It went to sleep before humans existed. Now it's awake. And it has no idea what you are.
Glaciologist Dr. Kira Vasquez is drilling ice cores on Deception Island-a volcanic caldera hidden inside an Antarctic island, concealed behind a gap in the crater wall so narrow you could sail past and never know the harbor was there. In the deepest layers of ice, she finds heat signatures that shouldn't exist. Organized. Geometric. Millions of years old.
Then the thaw begins.
Something beneath the caldera has been in perfect suspension since before mammals evolved. When a signal arrives from across the planet, it wakes-not gradually, not gently. In four seconds, a consciousness older than complex life on Earth goes from frozen to fully aware. The windows crack. The harbor steams. And five scientists on a remote Antarctic base become the first humans this entity has ever encountered.
It doesn't know what a mind is. It doesn't know what a mammal is. It communicates through heat because heat is all it understands. And when it tries to apologize for the windows, it fixes them-sealing the cracks with precision thermal engineering because an alien consciousness that predates humanity has read a textbook and decided the appropriate response to breaking something is to repair it.
The Frozen is a first contact story told from the alien's perspective-the story of a consciousness waking into a world it doesn't recognize, finding a species it never imagined, and choosing to become the engineer that builds the infrastructure for a planetary choir.
For readers of Arrival, The Thing, and Annihilation. For anyone who has ever wondered what an alien would think of us.
The frozen don't stay frozen. Not when there's work to do.