Splinters in the Glasshouse

The glass walls of the research cabin fogged over at dawn, streaked by wind-driven sleet that rattled from branches like dry bones. Dr. Maren Chevalier, exo-anthropologist, woke to the familiar, clinical beeping of her wrist monitor. Pulse: elevated. Cortisol: high. The numbers did not surprise her.

She sat up, pulling the thermal blanket tight around her shoulders. The woods outside—the planet’s so-called "green belt"—were not green at all but composed of skeletal fungi that rose five meters into the air. Their feathery crowns shivered as if in anticipation. Chevalier squinted at the dawn through triple-paned glass, then turned away. Too many mornings had started this way; too many reminders that she was alone.

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On the central table lay her field journal and a well-thumbed paperback: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. She had packed it last minute from an old storage box back on Luna Station, thinking she might need something more human than data sheets and protocol manuals. The pages felt oddly warm whenever she handled them, as if retaining echoes from another world where stories mattered more than planetary reports.

She boiled water for synth-coffee and propped the book open beside her bowl of meal cubes. Outside, a drone whirred through its perimeter sweep—a reminder of her mission's true nature: observe, catalog, report back to Command on indigenous lifeforms' potential utility or threat level. Maren felt the old tension twist inside her: colonial arrogance dressed up as scientific detachment.

Her first use for the novel came mid-morning, when Command interrupted her reading with a vid-call:

"Dr. Chevalier," came Director Amano’s voice—flat, distant. "Update on social patterns?"

She glanced down at Songbirds and Snakes as if it might offer an answer. The novel’s Capitol citizens manipulated everything—rules, food, even the games designed to keep order through spectacle. Maren spoke carefully:

"No evidence of sentient communication yet. The fungal clusters exhibit adaptive growth but no clear social structure. Requesting permission for longer observation." She thumbed the book’s dog-eared page while she spoke, letting its narrative ambiguity ground her own uncertainty.

After the call ended, she pressed her palm to the book cover. Her motivations felt suddenly exposed—how much did she want to discover something new? How much did she want to avoid becoming just another agent in Command’s long history of justified conquests?

By afternoon she’d convinced herself to take air samples among the densest fungus groves—an excuse to escape both screens and guilt. She zipped Songbirds and Snakes into her field jacket pocket; it felt like contraband.

Hours later, as drizzle ticked against her suit visor and bioluminescent spores floated past like fireflies, Maren found a place to sit beneath a low-hanging canopy. She extracted the novel with gloved hands and read while sensors recorded environmental data beside her.

The scene she landed on described Coriolanus Snow weighing his obligations against personal ambition—a chess match with lives as pieces. Maren looked up at the tangled forest around her and felt an uncomfortable kinship with him: agents dispatched far from home, justifying their presence with talk of necessity and progress.

A rustle snapped her attention away from fiction.

Something moved between two pale trunks—a shadow flickering at the edge of vision. Maren stood slowly, heart thumping in time with her wrist monitor’s insistent beeps. She closed Songbirds and Snakes around one finger as a bookmark, ready to run if needed.

But nothing materialized except for falling spores.

Back inside that night, after logging samples and updating logs for Command (“No hostile activity detected”), Maren collapsed into her cot. The novel lay atop her chest as she drifted toward sleep—a weight both literal and symbolic.

The next morning brought static-laced transmissions: Command had authorized resource extraction based on preliminary findings.

She stared out at the untouched woods—the future site of landing pads and mines—and thumbed through Songbirds and Snakes again for comfort or maybe penance. It struck her that every page was filled with characters who thought themselves above consequence until they weren’t.

At lunch she tore off a strip of packaging to mark a passage about empathy as weakness—a line that made her wince at its truth within these walls.

When dusk fell on Day 92, Maren recorded one last entry:

"Isolation breeds clarity—and sometimes complicity. I wonder if future historians will read us like I read this novel: searching for moments when someone could have chosen differently." She set down both recorder and book beside each other on the table—two artifacts from different worlds—and let herself hope that stories might matter after all.

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