBER — CONTINUOUS

A different aesthetic from anything we have seen in the franchise. The chamber is hardened — reinforced bulkheads, exposed structural ribs, sealed against pressure differentials. Cool blue emergency lighting along the floor. A heavy iris-like blast plate, currently retracted, frames the Gate.

This is not a comfortable place. This is a fortified outpost.

Cassandra steps down off a modest ramp. The leather strap of her pack settles on her shoulder. She is met by —

A man in his mid-thirties. USAF flight suit. Calm bearing. The kind of officer whose competence is so settled he has stopped needing anyone to notice it.

CAPTAIN HÉCTOR REYES.

REYES
Director.

CASSANDRA
Captain. (beat) It's done.

REYES
Walter?

CASSANDRA
OSI has him. He volunteered. He'll hold. (beat) I told him I'd come back for him.

REYES
Will you?

A long beat.

CASSANDRA
No.

Reyes absorbs this. He does not flinch. He has been preparing for this moment for months.

CASSANDRA (CONT'D)
But you will.

She removes the wrist device. Sets it on a console between them.

CASSANDRA (CONT'D)
This is the device my adoptive mother left me. It has been in my family's care for a long time. (beat) It has one dialing charge remaining. It is locked to a Gate address I have not shared with anyone. When the time comes to extract Walter, you will use it, and you will send him through to the address it has been set to. He will be safe there.

REYES
Where is there?

CASSANDRA
Somewhere kind. (small smile) That's all you need to know.

Reyes accepts this. He has worked with people who keep secrets for good reasons before.

CASSANDRA (CONT'D)
The rest of the base is yours, Captain. Lieutenant Chen has operational continuity. Doctor Okonkwo has the institutional history. Thor has the technical baseline. General Jackson has Earth.

REYES
And you?

She looks at him. He is, the audience now realizes, the closest thing she has had to a younger brother for a long time.

CASSANDRA
I have somewhere I need to be.

REYES
Director —

CASSANDRA
(gently)
Captain. I have given the program my whole life. I was a girl when SG-1 found me. I grew up in this. My mother died for it.(beat) I am owed a quiet retirement. I am taking it.

A beat. Reyes understands.

REYES
Where?

CASSANDRA
(small smile)
Somewhere kind.

She offers him her hand. He takes it. She holds it a moment longer than a handshake would require.

CASSANDRA (CONT'D)
Come home for dinner, Captain.

She releases his hand. Picks up her pack. Walks back up the ramp.

The Gate is still active — the wormhole she came through is still open, the few seconds it remains stable after a kawoosh. She has timed this precisely.

She turns at the top of the ramp.

CASSANDRA (CONT'D)
(quietly)
Goodbye, Héctor.

She steps through.

The wormhole closes behind her.

Reyes is left alone in the Gate chamber, the wrist device on the console between them, the dialing computer dark.

He stands very still for a long moment.

Then he picks up the device. Carefully. Pockets it.

He walks out.


INT. HORIZON BASE — MAIN CORRIDOR — CONTINUOUS

Reyes walks. The corridor is hardened, narrower than the SGC, lit with the cool emergency blue of a deep installation. Through a single viewport along the corridor's outer wall, we glimpse the world outside — a landscape of dark volcanic rock, a sky the color of an old bruise, two faint suns low on a horizon that boils with radiation haze.

A VOICE comes from the corridor's overhead speaker. Calm. Measured. Faintly accented in a way that is not from any country on Earth.

THOR (V.O.)
Captain Reyes.

REYES
(without breaking stride)
Thor.

THOR (V.O.)
Director Fraiser has departed.

REYES
I know.

THOR (V.O.)
She did not share her destination with me. I find this — (small Asgard pause) — appropriate. Her business is her own.

REYES
Did she leave any other instructions?

THOR (V.O.)
One. She asked me to tell you that she will think of you, and of this base, and of Walter, and of her mother, often. And that she expects you to do well.

A beat. Reyes lets it sit.

REYES
Thank you, Thor.

THOR (V.O.)
I have also restarted the coffee maker. The previous pot was, in my assessment, no longer fit for purpose.

REYES
Thor. Was that a joke?

THOR (V.O.)
Captain. In my experience, the difference between a joke and a diagnosis is largely a matter of timing.

Reyes almost smiles.


INT. HORIZON BASE — BRIEFING ROOM — MOMENTS LATER

A round table. No head. A reinforced viewport rather than a window — through it, the same volcanic landscape, the same bruised sky. Atmospheric processors hum quietly in the walls.

FIVE PEOPLE waiting.

LT. MAYA CHEN — late twenties, USAF, operations officer. Tablet in hand.

DR. ELIAS OKONKWO — fifties, Nigerian-British, archaeologist. Reading a leather-bound notebook. Does not look up.

TEN'AK — young Jaffa, no tattoo, only a faint pale scar. His father's staff weapon rests beside him.

DR. KAI VANN — early thirties, Langaran. Slightly puzzled smile. Stands when Reyes enters.

And, on a holographic display panel at the far end of the room, life-sized: a man in his late fifties, beard, glasses, fisherman's sweater, holding a mug of coffee.

GENERAL DR. DANIEL JACKSON.

REYES
General.

DANIEL
(quietly)
Captain. Is she —

REYES
She's gone. She didn't say where.

A long beat. Daniel looks down at his coffee. He has known this was coming. He still needed to hear it.

DANIEL
(half-smile)
Of course she didn't.

He sips. Looks back up. When he speaks again, he is the general the President drafted him to be.

DANIEL (CONT'D)
All right. The transition is complete. As of fourteen hundred hours Earth time, Stargate Command is officially mothballed. The IOA has dissolved its working committee on Gate operations — the votes are no longer there, in the current global climate, to keep it functioning. The Pentagon has agreed, with some reluctance, that the Gate program is no longer a thing Earth can host.

KAI
(quietly)
General — if the IOA is dissolved, who do we answer to?

DANIEL
(simply)
Each other.

A beat. Kai absorbs this.

DANIEL (CONT'D)
The base's continued operation is funded under a quiet line item in three separate national defense budgets, one private foundation, and the personal patronage of a man on Tau'ri-allied Langara whose name I am not going to say out loud on this channel. The funding is real. The deniability is total. The mandate is exploration. And the condition of the mandate is that we do not, under any circumstances, become a weapons program. If we cross that line, the funding ends, and the door closes for another generation. Are we clear?

TEN'AK
We are clear.

OKONKWO
(turning a page)
Refreshing.

Daniel almost smiles. He picks up the coffee. Sips.

DANIEL
First mission.

Reyes nods to Chen. A holographic display rises.

REYES
Signal received three weeks ago on a carrier we have not been able to identify. Repeats every nineteen hours. Linguistic team translated it yesterday.

The display resolves to a single line:

WE HAVE BEEN WAITING.

A long beat.

KAI
(quietly)
Waiting for whom?

DANIEL
That, Doctor Vann, is what you are going to find out.

He looks at Reyes.

DANIEL (CONT'D)
Héctor. Two notes before you go.

REYES
Sir.

DANIEL
One. The signal address has not been cross-referenced against any known database. Not Ancient. Not Asgard. Not Goa'uld. Not Tok'ra. That doesn't mean it's hostile. It means it's old. Or new. Either possibility deserves caution.

REYES
Understood.

DANIEL
Two. If the situation degrades, call me first. Not the Pentagon. Not the IOA. Me. The previous program lost too many people because the people in the field hesitated to call home.

REYES
Yes, sir.

DANIEL
(quieter)
And Héctor.

REYES
Sir?

DANIEL
Come home for dinner.

A beat. Reyes recognizes the line. He does not yet know whose it was first. He suspects.

REYES
Yes, sir.

The hologram flickers, dims.

DANIEL
(almost gone)
I'll be in Pegasus by the end of the week. McKay has been complaining about something. He is always complaining about something. This time he claims it is serious. I will believe him when I see it.

The hologram dies.


INT. HORIZON BASE — GATE CHAMBER — LATER

The team is geared. Reyes is checking his sidearm. Okonkwo's impossible satchel. Ten'ak's staff. Kai's tablet and nervous look.

Chen at the dialing console.

CHEN
Address locked. Carrier signal still active. Captain — Thor's probability assessment.

REYES
Let's hear it.

THOR (V.O.)
Captain. My assessment of the civilization which transmits this signal places the likelihood of a peaceful reception at approximately forty-one percent, a cautious testing at thirty-eight percent, and the remainder distributed across outcomes I have classified as "interesting."

REYES
That's lower than usual.

THOR (V.O.)
Yes.

REYES
You want to elaborate?

THOR (V.O.)
I would prefer not to, Captain. My elaborations, when not requested by clear necessity, have in the past been characterized by your predecessor as — and I quote — "the long way around to a bad mood."

OKONKWO
(without looking up)
He has a point.

REYES
(dry)
Noted. Lieutenant Chen, you have the base.

CHEN
I have the base.

Reyes turns to the team.

REYES (CONT'D)
All right. We go in. We look around. We come home for dinner. Doctor Vann, that includes you.

KAI
(meekly)
Understood.

REYES
Move out.

They walk up the ramp. The event horizon takes them, one by one. Reyes last.

Before he steps through, his hand goes briefly to his pocket — to the wrist device he is now carrying. Cassandra's last gift. Walter's eventual freedom. The device that will, decades from now, also be used by an older Cassandra in a dust-sheeted future Gate Room to send four friends home. (But that scene has already happened, in another show, and we are not going to re-enact it. The audience that knows, knows.)

He steps through.

The Gate disengages.


INT. HORIZON BASE — GATE CHAMBER — CONTINUOUS

Chen alone at the console. The chamber quiet. Outside the viewport, the bruised sky.

CHEN
(softly, to herself)
Come home for dinner.

CUT TO BLACK.


END OF TEASER


SHOWRUNNER'S NOTE — FINAL

On the title sequence. The opening title is the show's psychological bridge, and it is doing more work than any other sixty-second sequence in the pilot. It does not reproduce the SG-1 opening (which would read as embalming) and it does not replace it (which would read as repudiation). It morphs between them — Joel Goldsmith's main theme arrangement transitioning from full brass orchestration through a half-and-half hybrid to a new atmospheric pad orchestration, while the visual imagery transitions, frame-by-frame, from the Cheyenne Mountain SGC Gate Room to the Horizon Base Gate chamber. The audience that loved the original sees the original. The audience that loved the originalalso sees the new show take its place at the end of the lineage, without being asked to choose. The melody is the spine. The room the melody lives in is what changes. Goldsmith is deceased; the new arrangement should be done by a composer who reveres him, with the original cue licensed and used as the foundation rather than as a sample. This is the Gate. The real one. Today. That is the subtitle of the entire sequence, never said aloud, communicated through the cut. The iris-equivalent blast plate that closes at the end of the title — iris-shaped, hardened, the same gesture in a new material — is the final visual confirmation that the show inherits its protective discipline from what came before. Old function. New form. Same Gate. If the rest of the show is the SG-1 frequency tuned for 2026, the title sequence is thetuning — the audience watching the dial turn, in real time, from a station they remember to one that is playing the same song in a new arrangement.

On the opening flashback. The pilot opens not in 2026 but in 2003, in Janet Fraiser's kitchen, with Sam Carter handing the wrist device to sixteen-year-old Cassie. Amanda Tapping reprises the role, with practical makeup and modest de-aging to bridge to the period setting. The scene is short — under four minutes — domestically lit, and the de-aging only needs to hold for kitchen-table proximity. This is not the Indiana Jones 5 approach of trying to make a sixty-year-old actress look thirty for an action sequence; it is the Better Call Saul approach of letting an older actor play a younger version of themselves in a warm, contained, character-driven scene where the audience meets the technique halfway because the performance is what matters. Tapping in her mid-fifties can absolutely play forty-year-old Major Carter in a kitchen for one afternoon. The scene's emotional weight is carried by the actress, not by the prosthetics. It is a gift to the audience that loved Sam, and a foundation for everything that follows.

On the structural work the flashback does. It establishes the wrist device's provenance. It introduces Janet — alive, in passing, briefly — and lets the audience know the family Cassandra had before letting them watch her carry that family alone twenty-three years later. It tells us why Cassandra has carried this thing her entire adult life: because Sam Carter gave it to her so that no one could ever take her family from her by force. It shows us the kitchen-table SGC, the SGC that existed offstage and underneath the missions, the SGC the franchise spent ten years quietly building without ever underlining. And it places one of the franchise's most beloved actresses on screen one more time, in a role she perfected over a decade, in a scene that asks nothing of her except to be Sam Carter in a moment of unguarded love. That is a good legacy-character cameo. That is what Better Call Saul learned and what Picard never did.

On the warning the audience does not get. The flashback does not tell the audience that Janet will die the following year. The flashback does not tell the audience that this is the last good afternoon. The dialog does not foreshadow. The scene is simply warm, and ordinary, and full of small jokes about a sock drawer. The grief is in the audience'sknowledge, not in the scene's text. That is the discipline. Show; do not editorialize. The audience that knows the franchise knows what is coming. The audience that doesn't gets to enjoy the afternoon for what it is. Both audiences are served, and both audiences will think about the kitchen scene later, in ways the show does not require them to articulate.

On structure and restraint. Following the 2003 flashback, the pilot deliberately does not re-enact the 1969 episode. The audience that loves it remembers it. The new show inherits its weight by adjacent reference, not by recreation. Cassandra's wrist device is now established with a face and a voice and a moment of love attached to it. Every subsequent use of the device in the teaser — opening the staff corridor, dialing the Gate, sitting on the console between Cassandra and Reyes at Horizon Base — carries the weight of that kitchen scene. The audience does not need to be told. They feel it.

On Cassandra's exit. She leaves for an off-world destination she does not name. Her fate is deliberately unresolved. She may return in a later season — the Torment of Tantalus model, where a Gate address turns out to lead somewhere a long-lost figure has been quietly living. She may not. The door is left open. This is the Zephram Cochrane treatment: a character we loved, last seen alive, leaving on her own terms, fate suspended. It is the most honest thing we can do for a character who has been in the franchise's bones since 1997. We do not tie her up. We do not grant her ascension. We let her leave.

On the generational stewardship architecture. The Gate is carried forward across generations by people drawn into its orbit, often as children, often without recognition, on every line of family the franchise has ever followed. Catherine Langford at Giza. Cassandra on Hanka. Cameron Mitchell's grandfather aboard the Achilles in 1939. Nick Ballard. Teal'c's father Ronac and Teal'c's son Rya'c. Bra'tac and Teal'c. The pattern is family across generations, not gender. The new show inherits the pattern by letting it stay open — planting the next instance somewhere on Horizon Base as the show finds room for them, without underlining the architecture and without committing to a specific shape. A child of any sex. A grandchild of any family the team encounters. A long fuse the audience does not realize they are watching until it lands. That is the franchise. That is what the franchise has always quietly been about.

On the 2026 framing. The base is off-world by political necessity. The IOA has dissolved. Earth cannot host the program in a fractured international climate. The mandate is exploration, not weapons. The funding is post-national. The crew answers to each other. The geopolitics are acknowledged honestly without anyone making a partisan speech.

On the hostile-planet base. Horizon is buried on a world humans cannot survive on the surface of. The corridors are narrow. The viewports are reinforced. The crew cannot leave. The lesson of the SGC's losses is structural: this base errs on the side of paranoia.

On Daniel, Thor, the team. Daniel as the reluctantly-drafted General, Shanks aged into the conscience role. Thor as the Asgard memorial and the base's institutional voice. Reyes, Chen, Okonkwo, Ten'ak, Kai as the five regulars. Recurring: Twitch (the Hammond pilot), McKay (Pegasus visits, infuriating Reyes once a season), Walter (eventual extraction, the season's quiet moral spine), Jonas Quinn (one episode, season one, to bless Kai). Sparingly: O'Neill on a phone call. Carter as a general's voice. Teal'c on Dakara, by message. SG-1 is retired. The show honors that.

On the discipline. No lectures. No identity politics in either direction. Characters who are professionals first and identities second. The work in the foreground, the personal lives offstage. The SG-1 frequency tuned for 2026.

On the recurring line. Come home for dinner. Cassandra says it to Reyes. Daniel says it to Reyes. Chen says it to herself. Reyes says it to the team. By the end of the teaser, the audience understands: this is the show's emotional center. Not victory. Not heroism. Dinner.

 FADE OUT.