Deep Current

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The first physicist jumped from the forty-second floor of the Luna Farside Research Complex on a Monday. I was assigned to the case because I was the detective who nobody wanted—too Earth-side, too old-school, too much of a habit of actually solving things.

Her name was Dr. Anya Petrova. Quantum theorist. Three publications in Nature. A husband on Mars who didn't believe in gravity's importance. She climbed out of her lab window at 2:47 PM and fell twelve stories onto the observation deck below. The coroner called it suicide. I called it what it was: a woman who saw something she couldn't unsee and decided the best option was to stop seeing.

I found her notebook under her cot in the dormitory. Eighteen pages of equations, none of which made sense. The last page read: the cracks are getting wider. I took the notebook and went to the only person who might know what it meant.

His name was O'Malley—a geologist who ran a private lab out of a converted cargo bay in Sector Four. He was Irish, or claimed to be; nobody on the Belt really knows where anyone claims to be from anymore. He looked at Petrova's equations, took off his glasses, cleaned them on his shirt, put them back on, and looked at them again.

"Where'd you get these?" he asked.

"From a dead woman."

"Right. And did she mention cracks?"

I told him no.

"She mentioned them to me. Three weeks ago. Said she was running a lattice diffraction experiment and the results were inconsistent. Not wrong—inconsistent. The same experiment, same setup, different results on repeat runs. I told her it was equipment drift. She said equipment doesn't drift like this."

I told him Petrova was dead.

He didn't flinch. He just nodded and said, "How long?"

"Since Monday."

"Then it's accelerated."

The authority—Interstellar Space Authority, the bureaucratic monster that governed all off-world research—denied everything. When I requested Petrova's full lab logs, they came back redacted so heavily they were basically black marker on white paper. When I asked Director Vasquez in person why a quantum theorist would jump, she smiled the smile of a woman who has practiced it in a mirror and said, "Tragedy, Detective. Sometimes brilliant minds are fragile minds."

I didn't believe her. Nobody with that much authority believes anything until it's profitable to believe it.

Dr. Linnea Voss was different. She was a former CERN researcher who'd transferred to the Belt after some kind of breakdown—nobody knew what kind, the records were sealed. She ran a private consulting lab and took cases the authority didn't want. I brought her Petrova's notebook and O'Malley's analysis.

She read for twenty minutes in silence. When she finished, she looked at me with eyes that had seen too much and didn't care anymore.

"The universe used to make sense," she said. "Before last year, if you ran an experiment, you got the same result every time. That's the deal. You put things in, things come out. The laws of physics are the contract."

"And now?"

"Now the contract's being breached. Something is editing the rules."

"Who?"

She smiled. It wasn't a nice smile. "That's the joke, Detective. I don't think it's who. I think it's what. And it's not doing it on purpose. It's doing it the way a man editing a manuscript doesn't think about every sentence—he just moves things around, deletes what doesn't fit, and hopes the story comes out right."

"The story?"

"The universe. Someone out there is editing the universe. And we're the text."

I spent the next six months following leads that went nowhere and coming back to Petrova's notebook again and again. Two more physicists died in that time—one in a lab fire that the authority called an equipment malfunction, one in the orbital slums of Earth's low orbit who simply walked off a maintenance platform and didn't try to catch herself.

On each death, I found the same phrase in their notes: the cracks are getting wider.

The end came on a Thursday in November. I was at Voss's lab, going through her files, when the lights flickered. Not a power surge—a real flicker. For maybe half a second, the room changed. Not darkened. Changed. The angles were wrong. The desk seemed flatter, as though someone had pressed it from above. Then it was normal again.

Voss was pale. "That's new," she said.

"What was that?"

"That's the world getting edited."

I left her lab and walked the corridors of the Luna Farside complex in silence. The other detectives asked me how it was going. I told them fine. The truth was too big for fine. The truth was that the universe was being edited, that physicists were dying because they saw the edits first, and that somewhere out there, something was working on reality like a man working on a manuscript—without thinking about what it was doing to the people who lived inside the sentences.

I filed my report. I recommended a full investigation. They thanked me and filed it under "other."

And I keep going to work every morning, drinking bad coffee and chasing ghosts, because that's what a detective does. You don't stop because the case is too big. You don't stop because the truth is too heavy. You keep going because stopping is worse.

The cracks are getting wider. I can feel them now, sometimes, in the corner of my eye. But I'm still here. Still breathing. Still doing the job.

That's all any of us can do.

================================================================================ OTMES v2 Objective Tensor Encoding System

Code: OTMES-v2-5D8C2F-078-M6-210-7R7000-7C50 E_total: 20.87 Dominant Mode: 6 (Suspense) Dominant Angle: 210.0° (Noir/Absurd) Rank: 8 Dominance Ratio: 0.65 Irreversibility: 0.6 M_Vector: [8.5, 0.5, 6.5, 4.5, 7.0, 9.5, 6.0, 8.0, 4.5, 6.0] N_Vector: [0.50, 0.50] K_Vector: [0.45, 0.55] TI_Estimated: 78.0 (T2 Disillusionment) Variant: V-03 Deep Current (Hard-Boiled Space Noir) ================================================================================


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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