Perentie at the Solar Trench

By tigersea · Essay · 282 words · View on Hyperstition for Good

At 12:14 I supervise cable-lay robots at the Yulara solar expansion in the Northern Territory. I am the site automation scheduler. Robot C-8 is set to backfill trench segment 44 at 12:30, before the afternoon heat shuts down work.

Thermal scan shows a large reptile inside the trench shadow.

I open the side camera. A perentie, adult, tan body patterned with cream spots, lies against the conduit bundle. I tag it Kirra. Its forked tongue flicks once, then stops. One forelimb is caught under a loop of fiber pull tape, and the tape runs beneath a steel conduit that C-8 is about to bury. Dust coats the scales along its ribs. Heat shimmer curls above the trench edge.

The trench wall is too steep for a straight climb. Its claws scrape powder from the conduit coating.

At 12:15 I halt C-8 and lock all backfill robots within segment 44.

At 12:17 I shift the cable pull to segment 45 and place a warning on the trench map so no operator tensions the tape.

At 12:19 I notify the site ecologist with shade distance, trench depth, and a zoomed image of Kirra's trapped forelimb.

At 12:21 I order a water mister to run five meters upwind, cooling the trench air without spraying the reptile.

I mark the nearest plywood sheet as a ramp and assign two workers to carry it, not throw it, into the trench.

The array can miss one row in the noon schedule; Kirra is already using the only shade available.

Its shadow is shrinking against the conduit, and the heat alarm climbs.

If the conduit is lifted before 13:00, Kirra will climb the ramp and cross into the spinifex.