He’d seen that once, a long time ago, when this war first began. Seen the bodies floating frozen inside a ruptured hab, the only survivors a lucky few who scrambled into pressure suits. A lucky few like him.
Because of a three-pound bomb.
Multiply it by a hundred colonies and a dozen years. Three airless worlds. A fight over territory, culture, religion. The things man has always fought over.
Humans are as they have always been. In space though, the cost of zealotry is higher.
A thousand years ago, nations bankrupted themselves to raise armies. It cost a soldier to kill a soldier. Then came gunpowder, technology, increased population densities—gradually leveraging the cost of death along a sliding scale of labor and raw materials, until finally three pounds of basic chemistry had the power to erase whole swaths of society. Ever more effortless murder, the final statistical flat-line in the falling price of destruction.
“What is your name?” the old man asked him.
The boy didn’t answer.
“We need the names of the others.”
“I will tell you nothing.”
“That’s all we need, just the names. Nothing more. We can do the rest.”
The boy stayed silent.
They watched the viewscreen. The black hole grew. The expanding darkness compressed the surrounding star field. The old man checked his instruments.
“We’re traveling at half the speed of light,” he said. “We have two hours, our time, until we approach the
“If you were going to kill me, there are easier ways than this.”
“Easier ways, yes.”
“I’m worth nothing to you dead.”
“Nor alive.”
The silence drew out between them.
“Do you know what a black hole is?” The old man asked. “What it is, really?”
The young man’s face was stone.
“It is a side-effect. It is a byproduct of the laws of the universe. You can’t have the universe as we know it and not have black holes. Scientists predicted them before they ever found one.”
“You’re wasting your time.”
The old man gestured toward the screen. “This is not just a black hole though, not really. But they predicted this, too.”
“Do you think you can frighten me with this game?”
“I’m not trying to frighten you.”
“It makes no sense to kill me like this. You’d be killing yourself. You must have a family.”
“I did. Two daughters.”
“You intend to change course.”
“No.”
“This ship has value. Even your life must be worth something, if not to yourself then at least to those whose orders you follow. Why sacrifice both a ship and a man in order to kill one enemy?”
“I was a mathematician before your war made soldiers of mathematicians. There are variables here that you don’t understand.” The old man pointed at the screen again. His voice went soft. “It is beautiful, is it not?”
The boy ignored him. “Or perhaps this ship has an escape pod,” the boy continued. “Perhaps you will be saved while I die. But you’d still be wasting a ship.”
“I cannot escape. The line that pulls us can’t be broken. Even now, the gravity draws us in. By the time we approach the
“I don’t believe you.”
The old man shrugged. “You don’t have to believe. You have merely to witness.”
“This doesn’t make sense.”
“You think it has to?”
“Shut up. I don’t want to hear more from a Godless
“Godless? Why do you assume I am Godless?”
“Because if you believed in God, you would not do this thing.”
“You are wrong,” the old man said. “I do believe in God.”
“Then you will receive judgment for your sins.”
“No,” he said. “I will not.”
Over the next several hours, the black hole swelled to fill the screen. The stars along its rim stretched and blurred, torturing the sky into a new configuration.
The boy sat in silence.
The old man checked his instruments. “We cross the Schwarzschild radius in six minutes.”
“Is that when we die?”
“Nothing so simple as that.”
“You talk in circles.”
The old mathematician picked up the scalpel. He touched his finger to the razor tip. “What happens after we cross that radius isn’t the opposite of existence, but its inverse.”
“What does that
“So now you ask the questions? Give me a name, and I’ll answer any question you like.”
“Why would I give you names? So they can find themselves in chairs like this?”
The old man shook his head. “You are stubborn, I can see that; so I will give you this for free. The
“You’re saying we’ll still live once we pass it?”
“For most black holes, we’d be torn apart long before reaching it. But this is something special. Super-massive, and old as time. For something this size, the tidal forces are more dilute.”