[s3e1] Adapting To Change ✦ Fast & Real

Maya’s voice crackled through the speaker, breathless and tense. I’m already here, Aris. But the manual valves are rusted shut. The previous crew didn’t expect us to ever need them.

He stepped beside her, gripping the wheel. On three. One, two, three!

We aren't going to fight it anymore, Maya, Aris said, turning to look at the viewscreen showing the shifting, violent landscape outside. We are going to adapt. [S3E1] Adapting To Change

Aris wiped a bead of sweat from his forehead. The station’s environmental controls were already struggling to compensate for the external temperature spikes. He pulled up the personnel roster. If they were going to survive this shift, he needed a team that could think outside the rigid protocols of the training manuals.

Aris looked down at his scorched gloves. He knew she was right. The old manuals were dead weight now. Survival on Colony 7 wasn’t going to be about forcing the environment to fit their plan anymore. It was going to be about how fast they could rewrite the plan. Maya’s voice crackled through the speaker, breathless and

Aris grabbed a plasma torch from the tool wall and moved toward the lift. The metal grate under his boots felt hotter than it had an hour ago. When he reached the sub-level, the air was thick with the scent of ozone and heated iron. Maya was straining against a massive iron wheel, her boots slipping on the slick floor.

Maya let out a long breath, leaning her back against the cool metal of the housing. We can't keep patching this place together, Aris. The planet is changing faster than the tech can handle. The previous crew didn’t expect us to ever need them

The fluorescent lights of the research bay hummed with a low, irritating frequency that matched the dull ache in Dr. Aris Thorne’s temples. He stared at the holographic schematics of the atmospheric processor, his fingers hovering over the interface. For three years, the Colony 7 terraforming project had followed a strict, predictable timeline. Now, a sudden shift in the planet's seismic activity had rendered their primary calculations useless.

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