As the Slowdown deepened, their progress grew smoother.
After a full nanosecond of near-side time, they appeared to be leaving
the Planck worms behind. After a microsecond, the worms slipped back
out of range of the probes, and there was nothing to be seem but the
At sixty microseconds, the toolkit signaled an alarm and the ship dragged them back to full speed.
The
Tchicaya glanced down into the darkness, as if his eyes could reveal something that the probes, responsible for the entire scene, had missed.
Mariama frowned. "Different how?"
"I have no idea. The probes don’t even scatter back from the boundary. I’ve tried redesigning them, but nothing works. Anything I send down simply vanishes." For all its knowledge and speed, the toolkit had never been intended to act as much more than a repository of facts. It couldn’t begin to cope with novelty in the manner of the people who’d contributed to it.
They sat and discussed the possibilities. Tchicaya had
learned quite a bit from his faction’s experts, and Mariama even more,
but they needed a bigger group; on the
For weeks, they argued and experimented. They took turns sleeping for an hour each; even without any fixed, bodily need to recuperate, their minds were still structured to function best that way. The toolkit diligently analyzed vast lists of possibilities, sorting through the quantum states that might be swallowing all their probes without a trace, hunting for a new design that would avoid that fate and return with solid information.
Nothing worked. The darkness beneath them remained inscrutable.
They had no way of knowing how long it would be until the Planck worms came flooding down after them. On bad days, Tchicaya consoled himself with the thought that when they died, the Planck worms might be buried with them. On worse days, he faced the possibility that brute mutation would find a way through, where all their passion and borrowed ingenuity had failed.
On the thirty-seventh day, Tchicaya woke and looked around the scape. They’d tried all manner of distractions for the sake of inspiration, but no stroll through a forest, no mountain hike, no swim across a sunlit lake had led them to the answer. So they’d stopped ransacking their memories for places to camp, and returned to the unpalatable truth. They were stranded in an ugly, barren cave in the pockmarked rind of an alien universe, waiting to be corroded into noise by a billion species of ravenous sludge.
Mariama smiled encouragingly. "Any revelatory dreams?"
"I’m afraid not." He’d dreamed he was a half-trained Sapper from the legend, suddenly confronted by a new kind of bomb, falling beside it toward a landscape of shadows that might have been anything from a desert to a vast metropolis.
"My turn, then. Come on, get up."
"I will. Soon." She could just as easily conjure up a bed of her own, but taking turns with one imposed a kind of discipline.
Tchicaya closed his eyes again. Sleep had lost all power to assuage his weariness, but it was still an escape while it lasted. He’d understood from the start that their struggle was quixotic, but he’d never imagined such a dispiriting end. They’d spend their last days writing equations on paper planes, and tossing them into an abyss.
As he drifted back toward sleep, he pictured himself
gathering up a mountain of crumpled paper and heaving it out of the
He opened his eyes. "We launch all our paper planes at once. Then we throw a message back, and use it to clear away all the garbage."
Mariama sighed. "What are you ranting about?"
Tchicaya beamed at her. "We have a list of the kind of
states the region below us might be in, and we have strategies for
dealing with them all. But we still haven’t found a probe that will
cross through and return — giving us a definite answer, letting us know
which strategy to use. Fine. We put the
Mariama was speechless. It took Tchicaya several seconds to interpret this response; he had rarely surprised her, and he had certainly never shocked her before.
She said, "Who cares about quantum divergence, if one world out of every quadrillion is the best of all possible worlds? That sounds like some desperate fatalist nonsense from the last days before the Qusp."