“I’m
“So am I. Take a number. Wait your turn.”
He
“Guess you’re pretty hungry after all that exhausting lying around, eh?” Szpindel waved at the galley. “Eat something. Be with you in a few minutes.”
I forced myself to work up my latest synopsis while I ate, but that only took half a mind; the other still shivered in residual thrall to fight-flight. I tried to distract it by tapping the BioMed feed.
“It was
Szpindel cleared his throat. “Try this one.”
The feed showed what she saw: a small black triangle on a white background. In the next instant it shattered into a dozen identical copies, and a dozen dozen. The proliferating brood rotated around the center screen, geometric primitives ballroom-dancing in precise formation, each sprouting smaller triangles from its tips, fractalizing, rotating,
A sketchpad, I realized. An interactive eyewitness reconstruction, without the verbiage. Susan’s own pattern-matching wetware reacted to what she saw —
It wasn’t, though. It was all just feedback and correlation. It doesn’t take a telepath to turn one set of patterns into another. Fortunately.
“That’s it! That’s
The triangles had iterated out of existence. Now the display was full of interlocking asymmetrical pentagrams, a spiderweb of fish scales.
“Don’t tell us that’s
“No,” Szpindel said, “It’s a Klüver constant.”
“A—”
“It’s a hallucination, Suze.”
“Of
“It was in your head all along. It was in your head the day you were born.”
“No.”
“It’s an artefact of deep brain structure. Even congenitally blind people see them sometimes.”
“None of us have seen them before.
“I believe you. But there’s no
“But it was so vivid! Not that flickering corner-of-your-eye stuff we saw everywhere. This was
“That’s how you can tell it wasn’t. Since you don’t actually
“Oh,” James said, and then, softly: “Shit.”
“Yeah. Sorry.” And then, “Any time you’re ready.”
I looked up; Szpindel was waving me over. James rose from her chair, but it was Michelle who gave him a quick disconsolate squeeze and Sascha who grumbled past me on her way to their tent.
By the time I reached him Szpindel had unfolded the couch into a half-cot. “Lie down.”
I did. “I wasn’t talking about back in
“Raise your left hand,” he said. Then: “
I lowered my right, winced at the pinprick. “That’s a bit primitive.”
He eyed the blood-filled cuvette between his thumb and forefinger: a shivering ruby teardrop the size of a fingernail. “Wet sample’s still best for some things.”
“Aren’t the pods supposed to do everything?”
Szpindel nodded. “Call it a quality-control test. Keep the ship on its toes.” He dropped the sample onto the nearest countertop. The teardrop flattened and burst; the surface drank my blood as if parched. Szpindel smacked his lips. “Elevated cholinesterase inhibitors in the ret. Yum.”
For all I knew, my blood results actually
No wonder he’d bonded with Michelle. He was almost synesthesiac himself.
“You spent a bit longer in there than the rest of us,” he remarked.
“That’s significant?”
A jerking shrug. “Maybe your organs got a bit more cooked than ours. Maybe you just got a delicate constitution. Your pod would’ve caught anything — imminent, so I figure — ah.”
“What?”
“Some cells along your brainpan going into overdrive. More in your bladder and kidney.”
“Tumors?”
“What you expect?
“But the pod—”