Wanhai — Telex

WANHAI 286 // URGENT // STOP ALL UNITS // REEFER CONTAINER WHLU-8821 // LOCATION: 22°15'N 120°17'E // TRANSMITTING VHF CH 16 // REPEAT // HUMAN LIFE DETECTED // SIGNED // CAPT. SUNG Lin stared. Wan Hai 286 had been scrapped in Bangladesh three months ago. He’d attended the virtual auction himself. And the coordinates—that was open sea south of the Pratas Islands, a place no Wan Hai vessel had sailed in weeks.

TELL MY WIFE THE ORCHIDS NEED SULFUR.

He didn’t know Captain Sung’s wife, but he knew sulfur was used to acidify soil for Cymbidium ensifolium —the orchid Sung had written a paper about, back when he was a young third officer. wanhai telex

FIVE SOULS. NO POWER. HULL INTEGRITY 12%. FOLLOWING YOUR TRANSPONDER. ETA DAWN. GODSPEED. Lin checked the AIS. No vessel within fifty miles. No transponder but his own. Then the telex printed one final line, smaller, as if the machine were running out of strength: WANHAI 286 // URGENT // STOP ALL UNITS

The telex machine never worked again. Lin keeps it in his office, though. Sometimes, late at night, the green light flickers. And when the wind blows from the south, he swears he can smell orchids and salt. He’d attended the virtual auction himself

The Wan Hai telex machine sat in a corner of the Kaohsiung shipping office, its green light pulsing like a quiet heartbeat. No one had used it in years—not since satellites and fiber optics made such clattering relics obsolete. But on this humid October night, as Typhoon Krathon lashed the windows, the machine groaned to life.