<p><b>“I am a motorcyclist in a hailstorm, recklessly speeding by the grace of a slipstream.” — John K. Mercury</b></p>
<p>John K. Mercury — the first astronaut chosen for humanity’s journey to Mars — vanished before the mission could be completed. No signal. No wreckage. No answers.</p>
<p>Decades later, his mission journal is rediscovered in the New Mexico desert. A printed book that should not exist. A text that appears older than the mission itself. And yet, inside its pages, John K.’s voice feels impossibly alive.</p>
<p>What begins as a mystery becomes something far more compelling.</p>
<p>The journal describes not just the silence of deep space, but the wonder he found there.</p>
<p>Not just isolation, but connection.</p>
<p>Not just fear, but a fierce, unexpected hope for the future of humanity.</p>
<p>As scientists, archivists, sceptics, and believers examine the rediscovered text, each voice finds something different in its pages — a warning, a prophecy, a confession, or a promise. And slowly, a picture emerges of a man who may not have been alone after all.</p>
<p>A derelict rover buried in Martian dust.</p>
<p>A manuscript encoded into telemetry.</p>
<p>A four‑day stretch of writing where reality seems to bend toward possibility.</p>
<p>Premonitions. Quantum echoes. Unexplained signals.</p>
<p>And through it all, a message that feels like it was written for us.</p>
<p>This multicast audio drama weaves together John K.’s rediscovered journal with the voices of those who study it, argue over it, and are changed by it.</p>
<p>A mystery, yes — but also a reminder:</p>
<p>Even at the edge of the unknown, hope survives.</p>