It was a blizzard, not a briefing: gravity wells and orbital trajectories, shear-stress simulations in thunderheads of ammonium and hydrogen, stereoscopic planetscapes buried under filters ranging from gamma to radio. I saw breakpoints and saddlepoints and unstable equilibria. I saw fold catastrophes plotted in five dimensions. My augments strained to rotate the information; my meaty half-brain struggled to understand the bottom line.
Something was hiding down there, in plain sight.
Ben’s accretion belt still wasn’t behaving. Its delinquency wasn’t obvious; Sarasti hadn’t had to plot every pebble and mountain and planetesimal to find the pattern, but he’d come close. And neither he nor the conjoined intelligence he shared with the Captain had been able to explain those trajectories as the mere aftermath of some past disturbance. The dust wasn’t just
Not all that debris seemed to hit. Ben’s equatorial regions flickered constantly with the light of meteorite impacts — much fainter than the bright wakes of the skimmers, and gone in the wink of an eye — but those frequency distributions didn’t quite account for all the rocks that had fallen. It was almost as though, every now and then, some piece of incoming detritus simply vanished into a parallel universe.
Or got caught by something in
Sarasti threw that one dead center: a bright contrail streaking diagonally across Ben’s perpetual nightscape, stuttering partway a degree or two to the left, stuttering back just before it passed from sight. Freeze-frame showed a beam of light frozen solid, a segment snapped from its midsection and jiggled just a hair out of alignment.
A segment nine kilometers long.
“It’s
“Not very well.” Bates emerged from the forward hatch and sailed spinward. “Pretty obvious refractory artefact.” She caught stairs halfway to the deck, used the torque of spin-against-spam to flip upright and plant her feet on the steps. “Why didn’t we catch that before?”
“No backlight,” Szpindel suggested.
“It’s not just the contrail. Look at the clouds.” Sure enough, Ben’s cloudy backdrop showed the same subtle dislocation. Bates stepped onto the deck and headed for the conference table. “We should’ve seen this earlier.”
“The other probes see no such artefact,” Sarasti said. “
“Wider angle to what?” Sascha said.
“To the line,” Bates murmured. “Between us and them.”
It was all there on tactical:
Except this one. This one had come in wide, and seen the trickery.
“The further from our bearing, the more obvious the discontinuity,” Sarasti intoned. “Think it’s clearly visible on any approach perpendicular to ours.”
“So we’re in a blind spot? We see it if we change course?”
Bates shook her head. “The blind spot’s
“
Szpindel twitched. “So what is it? Our skimmer factory?”
The freeze-frame’s pixels began to
Sometime during Sarasti’s executive summary we’d stopped accellerating.
“Er, that’s thirty klicks across,” Sascha pointed out. “And it’s
Szpindel shrugged. “We could second-guess vampires, we wouldn’t