He didn’t know Captain Sung’s wife, but he knew sulfur was used to acidify soil for Cymbidium ensifolium —the orchid Sung had written a paper about, back when he was a young third officer.
At first light, the coast guard found a life raft. Inside: five crewmen from a sunken freighter, listed as dead six years ago. They were hypothermic, delirious, but alive. They all claimed a green-hulled container ship had pulled alongside them in the dark—a ship that vanished when the sun rose. wanhai telex
WANHAI 286 // URGENT // STOP ALL UNITS // REEFER CONTAINER WHLU-8821 // LOCATION: 22°15'N 120°17'E // TRANSMITTING VHF CH 16 // REPEAT // HUMAN LIFE DETECTED // SIGNED // CAPT. SUNG Lin stared. Wan Hai 286 had been scrapped in Bangladesh three months ago. He’d attended the virtual auction himself. And the coordinates—that was open sea south of the Pratas Islands, a place no Wan Hai vessel had sailed in weeks. He didn’t know Captain Sung’s wife, but he
He called his supervisor, then the coast guard. They dismissed it as a ghost in the old TDM network—some corrupted packet from a decommissioned buoy. But Lin couldn’t shake the phrase: human life detected . The message repeated every ninety minutes, always from the same terminal ID, always signed by a captain who was now retired and living in Tainan. They were hypothermic, delirious, but alive