The procession never stopped.
It was a strange attractor in the interstellar gulf; the paths along which the rocks fell was precisely and utterly chaotic. It was as though some Keplerian Black Belt had set up the whole system like an astronomical wind-up toy, kicked everything into motion, and let inertia do the rest.
“Didn’t think that was possible,” Bates said.
Szpindel shrugged. “Hey, chaotic trajectories are just as deterministic as any other kind.”
“That doesn’t mean you can even
“Yup.”
“
Szpindel shrugged like a marionette.
All the while the Gang had been slipping in and out of character, dancing with some unseen partner that — despite their best efforts — told us little beyond endless permutations of
“Did you send the Fireflies?” Sascha asked.
“We send many things many places,”
“We do not know their specifications. The Fireflies burned up over Earth.”
“Then shouldn’t you be looking there? When our kids fly, they’re on their own.”
Sascha muted the channel. “You know who we’re talking to? Jesus of fucking
Szpindel looked at Bates. Bates shrugged, palms up.
“You didn’t get it?” Sascha shook her head. “That last exchange was the informational equivalent of
“Thanks for casting us as the Pharisees,” Szpindel grumbled.
“Hey, if the Jew fits…”
Szpindel rolled his eyes.
That was when I first noticed it: a tiny imperfection on Sascha’s topology, a flyspeck of doubt marring one of her facets. “We’re not getting anywhere,” she said. “Let’s try a side door.” She winked out: Michelle reopened the outgoing line. “
“Cultural exchange,”
Bates’s brow furrowed. “Is that wise?”
“If it’s not inclined to give information, maybe it would rather get some. And we could learn a great deal from the kind of questions it asks.”
“But—”
“Tell us about home,”
Sascha resurfaced just long enough to say “Relax, Major. Nobody said we had to give it the right answers.”
The stain on the Gang’s topology had flickered when Michelle took over, but it hadn’t disappeared. It grew slightly as Michelle described some hypothetical home town in careful terms that mentioned no object smaller than a meter across. (ConSensus confirmed my guess: the hypothetical limit of Firefly eyesight.) When Cruncher took a rare turn at the helm—
“We don’t all of us have parents or cousins. Some never did. Some come from vats.”
“I see. That’s sad. Vats sounds so dehumanising.”
—the stain darkened and spread across his surface like an oil slick.
“Takes too much on faith,” Susan said a few moments later.
By the time Sascha had cycled back into Michelle it was more than doubt, stronger than suspicion; it had become an
I was.
“Tell me more about your cousins,”
“Our cousins lie about the family tree,” Sascha replied, “with nieces and nephews and Neandertals. We do not like annoying cousins.”
“We’d like to know about this tree.”
Sascha muted the channel and gave us a look that said
“Well, it asked for clarification,” Bates pointed out.
“It asked a follow-up question. Different thing entirely.”
Bates was still out of the loop. Szpindel was starting to get it, though…
Subtle motion drew my eye. Sarasti was back, floating above the bright topography on the table. The light show squirmed across his visor as he moved his head. I could feel his eyes behind it.
And something else, behind