Sadassa Silvia showed up at four o"clock wearing a light brown jumpsuit, a yellow sweater, hooped earrings to match her Afro-natural hair. She had a solemn expression on her face, as before.

Seated across from me in my office she said, "As I drove up here I asked myself why you might be interested in any unusual dreams I have had. I keep a notebook for my shrink in which every morning I'm supposed to write down my dreams-before I forget them. I've been doing that as long as I've been seeing Ed, which is almost two years."

Tell me," I said.

"Do you want to know? Do you really want to? All right, I've had the feeling for three weeks now - it began on a Thursday - that someone is talking to me in my sleep."

"Man? Or woman?"

Sadassa said, "In between. It's a very calm voice, modulated. I only retain an impression of it when I wake up ... but it's a favorable impression. The voice is very lulling. I always feel better after I've heard it."

"You can't remember anything it says."

"Something about my cancer. That it won't come back."

"What time of night - "

"Exactly three thirty," Sadassa said. "I know because my boyfriend says I try to talk back to it; I mean, converse with it. I wake him up trying to talk, and he says it's always the same time of night."

I had forgotten about her boyfriend. Oh, well, I said to myself; I have a wife and family.

"It's as if I'd left the radio on very low," Sadassa continued. "To a faraway station. Like you get on shortwave late at night."

"Amazing," I said.

Sadassa said calmly, "I came to Progressive Records in the first place because of a dream, very much like the one I had last night. I was in a lovely green valley with very high grass, out in the country, fresh and nice, and there was a mountain. I floated along, not on the ground but weightlessly floating, and as I came toward the mountain it turned into a building. On the building they had put words, on a plaque over the entrance. Well, one word: PROGRESSIVE. But in the dream I could tell it was Progressive Records because I could hear the most incredibly dulcet music. Not like any music I have ever heard in actuality."

"You did the right thing," I said, "to act on that dream."

"Did I come to the right place?" She studied my face intently.

"Yes," I said. "You interpreted the dream right."

"You seem sure."

"What do I know?" I said jokingly. "I'm just glad you're here. I was afraid you wouldn't show up."

"I go to school - I will be going - during the day. Can we audition performers at night? I would expect so. We have to fit the job in around my school schedule."

"You don't want much," I said, a little nettled.

"I've got to go to school again; I lost so much time while I was sick."

"Okay," I said, feeling guilty now.

"Sometimes," Sadassa said, "I get the feeling that the government gave me cancer. Gave me a carcinogen to deliberately make me sick. It's only by a miracle that I survived."

"Good God," I said, jolted; I hadn't thought of that. Maybe it was so, everything considered. With her background. With what she knew, what she was. "Why would they want to do that?"

"I don't know; why would they? I'm paranoid, I realize that. But strange things happen these days. Two of my friends have disappeared. I think they're sticking "em in those camps."

My phone rang. I picked it up and found myself talking to Rachel. Her voice shook with excitement. "Nick - "

Tm with a client," I said.

"Have you seen today's LA TimesT

"No," I said.

"Go get it. You have to read it. Page three, the right-hand column."

Tell me what it says," I said.

"You've got to read it. It explains the experiences you've been having. Please Nick; go look at it. It really does!"

"Okay," I said. "Thanks." I hung up. "Excuse me," I said to Sadassa. "I have to go out front to the newspaper thing." I left my office, went down the hall to the big outside glass doors.

A moment later I had a copy of the Times and was carrying it back, reading it as I walked.

On page three in the right-hand column I found this article:

SOVIET ASTROPHYSICIST REPORTS RADIO SIGNALS FROM INTELLIGENT LIFE

Not from outer space as expected but emanating close to Earth.

Standing there in the hall, I read the article. The foremost Soviet astrophysicist, Georgi Moyashka, using a collection of interlinked radio telescopes, had picked up what he believed to be deliberate signals from a sentient life form, these signals containing the characteristics that Moyashka had anticipated finding. The big surprise, however, was their point of origin: within our solar system, which no one, including Moyashka himself, had anticipated. The US space people had already gone on record as saying that the signal undoubtedly emanated from old satellites put into space and then forgotten, but Moyashka was certain that the signals were of alien origin. So far he and his team had been unable to decode them.

The signals came in short bursts from a moving source that seemed to be circling Earth, perhaps six thousand miles away; they came on an unexpected ultrahigh frequency, rather than as short-wave emissions with greater carrying distance. The transmitter appeared to be powerful. One odd point that Moyashka had noted which he could not account for was the fact that the radio signals came only when the source was above Earth's dark or night side; during the day the signals ceased. Moyashka conjectured that the so-called Heaviside layer might be involved.

The signals, although short in duration, seemed "highly information rich" because of their sophistication and complexity. Curiously, the frequency changed periodically, a phenomenon found in transmissions seeking to avoid jamming, Moyashka stated. Further, his team had discovered, entirely by accident, that animals in their Pul-kovo laboratory underwent slight but regular physical changes during the time of signal transmission. Their blood volume altered and their blood pressure readings increased. Provisionally, Moyashka conjectured that radiation accompanying the radio signals might account for it. The Soviets (the article finished) planned to launch a satellite of their own to intercept the orbit of this Earth-rotating transmitter to confirm their theory that it was a satellite not of terrestrial origin. They hoped to photograph it.

From the pay phone in the hall I called Rachel back. "I read it," I said. "But Phil and I already have a theory."

Bitingly, Rachel said, "This isn't a theory; this is a fact. I heard it on the noon news, too. It's real, even if we deny it, the US denies it. I looked up Dr Moyashka in your Britannica; there's an article on him. He discovered volcanic activity on the moon and some kind of thing on Mercury; I didn't understand it, but every time, people said he was wrong or crazy. Stalin had him in a forced labor camp for years. He's highly esteemed; he's a big wheel in the Russian space program, and the radio today says he heads their CETI Project - „Contacting Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence." They're using telepathy and everything; they're really wild."

"Did the radio say how long they think the satellite's been transmitting?"

"The Russians just picked it up recently. They don't know anything about before that. But listen - short intense high-frequency bursts, always at night. Don't you receive your pictures and words around three A.M.? It fits, Nick! It does! You and Phil were thinking anyhow maybe it's a satellite orbiting Earth! I remember both of you talking about that!"

"Our new theory -" I began

"The hell with your new theory," Rachel said. "This is the biggest news in the history of the world! I'd think you'd be out of your mind with excitement!"

"I am," I said. "Catch you later." I hung up and returned to my office, where Sadassa Silvia sat, smoking a cigarette and reading a magazine.