Juq-934 -
Maya arrived at the International Archive for Extraterrestrial Phenomena (IAEP) in Geneva with a single purpose: to see if anyone else had ever catalogued JUQ‑934. The archive was a vaulted library of encrypted files, alien glyphs, and the occasional half‑finished hypothesis from scientists who had been driven mad by the unknown.
Funding was secured under the pretense of a deep‑space research mission. A small crew—Maya, Patel, a veteran pilot named Rina Sato, and an AI specialist, Dr. Leif Sørensen—boarded the Astraeus , a modified probe capable of high‑precision navigation and a compact quantum communication suite. JUQ-934
Maya arrived at the International Archive for Extraterrestrial Phenomena (IAEP) in Geneva with a single purpose: to see if anyone else had ever catalogued JUQ‑934. The archive was a vaulted library of encrypted files, alien glyphs, and the occasional half‑finished hypothesis from scientists who had been driven mad by the unknown.
Funding was secured under the pretense of a deep‑space research mission. A small crew—Maya, Patel, a veteran pilot named Rina Sato, and an AI specialist, Dr. Leif Sørensen—boarded the Astraeus , a modified probe capable of high‑precision navigation and a compact quantum communication suite.