The machine has been running for twelve thousand years. It fires in sixty-one days.
Eight months after triggering a global atomic clock anomaly at an Antarctic research installation, orbital scientist Daniel Mercer has been quietly mapping a network of ancient sites from a rented room in Cusco. Five installations. Three continents. One machine.
When archaeologist Elena Voss is found dead on the Nazca Plateau, the encrypted file she sends him in her final hours confirms what he has been building toward — and starts a countdown he cannot stop.
The machine is not new. It is twelve thousand years old, geothermally powered, and has been running at maintenance frequency for the entirety of recorded human civilization. It was built to do one thing: transmit. Not a distress signal. Not a territorial broadcast. A beacon — carrying the living comprehension of whoever stands at its interface when the alignment window opens on April 23rd.
That person, by every condition the builders encoded into the system, is Daniel.
So is Harlan Voss — Elena's brother, director of the Meridian Group, and a man who spent thirty years reaching the same conclusion Daniel reached in eight months. Harlan has the access, the permit, and the operating manual. He does not have Daniel's qualification. The machine will not accept a substitute.
What follows is a race across Bolivia and Peru that is less about stopping something than about understanding what it is before it happens — and whether understanding changes the obligation to act.
Geophysicist Rosa Quispe tracks the machine as it wakes, running readings the instruments were not designed to handle. Federal investigator Primitivo Solis follows the money and the bodies, documenting what she cannot prosecute and what she cannot explain. Archaeolinguist Yael Cohen finds a phrase in the builders' encoding she has seen somewhere else — in a text much older — and does not say so immediately.
On April 23rd, in a chamber beneath Isla del Sol at 3,800 meters elevation, Daniel enters step five.
The beacon fires.
Something receives it.
The return signal is still strengthening when he climbs out of the shaft into the Bolivian morning, afraid for the first time in sixty-one days, carrying coordinates he has not yet decided to share.
The Alignment Protocol is the second book in The Protocol Series — a mapped, connected universe of twelve novels spanning three series. Built on real archaeology, real science, and the questions that follow from both.
The Recurrence Protocol, Book One, is available now.
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