A Thousand Degrees Below Zero
Leinster Murray
Belletristik / Gegenwartsliteratur (ab 1945)
Beschreibung
In the midsummer heat of New York, the sun blazed down on the city. People stepped out onto the streets in short-sleeved shirts and light clothing, and long lines formed in front of ice cream shops. The billboards in Times Square flashed with vibrant colors as usual, while the blaring horns of cars filled the bustling air.
But on this ordinary summer day, something utterly unexpected happened.
Near the Hudson River in Manhattan, where boats were docked at the pier, a sudden scream pierced the air. "The water... it’s freezing!" someone shouted, and the people at the dock turned their eyes toward the river. What they saw defied all explanation.
In an instant, the waters of the Hudson River were covered in ice. At first, it seemed like a thin layer spreading across the surface, but within mere seconds, the entire river transformed into a thick block of ice. Even more shocking was that, under the scorching midsummer sun, the ice showed no signs of melting.
Panic swept through New York’s citizens. Newspapers and radio stations churned out headlines like "New York’s Summer Freezes Over!" Scientists scrambled to understand this bizarre phenomenon, but it transcended every known law of physics.
Dr. Teddy Gerrod called an emergency meeting at the New York University research institute to investigate the anomaly. A brilliant scientist with expertise in meteorology and physics, he had spent the past few years studying climate change and thermodynamics.
"This isn’t a natural phenomenon," Dr. Teddy said with a grave expression, holding data from measurements of the frozen river and the surrounding air. "The temperature of the Hudson River dropped to minus one thousand degrees in just a few seconds."
The meeting room fell silent.
"That’s impossible!" one researcher exclaimed. "A temperature drop that extreme couldn’t happen naturally. And at minus one thousand degrees—Fahrenheit or Celsius, negative 537—it’s not just the river; all of New York should have frozen solid!"
"That’s exactly the problem," Teddy replied in a low voice. "This can’t be explained by the laws of physics as we know them."
He instinctively knew this wasn’t a natural occurrence. Reviewing the experimental data again, he considered the possibility that similar events could strike across New York.
And his intuition was right.
This wasn’t just climate change.
This was an attack.
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SF, Space Opera, First Contact, Alternate History, Science Fiction