The Signal
One girl found it in the data. The other felt it in her dreams. Something is transmitting from the deep ocean — and two teenagers in Sundance, Wyoming are the only ones paying attention.
What You'll Receive
When you subscribe, you'll immediately receive Veyla Plumb's full research report: "Acoustic Anomalies and Unidentified Submerged Objects: A Data-Driven Analysis of Deep-Ocean Incident Clustering."
Thirteen pages. Forty-seven unexplained whale deaths. Cross-referenced with NOAA acoustic anomaly records, 9,000 USO sightings from the Enigma database, USS Omaha transmedium footage, and testimony from the November 2024 House Oversight hearing on unidentified anomalous phenomena.
Veyla built this analysis from publicly available data — congressional transcripts, Navy hydrophone logs, marine biology databases. She's methodical, skeptical, and increasingly unsettled by what her own numbers are telling her.
Amelia Moon doesn't have a spreadsheet. She has dreams she can't explain, a necklace that hums at frequencies she shouldn't be able to hear, and a growing certainty that whatever Veyla is tracking from above, she's been feeling from below.
They're following the same signal. The Signal follows them both.
Amelia’s
Experience
Dream fragments, moments the Eternal Chain responds to something deep, and pieces of a story that won't stay inside the pages of a book.
Veyla’s
Data
New whale mortality events, acoustic anomalies, and USO incident analysis as the data evolves. Congressional updates as the House Oversight Committee's investigation advances.
Behind
the Book
Notes from the author on how real-world ocean science is shaping the series, where the story is headed, and what's coming next from Sundance.
“The questions my fictional teenager is asking are the same questions that retired admirals and congressional representatives are now asking on the public record.”
–R.J. Roark
Author, Amelia Moon and the Sundance Shadow