The radio crackled to life at 3:17 AM, pulling Maya Chen from the kind of sleep that only comes after seventy-two hours of consciousness. Her hand found the volume knob before her eyes opened, a reflex honed by three months of manning the emergency broadcast station in what used to be downtown Portland.
"—day forty-seven since the Silence began. This is KPDX emergency broadcast, Maya Chen reporting. If anyone is out there, if anyone can hear this..."
She let her voice trail off, the same way it had for weeks. The same hollow echo bouncing back from empty buildings, empty streets, empty sky. Outside the reinforced windows of the radio station, the morning light revealed a city frozen in time. Cars sat abandoned in the middle of intersections, their drivers having simply walked away when the Silence took hold. Storefronts stood open, merchandise spilling onto sidewalks where it would remain until the rain and wind claimed it.
Maya pressed the transmission button again. "Weather report for October 15th. Clear skies, temperature approximately fifty-two degrees. Radiation levels..." She glanced at the Geiger counter mounted beside her microphone. "Radiation levels remain normal. Water treatment facility status unknown. Recommend boiling all water sources."
The routine kept her sane. Weather, radiation, water, food stores. The basics of survival broadcast into the void, just in case someone out there still needed to know. Just in case someone was still fighting.
She'd been a traffic reporter before the Silence. Flying in helicopters above the morning commute, warning people about fender-benders and construction delays that seemed monumentally important then. Now she reported to ghosts.
The Silence hadn't been nuclear war or plague or any of the disasters humanity had prepared for. It had been something far more insidious. On August 29th, at exactly 11:43 AM Pacific Time, every electronic communication device on Earth had emitted a single, perfect tone for seventeen seconds. When it stopped, something fundamental had changed in the human mind.
People didn't die. They didn't get sick. They simply... stopped caring about anything beyond their immediate physical needs. The drive for connection, for community, for progress—gone. Within days, most of the population had wandered away from their lives, following some internal compass toward places unknown. They walked with the serene expressions of sleepwalkers, ignoring attempts at communication, immune to pleas from loved ones.
Maya had been in the helicopter when it happened. The tone had come through her headphones, through the radio, through every speaker in the aircraft. For a moment, she'd felt it—that profound sense of peace, the temptation to simply let go of everything that made her Maya Chen. But something had fought back. Maybe it was her mother's voice in her memory, speaking Mandarin lullabies. Maybe it was pure stubbornness. Or maybe it was the terrified voice of her pilot, Jake, screaming her name as she'd nearly opened the helicopter door mid-flight.
They'd been among the lucky few. The Resistant, they called themselves. Less than one percent of the population, scattered across the globe, maintaining pockets of the old world through sheer force of will.
"This concludes the morning broadcast," Maya said into the microphone. "I'll be back at noon with updates. To any Resistant listening, the Portland Emergency Coalition meets every Sunday at Pioneer Courthouse Square. We have food, medical supplies, and information about safe zones. Don't give up. Don't stop fighting."
She clicked off the transmission and leaned back in her chair, staring at the wall of silent monitors that had once shown traffic cameras across the city. Most displayed empty intersections now, but three still functioned, their feeds cycling through automated sequences. She'd learned to read the subtle signs in those images—a flash of movement that might be another Resistant, smoke that could indicate someone had managed to start a generator, even the way debris accumulated differently in areas where people might still be active.
Movement caught her eye on Monitor 7. A figure walking down Burnside Bridge, moving with purpose rather than the aimless drift of the Silenced. Maya grabbed her binoculars and ran to the window. The figure was too far away to make out clearly, but their gait was deliberate, and they carried what looked like a backpack. A Resistant.
She'd learned not to get too excited about possible survivors. Twice she'd risked leaving the station to make contact, only to find people who were only partially Resistant—able to function but unable to truly connect, like broken radios picking up fragments of signal. But this person seemed different. They stopped at the center of the bridge and appeared to be looking directly at the radio station.
Maya grabbed the emergency flare from her desk and ran to the roof. The October air bit at her face as she emerged into the open. The city spread out below her, a monument to interrupted lives. In the distance, she could see smoke rising from the hills where some of the Silenced had gathered in loose communities, living like peaceful animals, taking only what they needed from abandoned stores and houses.
She fired the flare, watching it arc red across the morning sky. The figure on the bridge raised an arm—not just in acknowledgment, but in what looked like a military signal. Maya felt her heart rate increase for the first time in weeks.
Twenty minutes later, she heard boots on the stairs. Maya positioned herself behind the broadcast desk, one hand on the pistol she'd taken from a police station, the other on the emergency lockdown switch that would seal the station.
"Maya Chen?" The voice was female, confident. "My name is Dr. Sarah Okafor. I'm with the CDC. I've been tracking your broadcasts."
"Come up slowly," Maya called. "Keep your hands visible."
The woman who appeared in the doorway was tall, dark-skinned, wearing a military jacket over civilian clothes. Her eyes were alert, focused—definitely Resistant. She carried a backpack and what looked like scientific equipment.
"How do I know you're really CDC?" Maya asked, keeping her weapon trained on the stranger.
Dr. Okafor slowly reached into her jacket and pulled out a laminated ID badge. "Because I have information about what caused the Silence. And I think I know how to reverse it."
Maya studied the woman's face, looking for the telltale signs of the Silenced—the slight unfocus in the eyes, the absence of micro-expressions that indicated active thought. Dr. Okafor's gaze was sharp, intelligent, tinged with exhaustion and something that looked like hope.
"Talk," Maya said, not lowering her weapon.
"The signal didn't come from Earth," Dr. Okafor said. "We detected the source three days before it hit—a transmission from approximately forty-seven light-years away, in the constellation Lyra. It was clearly artificial, clearly directed at Earth. The seventeen-second duration wasn't random. It was precisely calibrated to human neural frequencies, specifically the frequencies associated with social bonding and abstract reasoning."
"Aliens?" Maya couldn't keep the skepticism out of her voice.
"That's what we thought at first. But the signal contained embedded data—mathematical sequences, chemical formulas, even what appears to be a star map. It wasn't an attack. It was a test."
Maya lowered her weapon slightly. "What kind of test?"
"The kind you determine whether a species is ready for contact. The signal didn't destroy our capacity for those higher functions—it suppressed them. Think of it as a neural inhibitor that can be reversed, but only by individuals who demonstrate sufficient resistance to outside influence. The one percent who stayed Resistant aren't just random survivors. We're the ones who passed the test."
"And you know how to bring everyone back?"
Dr. Okafor nodded. "The same frequency that caused the Silence can reverse it, but it has to be broadcast at a specific power level and combined with a counter-signal that I've spent the last two months calculating. I need a high-powered radio transmitter, and according to the emergency broadcast network, this station has one of the most powerful civilian transmitters on the West Coast."
Maya looked out the window at the empty city. "What if you're wrong? What if this makes things worse?"
"Then we're no worse off than we are now. But Maya, I've been tracking survivor communities across the country. We're dying out. Not from the Silence, but from isolation, from despair, from the simple fact that humans aren't meant to live alone. If we don't try this, in six months there won't be anyone left to save."
The weight of the decision settled on Maya's shoulders. Three months of solitary broadcasts, of hoping against hope that someone would answer. Now someone had, carrying the possibility of salvation or annihilation in a backpack.
"Show me your calculations," Maya said