Absolute Being: I Am Nothing Chapter 58

United States Of America

The room was too quiet, even with all of us in it. You could hear the air conditioner humming, a sound that usually got lost. Not today.

"Right," a guy at the far end said, leaning forward on his elbows. His voice was steady, the kind you listen to. "Before we all start tripping over our own egos, let’s get one rule straight. We don’t threaten him. Not a hint. Got it?"

"Threaten him?" a woman to his left scoffed, but it was a nervous sound. "We should be more worried about not annoying him. No posturing. No chest-thumping. And if someone brings up military options again, I swear I’m leaving. This isn’t that kind of meeting."

"You’re talking about him like he’s a hurricane," someone else muttered.

"You saw the same feeds I did," the woman shot back. "He isn’t."

The quiet came back, heavier this time.

"So," a younger voice ventured, trying to cut through it. "What do we call him, then? We need a name for the file, at least."

"Not ’asset.’ Makes him sound like a suitcase of cash."

"Definitely not ’hostile.’ That’s just asking for trouble."

"’Subject’?"

"Too clinical. Sounds like we’re studying a bug."

"Citizen?"

A few people groaned. "That’s creepy. Worse than the others."

"Adam," the steady-voiced man said. Everyone looked at him. "Just Adam. First name basis. Keeps it... personal. Reminds us he’s a person."

"Is he, though?" a tired-looking man near the window asked, not looking up from his hands. "After what happened up there?"

"And that’s exactly why we keep calling him one," the woman insisted. "We can’t afford to forget it. The moment we treat him like a force of nature is the moment we make a catastrophic mistake."

"We need to figure out what he wants," the younger one said, tapping a pen nervously. "He could have done... anything. But he didn’t. He just... stopped. And then he picked up the phone. That means something."

"It means we’re irrelevant," the tired man said.

"Or it means we’re not a threat," the woman countered.

"Same difference."

"It’s not, and you know it."

A beat of silence hung between them.

"The data... it’s all confirmed?" a new voice asked, quiet.

A nod from the head of the table. "Every sensor we have, and a few we borrowed. It’s real."

"And the... event? The one at the peak?"

Another nod. "Confirmed. The energy signature is gone. The pattern is... broken."

Someone let out a slow, shaky breath. It wasn’t a laugh. It was the sound your brain makes when it runs out of room for shock.

"You realize what this does, don’t you?" the younger one whispered. "To everything? To every reason people have ever fought over?"

"It might stop a few wars."

"Or start a hundred new ones. People need their reasons to exist."

"We’re not here to save souls or redraw maps," the steady man cut in, his voice leaving no room. "We’re here to make sure there’s still a world to argue about tomorrow. So we focus on that. Step one: do not insult him. Do not provoke him. Assume he’s having the worst day imaginable and we are uninvited guests."

"Agreed."

"No sanctions, no blockades."

"No grand ultimatums. No ’the international community demands.’"

"And for pity’s sake, no speeches," the woman said, pinching the bridge of her nose. "No ’on behalf of a grateful humanity.’ I’d rather jump out this window."

"What about an apology?" the younger one asked. "For... I don’t know, bothering him?"

The steady man shook his head. "Too risky. An apology assumes we did something wrong he cares about. It assumes he wants one. We don’t know that. It’s presumptuous."

"So we offer nothing?"

"We offer a conversation," the woman said. "That’s all we have. That’s all we are to something like him. A voice on the line."

"That’s it? Just... talk?"

"You got a better idea?"

A firmer voice spoke up from the corner. It was an older woman who hadn’t spoken yet. "Listen to yourselves. This individual just rearranged the fundamental architecture of reality because, as far as we can tell, he felt like it. Then he took a phone call. Politely. If his intention was our erasure, we wouldn’t be sitting here sweating through our shirts. We are here because he allowed it. Remember that. This isn’t a negotiation from strength."

"So we don’t go in as leaders," the steady man concluded.

"We go in as neighbors," the older woman said. "Confused, terrified neighbors who heard a massive noise next door and are checking to see if everything’s okay."

"We acknowledge what happened without giving an opinion," the woman added. "No ’bravo,’ no ’how dare you.’ Just... recognition."

"Neutral ground."

"Neutral tone. No religious terminology. No political justifications."

"No moralizing. No ’for the greater good.’"

"Then what in the world do we actually say?" the tired man asked, throwing his hands up. "Hello, we noticed the sky changed, fancy a chat?"

They all thought for a long moment.

The steady man finally spoke, slowly. "We say: we see you. We don’t understand you. But we are here. And we would like to find a way to be here, together."

"And if he asks what we want?" the younger one pressed.

"We tell the truth," the older woman said. "The simplest truth we have. We want to live. We don’t want conflict. We don’t want to be... a problem that needs solving."

Someone let out a long, weary sigh. It echoed in the quiet room.

"Feels like first contact," the younger one mumbled.

"It’s worse," the tired man said. "At least with aliens, you have rules. Protocols. This... this is one man who broke all the rules we didn’t even know existed."

"Who makes the call?" the woman asked, looking around the table. "It can’t be a politician. They can’t help but perform."

"It has to be someone calm," the steady man agreed. "Someone who knows how to listen more than they talk."

"Someone with a very quiet voice," the older woman added. "And the sense to use it sparingly."

"Someone who can hear ’no’ and not argue," the woman said.

"Who can accept ’yes’ and not celebrate."

"And if he laughs?" the tired man asked, a grim smile on his face.

"Then we let him laugh," the steady man said. "And we listen to that, too."

The silence returned, filling every corner. There were no more objections, no more debates. Just the weight of the task.

Finally, the steady man looked at each of them in turn.

"Let’s be very clear about what this is," he said, his voice low. "This isn’t diplomacy. There’s no treaty. No mutually assured destruction. We have nothing to offer but our presence."

"Then what is it?" the younger one asked.

The man paused, choosing his words with infinite care.

"It’s us," he said, "asking the man who reshaped the world what he plans to do next. And hoping, very quietly, that he doesn’t mind us staying in it."