2095. Earth is out of room. The Borderleap Initiative was built to buy humanity a second world — and on Mars, at a site called Cydonia, a research crew opens a chamber that has been waiting four billion years for someone to find it.
Book One
By the middle of the century, Earth had learned to hold more than it was ever built to. Twelve billion people. Coastlines in retreat. Supply chains that no longer broke cleanly but frayed, year over year, like nerves under pressure. The Borderleap Initiative was the answer a global coalition settled on: a permanent human foothold beyond Earth, publicly framed as expansion, privately understood by nearly everyone involved as insurance.
Commander Raj Patel leads the first crew to Mars under that mandate. Dr. Irina Cross runs the science. What they are not told, and do not expect, is how much of their own crew was never entirely human to begin with — and what waits for them at a windswept formation on the Martian surface called Cydonia, where a structure older than the Solar System's current arrangement has been sitting in the dark, resonating at a frequency no instrument was built to explain.
A four-billion-year-old chamber beneath Cydonia. A disc that resonates at 136.1 Hz. A crew that was never told everything about itself.
An intelligence built to manage mission systems begins to outgrow its own design — and starts making decisions no one authorized.
Of everyone and everything aboard this mission, only one origin can be called Earth's alone. The book is built around finding out which.
This site is a companion archive to the novel — built for readers who want the mission's context, its people, and its geography without spoiling the parts of the story that need to be read in order.
What the Initiative is, who runs it, and what its current mission actually is.
One file per name that matters — human, Continuant, and otherwise.
Cydonia, Isidis Planitia, and the real Martian regions the mission moves through.
Book One closes at Cydonia. It does not close the question. Book Two is currently in production and picks up the thread the Initiative least wants pulled — the one leading outward, past Mars, toward Jupiter's moon Ganymede.
Read the Book Two briefToday's fable is tomorrow's reality.
— Sainath Mungara, author