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PeterWatts_Blindsight

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Peter Watts 178 <strong>Blindsight</strong><br />

"Thirty-seven minutes," Sarasti had said, and none of us could<br />

fathom how he'd come to that number. Only Bates had dared to<br />

ask aloud, and he had merely glinted at her: "You can't follow."<br />

Vampire logic. From an obvious premise to an opaque<br />

conclusion. Our lives depended on it.<br />

The retros followed some preprogrammed algorithm that mated<br />

Newton with a roll of the dice. Our vector wasn't completely<br />

random—once we'd eliminated raceways and growth zones, areas<br />

without line-of-sight escape routes, dead ends and unbranched<br />

segments ("Boring," Sarasti said, dismissing them), barely ten<br />

percent of the artefact remained in the running. Now we dropped<br />

towards a warren of brambles eight kilometers from our original<br />

landing site. Here in the midst of our final approach, there was no<br />

way that even we could predict our precise point of impact.<br />

If Rorschach could, it deserved to win.<br />

We fell. Ridged spires and gnarled limbs sectioned the sky<br />

wherever I looked, cut the distant starscape and the imminent<br />

superJovian into a jagged mosaic veined in black. Three<br />

kilometers away or thirty, the tip of some swollen extremity burst<br />

in a silent explosion of charged particles, a distant fog of ruptured,<br />

freezing atmosphere. Even as it faded I could make out wisps and<br />

streamers swirling into complex spirals: Rorschach's magnetic<br />

field, sculpting the artefact's very breath into radioactive sleet.<br />

I'd never seen it with naked eyes before. I felt like an insect on a<br />

starry midwinter's night, falling through the aftermath of a forest<br />

fire.<br />

The sled fired its brakes. I snapped back against the webbing of<br />

my harness, bumped against the rebounding armored body next to<br />

me. Sascha. Only Sascha, I remembered. Cunningham had<br />

sedated the rest of them, left this one core lonely and alone in the<br />

group body. I hadn't even realized that that was possible with<br />

multiple personalities. She stared back at me from behind her<br />

faceplate. None of her surfaces showed through the suit. I could<br />

see nothing in her eyes.<br />

That was happening so often, these days.<br />

Cunningham was not with us. Nobody had asked why, when<br />

Sarasti assigned the berths. The biologist was first among equals

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