Lyra held up the geode. The snowflake inside caught the station’s low light and scattered it into faint rainbows. “Look.”

Weeks later, the first synthetic hease bloomed inside a chilled reactor, following the snowflake’s blueprint. The domed station glowed with new air. Lyra kept the original crystal in her quarters, floating in zero-gravity, catching light.

Kael looked. Then he looked again.

Not a real one, of course. Real snowflakes couldn’t exist here. But inside a frozen geode, preserved for a billion years, a perfect hexagonal crystal had somehow formed. It was delicate, impossibly intricate, and utterly useless for hease extraction.

In the glass-domed botanical station on Europa, “hease” was the most valuable currency—a rare, breathable essence extracted from the moon’s subsurface vents. Lyra was a hease-harvester, and she’d just found a snowflake.

“Hease snowflake,” Lyra whispered, the term born on the spot. A contradiction. A key.

“Waste of time,” muttered her partner, Kael, scanning for energy signatures. “We need hease, not museum pieces.”