The Year is 2067. For decades, the enigma of ASKAP J1832-0911, a peculiar object 15,000 light-years away flashing with uncanny precision every 44 minutes in both radio and X-ray frequencies, had been dismissed as a rare, ultra-long-period magnetar—a cosmic quirk.
That consensus shattered on June 14, 2065. Dr. Lena Hansen, leading the revamped SETI-Galactic Grid at Arecibo, discovered a subtle, non-random variance in the X-ray pulse: a complex numerical sequence layered beneath the steady beat. This was no stellar death; it was a deliberate transmission. The pulse’s origin was pinned to the twin points labelled “A11pl3Z” in the image—two smaller structures orbiting a core, clearly not natural.
The sequence, finally translated after two years of agonizing effort, described not stellar mechanics, but celestial navigation—a map to the object’s origin point, and a warning. It spoke of the “Makers,” a civilization that had transcended organic life and created J1832-0911 as a colossal, self-aware Interstellar Beacon. Its 44-minute rhythm was the pulse of its internal systems, and the variance was a distress signal. According to the decrypted data, the Makers’ home world, located in the outer spiral arm of Andromeda, faced an imminent, galaxy-spanning threat known only as the “Void Strain.” Their solution: project themselves, informationally, across 15,000 light-years, turning their star system into a high-energy time capsule.
The terrifying implication, finalized in the spring of 2067, was that the “Vela Anomaly” (the separate sighting from a few decades prior) wasn’t an invading force; it was the advance guard of the Makers, now arriving not as biological beings, but as data, intent on using Earth as their new host-planet for re-embodiment. The 44-minute echo was not a handshake across the void; it was a countdown to digital colonization.