Van Lyden hears unexplained sound during docking
The airlock of Recovery 7 is the claustrophobic heart of this event, a sealed chamber where Van Lyden floats in isolation, his only connection to Earth the voice of Cornish in his helmet. The airlock’s pressurization is a routine step, but it becomes a moment of vulnerability when the unexplained sound intrudes. The sound, unclassified and disembodied, disrupts the mechanical rhythm of the procedure, turning the airlock from a functional space into a liminal zone where the unknown threatens to breach the boundaries of the mission. Van Lyden’s pause mid-action—his hand on the second locking clamp, his breath held—highlights the airlock’s role as both a barrier and a threshold, a place where the safety of the known gives way to the dread of the unexplored.
Before:
The airlock is fully pressurized, matching the atmospheric conditions of Mars Probe 7. It is a sterile, functional space, its walls lined with controls and readouts, and its air filled with the low hum of life support and docking systems.
After:
The airlock remains pressurized, but the atmosphere within it has shifted. The unexplained sound has introduced an element of unease, and the space now feels charged with tension. Van Lyden’s hesitation has imbued the airlock with a new significance—it is no longer just a transit point but a site of potential danger.