She beamed at him with the beatific glow of the true convert. “There’s an intuition, Dan. It’s capricious, it’s unreliable, it’s corruptible—but it’s so powerful when it works, and it’s no coincidence that it ties into the same parts of the brain that give you the rapture. The Bicamerals harnessed it. They amped the temporal and they rewired the parietals—”
“You mean ripped them out completely.”
“—and they had to leave conventional language back in the dust, but they figured it out. Their religion, for want of a better word, goes places science can’t. Science backs it up, as far as science can go; there’s no reason to believe it doesn’t keep right on working after it leaves science behind.”
“You mean you have faith it keeps working,” Brüks observed drily.
“Do you measure Earth’s gravity every time you step outside? Do you reinvent quantum circuits from scratch whenever you boot up, just in case the other guys missed something?” She gave him a moment to answer. “Science depends on faith,” she continued, when he didn’t. “Faith that the rules haven’t changed, faith that the other guys got the measurements right. All science ever did was measure a teensy sliver of the universe and assume that everything else behaved the same way. But the whole exercise falls apart if the universe doesn’t follow consistent laws. How do you test if that’s true?”
“If two experiments yield different results—”
“Happens all the time, my friend. And when it does, every good scientist discounts those results because they failed to replicate. One of the experiments must have been flawed. Or they both were. Or there’s some unknown variable that’ll make everything balance out just as soon as we discover what it is. The idea that physics itself might be inconsistent? Even if you considered the possibility in your wildest dreams, how could you test for it when the scientific method only works in a consistent universe?”
He tried to think of an answer.
“We’ve always thought c and friends ruled supreme, right out to the quasars and beyond,” Lianna mused. “What if they’re just—you know, some kind of local ordinance? What if they’re a bug? Anyway”—she fed her plate into the recycler—“I gotta go. We’re test-firing the chamber today.”
“Look, science—” He marshaled his thoughts, unwilling to let it go. “It’s not just that it works. We know how it works. There’s no secret to it. It makes sense.”
She wasn’t looking at him. Brüks followed her eyes to the bulkhead feed. They all seemed more or less mended by now—Chinedum, Amratu, a handful of other demigods who’d never be more than names and ciphers to him—although the pressure still kept them captive for the moment. Still insufficiently omnipotent to speed the physics of decompression. It was a small comfort.
“Those guys do not make sense,” he continued. “They roll around on the floor and ululate and you write up the patent applications. We don’t know how it works, we don’t know if it’s going to keep working, it could stop working at any moment. Science is more than magic and rituals—”
He stopped.
Ululations. Incantations. Hive harmonics.
Rituals.
These feeds have motion cap, he remembered.
Colonel Jim Moore crouched sideways against the Commons wall like a monstrous grasshopper: legs folded tight at the knees, spring-loaded and ready to pop; thorax folded over them like a protective carapace; one hand dancing with some unseen ConSensus interface while the other, wrapped around a convenient cargo strap, held body to bulkhead. His eyes jiggled and danced beneath closed lids: blind to this impoverished little shell of a world, immersed in some other denied Daniel Brüks.
The grasshopper opened its eyes: glazed at first, clearing by degrees.
“Daniel,” it said dully.
“You look awful.”
“I asked for an onboard cosmetics spa before we launched. They went for a lab instead.”
“When was the last time you ate?”
Moore frowned.
“That does it. I’m buying, you’re eating.” Brüks stepped over to the galley.
“But—”
“Unless you think that anorexia’s the best way to prep for an extended field op.”
Moore hesitated.
“Come on.” Brüks punched in an order for salmon steak (he was still tickled by the fabber’s proficiency with extinct meats). “Lianna’s back in the hold, and Rakshi’s—being Rakshi. You want me eating with Valerie?”
“So this is a rescue mission.” Moore unfolded himself onto the deck, relenting at last.
“That’s the spirit. What do you want?”
“Just coffee.”
Brüks glared at him.
“Okay, fine. Anything.” The Colonel waved a hand in surrender. “Kruggets. With Tandoori sauce.”
Brüks winced and relayed the order, tossed a ’bulb of coffee across the compartment (Coriolis turned it into a curveball but Moore caught it anyway with barely a glance), grabbed one for himself and twisted the heat tab en route. He set the wobbly warming sphere onto the table and wound his way back to collect their meals.
“Still going over the Theseus data?” He pushed Moore’s fluorescent krill across the table and sat down opposite.
“I thought the whole point of this was to get my mind off that.”
“The point was to get you off your damn hunger strike,” Brüks said. “And to get me something to talk to besides the walls.”
Moore chewed, swallowed. “Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
“Warn me?”
“I distinctly remember raising the possibility—the likelihood, even—that you might be bored out of your skull.”
“Believe me, I’m not complaining.”
“Yes you are.”
“Maybe a little.” (Why did everything from the galley taste like oil?) “But it’s not so bad. I got ConSensus, I got Lee to try and deprogram. Weigh a little cabin fever against getting stashed with the luggage for the next six months—”
“Believe me.” Moore smiled faintly. “There are worse things than extended unconsciousness.”
“For example?”
Moore didn’t answer.
The Crown did, though. In an instant she turned half the bulkhead bloody with Intercom alarms.
SENGUPTA, they screamed.
Moore commed the Hub while Brüks was still peeling himself off the ceiling. “Rakshi. What—”
Her words cascaded back, high pitched and panicky: “She’s coming oh shit she’s coming up she knows—”
A pit opened in Brüks’s stomach.
“I’m on to her I think she knows of course she knows she’s a fucking vampire she knows everything—”
“Rakshi, where—”
“Listen to me you stupid roach she kil—oh fu—”
The channel died before she could finish, but it didn’t really matter. You could have heard the screaming halfway to Mars.
Moore was through the ceiling in an instant. Brüks followed in his wake, a jump up the ladder, a grab for a passing handhold, the endless loop of the conveyor pulling him smoothly along the weight-loss gradient from hab to Hub. Moore had no time for that shit; he shot up the ladder two rungs at a time, then three, then four. He ricocheted free-falling out the top of the spoke before the belt had drawn Brüks even halfway. That was okay. Maybe he’d have everything fixed by the time Brüks made it to the top, maybe Sengupta’s screams of rage would end and calm soothing voices would murmur in their stead, intent on reconciliation…