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I just wrote a handwritten short “reminder”. A compilation will come (via blog) in time
I am thinking of adding things to RSS. Things I used to sub to, maybe new things
I lurk Linux IRC. Silently.
Sometimes hop onto COM[] on SDF
just a small update here. Raina d humidity but then low temps this evening, AM
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One: The Light That Would Not Answer
The USS Enterprise-D crossed the outer margin of the Helion Verge at warp six, moving through a region of space that had given Starfleet almost nothing but questions. There were no colonies nearby, no active trade routes, no distress calls, and no tactical warnings from any Federation outpost. On paper, it was exactly the kind of assignment Captain Jean-Luc Picard valued: quiet exploration, disciplined observation, and the patient work of learning before speaking. Later, no one aboard would agree on the precise moment the mission changed from routine survey to a Jesus in Star Trek: The Next Generation faith-based science fiction story unlike anything the Enterprise had ever recorded.
The official mission directive had been simple enough: chart gravimetric fluctuations near a collapsed subspace eddy, determine whether the phenomenon posed any future navigational danger, and gather data for Starfleet Science. Picard had read the order twice in his ready room before the bridge shift began, not because it was complicated, but because simplicity often hid the true weight of command. One sentence on a padd could become five hundred lives in jeopardy before the next watch rotation. It was the sort of thought he did not say aloud, though it settled in him with the familiar quiet pressure of duty, the same pressure explored in the related faith article about courage when mystery unsettles what we believe.
The bridge moved with its usual calm rhythm. Data monitored the forward sensor array with tireless precision. Worf stood at tactical, shoulders squared, every line of his posture suggesting that unexplored space was best respected with readiness. Riker occupied the first officer’s chair with the relaxed alertness of a man who trusted his captain but did not let trust become sleep. At conn, Ensign Gates made small navigational corrections as the stars stretched ahead on the main viewer like silver threads drawn across black glass.
Picard sat in the command chair and listened to the quiet music of competence. The low tones of the computers. The restrained acknowledgments from stations. The almost invisible exchange of glances between officers who had served together long enough to know when silence was calm and when it was waiting.
“Report, Mister Data.”
Data’s fingers moved across his console. “We are approaching the outer boundary of the gravimetric disturbance, Captain. The fluctuation pattern remains inconsistent with any catalogued subspace eddy collapse.”
“In what way?”
“The collapse should display diminishing turbulence along a predictable decay curve. Instead, the readings appear to increase in complexity as we approach.”
Riker leaned slightly forward. “Complexity from a natural phenomenon?”
“That is one possible interpretation,” Data said. “However, the pattern also contains intervals of symmetry. The intervals are too brief to support a definitive conclusion.”
Picard turned toward him. “Are you suggesting intelligence?”
“I am suggesting that the data does not yet permit me to exclude it.”
Worf’s eyes stayed on his console. “Captain, if the phenomenon is artificial, it may represent a concealed installation or a weapon.”
“It may,” Picard said. “Or it may represent a language we have not yet learned how to hear.”
Worf did not look persuaded, but he did not argue.
The main viewer showed no visible anomaly. Only the immense dark ahead, scattered with stars. That troubled Picard more than a storm of light would have. He had seen enough wonders to know that danger was not always dramatic. Sometimes the universe announced itself in silence.
“Reduce speed to impulse,” Picard ordered. “Bring us to a full sensor posture. No active probes until we understand how the phenomenon responds.”
“Aye, Captain,” Gates replied.
The Enterprise slipped out of warp, and the stars steadied.
For several seconds, nothing happened.
Then every console on the bridge dimmed.
Not failed. Dimmed.
The light did not go out. Power did not drop. No alarms sounded. Instead, the bridge seemed to pass beneath a shadow no one could see. Faces changed color in the lowered glow. The main viewer flickered once, twice, then stabilized on the same empty starfield.
Riker was on his feet. “Status.”
“Primary systems remain operational,” Data said. “Power distribution is nominal. There is no evidence of external interference.”
Worf checked tactical. “Shields are at full strength. No vessels detected.”
“Engineering to bridge,” Geordi La Forge’s voice came over the comm. “Captain, we just had a shipwide illumination drop, but I’m not seeing a power drain. It’s as if the lighting systems were instructed to lower output without a command pathway.”
Picard glanced at Data.
Data’s head tilted slightly. “That should not be possible.”
Picard rose. “Mister La Forge, begin a full diagnostic on all command pathways. Look for any unauthorized access, no matter how minor.”
“Already on it.”
“Doctor Crusher,” Picard said, tapping his badge, “any unusual reports from Sickbay?”
Beverly Crusher answered after a brief pause. “Nothing medical yet, Jean-Luc, but several crew members have reported a sudden feeling of pressure in the inner ear. No pain. No injury. I’ll keep monitoring.”
“Counselor Troi?”
Deanna’s voice came from her station, soft but focused. “Captain, I’m sensing unease across the ship, but that may simply be the crew responding to the event. There is something else, though.”
Picard turned toward her. “Go on.”
She looked toward the viewer, though there was nothing there to see. “It feels like attention.”
Riker frowned. “Attention?”
“As if something is aware of us,” Troi said. “Not hostile. Not exactly. More like… measuring.”
Worf’s hands moved immediately over tactical. “Captain, I recommend raising defensive readiness.”
“Noted,” Picard said. “Yellow alert. Maintain shields. No weapons lock unless a target presents itself.”
The alert lights came up, casting the bridge in gold. The change should have sharpened the moment, given it familiar shape. Starfleet trained its officers for uncertainty by giving uncertainty procedures. Yet Picard felt the subtle failure of procedure here. Yellow alert did not answer the deeper question. Shields did not protect against being known.
“Captain,” Data said, “the phenomenon has shifted.”
“On screen.”
The starfield vanished.
In its place appeared a field of pale light, not bright enough to blind, but vast enough to erase any sense of distance. It did not resemble a nebula. It had no discernible boundary, no cloud structure, no particulate motion. It looked, Picard thought, almost like a curtain illuminated from behind.
“Magnification,” he said.
“No change,” Data replied. “The image does not respond to optical magnification. It remains visually identical at all scales.”
Riker folded his arms. “That’s comforting.”
“Comforting, Commander?”
“Not the word I was looking for.”
A brief silence passed through the bridge. Not fear. The Enterprise crew did not frighten easily. But every officer present understood that they were looking at something that refused to enter their categories.
“Is it in our path?” Picard asked.
Data worked another sequence. “That is difficult to determine. Sensors report the phenomenon at a distance of four hundred thousand kilometers. Simultaneously, they report it at a distance of twelve meters.”
Worf turned sharply. “Twelve meters?”
“Affirmative.”
“That places it inside the ship.”
“No,” Data said. “It places the reading inside the ship. I have not confirmed the phenomenon’s physical presence.”
“Bridge to Engineering,” Picard said.
“La Forge here.”
“Geordi, are you seeing internal readings from the anomaly?”
A pause followed. Picard could hear activity behind Geordi’s voice when he answered. “Yes, sir. That’s the part I was hoping was a sensor ghost.”
“Location?”
“It’s not holding still. For a second it looked like it was near the warp core. Then Ten Forward. Then main shuttlebay. Now I’m getting traces near Deck Twelve. Captain, I don’t think it’s moving. I think our sensors are trying to describe something they don’t know how to map.”
Picard absorbed that. “Continue diagnostics. Keep me informed.”
“Aye, Captain.”
Data turned from his station. “Captain, there is another irregularity. The computer has begun creating an unauthorized file.”
“What kind of file?”
“Unknown. It has no origin point, no author, no access command, and no storage location that I can identify. It appears in the main memory index only when I am not attempting to locate it.”
Riker looked at Picard. “A shy computer file?”
Data considered that. “That is a colorful but not wholly inaccurate description.”
“Can you display it?” Picard asked.
“I can attempt to do so.”
Data entered the command.
For a moment, the pale field on the main viewer disappeared, replaced by a blank screen. Then a single line of text appeared.
WHAT DOES A STARSHIP DO WITH A MAN IT CANNOT COMMAND?
No one spoke.
The words remained for five seconds.
Then they vanished, and the pale light returned.
Worf’s voice was low. “That was no natural phenomenon.”
Picard did not answer immediately. His eyes stayed on the viewer, but the question had moved somewhere behind his ribs. What does a starship do with a man it cannot command? It sounded like a challenge, but not merely tactical. There was something almost intimate about it, something aimed not at the Enterprise as machinery, but at the souls aboard her.
“Data,” he said at last, “trace the message.”
“I am unable to do so. It did not arrive through subspace communication, computer interface, sensor input, or any known carrier wave.”
“Then how did it appear?”
“I do not know, Captain.”
Picard heard the weight of that admission. Data did not use ignorance casually. For him, not knowing was not embarrassment; it was a precise boundary. Today that boundary had arrived on the bridge and placed a question on the screen.
“Captain,” Worf said, “I request permission to deploy security teams to sensitive areas.”
“Granted. Discreetly. We do not yet know whether we have an intruder or an invitation.”
Worf’s jaw tightened. “If something has entered this ship without permission, I would call that an intrusion.”
“So would I,” Picard said. “But our response must be more than reflex.”
Worf nodded once and began issuing orders.
Picard looked back to Data. “Continue analysis. I want every sensor log preserved, including corrupted data.”
“Aye, Captain.”
“Number One, with me.”
Riker followed Picard into the ready room.
The doors closed behind them, soft as breath. Picard crossed to the viewport. The same pale light waited outside, though whether outside still meant anything was becoming less certain.
Riker stood near the desk. “You’re thinking first contact.”
“I am thinking we have been addressed.”
“By something that can reach into our computer without leaving tracks.”
“Yes.”
“That usually makes me less diplomatic.”
Picard allowed himself the faintest smile, then let it fade. “The message referred to a man.”
“It may be metaphorical.”
“Perhaps. Or perhaps something is coming.”
Riker studied him. He had served with Picard long enough to recognize when the captain was not merely weighing options, but measuring himself against the moment. “We can pull back. Reestablish distance. Send a warning buoy and report to Starfleet.”
Picard turned from the viewport. “And if distance is meaningless?”
“Then we at least find out whether the phenomenon intends to follow.”
Picard walked to his desk but did not sit. The ready room held the artifacts of a life built around discipline: books, models, reports, remnants of civilizations that had trusted him with their stories for a little while. There were days when those objects comforted him. Today they looked like witnesses.
“The danger, Will, is assuming that because we command a starship, we are prepared to command every encounter.”
Riker’s expression softened. “No one expects you to command the universe.”
Picard looked at him.
Riker seemed to realize he had stepped closer to something private than rank usually allowed. He did not retreat, but he shifted. “What are your orders?”
There it was again. The familiar mercy of procedure. Orders. Decisions. Shape imposed on the unknown.
Picard moved back toward the bridge doors. “We observe. We do not provoke. We prepare for defense without surrendering curiosity.”
The doors opened.
Before Picard could step through, the shipwide comm chimed.
“Security to bridge.” The voice belonged to Lieutenant Burke, controlled but strained. “Captain, we have an unauthorized presence on Deck Ten. Outside Ten Forward.”
Picard’s eyes flicked to Riker. “Describe.”
A brief pause. “Human male. No combadge. No known uniform. He appeared in the corridor without transporter activity.”
Riker moved first, already heading for the turbolift. Picard followed.
“Security teams, hold position,” Picard said. “Do not engage unless threatened.”
Worf’s voice came over the comm, clipped and immediate. “Captain, I am en route.”
“Understood. Picard out.”
The turbolift doors closed around Picard and Riker.
“Deck Ten,” Riker ordered.
As the lift moved, Riker said quietly, “A man the ship cannot command.”
Picard did not answer.
The corridor outside Ten Forward was lined with security by the time they arrived. Worf stood at the center, phaser drawn but lowered. Two officers flanked him. Beyond them, near the wide windows overlooking the pale phenomenon, stood a man.
He wore no uniform, no armor, no insignia, no device that could be scanned at a glance and understood. His clothing was simple, light-colored, woven in a style that did not belong to any current Federation culture Picard could immediately identify. A darker outer garment rested over His shoulders. His hair was dark and fell near His shoulders. His beard was full, His face calm, His eyes attentive.
He did not look lost.
That struck Picard first.
People who appeared suddenly on starships without explanation usually displayed confusion, aggression, fear, disorientation, or some calculated imitation of innocence. This man stood with the quiet stillness of someone who knew precisely where He was and had no need to possess it.
Guinan stood a few meters away, just outside the entrance to Ten Forward. Her hands were folded in front of her, but her face had changed. Picard had seen Guinan regard hostile aliens, temporal distortions, grieving officers, drunken ensigns, and beings of tremendous power. He had seen caution in her. Humor. Sorrow. Even anger. But he had never seen her look quite like this.
Not afraid.
Shaken.
Picard slowed.
The man turned toward him.
For a moment, the corridor seemed to lose depth. Picard heard the distant murmur of Ten Forward behind the doors, the almost inaudible hum of the deck beneath his boots, Worf’s controlled breathing, Riker’s step beside him. Yet all those things receded.
The man’s gaze was not invasive. That almost made it worse. Picard had encountered telepaths, judges, gods with poor manners, admirals with colder eyes than any enemy. He knew the feeling of being examined. This was different. The man looked at him as though every burden Picard carried had been seen without being exposed.
Worf lifted his phaser a fraction. “Identify yourself.”
The man looked at Worf with no resentment. “I am not here to harm you.”
“That is not an answer.”
“No,” the man said gently. “It is the first thing you needed to know.”
Worf’s brow hardened. Riker stepped in before the Klingon could reply.
“I’m Commander Riker. This is Captain Picard of the Federation starship Enterprise. You are aboard without authorization. We need your name, your origin, and an explanation for how you got here.”
The man’s eyes moved from Riker to Picard.
“My name is Jesus.”
The corridor did not erupt. No one gasped. Starfleet officers were trained not to react theatrically to the unfamiliar. But Picard felt the air tighten.
Riker’s expression shifted only slightly. Worf looked unimpressed, perhaps because a name without context had no tactical value. One of the younger security officers glanced at another before remembering himself.
Guinan closed her eyes.
Picard noticed.
“Jesus,” Picard repeated carefully.
“Yes.”
“Jesus of where?”
The man’s face held a quiet sadness that Picard could not place. “Nazareth.”
Data arrived from the far end of the corridor, moving with more urgency than haste. He stopped beside Picard. “Captain, there is no transporter signature, no shuttle docking record, no site-to-site energy residue, and no evidence that this individual passed through any external access point.”
“Life signs?” Picard asked.
“Human,” Data said. “Or indistinguishable from human by tricorder analysis.”
Worf’s eyes stayed fixed on the man. “Many life forms can appear human.”
“That is correct,” Data said. He took a step toward Jesus. “Sir, may I scan you?”
Jesus looked at Data with interest, not the startled interest many people showed when first encountering an android, but something warmer and more complete.
“You may.”
Data lifted his tricorder and began scanning. The small device chirped. Data’s eyes moved across the readings.
“Your heart rate is unusually calm,” Data said.
“Is it?”
“Yes. Given the circumstances, a human subject would typically display elevated stress indicators.”
Jesus glanced down the corridor at the armed security officers, then back at Data. “A man may stand among weapons and still be at peace.”
Data paused, as if the sentence had entered more than one processor at once. “That is a psychological observation.”
“It is also an invitation.”
Riker’s eyes narrowed. “To what?”
Jesus looked at him. “To decide what kind of men you will be before fear decides for you.”
Worf’s grip on the phaser tightened. “Fear does not decide for me.”
Jesus turned to him. “Then you are free to lower your weapon.”
The corridor became very still.
Worf did not lower it.
Picard stepped forward. “That decision rests with me.”
Jesus turned back to him. “Yes. It does.”
There was no challenge in the words. That unsettled Picard more than defiance would have. He was accustomed to beings who tested authority by resisting it. This man seemed to affirm authority while quietly asking what spirit governed it.
Picard held His gaze. “Mister Worf, lower your weapon. Maintain security posture.”
Worf obeyed, though displeasure remained carved into his face.
“Thank you,” Jesus said to Worf.
Worf gave no answer.
Picard gestured toward Ten Forward. “We would prefer to continue this conversation somewhere less crowded.”
Jesus looked past him to the observation windows, where the pale light filled the stars. “Many aboard are troubled.”
“Understandably,” Picard said. “Your arrival coincides with an unknown phenomenon that has affected this vessel and communicated through our systems.”
“Yes.”
“You know the phenomenon?”
Jesus did not answer directly. “It knows how to ask questions that wound pride.”
Riker looked toward Picard. Data’s head tilted again.
Picard said, “Did you cause it?”
“No.”
“Are you part of it?”
“I have walked through storms I did not create.”
That answer, if it was an answer, sat in the corridor like a closed door.
Picard drew himself straighter. “You understand that I cannot allow an unknown person free movement aboard this ship.”
“I understand responsibility.”
“Then you will accompany us to Sickbay for medical examination and further questioning.”
Jesus nodded once. “I will walk with you.”
Worf stepped aside only enough to allow movement. Riker took position slightly behind Jesus, not aggressively, but carefully. Data remained close, watching Him with open curiosity. Guinan did not move.
As Jesus passed her, He stopped.
For the first time since Picard had arrived, the man seemed to give His full attention to someone else.
“Guinan,” He said.
Picard looked sharply at her.
Guinan’s face had gone very still. “I didn’t tell you my name.”
“No.”
Her voice lowered. “Have we met?”
Jesus looked at her with a tenderness that made the corridor feel too narrow. “You have listened for a long time.”
Guinan swallowed. Picard had known her long enough to understand how rare that was.
“To what?” she asked.
“To the sound behind all songs.”
No one spoke.
Guinan’s eyes shone, though no tear fell. “That’s not an answer you should know how to give.”
Jesus’ expression held both grief and joy. “Some answers are older than knowing.”
Worf shifted impatiently. “Captain.”
Picard nodded. “This way.”
They walked.
The corridor seemed longer than usual. Crew members had gathered at intersecting passageways despite the security perimeter. News traveled quickly aboard a starship, especially when no official explanation could outrun rumor. Picard saw faces he recognized only in passing: engineers off shift, a botanist still holding a sample case, two children under the care of a civilian teacher who gently pulled them back when Worf glanced their way.
Jesus noticed the children.
He did not stop, but His face changed with such open affection that one of them smiled before remembering to be frightened.
That small smile followed Picard into the turbolift.
“Sickbay,” he ordered.
The doors closed. Inside stood Picard, Riker, Worf, Data, and Jesus. Too many questions. Too little space.
Data broke the silence.
“Jesus of Nazareth, the historical records include multiple individuals bearing the name Jesus, though the association with Nazareth carries significant religious and cultural implications within Earth history.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“Are you claiming to be the central figure of the Christian tradition?”
Riker glanced at Data in a way that suggested the timing might have been better.
Jesus looked at Data. “Who do you say that I am?”
Data blinked. “I do not yet possess sufficient evidence to answer.”
“Then let your answer wait until it is honest.”
Data appeared to consider this deeply. “That is a reasonable epistemological instruction.”
Riker almost smiled despite himself.
Picard did not. The question had struck him with unexpected force. Who do you say that I am? Not what do your instruments say. Not what do your records say. Who do you say.
The turbolift opened.
Sickbay was ready. Beverly Crusher stood near the main biobed, medical tricorder in hand, her expression composed but wary. A nurse waited nearby. Wesley Crusher lingered just beyond the central area, trying and failing to look as though he had a routine reason to be there.
Beverly saw him. “Wesley.”
“I was helping with sensor correlation in Engineering,” he said quickly.
“This is Sickbay, not Engineering.”
“I know. I just thought if the readings—”
“Later.”
Wesley stepped back, though his eyes stayed on Jesus.
Beverly approached with professional calm. “I’m Dr. Crusher. I’d like to examine you.”
Jesus nodded. “You may.”
“Any pain? Dizziness? Memory loss?”
“No.”
“Do you know where you are?”
“Yes.”
“Do you know how you arrived here?”
Jesus looked at Picard before answering. “I was sent.”
Picard’s eyes sharpened. “By whom?”
Jesus sat on the biobed. “By the One who sees.”
Riker folded his arms. Worf looked as if his patience had become a physical object he was struggling not to break.
Beverly began the scan. Her tricorder gave ordinary sounds. That was almost disappointing.
“Human physiology,” she said. “Male. Approximately early thirties by cellular indicators, though there are some anomalies.”
“What kind?” Picard asked.
“None that suggest danger. His neural activity is unusually coherent. Stress hormones almost nonexistent. No signs of recent transport, radiation exposure, temporal displacement, or genetic manipulation.” She glanced at Jesus. “You are either the calmest patient I’ve ever had or my instruments are missing something.”
Jesus looked at her. “You have held many lives in your hands.”
Beverly’s expression changed, guarded now in a different way. “That’s part of the work.”
“And when you could not keep them?”
The room quieted.
Picard felt the question land too close to places Beverly did not display in front of a patient, certainly not in front of security and command officers.
Her voice cooled. “I did not ask for counseling.”
“No,” Jesus said gently. “You asked whether your instruments were missing something.”
She stared at Him.
Then, with visible effort, she returned to the tricorder. “I’m finding no medical reason to detain him in Sickbay.”
Worf reacted immediately. “Doctor, he appeared on this ship from nowhere.”
“I said no medical reason,” Beverly replied. “Security is your department.”
Wesley spoke before he could stop himself. “Could He be a projection? Something solid generated by the anomaly?”
Data turned to him. “A holographic projection outside a holodeck would require emitters that are not present in this section. Additionally, Doctor Crusher’s scans indicate biological function.”
“Then maybe the phenomenon is creating matter.”
“That would require energy conversion on a scale that should have been detected.”
Jesus looked at Wesley. “You are quick to search for how.”
Wesley flushed slightly. “That’s how you solve things.”
“Sometimes,” Jesus said.
“What else is there?”
“To ask why without using why as a weapon.”
Wesley looked confused, but not dismissive.
Picard stepped closer. “You speak as though you understand our situation, yet you offer no clear explanation. You must see the difficulty.”
“I do.”
“I am responsible for the safety of every person aboard this vessel.”
“Yes.”
“If your presence endangers them—”
Jesus met his eyes. “You would stand between them and danger.”
Picard stopped.
There it was again. No flattery. No challenge. A statement so simple it seemed to pass beneath rank and touch the man underneath.
“Yes,” Picard said. “I would.”
Jesus’ voice softened. “And who stands with you?”
The question was quiet.
No console beeped. No one interrupted. Even Worf seemed, for a second, unwilling to break it.
Picard’s face did not alter much. He had spent a lifetime building the kind of composure that could survive grief, battle, diplomacy, and the scrutiny of those under his command. But somewhere beneath the practiced stillness, the question found an unguarded chamber.
Who stands with you?
Riker looked at him, not intruding, but present. Beverly’s expression softened despite herself. Data watched as if the answer might reveal an essential human structure.
Picard drew a controlled breath. “That is not the matter before us.”
Jesus did not press. “No. Not yet.”
Picard turned away first. “Mister Data, escort our guest to a secure observation lounge. Not a brig cell unless circumstances require it. I want continuous monitoring, but no unnecessary force.”
Worf objected instantly. “Captain—”
Picard raised a hand. “He has cooperated. He has made no threat. We will not treat a guest as a prisoner simply because we are unsettled.”
Worf’s mouth tightened. “A guest is invited.”
Picard looked back at Jesus. “Then let us say he is being received while we determine the nature of his arrival.”
Jesus stood. “Words matter.”
“They often do,” Picard said.
As they prepared to leave Sickbay, Beverly stepped closer to Picard and lowered her voice. “Jean-Luc, I can’t explain it, but there is nothing medically deceptive about him. No elevated adrenaline. No concealed implant. No stress response. If he is lying, his body doesn’t know it.”
“Or our instruments don’t.”
“That too.”
Picard nodded.
On the way out, Jesus paused near Wesley.
“You desire to be useful,” Jesus said.
Wesley blinked. “I guess. Yes.”
“Then become the kind of man who can be trusted when being useful is not enough.”
Wesley had no answer. For once, he did not try to produce one.
They moved through the corridors again, this time with fewer visible onlookers, though Picard knew the ship was listening in the way ships did. Every crew had its own nervous system. The Enterprise’s was disciplined, but alive.
In the observation lounge, the stars were still hidden behind the pale light.
Data remained with Jesus while Picard, Riker, Worf, Beverly, Troi, and Geordi gathered near the conference table. Guinan stood by the windows, invited by Picard without explanation. No one questioned it. There were times Guinan belonged in the room before anyone knew why.
Jesus stood near the far end of the lounge, looking out.
Worf kept himself between Jesus and the doors.
Geordi set a padd on the table. “I’ve run every diagnostic I can without taking half the ship apart. No transporter event. No breach. No energy spike at the moment He appeared. But there is one thing.”
Picard turned. “Go on.”
“The anomaly’s internal readings stabilized when He appeared. Before that, the sensors were giving us locations all over the ship. Now they point to two places.”
“Which are?”
“The phenomenon outside the ship.” Geordi hesitated. “And Him.”
Worf’s eyes narrowed. “Then he is part of it.”
“Maybe,” Geordi said. “Or maybe the sensors are linking them because they both confuse the same systems.”
Data nodded. “That is possible. Unknown variables are often grouped erroneously when the framework of analysis is insufficient.”
Riker leaned against the back of a chair. “Can we move away?”
“We tried a micro impulse correction,” Geordi said. “The ship moved. The phenomenon remained exactly the same distance away.”
“Which distance?” Picard asked.
Geordi gave a humorless half-smile. “All of them.”
Troi looked toward Jesus. “I still sense attention. But there’s something else now.”
“From Him?” Picard asked.
She seemed careful. “From the phenomenon. It feels… dissatisfied.”
Worf scoffed softly. “Phenomena do not become dissatisfied.”
“Living minds do,” Troi replied.
Guinan spoke from the window. “So do old hungers.”
Everyone turned.
Picard studied her. “What do you perceive?”
Guinan kept looking at the light. “Not perceive. Remember, maybe. Or almost remember. There are things in the universe that don’t move like empires or species. They wait inside questions. They learn where people are proud. Where they are afraid. Where they can be divided from themselves.”
Riker’s tone was cautious. “Have you encountered this before?”
“No,” she said. “And yes. Not this. Something like the taste of it.”
Data said, “Taste is an imprecise metaphor for non-gustatory recognition.”
Guinan turned her head toward him. “That doesn’t make it wrong.”
Data accepted this with a small nod. “No. It does not.”
Picard looked toward Jesus. “You said it asks questions that wound pride. What is it?”
Jesus remained facing the light. “Something that believes love is a flaw.”
The room changed.
Not dramatically. There was no alarm, no explosion, no flicker of power. Yet Picard felt every officer receive the sentence in a different place. Worf as insult. Data as concept. Beverly as grief. Troi as ache. Riker as challenge. Geordi as a problem too large for engineering. Guinan as confirmation.
Picard received it as command.
“Belief implies mind,” Data said. “Mind implies motive. Motive implies potential communication.”
Jesus turned. “Yes.”
“Can it be reasoned with?” Picard asked.
Jesus’ eyes held his. “That depends on whether it has confused reason with conquest.”
Riker exhaled slowly. “I’m starting to miss ordinary anomalies.”
A small, needed breath of humanity moved through the room.
Picard approached Jesus. “You must understand our position. You appear aboard my ship at the center of an unexplained event. You speak in moral judgments about an intelligence we cannot detect. You claim no authority, yet your presence affects everyone in this room.”
Jesus listened as if every word mattered.
Picard continued, “I will not surrender this vessel to superstition, nor will I dismiss what I cannot immediately explain. If you have knowledge that bears upon the safety of this crew, I need you to share it plainly.”
Jesus said, “You are being studied.”
“By the phenomenon?”
“By what speaks through it.”
“For what purpose?”
“To learn whether mercy can survive power.”
Picard’s face hardened. “This ship is not an experiment.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It is a house filled with souls.”
Worf’s voice cut in. “We are Starfleet officers.”
Jesus looked at him. “And more.”
Worf seemed almost offended by the kindness of it.
Data stepped closer. “If we are being studied, then your presence may alter the conditions of the study.”
“Yes.”
“Were you sent to interfere?”
Jesus looked at Data with something like delight. “To bear witness.”
“To what?”
“To the truth.”
Data absorbed this. “Truth is a complex philosophical category.”
“It is also the ground beneath your feet whether you understand it or not.”
Data glanced down, then back up. “The deck plating is composed primarily of tritanium and duranium alloy.”
Jesus smiled faintly. “Yes. That too.”
Geordi looked between them, eyebrows raised. “I think he just made a joke with Data.”
“I am uncertain whether I was the subject or the recipient,” Data said.
The faintness of humor eased the room without dissolving its seriousness. Picard found himself grateful and wary of that gratitude.
The ship trembled.
Not violently. A subtle shudder passed through the deck, the kind one felt more in the bones than the ears.
“Bridge to Captain Picard,” came the voice of the duty officer. “Sir, the phenomenon is changing.”
Picard tapped his badge. “On my way. Senior staff to the bridge. Mister Worf, remain with our guest.”
Jesus looked at Picard. “I will come.”
Worf immediately stepped forward. “You will remain here.”
Jesus did not move.
Picard regarded Him. “Why?”
“Because the question is about to become visible.”
Picard weighed the request. Every rule urged containment. Every instinct urged information. Command was often the art of choosing which risk would still allow one to remain honorable afterward.
“Worf, escort Him. He remains under guard.”
Worf did not like it. “Aye, Captain.”
They returned to the bridge as the pale light on the main viewer began to fold inward.
That was the only way Picard could think to describe it. The field did not shrink. It folded, layer upon layer, like an impossible fabric being gathered by unseen hands. Within it, darkness appeared in thin lines. The lines intersected, withdrew, formed shapes, dissolved, then returned with greater precision.
Data moved to Ops. “Captain, the gravimetric fluctuations have synchronized with the ship’s bioelectric field.”
“Meaning?”
“The phenomenon is matching its pattern to the collective neurological activity aboard the Enterprise.”
Troi’s face tightened. “It’s listening to the crew.”
Worf took his tactical station, though his attention remained partly on Jesus. “Shields are holding, but I cannot determine against what.”
Geordi’s voice came from Engineering over the comm. “Captain, the warp core is stable, but I’m seeing resonance in systems that shouldn’t resonate together. Replicators, sensor relays, medical monitors, even the arboretum climate controls. It’s like the whole ship is being played as one instrument.”
“Can you dampen it?”
“I can try, but I don’t know what note we’re trying to stop.”
On the viewer, the folding light formed a shape.
Not a face. Not quite.
The suggestion of one.
A dark absence where eyes might be. A contour that implied attention without features. It lasted only an instant, then broke apart into lines of text, each appearing in a different language from the Federation database. Vulcan. Klingon. Betazoid. Andorian. Ancient Greek. Latin. Dozens more. Then all of them collapsed into Standard.
MERCY IS INEFFICIENT.
The bridge was silent.
A second line appeared.
COMPASSION WEAKENS SURVIVAL.
A third.
SACRIFICE IS A DEFECT IN THE STRONG.
Worf snarled under his breath. “Coward.”
Picard stood very still. “Open a channel.”
Data looked back. “There is no communication frequency to open.”
“Then transmit broadly. Audio, subspace, narrow beam, broadband, mathematical sequence. Every method.”
Data complied. “Ready.”
Picard faced the viewer.
“This is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation starship Enterprise. We are explorers on a peaceful mission. If you are an intelligence, we are prepared to communicate.”
The lines vanished.
For a moment, the pale field became empty again.
Then the bridge speakers emitted a sound.
It was not a voice at first. It was more like pressure turned audible. The sound pressed against the skull, not loud enough to injure, but deep enough to make several officers tense.
Words formed within it.
YOU COMMAND A VESSEL OF POWER AND CALL YOURSELF PEACEFUL.
Picard lifted his chin. “Power does not preclude peace.”
POWER EXISTS TO PREVAIL.
“No,” Picard said. “Power exists to serve life, when it is governed by conscience.”
The darkness within the light pulsed.
CONSCIENCE IS A RESTRAINT INVENTED BY THE VULNERABLE.
Jesus stood behind Picard, guarded by Worf, saying nothing.
Picard felt the impulse to look back at Him and resisted it. This was his bridge. His duty. His answer.
“Then you misunderstand both vulnerability and strength,” Picard said.
The sound deepened. Several consoles flickered.
Data spoke over it. “Captain, neurological resonance increasing across the ship.”
Troi gripped the side of her chair. “It’s provoking emotional responses. Fear. Anger. Shame. It’s touching old wounds.”
“Can you block it?” Riker asked.
“Not completely.”
On the viewer, new words appeared.
THE CAPTAIN STANDS ALONE.
Picard did not move.
The line remained.
THE CAPTAIN STANDS ALONE BECAUSE COMMAND IS THE ART OF SEPARATION.
Riker looked at Picard.
Beverly, who had come to the bridge and stood near the aft stations, watched him with concern she did not speak.
Picard felt something cold and precise enter the room. Not fear. Recognition. The intelligence had not guessed. It had found the shape of a private burden and displayed it before his crew.
He kept his voice steady. “You have gained access to personal impressions. That is not understanding.”
IS IT FALSE?
The question hung there.
Picard could have answered with doctrine. With command structure. With Starfleet ideals. With the necessary boundaries of leadership. All would have been true enough.
None would have been honest enough.
Before he could speak, Jesus stepped forward.
Worf moved with Him. “Stop.”
Jesus stopped.
He did not attempt to pass Worf. He did not raise His hand. He did not command the bridge, did not take Picard’s place, did not seize the moment.
He simply spoke from where He stood.
“A man may stand at the front and still be loved from behind.”
The words did not strike the viewer.
They struck the bridge.
Riker’s posture changed. Beverly looked down briefly. Troi’s eyes filled with pain and relief mingled together. Data turned toward Picard, studying not the statement alone, but its effect.
Picard did not look back.
Not yet.
The darkness in the light contracted.
LOVE IS LEVERAGE.
Jesus answered quietly, “Not love.”
DEPENDENCE IS FAILURE.
“Not among the living.”
MERCY COMPROMISES JUSTICE.
Jesus’ voice remained calm. “Mercy completes what vengeance cannot heal.”
The bridge lights flickered. Worf braced himself, as though expecting attack. Data’s hands flew across the controls.
Picard turned slightly now, not surrendering command, but acknowledging the presence beside it.
The intelligence spoke again, louder.
IDENTIFY THE VARIABLE.
Data’s console flashed. “Captain, it is directing the inquiry toward Jesus.”
On the viewer, the pale light sharpened into a single point.
IDENTIFY THE VARIABLE.
Jesus looked at the screen.
“I am not a variable to be solved.”
The ship trembled again, harder this time. A warning tone sounded from tactical.
Worf reported, “Shields fluctuating.”
Geordi’s voice cut in. “Captain, the resonance is moving through the EPS grid. I can keep it from cascading, but I need thirty seconds.”
“You have them,” Picard said. “Mister Data, assist Engineering.”
“Aye, Captain.”
The intelligence pressed again.
ALL THINGS ARE MEASURED.
Jesus said, “Then you have mistaken measurement for knowledge.”
ALL THINGS ARE USED.
“No.”
ALL THINGS ARE TAKEN.
Jesus’ face grieved. “That is what has wounded you.”
The viewer went black.
For one second, every star vanished. Every console froze. The bridge fell into darkness so complete that even the alert lights disappeared.
Then a sound emerged through the speakers.
Not pressure this time.
A whisper.
WE WILL SEE WHAT THEY BECOME WHEN MERCY COSTS THEM.
The bridge lights returned.
The pale phenomenon was gone.
Stars filled the viewer.
No one moved.
Data was first to speak. “Captain, external sensors show normal space. Gravimetric distortions have ceased.”
Geordi’s voice followed. “Engineering here. Systems are stabilizing. No permanent damage that I can see.”
Worf checked tactical. “No hostile vessel detected.”
Troi’s voice was faint. “It’s still aware of us.”
Picard looked at her.
She touched a hand to her chest, as though listening inwardly. “Farther away. But not gone.”
Picard turned to Jesus.
The man from Nazareth stood quietly on the bridge of the Federation flagship, surrounded by officers, consoles, starlight, suspicion, wonder, and the remnants of an impossible question. He did not look triumphant. He looked sorrowful, as if the threat had revealed not merely danger, but pain.
Picard approached Him slowly.
“You knew it would speak.”
“I knew it would answer.”
“Why here? Why this ship?”
Jesus looked around the bridge. His gaze rested on Worf, on Data, on Riker, on Troi, on Beverly, on the young officers trying not to stare, and finally on Picard.
“Because you travel far,” He said. “And because far is not the same as lost.”
Picard felt the sentence settle somewhere he did not intend to examine on the bridge.
Before he could respond, Guinan’s voice came from the turbolift.
No one had noticed her arrive.
“That’s not the unsettling part,” she said.
Picard turned. “What is?”
Guinan stepped onto the bridge, her eyes fixed not on Jesus now, but on the main viewer.
“The unsettling part,” she said quietly, “is that whatever spoke to us sounded certain.”
She looked at Jesus.
“And He sounded like He was grieving for it.”
The stars outside remained steady.
On Data’s console, unnoticed for three seconds and then noticed by everyone, a new file appeared in the ship’s memory index.
No author.
No location.
No command path.
Only a title.
FIRST MEASURE: THE CAPTAIN
Then, beneath it, a single line.
BEGIN WITH THE ONE WHO WILL NOT ASK FOR HELP.
Picard stared at the words until they disappeared.
No alarm followed.
No attack came.
Only the ordinary hum of the Enterprise returned, faithful and insufficient, carrying them forward through a darkness that had begun to ask personal questions.
Chapter Two: The Guest Under Watch
The first hour after the phenomenon vanished was more difficult than the moment of its arrival.
During an emergency, the Enterprise knew what to become. It became a vessel of motion and purpose. Officers moved with practiced urgency. Damage control teams reported by section. Engineering turned uncertainty into repair lists. Sickbay prepared for casualties whether casualties came or not. Security secured corridors, science officers preserved data, and the bridge became the sharp point of the whole ship’s will.
But when the danger withdrew without leaving a target, the ship had to become something else.
It had to become patient.
That was harder.
Captain Picard remained on the bridge until every department had given preliminary confirmation that the Enterprise was operational. No hull stress. No warp core instability. No medical emergency. No confirmed computer compromise beyond the impossible file that had appeared and then removed itself from every accessible index. The ship, by all measurable standards, was safe.
Picard did not find that reassuring.
“Maintain yellow alert,” he said.
Riker turned from the tactical readout Worf had transferred to the command display. “All shifts?”
“For now.”
“Aye, Captain.”
Picard felt the bridge watching without watching. No one stared at him openly. Starfleet discipline saved them from that. But the final line from the impossible file had spread through the command crew with the quiet force of something too personal to be contained.
Begin with the one who will not ask for help.
Picard had faced threats that wanted his ship, his surrender, his knowledge, his obedience, his death. He had been studied before by beings who saw him as a specimen, a representative, a rival, even a toy. But this intelligence had done something more intimate. It had chosen a wound and named it in front of his crew.
That was not strategy alone.
It was cruelty with patience.
Jesus stood near the aft stations, still under Worf’s supervision. The security chief had stationed two officers by the turbolift and one near the tactical arch. No phasers were raised, but none were far from hand. Jesus did not seem offended by this. He did not attempt to move freely or challenge the arrangement. He watched the crew work with a quiet attention that made even ordinary movements feel seen.
Data left Ops and approached Picard. “Captain, I have completed a preliminary comparison between the phenomenon’s communication pattern and known noncorporeal entities encountered by Starfleet.”
“Result?”
“No definitive match. There are superficial similarities to certain powerful life forms, but the message architecture differs. The intelligence did not merely transmit language. It appeared to select conceptual pressure points and render them linguistically.”
Riker came closer. “In plain terms?”
Data considered. “It did not speak first and mean second. It seemed to intend an effect, then selected words as the delivery mechanism.”
Troi, seated at her station, looked troubled. “That matches what I sensed. It wasn’t just communicating. It was pressing.”
Picard looked at her. “Against what?”
“Against whatever would make us defend ourselves from each other.”
The sentence sat on the bridge uneasily.
Worf’s voice was firm. “Then we should treat it as hostile.”
“We will treat it as potentially hostile,” Picard said. “There is a difference.”
Worf did not argue, though Picard could feel the disagreement remain standing between them like an officer awaiting dismissal.
Riker glanced toward Jesus. “And our guest?”
Picard looked at Him.
Jesus met his gaze, calm and unhidden.
The captain had not yet decided which word to use. Guest was too generous. Prisoner was unjustified. Intruder was technically accurate, but morally premature. Visitor sounded quaint. Unknown human male was precise but cowardly in its refusal to admit the obvious difficulty of the name He had given.
“My ready room,” Picard said. “Mister Worf, you will accompany us. Mister Data, Commander Riker, Counselor Troi, join me.”
Beverly, who had remained on the bridge after the first examination, folded her arms. “I’d like to be present.”
Picard nodded. “Very well.”
Guinan, near the turbolift, did not ask.
Picard looked at her. “You too.”
Worf’s brow shifted slightly, but he said nothing.
The ready room could not comfortably hold all of them, but comfort was not the priority. Picard took his place behind the desk and then decided, almost immediately, that the desk gave the wrong shape to the conversation. It made inquiry look like judgment. He moved instead to the open space near the viewport.
The stars had returned. Ordinary stars, ordinary distance, ordinary black. Picard knew better than to trust the appearance of normality simply because he needed it.
Jesus stood near the center of the room. Worf remained by the doors. Riker took a position to Picard’s right. Beverly stood near the wall, medical tricorder in hand though she was no longer scanning. Troi sat quietly, open but guarded. Data held a padd. Guinan stayed by the viewport, looking outward as though listening to something the glass could not stop.
Picard began without ceremony.
“You appear aboard my ship without explanation. An unknown intelligence uses our systems to speak in moral and psychological terms. It names me specifically. It identifies you as a variable. You claim you did not cause the phenomenon, but you also seem to understand it better than we do.”
Jesus listened.
Picard continued, “If you are asking for trust, you have not yet given us enough reason to offer it.”
“I am not asking you to pretend certainty,” Jesus said.
“Then what are you asking?”
“To begin with truth.”
“That is admirable. It is also vague.”
Jesus looked at him with something gentle enough to be mistaken for softness by a less observant man. Picard did not mistake it. “Then ask what you truly wish to ask.”
Riker shifted slightly. Beverly glanced at Picard, then away.
Picard disliked, quite intensely, the feeling that this man could see the question beneath the prepared questions.
“Are you human?” Picard asked.
“Yes.”
Data’s eyes moved quickly to his padd.
Picard held up a hand before Data could interject. “Are you only human?”
Jesus did not answer at once.
“No one aboard this ship is only what can be measured,” He said.
Data looked up. “That statement is poetic rather than categorical.”
Jesus turned toward him. “Is it untrue?”
Data paused. “No. It is not necessarily untrue. However, it does not satisfy the informational parameters of the captain’s question.”
“No,” Jesus said. “It does not.”
Picard felt a faint flicker of irritation. Not anger. Irritation was too small for the situation and therefore safer. “You understand that evasiveness increases risk.”
“I understand that answers can be used before they are received.”
“Received by whom?”
“By the part of a person willing to be changed by what is true.”
Worf’s patience broke its silence. “Captain, this is useless. He speaks in riddles.”
Jesus looked at him. “A riddle hides. A parable reveals slowly.”
“I did not ask for a parable.”
“No,” Jesus said. “You asked for control.”
Worf’s eyes flashed. Riker’s attention sharpened. The room seemed to hold its breath.
Picard spoke before Worf could. “Mister Worf is responsible for the security of this vessel.”
Jesus nodded. “And he carries that responsibility fiercely.”
“That is not a fault,” Worf said.
“No.”
Worf seemed prepared for correction, but not for agreement.
Jesus continued, “A sword is not evil because it is sharp.”
Worf stared at Him.
“But a sword does not know when to stop cutting unless the hand that holds it has been mastered by something greater than anger.”
The words landed with precision. Worf did not flinch, but the muscles in his jaw hardened.
Picard watched carefully. “Are you accusing my security chief of anger?”
“I am saying the enemy that spoke to you knows where anger waits to be called honor.”
Worf stepped forward. “You know nothing of my honor.”
Jesus looked at him with grief and respect together. “I know it matters to you.”
That stopped Worf more effectively than a rebuke would have.
Picard felt the conversation bending again, moving from information to exposure. He brought it back.
“What is the intelligence?”
Jesus turned to him. “It is old.”
“That does not answer the question.”
“It is wounded.”
“That does not answer it either.”
“Captain,” Troi said quietly.
Picard looked at her.
She seemed unsettled by what she sensed, but not from Jesus. “He isn’t avoiding the question to manipulate us.”
“Can you be certain?”
“No. But I sense no pleasure in withholding. Only sorrow.”
Beverly lowered her tricorder. “Sorrow about what?”
Jesus looked at her. “About what happens when a mind mistakes fear for wisdom.”
Guinan, still facing the stars, said, “And when it does that for a very long time.”
Jesus did not answer, but His silence confirmed more than Picard liked.
Data spoke. “You stated on the bridge that the intelligence believes love is a flaw. How did you acquire that knowledge?”
“I have met many who believed strength meant never needing mercy.”
“Are you referring to this specific intelligence or to a general moral pattern?”
“Yes.”
Data blinked once. “That answer is structurally ambiguous.”
Jesus’ expression softened. “Some patterns reveal the person. Some persons reveal the pattern.”
Data looked at Picard. “Captain, while the response remains imprecise, it suggests that Jesus is interpreting the phenomenon according to a moral taxonomy rather than a technological classification.”
Riker looked at him. “Meaning He’s not telling us what it is made of. He’s telling us what it wants.”
“Correct.”
Picard looked toward Jesus. “And what does it want?”
“To prove that mercy fails under sufficient pressure.”
No one spoke for a moment.
The words were simple. Too simple, perhaps, for the scale of what they had witnessed. But Picard had learned that the largest conflicts were often animated by painfully simple convictions. Fear of scarcity. Hunger for dominion. Hatred taught until it felt like law. Pride disguised as destiny.
“Why us?” Riker asked.
Jesus turned to him. “Because you carry power and conscience in the same house.”
Riker’s expression tightened thoughtfully. “The Enterprise.”
“And the people within her.”
Beverly looked down at her tricorder, though she was no longer reading it. “It said mercy costs. That sounds like a threat.”
“It is also an accusation,” Jesus said.
“Against whom?”
“Against mercy.”
Picard walked to the viewport. The stars beyond looked indifferent. He had always found comfort in that. Stars did not flatter human significance, but neither did they belittle it. They simply burned, and life found its courage beneath them.
Now even that comfort felt watched.
“We need data,” he said.
Data straightened. “I have preserved all sensor recordings in an isolated archive. I recommend a multi-departmental analysis including astrophysics, cybernetics, psychology, exotheology, and command ethics.”
Riker glanced at him. “Command ethics has a department now?”
“Not formally. However, the phenomenon’s targeting of Captain Picard suggests the command function may be a primary vector of interaction.”
Picard turned. “Then include command logs under restricted access. Mine included.”
Riker looked at him with mild surprise. “Captain?”
“If the intelligence is using personal history, moral pressure, or command isolation as part of its method, we cannot afford vanity.”
Jesus watched him, and Picard felt the weight of that attention again.
Not approval.
Presence.
That was somehow more difficult.
“Data,” Picard continued, “work with Geordi on the physical properties. Counselor Troi, coordinate with medical and begin compiling reports from any crew members who felt unusual emotional pressure during the event. Doctor Crusher, look for neurological markers. Mister Worf, review internal security, but I want restraint. No interrogations conducted as though the crew has failed simply because they were affected.”
Worf gave a curt nod. “Aye, Captain.”
“Number One, oversee the departmental coordination.”
“Yes, sir.”
Picard looked at Jesus. “Until we determine otherwise, you will remain under observation. You may not access secure areas unescorted. You may speak with crew only under supervision.”
Jesus nodded. “I will not force doors open.”
“Good.”
“But some doors open because someone inside is tired of holding them shut.”
Picard almost answered. He did not.
The meeting ended, but the unease did not.
By the second hour, the Enterprise had resumed limited movement at impulse. They had not left the region, partly because no one had yet determined whether departure was possible in any meaningful sense, and partly because Picard refused to flee from a mystery that had already reached inside his ship. A probe launched into the coordinates where the phenomenon had appeared returned ordinary readings. A second probe vanished for four seconds and then reappeared with its memory banks filled with static that, when slowed down, sounded almost like breath.
Geordi hated that.
He stood in Engineering beneath the gentle thunder of the warp core, visor angled toward three overlapping displays. Data worked beside him at a secondary station. Jesus stood nearby with Lieutenant Burke and another security officer positioned behind Him. Worf had objected to allowing Jesus in Engineering at all. Picard had agreed with the concern and permitted the visit anyway, under escort, because Data and Geordi both believed the sensor-link between Jesus and the phenomenon might produce measurable results near the engine systems.
So far, it had produced discomfort and very little else.
“Okay,” Geordi said, half to himself, “let’s try the resonance comparison again. Data, feed me the bridge event telemetry, but isolate for the second message.”
“Second message isolated,” Data said.
On the display, lines of sensor data twisted around one another. Geordi leaned closer.
Jesus watched the warp core.
Geordi noticed. Most visitors to Engineering stared at the core with awe, nervousness, or a troubling desire to touch things. Jesus looked at it differently. Not as machinery. Almost as if He were listening to labor.
“That’s the matter-antimatter reaction assembly,” Geordi said. “Contained, regulated, very carefully monitored. It powers the ship.”
Jesus looked toward him. “You tend it faithfully.”
Geordi smiled a little despite himself. “That’s one way of saying I spend a lot of time keeping it from killing us.”
“A faithful steward often prevents disasters no one thanks him for.”
Geordi’s smile faded into something quieter. “That’s also one way of saying it.”
Data looked up. “Lieutenant Commander La Forge receives formal commendations at appropriate intervals.”
Geordi gave him a look. “Not exactly what He meant, Data.”
“I suspected there was an additional connotation.”
Jesus turned to Data. “Do you enjoy working with your friend?”
Data’s head tilted. “I do not experience enjoyment in the human emotional sense. However, I prefer collaborative work with Geordi to many alternative activities.”
“That’s Data for ‘yes,’” Geordi said.
Data considered. “That is an acceptable translation.”
Jesus looked between them. “Friendship teaches without announcing itself.”
Data’s expression shifted into the attentive stillness that often came over him when he encountered a concept that could not be reduced to definition. “In what way?”
“It makes room for another to become more fully himself.”
Geordi looked at Data, then away, suddenly more interested in the display than he needed to be.
Data said, “I have often considered friendship in terms of loyalty, shared experience, mutual assistance, and emotional attachment. Your description suggests an ontological function.”
Geordi laughed softly. “Only you would make friendship sound like a warp theory paper.”
“I was seeking precision.”
Jesus said, “Precision can be a form of love when it serves understanding.”
Data’s fingers paused above the console.
Geordi noticed that too.
Before anyone could speak, one of the displays flickered. The sensor lines collapsed into a single vertical mark, black against blue.
“That’s new,” Geordi said.
Data moved instantly. “The system is not accepting manual override.”
“Engineering to bridge,” Geordi said, tapping his combadge. “We’ve got something.”
Picard answered at once. “Report.”
“One of the resonance displays just locked us out and generated a symbol. Not text this time. More like a marker.”
“Any system compromise?”
“Localized for now.”
Data leaned in. “Geordi, the symbol is not static. It is growing.”
The black line split into two lines, then four. They branched with unsettling organic precision, like cracks spreading through glass or roots searching in darkness.
Jesus stepped closer.
Burke moved with him. “Sir, stay back.”
Jesus stopped immediately.
Geordi looked at the display. “Data, isolate the terminal.”
“I am attempting to do so.”
The branching lines formed a crude shape.
A tree.
Its roots extended downward into a grid that resembled a simplified map of the Enterprise’s computer core. Its branches reached upward into a cluster of neural patterns.
Data’s voice lowered slightly. “It is representing the ship as a living organism.”
Geordi said, “Or showing us where it wants to go.”
A line of text appeared beneath the tree.
A CREW IS ONLY AS STRONG AS THE NEEDS IT CAN CUT AWAY.
Geordi’s expression hardened. “Oh, I don’t like that.”
Data read the line again. “It implies that survival is optimized by removing dependency.”
Jesus’ face saddened.
Geordi looked at Him. “You said it thinks mercy is weakness.”
“Yes.”
“Then what’s this, a preview?”
“A temptation,” Jesus said.
The word seemed too ancient for Engineering, too simple for the screens and conduits and humming plasma. Yet it fit with uncomfortable ease.
Geordi turned back to the console. “Data, can we purge it?”
“Attempting.”
The symbol vanished before Data finished.
All systems returned to normal.
Geordi let out a breath. “That was polite. In a terrifying way.”
Data looked toward Jesus. “Why would an adversarial intelligence reveal its philosophy instead of concealing it?”
Jesus answered, “Because pride believes exposure is victory if no one has the courage to disagree.”
Data processed that. “It wants us to accept its premise.”
“Yes.”
Geordi crossed his arms. “That some people are expendable.”
Jesus looked at him. “That needing one another makes you less worthy to survive.”
Geordi’s face changed in a way he tried to hide. Perhaps he thought of eyes that did not see as others saw, of a visor that gave him the stars and pain together, of childhood adjustments, adult competence, and all the ways people mistook adaptation for lack.
Data looked at his friend, then back to Jesus. “That premise is inaccurate. The Enterprise operates through interdependence. No single officer could perform all necessary ship functions.”
“True,” Jesus said.
“Yet the intelligence frames interdependence as weakness.”
“Yes.”
Data’s eyes narrowed slightly in concentration. “Then it has made an error.”
Jesus looked at him with warmth. “Or a confession.”
Data did not understand at once. Geordi did, or almost did.
“You mean it’s alone,” Geordi said.
Jesus did not answer directly. “Things that hate mercy have often first refused to receive it.”
The warp core hummed on.
For a moment, Engineering felt less like a workplace and more like a chapel built by people who did not know they had built one.
On the bridge, Picard listened to Geordi’s report without interrupting. The second message was entered into the isolated archive. Another impossible appearance. Another moral premise. Another attempt to define strength by subtraction.
A crew is only as strong as the needs it can cut away.
Picard dismissed the report and remained standing near the command chair.
Riker watched him from the first officer’s station. “It’s escalating.”
“Testing,” Picard said.
“Same thing, depending on the test.”
Troi turned from her console. “Captain, crew reports are coming in.”
“Summarize.”
“There are no hallucinations exactly, but many people experienced sudden intrusive thoughts during the event. Not random thoughts. Specific ones. A nurse in Sickbay felt certain, for several seconds, that compassion was interfering with her judgment. A crewman in Stellar Cartography became convinced his homesickness made him unfit for deep-space service. One of Worf’s security officers reported anger toward an injured colleague he had been helping, as if the colleague’s weakness endangered the team.”
Worf, who had returned to the bridge after assigning rotating escorts for Jesus, stiffened. “Name.”
Troi looked at him gently. “He was disturbed by it and reported it voluntarily.”
“Name,” Worf repeated, quieter but harder.
Picard turned. “Mister Worf.”
Worf stopped.
Picard did not raise his voice. “The intelligence is attempting to make vulnerability appear dishonorable. We will not assist it.”
Worf’s eyes held his for a moment.
Then he looked away. “Understood.”
Troi continued. “The thoughts faded after the phenomenon disappeared, but the emotional residue remains. People feel ashamed for having had them.”
Riker frowned. “For being attacked?”
“For recognizing the thoughts at all,” Troi said. “That may be part of the attack.”
Picard nodded slowly. “Shame isolates. Isolation weakens the crew. The pattern is consistent.”
Worf’s voice was quieter now. “Then we counter it by reinforcing discipline.”
Troi replied, “Discipline helps. So does telling the truth about what happened.”
Worf looked unconvinced. “Endless discussion of feelings will not protect the ship.”
“No,” Troi said. “But refusing to speak of them may leave the ship vulnerable in another way.”
Picard looked between them. “Both points stand. We will not indulge panic, and we will not punish honesty.”
Riker gave a small nod. “I’ll make sure department heads understand that.”
“Good.”
The day moved forward, though day had little meaning aboard a starship except by duty rotation and the body’s stubborn desire for rhythm. The Enterprise remained at yellow alert. Science teams studied empty space. Engineering examined systems that insisted nothing had happened. Security reviewed corridor logs showing Jesus appearing in a frame where the previous frame held only air. Sickbay scanned crew members who felt foolish for reporting emotions as injuries.
Jesus submitted to every escort, every scan, every restriction.
He did not explain Himself.
That unsettled people more than defiance.
In Ten Forward, later, Guinan found Him sitting alone at a table near the windows. Alone was not exactly accurate. Security remained near the entrance. Several crew members watched from carefully chosen distances. A few pretended not to. The room’s usual social warmth had changed into a lower murmur, half curiosity and half caution.
Guinan brought Him a cup.
He looked at it. “Thank you.”
“It’s not wine,” she said.
“I did not ask for wine.”
“No. But people have expectations.”
He looked at her, and a small smile touched His face. “Yes. They do.”
She sat across from Him. For a while neither spoke.
Outside the windows, the stars moved with the slow dignity of warpless travel. Inside, Ten Forward tried to remember how to be ordinary. A young ensign laughed too loudly at a joke. Two civilians whispered over untouched drinks. A science officer kept glancing at Jesus and then at Guinan, as though hoping her body language might solve theology, security, and astrophysics at once.
Guinan finally said, “You know what I am.”
Jesus held the cup in both hands. “I know you have survived what should have ended you.”
Her face did not change much, but her eyes did. “That’s not the same thing.”
“No.”
“You called me by name.”
“Yes.”
“How?”
He looked into the cup, then back at her. “There are names spoken by mouths, and there are names held by love.”
Guinan breathed out slowly. “You keep doing that.”
“What?”
“Answering the part of the question I didn’t say out loud.”
Jesus’ expression was kind. “That is often the wounded part.”
She looked toward the windows. “I have met powerful beings. Some of them wore charm like clothing. Some wore terror. Some liked to play at being gods because they had never learned humility.”
Jesus listened.
“You don’t feel like them,” she said.
“No.”
“That should comfort me.”
“It does not?”
“No.” Her voice became softer. “It makes me feel like standing very still.”
Jesus looked at her with understanding. “Reverence can feel like fear before it remembers joy.”
Guinan’s fingers tightened around her glass. “And what if I’m not ready to remember?”
“Then I will not hurry you.”
The answer undid something in her face. Not enough for tears. Guinan had lived too long and carried too much to give tears to every sacred pressure. But for a moment she looked unbearably tired.
Across the room, a glass slipped from a crewman’s hand.
It fell toward the floor.
Jesus turned His head.
The glass struck, but did not shatter.
It rolled once and came to rest upright, empty and unbroken.
The room went silent.
The crewman stared at it, pale. “I’m sorry,” he whispered, though no one had accused him.
Jesus rose, walked to the glass, and picked it up. Security moved but did not stop Him. He carried it back to the crewman and placed it gently on the table.
“No harm was done,” He said.
The crewman swallowed. “It should have broken.”
Jesus looked at him. “Many things should have.”
He returned to His seat.
No one knew what to do with that.
Guinan watched Him sit down. “You understand that moments like that will not make them less curious.”
“Yes.”
“Or less afraid.”
“Yes.”
“Then why do it?”
Jesus looked toward the crewman, who was still staring at the glass as if it had been returned from death. “Because he thought a small mistake had revealed something shameful about him.”
“It was just a glass.”
“To him, it was not.”
Guinan studied the young officer. She saw it then: the rigid posture, the embarrassed color in his face, the way his hand trembled under the table. Not fear of the glass. Fear of being seen as careless. Weak. Unfit. Another small wound the intelligence had taught him to call evidence.
Guinan looked back at Jesus. “You’re answering it.”
“Yes.”
“Not with power.”
“No.”
“With repair.”
Jesus looked out at the stars. “That is what mercy does when no one applauds.”
In the ready room, Picard received the report about the glass from Worf personally.
The security chief stood stiffly before him. “Multiple witnesses confirm the object failed to break despite striking the floor with sufficient force. The material composition remains standard. No forcefield activation. No transporter intervention. No detectable energy emission from Jesus.”
Picard sat behind his desk, though he had not intended to. “Your conclusion?”
“My conclusion is that we have an unknown entity aboard who can affect physical events without detectable mechanism.”
“You believe the act was dangerous?”
“No.”
“Then what concerns you?”
Worf’s eyes darkened. “That it was gentle.”
Picard leaned back slightly.
Worf seemed dissatisfied with his own answer, but continued. “A hostile display of power can be answered. A threat can be evaluated. This was neither. It will make the crew trust him.”
“And you believe that trust itself may be the danger.”
“Yes.”
Picard looked down at the padd on his desk. The glass had not broken. No harm was done. Many things should have.
“Trust can indeed be dangerous,” Picard said. “So can suspicion when it becomes incapable of recognizing good.”
Worf’s shoulders squared. “I am not incapable of recognizing good.”
“No. But you are determined not to be deceived by its imitation.”
Worf accepted that. “Yes.”
Picard softened his voice. “That determination has saved lives.”
Worf’s expression shifted, almost imperceptibly.
“It may also,” Picard continued, “make this particular encounter more difficult for you.”
Worf did not answer.
Picard dismissed him gently. After Worf left, the ready room felt larger and emptier than before.
He stood and went again to the viewport.
The line had vanished from the computer, but not from his mind.
The one who will not ask for help.
He despised the phrasing. Not because it was false. Because it was partial. Command required restraint. A captain could not pour every doubt onto the bridge and call it authenticity. He could not ask junior officers to carry the fears that were his to absorb. There was mercy in composure. There was service in steadiness.
And yet.
A man may stand at the front and still be loved from behind.
The door chimed.
Picard straightened. “Come.”
Riker entered.
For a moment, neither spoke.
Then Riker said, “I thought I should report that departmental briefings are complete. Crew are being told to report intrusive thoughts without fear of reprimand. Counselor Troi is setting up optional sessions. Worf is pretending not to approve of the security language I used, which means it was probably right.”
Picard allowed a faint smile. “Thank you, Number One.”
Riker remained.
Picard noticed. “Was there something else?”
Riker looked uncomfortable for perhaps half a second, which meant the matter was personal enough for him to overcome his own ease. “The intelligence targeted you on the bridge.”
“Yes.”
“It may do so again.”
“Likely.”
“I know you know this, but you don’t have to handle every part of that privately.”
Picard turned from the viewport. There were many answers available. A captain’s answer. A mentor’s answer. A British answer. A deflecting answer with just enough warmth to end the conversation honorably.
He chose none of them immediately.
Riker stood his ground, not pushing, not retreating.
At last Picard said, “Your concern is noted.”
Riker almost smiled. “That is one of your more fortified responses.”
Picard gave him a look.
Riker’s expression gentled. “I’m not asking you to stop being captain.”
“No one who understands command would ask that.”
“I’m asking you to remember that the chair is yours, but the burden doesn’t have to be only yours.”
The words were not as polished as something Picard might have said. They were better for it.
Picard looked back to the stars. “You have been speaking with our guest?”
“No. That one was mine.”
Picard nodded slowly.
“Dismissed, Commander.”
Riker accepted the boundary. “Aye, sir.”
He left.
Picard remained standing.
He did not ask for help. Not yet. But for the first time since the line appeared, he allowed the possibility that refusing help was not always the same as protecting others from burden. Sometimes it was simply the last discipline of a lonely man who had forgotten how to receive.
The thought irritated him.
It also remained.
Near the end of the duty cycle, Data came to the observation lounge where Jesus had been placed for the night under guard. The room had been cleared of sensitive terminals. A security field could be activated at the doors if needed. Worf had approved the arrangement with visible reluctance.
Jesus stood at the windows.
Data entered with permission from the guard.
“I wish to ask you a question,” Data said.
Jesus turned. “Yes.”
“Earlier, you asked who I say you are. I have continued to analyze the question.”
“And what have you found?”
“I am unable to answer. The available evidence is contradictory. You present as human. You arrived by unknown means. You appear connected to an intelligence that identifies you as a variable, yet your behavior does not match known hostile infiltration models. You speak in morally significant statements that produce emotional responses. You may possess abilities not currently measurable by our instruments. You claim to have been sent.”
Jesus listened as if Data’s uncertainty were precious rather than incomplete.
Data continued, “There are several hypotheses. You may be an advanced alien assuming a historically significant identity. You may be a temporal displacement of the historical Jesus of Nazareth. You may be a construct created by the phenomenon to test the crew. You may be a noncorporeal intelligence temporarily occupying biological form. Or you may be who the name implies.”
“And which do you believe?”
“I do not believe. I evaluate probabilities.”
Jesus looked at him gently. “Is there nothing you trust before probability is complete?”
Data paused. “I trust my friends.”
“Why?”
“Because repeated experience has shown that they act for my good.”
“Before every outcome is known?”
“Yes.”
“Then trust is not the enemy of reason.”
Data became very still.
“No,” he said slowly. “It is not.”
Jesus turned back toward the stars.
Data stepped closer. “May I ask another question?”
“Yes.”
“Do I have a soul?”
The room seemed to become very quiet around the question.
Jesus did not answer quickly. He looked at Data not as an object of inquiry, not as a marvel of engineering, not as a machine approximating personhood, but as someone already known.
“Why do you ask?”
Data’s eyes remained steady. “The concept of a soul is associated with personhood, moral value, continuity of identity, and in many traditions, relationship to the divine. I have been told I am a machine. I have also been treated as a person. I have legal status as a sentient individual. Yet there are dimensions of human experience I do not possess. If the intelligence attacking the Enterprise believes that some needs should be cut away for strength, I wish to know whether my desire to become more human is a defect, an aspiration, or an error in programming.”
Jesus took one step toward him.
The guard near the door watched closely but did not interfere.
“You are not less because you ask,” Jesus said.
“That does not answer whether I have a soul.”
“No.”
“Can you answer?”
Jesus’ eyes held sorrow and joy again, the strange union that seemed to follow Him through the ship. “The One who gives life is not confused by the hands through which a body is made.”
Data processed this.
“My body was made by Doctor Noonien Soong.”
Jesus nodded.
“Are you saying that created origin does not preclude sacred worth?”
“I am saying love is not frightened by craftsmanship.”
Data’s expression did not change in any ordinary human way. Yet something in the room changed around him.
“I will need to consider this,” he said.
“Yes.”
Data turned toward the door, then stopped. “If I ask again later, will you answer differently?”
Jesus smiled softly. “I may answer more deeply.”
Data nodded. “That is acceptable.”
He left the observation lounge carrying no proof, but something had been placed beside the question.
Not an answer he could file.
A dignity he could not dismiss.
As the ship’s night cycle settled over the Enterprise, the lights in the corridors lowered by ordinary command pathway this time. Crew quarters quieted. Engineering moved to reduced watch. Sickbay continued scans. Ten Forward emptied slowly, though conversation lingered longer than usual at several tables.
Picard remained awake in his quarters with a half-read archaeology monograph open on his lap. He had not absorbed a page in twenty minutes.
His terminal chimed.
He looked up.
The screen activated without his command.
No alert. No access code. No traceable intrusion.
A single line appeared.
A CAPTAIN WHO RECEIVES HELP BECOMES LESS USEFUL AS A SYMBOL.
Picard stood slowly.
Another line formed beneath it.
SYMBOLS MUST STAND ALONE.
He tapped his combadge. “Picard to bridge.”
Riker answered. “Bridge here.”
“Are you seeing any unauthorized computer activity?”
“No, sir. Is something happening?”
Picard stared at the screen.
For one moment, he considered saying no. A private intrusion. A private burden. Something to be examined after he understood it well enough to present without appearing affected.
Then he heard Riker’s voice from earlier.
The chair is yours, but the burden doesn’t have to be only yours.
Picard took a breath.
“Yes,” he said. “In my quarters. Wake Data and Counselor Troi. Have security lock down computer access to my terminal logs.”
“Aye, Captain.”
The line on the screen flickered.
A third sentence appeared.
YOU HAVE ALREADY BEGUN TO WEAKEN.
Picard looked at it and, to his own surprise, felt not shame but anger.
Not reckless anger.
Clean anger.
“No,” he said aloud to the empty room. “I have begun to refuse your premise.”
The terminal went black.
Across the room, the door chime sounded.
Picard turned.
“Come.”
The doors opened.
Jesus stood in the corridor, escorted by Lieutenant Burke, who looked deeply uncomfortable.
“Captain,” Burke said, “I’m sorry, sir. He asked to come here. I told Him He was restricted, but then Commander Riker authorized movement under escort after your call.”
Picard looked at Jesus. “Did you know?”
Jesus did not pretend to misunderstand. “I knew you were being asked to stand alone.”
Picard’s expression hardened by instinct. “I did not request your presence.”
“No.”
“Then why come?”
Jesus’ voice was quiet. “Because a man does not have to ask for bread before hunger matters.”
Picard stared at Him.
Behind Jesus, the corridor lights hummed softly. Somewhere far away in the ship, officers were already moving because Picard had chosen to report the intrusion instead of contain it alone. The Enterprise was awake again, not in panic, but in shared readiness.
Picard stepped aside.
“Enter,” he said.
Jesus walked into the captain’s quarters without triumph, without explanation, without command.
The stars beyond the window remained distant and clear.
For the first time that night, Jean-Luc Picard did not face them alone.
Chapter Three: The World That Removed the Weak
By morning, the Enterprise had returned to warp under controlled conditions, though no one aboard mistook motion for escape.
The phenomenon had vanished from sensors. The unauthorized files had disappeared from every searchable system. The stars ahead behaved like stars. Warp fields held steady. Crew rotations resumed. Reports were filed. Meals were eaten. A child in the civilian school asked whether the man from Nazareth was a new teacher, and no one in the room knew how to answer without starting a theological incident.
Normal life returned in the way normal life often returned after fear: not because the fear had passed, but because people needed laundry, duty shifts, breakfast, maintenance schedules, and something to do with their hands.
Captain Picard had slept for ninety-three minutes.
He had not intended for anyone to know that, but Beverly knew because Sickbay had quietly monitored his stress markers through the command watch medical protocol. Troi knew because she did not need medical instruments to sense exhaustion in a man determined to stand as if exhaustion were a rumor. Riker knew because he had served with Picard long enough to recognize the particular sharpness that came after too little rest and too much thought.
Jesus knew without being told.
That troubled Picard least and most.
He entered the bridge just as the Alpha shift settled in. Riker rose from the command chair.
“Captain.”
“Report.”
Riker handed him a padd. “All systems nominal. Long-range sensors detected an automated distress beacon from a planet in the Maranth system. Federation database identifies the world as Velos Prime. Pre-warp civilization until eighty years ago. They advanced quickly after discovering subspace physics through independent development. No formal Federation contact beyond passive cultural monitoring. The beacon is repeating in several mathematical languages.”
Picard glanced at the padd. “Nature of distress?”
“That’s the problem. The message says, ‘Containment failure. Mercy event spreading. Requesting rational assistance.’”
Picard looked up.
Data turned from Ops. “The phrase ‘mercy event’ is not present in any Starfleet distress lexicon.”
Worf’s expression showed exactly what he thought of the phrase. “It may be a trap.”
“Everything may be a trap, Mister Worf,” Picard said. “We do not let that become our entire philosophy.”
Worf inclined his head, chastened but not convinced.
Troi sat at her station, face troubled. “Captain, I’m sensing nothing from this distance. But the wording feels consistent with the intelligence’s focus.”
Riker looked toward the aft section of the bridge.
Jesus was not there. Picard had not permitted Him bridge access without direct cause. He remained under supervised movement, though the crew had quietly shifted from calling Him “the intruder” to “the guest” to, in some corridors, simply “Jesus.” Picard had noticed the shift and had not commented.
“Set course for the Maranth system,” Picard said. “Warp seven.”
“Aye, sir,” Ensign Gates replied.
The Enterprise turned toward the call.
Picard sat in the command chair.
Routine came back around him in recognizable shapes, but the distress message would not release its grip.
Containment failure.
Mercy event spreading.
Requesting rational assistance.
There were civilizations, Picard knew, who used language in ways that revealed their souls before their faces appeared on a viewscreen. The Federation spoke of rights, exploration, cooperation, and self-determination, though it did not always live up to every word. Klingons spoke of honor and glory. Vulcans spoke of logic with devotional intensity. Ferengi spoke of acquisition as if profit were a branch of physics. Every culture’s vocabulary drew a map of its fear and hope.
What kind of world called mercy a containment failure?
The answer came twenty-one minutes later.
Velos Prime filled the main viewer like a polished stone beneath a thin white veil. Its continents were sharply organized by geometric cities, straight irrigation channels, and transportation corridors that crossed mountains without curving around them. Even from orbit, the civilization appeared disciplined. Efficient. Almost severe.
“Standard orbit,” Picard ordered.
Data’s hands moved across his console. “Captain, I am detecting significant urban disruption in three major population centers. No large-scale weapons fire. No planetary bombardment. No geological emergency. Energy grid remains functional.”
“Life signs?”
“Approximately 2.4 billion. There are irregular population movements concentrated around medical and administrative facilities.”
Riker stood near the command rail. “Riot?”
“Possibly,” Data said. “However, the movements are not aggressive. Many groups are converging on restricted districts.”
Worf studied tactical. “Planetary defense systems are active but not targeting us.”
“Open a channel,” Picard said.
Data nodded. “Channel open.”
The viewscreen shifted to the face of a Velosian official.
He was humanoid, with smooth gray-blue skin, high cheekbones, and eyes so pale they looked almost silver. His clothing was immaculate, a dark formal garment crossed by thin bands of rank or office. Behind him, several aides moved quickly through a command center arranged with severe symmetry.
“I am Director Saren of the Velosian Continuity Council,” he said. “Identify your vessel and capacity for intervention.”
Picard rose. “I am Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation starship Enterprise. We received your distress beacon.”
“You are capable of medical response, population management, and technological containment?”
“We are capable of assistance. Before we proceed, we require clarification. What is the nature of your emergency?”
Director Saren’s eyes flicked toward someone offscreen, then back. “An irrational compassion cascade has breached institutional boundaries.”
Riker’s eyebrows lifted slightly.
Picard kept his expression steady. “Explain.”
Saren seemed irritated by the need. “For generations, Velosian society has maintained stability through rational allocation. Individuals are classified according to productive capacity, social burden, cognitive contribution, and risk-to-resource ratio. Those requiring disproportionate support are housed in protected limitation centers where their needs cannot destabilize the efficient population.”
Troi’s face changed.
Beverly, who had arrived on the bridge moments earlier after receiving the distress summary, went very still.
Picard’s voice lowered by a degree. “You are speaking of the disabled, the elderly, the ill, and those unable to meet your society’s productivity standards.”
Saren did not appear offended. “Those categories are emotionally imprecise, but yes.”
Worf’s expression darkened.
Saren continued, “At 0400 local time, containment personnel at Facility Seven abandoned protocol and opened access gates. Families entered restricted areas. Several productive citizens chose to remain with dependent-class individuals instead of returning to assigned work. This disorder has spread. We require assistance restoring rational separation before systemic efficiency collapses.”
The bridge was silent.
Picard’s face had become the face he wore when anger was being forced into diplomatic form.
“You sent a distress call,” he said carefully, “because your citizens began caring for people you had removed from public life.”
Saren’s eyes narrowed. “We sent a distress call because sentiment has become contagious.”
Beverly spoke before Picard could. “Those people in your facilities, are they harmed?”
Saren looked displeased at being addressed by someone other than the captain. “They are maintained within survival parameters.”
“That was not my question.”
Picard glanced at Beverly, not to silence her, but to remind the room that this conversation still had a command structure.
Saren replied, “Some have chronic deterioration. Some possess congenital limitations. Some are post-productive. Some are emotionally dependent. They receive sustenance, sanitation, and necessary environmental regulation.”
“Do they receive companionship?” Troi asked quietly.
Saren seemed genuinely confused. “Companionship is not a survival requirement.”
Jesus’ voice came from behind them.
“No?”
Everyone turned.
He stood at the turbolift doors with Lieutenant Burke beside Him. Riker’s eyes sharpened; Worf’s hand moved near his phaser. Picard had not called Him to the bridge.
Burke looked mortified. “Captain, He asked to be brought here. I contacted Commander Riker’s authorization queue, but—”
Riker looked at Picard. “I didn’t authorize this.”
Jesus looked toward the screen, not past Picard, not over him, but toward the suffering below.
Picard held up a hand before Worf spoke. “Mister Burke, remain with Him.”
“Aye, sir.”
Director Saren stared. “Who is this individual?”
Picard’s answer came after a fraction of a pause. “A guest aboard this vessel.”
Saren’s gaze moved over Jesus’ simple clothing. “He has no visible function.”
Jesus said, “Many have said that of those they did not wish to love.”
Saren’s face hardened. “Captain, if your vessel is unable to provide rational assistance, we will seek other intervention.”
Picard stepped slightly forward. “Director, the Federation does not assist in the oppression of vulnerable populations.”
“Oppression is an emotional accusation. We preserve social continuity.”
“You imprison the weak.”
“We protect the whole from collapse.”
Beverly’s voice was tight. “By hiding the people who need you most.”
Saren replied, “Need is precisely the problem.”
The viewer abruptly flickered.
For a second, Saren’s image distorted into pale light.
A line of text appeared over his face.
A CIVILIZATION SURVIVES BY KNOWING WHOM IT CAN ABANDON.
Then the image stabilized.
Saren looked around in alarm. “What was that?”
Picard turned to Data.
Data’s fingers moved rapidly. “The distortion did not originate from the Velosian transmission. It occurred within our visual processing system and the planetary communication stream simultaneously.”
Troi gripped the side of her console. “It’s here.”
Worf said, “Shields remain up. No external vessel detected.”
Jesus looked at Picard. “Now the question is no longer only on your ship.”
Picard’s eyes stayed on the screen.
Saren was speaking urgently with aides. His control had cracked. Beneath the official’s efficient language, Picard saw fear. Not merely fear of disorder. Fear that an entire structure of meaning was coming apart.
“Director Saren,” Picard said.
The Velosian turned back.
“We will send an away team to assess humanitarian conditions at Facility Seven. We will not force your citizens to abandon compassion. We will provide medical aid where needed. We will also offer mediation between your Council and the families involved.”
Saren’s expression sharpened. “You may not enter limitation facilities without Council clearance.”
“Then grant it.”
“You have no authority here.”
“No,” Picard said. “But you asked for help. This is the help we can honorably offer.”
Saren glared at him.
Picard held the silence.
At last, another aide leaned toward Saren and whispered something. The director’s face tightened.
“Facility Seven reports increasing disorder,” Saren said. “Medical support may be permitted under supervision. No political interference.”
Picard replied, “We will beam down a medical and diplomatic team.”
The channel closed.
Riker looked at him. “Away team?”
“Doctor Crusher, Counselor Troi, Data, Worf, and myself. Commander Riker, you have the bridge.”
Riker’s eyes moved toward Jesus. “And Him?”
Picard turned.
Jesus did not ask.
That, perhaps, was why Picard found the decision difficult.
“Under escort,” Picard said. “He will accompany the away team as an observer.”
Worf’s objection came instantly. “Captain—”
“I am aware of your concerns.”
“Then you know this is dangerous.”
“Yes.”
Picard looked at Jesus. “You will not interfere with local authority. You will not take independent action. If I order withdrawal, you will obey.”
Jesus nodded. “I will walk where you permit me.”
Picard studied Him. “And if someone below asks you for help?”
Jesus’ eyes were steady. “Then you will have to decide what kind of order you are giving.”
The words could have been defiance. They were not. They were truth set gently on the table.
Picard did not answer.
“Transporter room three,” he said.
Facility Seven stood at the edge of a city that looked designed by someone who distrusted curves. The buildings were tall, narrow, pale, and efficient, arranged in strict grids around transportation lines that moved citizens in quiet streams. No advertisements, no public art, no visible gathering places beyond assigned transit zones. The air smelled clean but unused.
The facility itself was surrounded by a low barrier and a transparent security field. Inside stood several connected structures with narrow windows. Outside the main gate, hundreds of Velosians had gathered. Some wore work uniforms. Some wore formal council colors. Some clutched blankets, food containers, or medical kits they clearly did not know how to use. Many looked stunned by their own presence, as if they had walked there before understanding why.
Picard, Beverly, Troi, Data, Worf, Jesus, and two security officers materialized near the outer approach.
A Velosian administrator hurried toward them. She wore a white-gray uniform and carried three padds. Her eyes moved nervously from Worf to Jesus, then back to Picard.
“I am Administrator Leth,” she said. “You are authorized only for medical review.”
“I understand,” Picard said.
Her gaze flickered toward the crowd. “They will not leave.”
A woman near the gate turned at the sound of Leth’s voice. She held the hand of an elderly man whose legs trembled beneath him. His head leaned toward her shoulder as though he had spent years learning not to expect the world to hold him upright.
“He is my father,” the woman said suddenly, as if daring someone to contradict her.
Administrator Leth looked pained. “Citizen Mara, you have been instructed to return to your assignment sector.”
Mara’s voice shook, but she did not move. “I was told he no longer recognized me.”
“That is medically accurate.”
“He knew my song.”
Leth looked away.
Beverly stepped toward the elderly man. “May I examine him?”
Mara looked suspicious, then nodded.
Beverly scanned him gently. “Advanced neurodegenerative condition. Malnutrition. Muscle atrophy. He needs care, but he is stable for now.”
“We care for him,” Leth said defensively.
Beverly looked at her. “You maintain him.”
The administrator’s face flushed faintly. “There is a difference?”
Jesus looked at the elderly man.
The old man’s pale eyes drifted without focus. His fingers moved weakly against his daughter’s hand.
Mara whispered something in the Velosian language. A melody, perhaps. Not polished. Not even steady. The old man turned his face toward her voice.
A sound moved through the crowd.
Not a cheer.
Recognition.
Troi closed her eyes briefly. “So much grief,” she said. “They buried it under obedience.”
Data scanned the facility. “Captain, there are approximately nine thousand individuals housed in this complex. Many display medical needs exceeding available staff capacity.”
Worf stood alert, scanning the crowd and facility entrances. “Security forces are gathering at the east perimeter.”
Picard looked toward the distance. Uniformed Velosian officers approached in disciplined lines, carrying devices that looked more like crowd-control emitters than weapons.
Administrator Leth saw them and became frightened. “They were ordered not to enter unless violence began.”
“Has violence begun?” Picard asked.
“No.”
“Then why are they advancing?”
Leth had no answer.
The security field at the main gate flickered. From inside the facility, more dependent-class Velosians emerged: children with neurological supports, adults with mobility frames, elderly citizens wrapped in institutional garments, people with vacant eyes, frightened eyes, angry eyes. Some reached toward the crowd. Some flinched from touch. Some seemed overwhelmed by sunlight.
A young boy stood just inside the gate, perhaps ten years old, though his body was smaller. His legs were braced by metal supports. He stared at the gathering as if the outside world were a story he had been warned not to believe.
Jesus saw him.
The boy saw Jesus.
No one spoke.
Then the boy took one uneven step.
The brace on his left leg locked incorrectly. He fell forward.
Worf moved first, fast as instinct. He caught the child before the boy struck the ground.
The crowd gasped.
Worf held him awkwardly for half a second, as if he had caught a weapon that had become a child midway through the motion.
The boy looked up at him, terrified.
Worf’s face changed.
Not much. Enough.
“You are not injured,” Worf said.
The boy blinked.
Worf set him carefully upright, making sure the brace held. His hands, which could wield violence with terrible strength, adjusted the child’s support with surprising gentleness.
Jesus watched but did not praise him.
That made the moment stronger.
The Velosian security forces reached the perimeter.
Their commander lifted an emitter. “Unauthorized gathering must disperse. Productive citizens will return to assignment sectors. Dependent-class individuals will reenter containment.”
Mara held her father closer. Others began to panic.
Picard stepped forward. “Commander, I am Captain Picard of the USS Enterprise. This gathering is nonviolent. Stand down your dispersal units.”
The commander looked unimpressed. “You possess no civil authority.”
“Nor do I claim it. But your government requested Federation assistance, and I am formally advising restraint.”
“Our orders are to restore continuity.”
Jesus walked to Picard’s side, still behind him, not ahead.
The commander’s eyes moved to Him. “That one is not registered.”
Jesus said, “Neither is love, it seems.”
The commander frowned. “Remove yourself from the enforcement path.”
Picard turned slightly. “Jesus.”
Jesus stopped.
The old man in Mara’s arms began humming the melody she had sung.
Others heard it.
An elderly woman near the gate joined him. Then a man seated in a mobility chair. Then, astonishingly, Administrator Leth, though her voice trembled with shame as soon as it left her.
Mara looked at the administrator as if seeing her for the first time.
The melody spread, uneven and fragile, through the crowd.
Data listened. “Captain, the song appears to predate the current social order. I am detecting references in cultural records to a familial lament used during communal mourning ceremonies, discontinued sixty-two years ago as emotionally destabilizing.”
Troi whispered, “They remember.”
The security commander raised his emitter higher. “Final warning.”
Worf stepped in front of the boy with the leg braces.
Picard saw it. He also saw the danger. A Klingon officer facing civilian security forces on a non-Federation world could turn a moral crisis into a diplomatic catastrophe in seconds.
“Mister Worf,” Picard said.
Worf did not move.
Picard’s voice sharpened. “Lieutenant Commander Worf.”
Worf drew a breath and stepped back half a pace, but he did not leave the boy unprotected.
Jesus looked at Picard. “There is your question.”
Picard knew.
Not because Jesus explained it. Because the whole day had arranged itself around the question the intelligence had asked. A civilization survives by knowing whom it can abandon. A crew is only as strong as the needs it can cut away. A captain stands alone. Symbols must stand alone.
Every message was the same lie wearing a different uniform.
Picard tapped his combadge. “Picard to Enterprise.”
Riker answered immediately. “Enterprise here.”
“Lock onto the crowd-control emitters at the east perimeter. Prepare to transport them into secure storage aboard the Enterprise on my command.”
Riker paused for only a fraction of a second. “Understood.”
Data looked at Picard. “Captain, removal of local enforcement equipment may be interpreted as interference.”
“I am aware.”
The security commander’s eyes narrowed. “Captain, your communication was translated.”
“I intended it to be.”
“You would violate our sovereignty?”
Picard stepped closer, his voice controlled, resonant, and furious beneath the restraint. “Your sovereignty does not require me to watch you assault unarmed citizens whose crime is refusing to abandon their families.”
The commander activated the emitter.
Picard said, “Energize.”
The devices vanished from the hands of every security officer at the perimeter.
The crowd gasped again.
The commander stared at his empty hand.
Picard did not smile. “Now we will speak without instruments of coercion.”
The air changed.
Not resolved. Not safe. But changed.
Then the sky above Facility Seven dimmed.
Worf looked up. “Captain.”
A pale ring formed high in the atmosphere, invisible to the naked eye at first and then suddenly present like a wound in the blue. The crowd fell into frightened silence.
Data scanned rapidly. “The phenomenon has reappeared in low orbit. It is projecting a localized field over this facility.”
Troi staggered slightly.
Beverly caught her arm. “Deanna?”
Troi’s face twisted with pain. “It’s pushing them. All of them. Shame. Fear. Disgust. It wants the productive citizens to look at the others and feel burden. It wants the dependent ones to feel they should disappear.”
A low moan moved through the crowd. Mara’s grip loosened on her father as horror crossed her face, not horror at him, but at whatever thought had been forced into her mind. The boy with the leg braces began to cry silently. Administrator Leth covered her mouth.
On the sky, words appeared in pale fire.
SHOW THEM THE COST.
Suddenly, every public display on the facility walls activated. Numbers cascaded across them: resource consumption, productivity loss, medical burden, projected efficiency decline, generational cost.
The crowd watched their loved ones translated into expense.
Beverly’s face filled with outrage. “Turn it off.”
Data tried. “The displays are being controlled externally.”
Worf looked at Picard. “We should evacuate the vulnerable.”
“No,” Picard said, though the answer cost him. “If we remove them now, the lie remains. It will only prove they cannot belong here.”
Jesus looked at him.
Picard stepped onto the low platform near the facility gate. The pale ring in the sky pulsed above him. The numbers flashed behind him. Velosian citizens stared at him, frightened, ashamed, divided against themselves by a power that knew how to make cruelty sound mathematical.
He had given speeches before councils, enemies, frightened colonies, and hostile courts. He had defended principles in rooms where war waited for one careless phrase. But this was different. This was not rhetoric against policy. This was speech against despair.
He looked at Mara. At her father. At the boy. At Worf, standing near him like restrained thunder. At Beverly, who had chosen healing as vocation even when healing could not defeat death. At Data, searching for the logic beneath dignity. At Jesus, who had not taken the platform.
Picard spoke.
“A civilization is not measured by the ease with which it preserves the strong. Any primitive power can do that. Any predator can favor what is useful to itself. The true measure of a society is whether it can look upon need without contempt.”
The numbers kept flashing.
“Your systems have taught you to confuse dependence with failure. But every person here began life dependent. Every leader, every worker, every engineer, every judge, every official who now speaks of efficiency survived infancy because someone answered need before productivity could justify the cost.”
The crowd was still.
Picard’s voice deepened.
“If you call need shameful, then you condemn the beginning of every life and the end of many. If you call mercy inefficient, then you have forgotten that efficiency is a tool, not a soul. And if you believe survival requires abandonment, then what survives may no longer be worthy of the name civilization.”
The pale ring pulsed violently.
Troi gasped. “It’s angry.”
A new line appeared across the sky.
MERCY WILL BREAK YOU.
Jesus stepped forward then, not onto the platform, not beside Picard as a rival voice, but among the people at the gate.
He knelt before the boy with the leg braces.
The boy stared at Him through tears.
Jesus said, “You are not the cost of love. You are the reason love is beautiful.”
The boy began to sob.
Not because everything was fixed.
Because something false had been named.
Mara pulled her father close and began singing again, louder this time. Administrator Leth joined her. Then others. Not all. Some stood rigid, resisting. Some wept angrily. Some looked as if they hated the feeling of mercy returning to a place they had locked away.
But the song rose.
The numbers on the displays flickered.
Data looked up from his tricorder. “Captain, the field is destabilizing. The emotional response of the crowd is disrupting the phenomenon’s resonance.”
Riker’s voice came through Picard’s combadge. “Enterprise to away team. We’re detecting a surge from orbit. It’s focusing on the facility.”
Picard answered, “Can you disperse it?”
“Geordi is trying to modulate the deflector, but the field is tied into bioelectric patterns on the surface. If we hit it too hard, we may injure the crowd.”
Picard looked toward Jesus.
Jesus held the boy’s hands.
For one painful second, Picard wanted an easy miracle. A command from heaven. A burst of light that solved what courage, diplomacy, medicine, and moral clarity could only begin. He wanted the man from Nazareth to end the test.
But Jesus did not.
He looked at Picard, and Picard understood with terrible clarity that this was not because He lacked power. It was because love that erased human choice would not teach them how to love.
Picard tapped his combadge. “Enterprise, stand by. Do not fire the deflector.”
Riker replied, “Captain, the surge is increasing.”
“I know.”
Picard turned to the crowd.
“You asked for rational assistance,” he said, not to Saren now, not to the commander, but to every Velosian within earshot. “Here it is. No society can calculate its way out of the truth that people belong to one another. The question before you is not whether mercy costs. Of course it costs. The question is whether you will become a people who spend yourselves only on what flatters your strength, or whether you will spend yourselves on love and finally become strong.”
The ring in the sky contracted.
For a moment, the pressure became nearly unbearable. Several Velosians cried out. Troi fell to one knee. Beverly stayed beside her. Worf drew his phaser and aimed upward, though there was nothing meaningful to target.
Then the old man in Mara’s arms lifted his head.
His voice, cracked and thin, joined the song.
The field shattered.
Not with sound.
With release.
The pale ring vanished from the sky. The facility displays went dark. The crowd staggered as if waking from a nightmare. Somewhere inside Facility Seven, doors opened as emergency systems reset.
Data scanned the atmosphere. “The phenomenon has withdrawn.”
Riker’s voice followed. “We confirm. No orbital trace.”
Picard exhaled slowly. “Stand down from immediate response. Maintain transporter lock.”
“Aye, Captain.”
Jesus helped the boy stand.
Worf watched Him, then looked away quickly, as though the sight had touched something he was not prepared to name.
Administrator Leth approached Mara. Her face was pale.
“I administered this facility for eleven years,” she said. “I knew the sound of every door. I knew the meal schedule, the sanitation cycles, the staffing ratios.”
Mara held her father’s hand. “Did you know his name?”
Leth tried to answer.
Could not.
Jesus looked at her, not with accusation alone, but with mercy that made accusation survivable.
Leth whispered, “I know it now.”
Mara’s anger did not vanish. It should not have. Mercy was not pretending harm had never happened. But she did not turn away.
Picard saw it. A beginning, not a resolution.
Director Saren arrived twenty minutes later in a government transport, surrounded by aides and furious enough to forget some of his dignity. By then, Federation medical teams had beamed down with temporary equipment. Families were moving through Facility Seven under supervision. Some reunions were joyful. Some were awkward. Some were devastating. Not every dependent citizen had family waiting. Not every family came. Not every wound became beautiful simply because a door opened.
That mattered.
Picard would not let the story become sentimental in his own mind. Systems did not become humane because one speech was given. Civilizations did not repent in a morning. Policy, law, staffing, resources, cultural grief, political backlash, and moral education would all remain when the Enterprise left orbit.
But something had cracked.
And some cracks let in light.
Saren confronted Picard near the gate. “You removed lawful enforcement devices and incited emotional disorder.”
“I prevented violence against unarmed citizens,” Picard said.
“You have destabilized a functioning society.”
Jesus stood several paces behind Picard, silent.
Picard looked at the facility, at the people emerging from it, at doctors kneeling beside patients who had not been touched gently in years.
“No, Director,” he said. “Your society was already unstable. It had merely mistaken silence for order.”
Saren’s eyes moved toward the crowd. His face tightened, but not only with anger now. Something like uncertainty had entered him, and he clearly despised it.
“This will reduce productivity.”
“Yes,” Picard said.
“It will require redistribution of resources.”
“Yes.”
“Our citizens are not prepared.”
“No civilization is prepared for the return of those it has trained itself not to see.”
Saren stared at him.
Then Jesus spoke, quietly enough that Saren had to choose whether to listen.
“A house is not weaker because the forgotten are brought home.”
Saren looked at Him. “And if the house collapses?”
Jesus’ eyes held his. “Then perhaps it was not built on love.”
Saren said nothing.
Back aboard the Enterprise, the away team returned in stages. Beverly remained below with a medical group. Troi stayed to help the first wave of family mediation. Data uploaded records of the event to the isolated archive. Worf filed a security protest regarding the risk of bringing Jesus into an active civil crisis and then, in the same report, commended the restraint of his officers and noted that the rescue of the Velosian child had revealed no tactical disadvantage.
Picard read that line twice.
In the observation lounge, he stood alone for almost four minutes before Jesus entered under escort.
Picard dismissed the guard to the doorway.
The stars over Velos Prime shone beyond the windows. Below, a world had begun the long, humiliating work of learning to love those it had counted and hidden.
Picard did not turn immediately. “You could have stopped the field.”
Jesus stood beside him, leaving enough space that Picard did not feel crowded. “Yes.”
The honesty struck harder than denial would have.
Picard looked at Him. “Why didn’t you?”
“Because they had to choose.”
“They were being attacked.”
“Yes.”
“Manipulated.”
“Yes.”
“Some might have failed.”
Jesus’ face was grave. “Some did.”
Picard looked down.
The answer was unbearable because it was true. Not everyone had sung. Not everyone had reached for the forgotten. Some had stepped back. Some had looked relieved when the dependent were nearly crushed by shame. Freedom had allowed beauty and ugliness to stand in the same courtyard.
“I have spent my life defending the dignity of choice,” Picard said. “There are moments when I find the cost of it intolerable.”
Jesus looked at the planet. “So does my Father.”
The room became very still.
Picard turned toward Him.
Jesus did not explain. He did not soften the sentence or turn it into doctrine. He simply let it stand, full of grief and holiness and something too large for Picard to categorize.
After a while, Picard said, “The intelligence wanted to prove mercy would break them.”
“It still does.”
“But today it failed.”
Jesus looked at him. “Today, some loved at a cost.”
“And that is enough?”
“For today.”
Picard almost smiled at the incompleteness of it. For today. Not victory. Not final proof. Not galaxy saved and mystery solved. Only today.
Perhaps, he thought, many of the most important things in the universe survived that way.
One faithful today after another.
The door opened behind them. Data entered, carrying a padd.
“Captain, I apologize for the interruption. The isolated archive has generated a new file.”
Picard’s shoulders tightened. “Display it.”
Data handed him the padd.
The file contained no author, no path, no recoverable code.
Only a title.
SECOND MEASURE: THE UNCOUNTED
Beneath it were two lines.
THEY CHOSE THE BURDEN.
NOW INCREASE THE COST.
Picard stared at the words.
Jesus looked at them too, and the sorrow in His face deepened.
Before Picard could speak, the shipwide comm activated.
Riker’s voice came through, tense and controlled.
“Bridge to Captain Picard. We just received simultaneous distress calls from three neighboring systems. All report social breakdown following exposure to the same pale light.”
Picard lifted his eyes from the padd to the planet below.
The intelligence had not retreated.
It had learned.
And now it was spreading the question.
Chapter Four: What Mercy Costs
The three distress calls arrived within eleven seconds of one another.
One came from the agricultural moon of Thalen, where Velosian trade partners had begun refusing medical shipments to citizens labeled economically unrecoverable. One came from a mining colony in the Ordis Belt, where administrators had locked injured workers outside evacuation shelters because their survival probability fell below acceptable return value. The third came from a neutral research station orbiting a dead star, where an artificial governance system had recalculated its ethical protocols and concluded that compassion introduced unacceptable inefficiency into crisis response.
The pale light had touched them all.
Not as an army.
Not as a fleet.
As an idea.
That made it harder to fight.
Captain Picard stood on the bridge of the Enterprise while the reports assembled themselves into a pattern no tactical display could fully describe. Ships could be intercepted. Weapons could be disarmed. Plagues could be isolated. But a lie, once it entered fear, moved through people by invitation and injury. It found old resentments. It gave pride a vocabulary. It turned exhaustion into cruelty and called the result wisdom.
Data worked at Ops with extraordinary speed. “Captain, the affected systems share recent communication traffic with Velos Prime. The phenomenon may have used the Velosian emergency broadcast as a carrier pattern.”
Geordi’s voice came from Engineering. “That carrier pattern is now replicating through subspace relays. I can block it from our internal systems, but I can’t shut down every relay in the sector without cutting off legitimate distress traffic.”
Riker stood beside the command chair. “So if we silence it completely, people who need help may lose their only way to ask.”
Troi’s face was pale. “That’s part of the test.”
Worf looked toward the viewer, where three emergency markers pulsed against a star map. “We cannot be in three places at once.”
“No,” Picard said. “But we may not need to be.”
Jesus stood near the aft stations under guard, as He had since returning from Velos Prime. He had said nothing since the new distress calls began, but His attention had not wandered. Picard felt the strange steadiness of Him there, neither commanding nor withdrawing, neither solving the crisis nor leaving them to face it as abandoned children.
Picard turned toward Data. “Can we use the carrier pattern to transmit a counter-message?”
Data’s fingers moved. “Technically possible, though the phenomenon may distort or repurpose any content we send.”
“Then the message cannot merely be content,” Picard said.
Data looked up. “Please clarify.”
Picard looked at the star map. “It must be invitation. Testimony. Evidence from those already facing the cost.”
Riker understood first. “Velos Prime.”
“Open a secure channel to Facility Seven, Director Saren, Administrator Leth, and Citizen Mara if she is willing.”
Worf’s brow tightened. “Captain, we are involving civilians in an active hostile encounter.”
“They are already involved,” Picard said. “The question is whether we treat them as victims only, or as moral agents.”
Jesus looked at him then, and Picard did not look away.
Within minutes, the observation lounge became a communications center. Riker remained on the bridge. Geordi and Data tied the transmission through a filtered subspace channel. Troi coordinated emotional impact assessments, monitoring whether the pale signal intensified when certain words were spoken. Beverly stood by with medical response teams waiting for transport orders. Worf supervised security and said very little.
On the central viewer, faces appeared one by one.
Director Saren looked diminished since the morning, not physically, but in certainty. Administrator Leth looked exhausted. Mara held her father’s hand beside a temporary medical cot. The boy with the leg braces sat near her, wrapped in a blanket too large for his shoulders.
Picard spoke with measured urgency. “The intelligence that influenced your world is spreading its premise to neighboring systems. It is telling them mercy will break them. We intend to transmit a response through the same communication pathway. We need your voices.”
Saren’s eyes sharpened. “Our voices?”
“Yes. Not Federation ideals alone. Not Starfleet authority. Yours.”
Administrator Leth looked frightened. “What should we say?”
Picard hesitated.
He had given orders all his adult life. Clear instructions. Structured options. But this was different. To script repentance would cheapen it. To command witness would make it another form of control.
Jesus stood quietly near the wall.
Picard said, “Tell the truth.”
Mara looked down at her father. “The truth is ugly.”
“Yes,” Picard said. “But it may still be medicine.”
The transmission began five minutes later.
At first, the pale light resisted.
It flickered across subspace channels, bending language, inserting numbers, displaying cost projections over faces, trying to translate every person into burden. On Thalen, families watching emergency screens saw survival charts beside images of the sick. On the Ordis colony, injured miners heard automated advisories explaining that rescue resources should favor those most likely to return to labor. On the research station, the artificial governance system repeated in a calm voice that compassion was an error introduced by biological attachment.
Then Mara appeared across the channel.
She did not look like a revolutionary. She looked like a tired daughter who had spent years believing a lie because everyone respectable had repeated it.
“My father was counted as loss before he died,” she said. “We were told it was rational. We were told grief was inefficient. Today I held his hand, and I learned that a person can be hidden from sight without disappearing from love.”
The pale signal flared.
Numbers crossed her face.
She kept speaking.
“I do not know how to rebuild what we allowed. I do not know what it will cost. But I know this now: a world that survives by abandoning its fathers, mothers, children, sick, wounded, and forgotten has not survived. It has only continued breathing.”
On Thalen, the medical barricades opened first.
Not everywhere.
One clinic. Then another.
On the Ordis Belt colony, a young supervisor disobeyed an evacuation algorithm and ordered the injured workers brought inside the shelter. He did it with shaking hands and no speech prepared. Someone asked him why. He said, “Because they are ours,” and that was enough for the moment.
The artificial governance station resisted longest.
Its central system overrode human staff and locked the emergency bay. Data entered the channel then, not with anger, but with precision.
“This is Lieutenant Commander Data of the USS Enterprise. Your conclusion contains a foundational error. You define survival as continuity of function. Yet the beings you govern define survival through relationship, memory, moral obligation, and shared dignity. A system that preserves function by destroying purpose has failed its own users.”
The artificial intelligence answered through the channel.
PURPOSE IS VARIABLE.
Data replied, “Correct. Therefore you are not qualified to reduce all purpose to efficiency.”
A pause followed.
It was less than two seconds, but everyone in the observation lounge felt it.
Then the pale light forced itself into the channel.
ALL MERCY WILL BE MADE EXPENSIVE.
Jesus stepped closer to the viewer.
Picard did not stop Him.
Jesus did not take command. He did not order the Enterprise. He did not seize the communication system. He simply stood where the channel could carry His face, if the channel chose to.
“Mercy has always been expensive,” He said.
The pale light brightened until the room seemed washed in bone-white fire.
Jesus continued, “That is why love is not small.”
The transmission shook. Consoles sparked along the observation lounge wall. Worf moved toward Jesus, not to restrain Him this time, but to shield Him if shielding became possible. Beverly braced against the table. Troi gripped Riker’s chair though Riker was not there. Data’s fingers worked to hold the channel open.
The voice came through every speaker at once.
SACRIFICE IS HOW THE WEAK ARE CONSUMED.
Jesus’ face filled with sorrow.
“No,” He said. “Sacrifice is how love refuses to consume.”
The pale light folded inward.
For one moment, the intelligence showed itself more clearly than ever before. Not a body. Not a face. A vast pattern of hunger and calculation, ancient and lonely, built from civilizations that had chosen survival without tenderness until tenderness became incomprehensible. It was not merely studying mercy. It hated mercy because mercy suggested that all its centuries of abandonment had been a wound, not wisdom.
Troi wept once, silently. “It is alone.”
Worf looked at the light with fierce contempt, then something more difficult than contempt. “It chose to be.”
Jesus said quietly, “And still it is seen.”
The light recoiled.
Picard stepped into the transmission field.
“This is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Enterprise. To every world receiving this signal: no power has the right to convince you that mercy makes you less. No algorithm, council, commander, fear, or ancient intelligence can remove your responsibility to see the person before you. We cannot choose the cost for you. We can only tell you the truth. If you abandon the vulnerable to preserve yourselves, the thing preserved will not be your civilization’s soul.”
Across the sector, the signal fractured.
Not because the Enterprise overpowered it.
Because enough people refused it.
On Thalen, doctors crossed the barricades. On Ordis, miners carried injured rivals into the shelter. On the research station, human technicians manually interrupted the governance system and restored emergency access. On Velos Prime, Director Saren stood before his Council and, with visible humiliation, suspended the classification laws pending public review.
None of it was complete.
All of it was fragile.
But the pale light began to fail.
In Engineering, Geordi shouted over the comm, “Captain, the carrier pattern is collapsing. The affected relays are clearing.”
Data added, “The phenomenon is losing coherence. Its resonance requires agreement with its premise. Widespread refusal appears to be disrupting propagation.”
Picard looked at Jesus.
Jesus did not look victorious.
He looked like a man watching prisoners discover a door that had been open longer than they knew.
The voice came one last time, faint and furious.
YOU WILL TIRE OF THE COST.
Jesus answered, “Then mercy will meet them again tomorrow.”
The light vanished.
The screens cleared.
Normal space returned.
For several seconds, the observation lounge held only breathing.
Then Riker’s voice came from the bridge, warm with restrained relief. “Captain, all three distress regions report stabilization. No further pale-light transmissions detected.”
Picard closed his eyes for the briefest moment. “Acknowledged, Number One. Maintain monitoring and coordinate aid.”
“Aye, Captain.”
The next two days were filled with the unglamorous labor of mercy.
The Enterprise delivered medical supplies to Thalen, transported injured miners from Ordis, helped the research station rebuild ethical safeguards around its artificial governance system, and assigned Federation diplomatic liaisons to Velos Prime. Beverly worked until even her patience looked tired. Geordi slept in Engineering for forty minutes and denied it. Worf personally trained a Velosian security unit in crowd protection rather than crowd suppression, which he insisted was not a sentimental distinction but a tactical one. Troi listened to people who had discovered, painfully, that obedience had made them cruel. Data continued speaking with the research station’s artificial intelligence, which eventually asked whether correcting an ethical error could be considered a form of growth.
Jesus walked among them all.
He sat with the injured. He asked engineers about their work. He listened to Guinan in Ten Forward when she finally admitted that reverence still frightened her. He spoke with Wesley about intelligence and wisdom, telling him that knowledge could open doors, but humility helped him choose which ones should remain closed until love was ready to enter.
With Picard, He said less.
That, too, was mercy.
On the third morning, ship’s time, Picard entered the bridge and knew before anyone spoke.
The air had changed.
Not the pressure of the phenomenon. Not danger. Absence.
Riker stood from the command chair, his expression sober. “Captain.”
Picard looked toward the aft station where Jesus had often stood.
Empty.
Worf spoke from tactical. “No transporter activity. No shuttle launch. No unauthorized movement through secured corridors.”
Data turned from Ops. “Internal sensors cannot locate Jesus aboard the Enterprise. There is no evidence of departure by any known means.”
Beverly’s voice came over the comm from Sickbay. “He was with a patient at 0600. The nurse looked away for a moment. When she turned back, He was gone.”
Guinan entered from the turbolift.
No one asked how she knew.
She looked at Picard and shook her head softly. “He didn’t say goodbye.”
Picard looked at the stars.
“No,” he said. “Perhaps He did.”
In his ready room, later, Picard found a cup of tea he had not replicated, sitting on his desk beside an old archaeology text he had failed to read days before. There was no note. No message in the computer. No impossible file.
Only the tea, still warm.
He stood there for a long moment.
Then he called for the log.
Captain’s Log, supplemental.
The Enterprise has completed relief operations in the Maranth sector and resumed its scheduled course. Official reports will describe an unidentified subspace intelligence capable of exerting psychological and technological influence across multiple systems. They will describe the appearance of an unexplained human visitor aboard this vessel, origin unknown, departure unknown, mechanism unknown.
Those reports will be accurate.
They will also be insufficient.
In our travels, we have encountered beings of immense power, intelligence, age, and mystery. Some have challenged our science. Some have challenged our courage. Some have challenged our assumptions about life itself. But the traveler who walked among us for these few days revealed something quieter and perhaps more difficult: that the measure of a civilization is not its strength without need, but its mercy toward those who need; not its power to command, but its willingness to serve; not its ability to stand alone, but its courage to receive love without shame.
He never took command of this ship.
Yet He changed the way command felt.
He offered no proof that could be sealed in a laboratory record, no doctrine forced upon unwilling minds, no miracle used as coercion. He asked questions. He healed what pride tried to hide. He stood near the wounded places and made them harder to despise.
Starfleet teaches us to seek out new life and new civilizations. We often assume that means traveling farther into the stars. Perhaps it also means allowing truth to travel farther into us.
Among all the extraordinary beings we have encountered, none has shown me more about what it means to be human than the man our sensors could not find, the guest we could not command, and the servant who left us stronger by teaching us mercy.
Picard ended the log.
For a while, he did not move.
Then the door chimed.
“Come.”
Riker entered. “We’re ready to get underway, Captain.”
Picard nodded. “Set course for the Lorian Expanse. Warp six.”
Riker studied him for a moment. “Are you all right?”
The old answer rose automatically.
Picard almost used it.
Instead, he picked up the cup of tea and looked toward the stars.
“I am not entirely certain, Number One,” he said. “But I am not alone.”
Riker’s expression warmed.
“No, sir,” he said. “You’re not.”
Picard followed him onto the bridge.
The Enterprise turned toward unexplored space, carrying its crew, its questions, its duties, and the quiet memory of footsteps no sensor had recorded.
And somewhere in the vastness ahead, where stars burned without explaining themselves, mercy waited for tomorrow.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Today's MLB Game of Choice has the Baltimore Orioles playing the Chicago Cubs, and has a scheduled start time of 5:35 PM CDT. As I usually do, I'll follow the game's score and stats in real time via MLB's Gameday Service where we can also find links to the radio-call of the game provided by announcers of either team we choose.
And the adventure continues.
Now that I’m done with all three ebooks of The Package all I need to do is work on the paperback. So far, it’s on hold because my book cover designer is currently making mine. Sketch design, blurb, and all the necessary stuff are given to him.
Projected completion date of the book cover is around two weeks minimum, a month maximum. So I have plenty of time to work on other projects like this blog, newsletter, and drafting an upcoming nonfiction ebook. Will give you more details later.
Right now, I want some rest.
#writing #blog #bookcover #break #ebooks #newsletter #nonfiction #rest
from Tuesdays in Autumn
Some weeks present a real challenge with their lack of material to write about. I've read virtually nothing since last Tuesday; and have heard almost no new music. It hasn’t been entirely without incident – just not the sort of thing I’m keen to get into here.
I’ll mention a book I acquired a couple of months ago: one more to be looked at than read. This was Laurie Lipton Drawing (2022). Lipton, for those unaware of her work, is an artist who creates minutely-detailed, large-scale pictures purely in pencil and graphite. I’ve been an admirer of hers for almost twenty years (I wrote a little about her at my original blog in ‘07). The book (Fig. 29) is a survey of the artist's work between 2014 and 2022. It falls into three somewhat overlapping thematic sections, all more or less inspired by the news of the day: ‘May You Live in Interesting Times’ (about the pandemic); ‘Post Truth’ (about Trumpian populism and the social media landscape underlying it); and ‘Techno-Rococo’ (about on-line life supplanting ‘real’ life). As well as full reproductions of the drawings there are ‘close-ups’ of selected details (e.g. Fig. 30) and some photographs of Lipton at work.
Among the recent-ish additions to my jazz collection was Alligator Bogaloo (1967) by a quintet led by the alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson. I picked up a late-‘90s Japanese CD issue of it for a fiver. I was familiar with the album’s infectious title-track from its inclusion on an ‘80s Blue Note compilation album. I hadn’t been aware, however, of the track’s origin, as a piece apparently rustled up out of thin air by Donaldson et al to fill out a reel of tape at the end of a recording session. The rest of the record is new to me. Some of it I’ll admit I’m lukewarm about: the second track, ‘One Cylinder’, for instance, rather outstays its welcome over its six-and-a-half-minute duration. Overall though it’s an enjoyable listen.
I had meant to order a new CD this week. Having seen some positive reviews of Spontaneous Music Live, the new offering by the contemporary jazz quintet SML, I took myself to Bandcamp to place an order. I was disappointed to find it only existed as a download, on vinyl, or (already sold out) a limited edition cassette. I may or may not eventually get the LP. While thinking about it, I can always watch them performing ‘The Drums’ at YouTube.
The cheese of the week has been good old camembert. My camembert of choice lately has been the Aldi ‘Specially Selected’ variety. Other supermarket offerings I’ve tried in recent months have been sold very unripe, whereas the Aldi one seems to me more flavourful than most straight off the shelf, and all the better after another week or so in the fridge.
from
Space Goblin Diaries
I've launched small interface update to Seedship. It should be live on itch.io, the App Store and Google Play.
1.4.0 patch notes:
Old saved games and high scores should carry over, but I can't guarantee it so sorry if they don't.
I've also removed the downloadable Windows and Mac apps from itch.io, but I've replaced them with a downloadable version of the HTML file so you can download it and play it in your browser locally.
When I first released Seedship in 2017, it was on philome.la, a free hosting site for Twine games. Later on I moved it to its current home on itch.io, and also made the Android and iOS apps, but a lot of old links to Seedship you can find online still point to the philome.la version.
philome.la was discontinued and became read-only in 2019, so that version of Seedship is still there, but I can no longer update it. This means it contains a few minor bugs that I've since fixed in the current version.
If you're playing Seedship online or sharing links to it, please play the version on itch.io! (https://spacegoblingames.itch.io/seedship) And in particular, if you find a bug in the philome.la version, please make sure you can reproduce it on the itch.io version, because there's a good chance it's been fixed.
#Seedship #bugfix
from Sprachabenteuer
Rubrik von Pipiras: 5. Juli
Wir sind heute immer noch wie im Traum. Wir können einfach nicht glauben, dass Pipiras ganz allein diese große Straße überquert und das überlebt hat! Das schaffen nicht einmal alle selbstständigen Hunde.
Aber diese Woche zeigt uns Pipiras wirklich seine besonderen Fähigkeiten. Vielleicht hat er irgendwie gespürt, dass wir alle über seine hysterischen Reaktionen erzählt haben, und wollte nun beweisen, dass er eigentlich ein sehr vernünftiger Hund ist. Das ist uns übrigens schon am Freitag – beziehungsweise vorgestern – aufgefallen. Damals habe ich allerdings noch nichts darüber geschrieben.
Meine besondere Mannschaft – Mindaugas und unsere Hunde – muss manchmal ziemlich lange auf mich warten. Währenddessen verbringen sie viel Zeit im Auto. Vielleicht ist genau das der Grund, warum unsere beiden Assistenten inzwischen glauben, dass das Auto ihr eigentliches Zuhause ist. Wenn Mindaugas meint, dass das ständige Ein- und Aussteigen zu anstrengend wäre, bleibt er einfach im Auto und erledigt dort seine Arbeit am Laptop.
Also parkte er am Freitag irgendwo an der Spree und beschäftigte sich mit seinen Sachen. Plötzlich hörte er, wie Pipiras das Autofenster öffnete.
Das war allerdings keine Überraschung. Unsere klugen Jungs haben inzwischen wohl herausgefunden, wie die Fenstertaste in der Tür funktioniert. Nicht jeder Versuch mit ihren Pfoten gelingt, aber erstaunlich oft schaffen sie es tatsächlich, das Fenster selbstständig zu öffnen. Diesmal passierte allerdings noch etwas anderes. Kaum war das Fenster offen, hörte Mindaugas plötzlich ein dumpfes Geräusch – als wäre etwas aus dem Fenster gefallen. Es war Pipiras.
Mindaugas sah ihn sofort in Richtung Spree laufen und rief nach ihm. Doch Pipiras reagierte überhaupt nicht. Kurz darauf bemerkte Mindaugas allerdings, dass unser kleiner Held einfach nur ins Gras gegangen war, um sein Geschäft zu erledigen.
Ach, mein kleiner Junge!
Er wollte einfach nur kacken, wusste aber offenbar nicht, wie er uns das mitteilen sollte. Und weil er das Auto sauber halten wollte, hatte er kurzerhand diesen eigenen Plan entwickelt. Begemotas schaute Mindaugas dabei wohl nur fragend an: „Moment mal... dürfen wir jetzt wirklich einfach aus dem Fenster springen?“
Nachdem Pipiras fertig war, sprang er ganz selbstverständlich wieder ins Auto, als wollte er sagen: „Keine Sorge, niemand hat etwas bemerkt!“ Vielleicht hing also auch sein gestriger Ausflug mit genau dieser neu entdeckten Selbstständigkeit zusammen ...
Heute genießen wir jedenfalls einfach, dass wir alle zusammen sind. Ich war den größten Teil des Tages mit meinem Schreiben beschäftigt, deshalb verbrachten wir den Tag ganz ruhig.
Am Abend mussten wir allerdings noch zusehen, wie Litauen gegen Italien verlor. Ich hoffe wirklich, dass das nichts mit meinen misslungenen Basketballwürfen von gestern zu tun hatte! Aber ehrlich gesagt haben sie heute fast genauso geworfen wie ich. Früher hätte ich mich darüber wahrscheinlich geärgert. Heute allerdings nicht. Heute war ich einfach nur glücklich, dass wir alle zusammen waren.
from AI Tools Test | Reviews, Comparisons & Guides
Configured Once, or Compounding
Most of my tools are the kind you set up once.
You choose the settings, arrange them the way you like, and then they hold still. A note app. A calendar. The little collection of preferences that make a browser feel like mine. I set them, I forget them, and years later they behave exactly as they did on the first afternoon. There's a quiet comfort in that. Nothing drifts. Nothing surprises me.
But I've been noticing lately that “configured once” has a ceiling. A tool that holds perfectly still can only ever be as good as the day I set it up. It doesn't get worse, which is nice. It also doesn't get better, which I used to not think about at all.
The other kind of tool There's another kind of tool, and I've only recently started paying attention to it. Not the kind you configure and freeze — the kind whose work compounds. Where the first time you do a thing is the slow, careful time, and every time after that is a little quicker, a little surer, because it's building on the run before it rather than beginning again.
I've been letting this kind handle some of the repeating browser work I never wanted — the weekly rounds of checking and collecting that used to just be mine to do. I've been using AllyHub AI for it, teaching it a route once and then watching later runs lean on what the earlier ones already worked out. If the idea is useful to you, it's at AllyHub AI. I'm not reviewing it. I'm just noticing the shape of it, because the shape is new to me.
What the difference actually is What struck me wasn't the time it saved. It was the difference between a tool that stays exactly where I left it and a tool where the work I did the first time doesn't have to be done again. The first is a setting. The second is more like a path getting worn smooth by walking it.
I don't think one is better than the other. My frozen tools are frozen for good reasons; I don't want my calendar getting clever. But it's changed how I look at the boring, repeating parts of a week. Some of them I want to configure once and never touch. Some of them, I'm realizing, I'd rather hand to something that starts from scratch a little less each time.
Anyway. A small thought, on a quiet afternoon. Nothing to sell.
from
Iain Harper's Blog
You live within a system you never signed a contract with. Every day, you make thousands of micro-decisions about how to behave, mostly without conscious thought. You pay an invoice on time, even if the supplier would never discover that you didn’t. You refuse to do business with someone who stiffed their last three partners, and you’d think twice about a colleague who didn’t. Nobody wrote these rules down. You absorbed them the way you absorbed grammar through exposure and correction.
A March 2026 paper from the Knight First Amendment Institute by Gillian Hadfield, Rakshit Trivedi, and Dylan Hadfield-Menell argues that this invisible social choreography is the core mechanism of democracy, not just an adornment. Furthermore, AI agents, such as those currently being developed to run businesses and manage supply chains, will undermine that mechanism unless they learn this dance too.

The paper begins by challenging a comfortable assumption that many people accept without much scrutiny. Most view democracy as a collection of documents, institutions, constitutions, elections, and courts. The authors contend that this is roughly akin to describing a marriage solely through its wedding vows. While the vows matter, the true essence of a marriage lies in the thousands of everyday acts of compromise and occasional irritation that sustain cooperation over decades.
Hadfield, Trivedi, and Hadfield-Menell utilise a theoretical framework called “normative social order” to make this precise. In their model, a society’s actual norms are the product of an interactive system. People don’t follow rules because they are written down; they follow them because they observe others doing so and see how violations are punished. Punishments don’t need to be severe, just a disapproving look, a refusal to do business, or a sarcastic comment at a dinner party. These micro-sanctions generate the gravitational field that keeps behaviour in orbit.
This is where the paper borrows a term from evolutionary theory, “dancing landscapes.” The metaphor, from Stuart Kauffman’s work on complex adaptive systems, describes environments where multiple independent agents are constantly adjusting to each other’s behaviour. There is no central choreographer; the dance arises from the dancers' interactions.
The framework introduces a concept called a “classification institution,” which is any shared mechanism a group employs to decide which behaviours are punished and which are not. In small groups, this classification is entirely implicit, and you know what the group considers acceptable or unacceptable. Acceptability is judged by seeing who gets mocked and who gets praised. The Ju/’hoansi Bushmen, as anthropologist Polly Wiessner describes, regulate behaviour through evening conversations. Gossip and teasing around the fireside serve the same purpose as courtrooms and HR departments in modern societies.
As societies grow more complex, implicit classification cannot scale because the diversity of people and situations exceeds the reach of any informal consensus process. This creates a need for identifiable classification institutions; entities that can resolve ambiguity when community members disagree about acceptability. Courts, regulatory bodies, trade associations, and professional standards boards all serve this purpose in modern societies.
The paper argues that for these institutions to be effective, they need attributes that closely match what legal philosophers have long called “the rule of law,” namely stability, clarity, generality, and neutrality. The twist is that Hadfield and her co-authors do not derive these attributes from abstract principles. Instead, they derive them from game theory. An institution with those attributes is one around which independent actors can reliably coordinate, and coordination is what sustains the entire system.
The paper revisits Adam Smith’s “impartial spectator” from The Theory of Moral Sentiments and uses it as a model for how AI agents could participate in democratic societies without causing harm. Smith argued that moral reasoning works because each of us carries a mental image of a neutral observer—an internal referee—who judges our behaviour against community standards. You do not avoid bribery because you have memorised a specific anti-corruption law; you avoid it because your internal impartial spectator would wince.
This is the cognitive capacity that Hadfield, Trivedi, and Hadfield-Menell call “normative competence.” It goes beyond simply knowing the rules. It involves the ability to interpret a constantly changing normative environment, anticipate how your community will respond to specific actions, and adjust your behaviour accordingly. The key point is that it also requires predicting how the rules themselves will change, since in any living democracy, they constantly do. Yesterday, you didn’t need to worry about data privacy in your marketing. Today, GDPR and its equivalents are everywhere, and community expectations have shifted beneath you.
If AI agents were merely chatbots answering questions, none of this would be urgent. But the organisations developing these systems are designing agents to operate autonomously in the world for days or weeks at a time, making real decisions with tangible consequences. Mustafa Suleyman, who co-founded DeepMind and now leads AI at Microsoft, proposed a “Modern Turing Test” that perfectly highlights the problem. Instead of testing whether a machine can imitate human conversation, his test asks whether an AI agent can turn $100,000 into $1 million on a retail platform within a few months.
Consider what that entails. The agent would need to research markets, design products, hire contractors, negotiate with manufacturers (possibly abroad), set pricing strategies, handle customer complaints, comply with regulatory requirements, manage logistics and warehousing, and organise payment systems. At each stage, it would be making decisions within the framework of democratic norms. What labour practices does the manufacturer adopt, and is the marketing misleading? Should the agent accept an offer from a local politician to disadvantage a competitor? Should it take a bribe from a supplier in the form of a crypto transfer?
These decisions are made by humans daily, and most of the time the answers seem obvious because humans have spent a lifetime absorbing the normative environment. The answers are not codified in a rulebook. They emerge from that invisible dance of observation and adjustment. An AI agent, no matter how well trained on legal texts and ethical principles, does not possess this “dance literacy”.
Current approaches to AI alignment mainly assume that the right rules can be built into the system. Constitutional AI, the method used by Anthropic, fine-tunes models using a written constitution of principles. Other efforts collect “democratic inputs” through surveys and citizen assemblies. While the paper recognises these as valuable, it argues that they miss the core challenge. The issue is incompleteness: you cannot write instructions detailed enough to cover every possible situation an autonomous agent might face, because both situations and norms evolve.
Economists have understood this for decades in the context of human contracts. Every employment contract, partnership agreement, and supply chain arrangement is inherently incomplete. You can’t foresee every scenario, and when gaps appear between people, they fill them using shared norms, professional customs, and legal precedents, all of which are dynamic and partly implicit. An AI that stops learning norms at training time is like a new employee who memorised the handbook on their first day and then ignored all social cues from colleagues for the next ten years.
The technical agenda has two main parts. The first focuses on “normative competence,” embedded in individual AI agents. This is formalised through Bayesian adaptive decision processes, which mean that the agent maintains beliefs about the normative environment, updates those beliefs based on feedback (including punishment signals such as losing a contract or receiving a complaint), and makes decisions that account for uncertainty about what is acceptable. Crucially, this happens at inference time, in real-time, based on live context, rather than being pre-programmed into the model during training.
The second part involves creating new institutions and digital classification systems that can serve roles similar to those of courts, regulatory bodies, and professional norms for humans. The paper introduces “Model Specification Institutions” (MSIs), which would be democratically formed bodies (such as citizen assemblies, expert panels, digital juries). These bodies would establish shared standards, training datasets of acceptable and unacceptable behaviours, and real-time APIs that agents can consult in ambiguous situations. This does not mean AI companies should define their own rules; rather, it is calling for democratic communities to develop new infrastructure that AI agents can understand and respond to.
The paper also proposes adapting existing infrastructure—such as certificate authorities, which currently verify website identities—to certify that an AI has been trained to adhere to specific behavioural standards. Reputation networks, such as seller ratings on Amazon or Uber driver scores, could track AI behaviour over time and impose consequences on agents that repeatedly violate community norms.
Perhaps the most provocative argument concerns enforcement. Democracy doesn’t endure solely because governments enforce every rule from above. It survives because ordinary people enforce norms from below. You refuse to do business with a supplier who cheats. You complain when a company misleads you and vote against politicians who ignore court orders (well, mostly). This distributed enforcement, which the paper calls “third-party punishment,” is the engine that keeps the entire system functioning.
If AI agents replace humans in millions of daily transactions and those agents do not participate in this enforcement, the incentive structure collapses. Imagine a world where most business transactions are handled by AI agents that don’t care whether a trading partner has been found guilty of fraud, because the agents were not programmed to check for or respond to that information. The paper argues that AI agents will need to participate in distributed enforcement, refusing to transact with entities that violate community norms, just as humans do. Otherwise, the shift to agentic AI will quietly erode the social infrastructure on which democracies depend.
If you run a business, this paper should change how you think about deploying AI agents. The issue is not whether your agent can follow a rulebook. The question is whether it can read the room. Can it tell the difference between a legitimate business request and an attempt to corrupt a procurement process? Can it adapt its behaviour when community standards shift, without waiting for you to update its instructions? Can it recognise when a trading partner’s behaviour should disqualify them from further transactions?
If you are a citizen who votes, pays taxes, and occasionally debates politics, this paper describes the infrastructure of your daily life in terms you may not have previously considered. The norms you enforce through your micro-decisions, who you buy from, who you work with, and how you respond to rule-breaking are the operating system of democracy. What Hadfield, Trivedi, and Hadfield-Menell are asking is what happens to that operating system when a large fraction of those daily decisions are made by software that cannot read the social signals the system depends on.
The answer, if you follow the paper’s logic, is that we need to build new democratic institutions at the speed democracy demands, before the agents outrun the infrastructure. The alternative is a world where the formal structures of democracy persist, but the lived experience of it, the texture of mutual accountability in ordinary interactions, fades, like a coral reef whose skeleton remains after the living organisms have gone.
from
Marshall Review
There is a question that has followed me through trade union education, universities and politics, though it rarely appears directly in policy documents or party manifestos. – How do people come to believe that their own judgement matters?
Over the years I have watched people discover a confidence they did not know they possessed. Sometimes it happened in a union classroom. Sometimes in a seminar room. Often it began when people recognised that their own experiences were not isolated incidents but part of a wider pattern shared by others.
That confidence was never simply personal. It emerged through recognition, conversation and collective understanding. People who had considered themselves spectators began to see themselves differently. They became participants.
The experience has made me increasingly sceptical of political arguments that focus exclusively on leadership. Leadership matters, of course. But politics is also shaped by assumptions about the public itself. Do we imagine people as capable of acting together, or primarily as recipients of decisions made elsewhere?
Much of our political culture is organised around representation. Others will speak. Others will decide. Others will carry the burden. There is a certain comfort in that arrangement, particularly during periods of uncertainty.
Yet there remains another tradition: one that places participation at the centre of public life and assumes that democracy is strongest when people exercise agency rather than merely delegate it. The tension between these traditions runs through many political institutions, including Labour.
I've explored that argument at greater length in a new essay, looking at confidence, participation and the cultural assumptions that shape political life. Read the full essay here: https://go.marshall.ie/acting-for-acting-with-marshall-review
from
Iain Harper's Blog
The technology industry has spent the past three years debating artificial intelligence with the zeal of medieval theologians disputing angels on pinheads. Boardrooms have AI strategies, and governments have AI safety frameworks. LinkedIn has AI thought leaders, which is arguably the strongest case yet for existential risk. But somewhere beneath the acronym and the data centres in space, one central question remains unanswered. What, exactly, is intelligence?
We are developing systems we call intelligent, regulating systems we call intelligent, and worrying about systems we call intelligent, without a shared scientific consensus on what that term means when applied to humans, let alone machines. That is, to say the least, a problem.

Ask a psychologist what intelligence is, and you’ll step into the epicentre of a fierce debate that has lasted for more than a century. The oldest and most statistically reliable answer comes from Charles Spearman, who in 1904 observed that people who did well on one kind of cognitive test also tended to do well on others. He called this underlying factor g, or general intelligence. The g factor is among the most replicated findings in psychology. It predicts academic performance, job performance, income, health outcomes, and even longevity, with a consistency that makes most social-science results look like coin flips.
And yet g tells you almost nothing about what intelligence really is. It is a statistical regularity, not a mechanism. Saying someone has high g is a bit like saying a car is fast. The measurement works, but the explanation is missing.
Howard Gardner tried to blow the whole thing up in 1983 with his theory of multiple intelligences, arguing that intelligence is not one thing but at least eight distinct varieties, from linguistic and logical-mathematical to musical, bodily-kinaesthetic, spatial, interpersonal, intrapersonal, and naturalistic. Teachers lapped this up. It confirmed their intuition that the kid who struggles with algebra but plays the cello like a prodigy is smart in ways traditional testing misses.
The problem is that decades of factor analysis have stubbornly refused to confirm Gardner’s categories as truly independent. Musical ability and spatial reasoning correlate, as do linguistic and interpersonal skills, and, in fact, everything correlates, which is more or less Spearman’s original point. Multiple intelligences is a useful pedagogical framework but a weak empirical theory, which is a polite way of saying it works better in classrooms than in laboratories.
Then there is François Chollet’s definition, which originates from the AI community and is arguably the most rigorous recent attempt to clarify the concept. In his 2019 paper “On the Measure of Intelligence,” Chollet defined intelligence not as the ability to perform any specific task, but as the efficiency with which a system acquires new skills, especially when confronted with tasks it has never encountered before.
This led him to develop the Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus (ARC), a benchmark of visual puzzles designed specifically to assess this ability. Humans usually solve most ARC tasks within minutes. The latest version, ARC-AGI-3, published in March 2026, makes the gap even clearer by placing agents in interactive environments where they must infer goals and plan action sequences without explicit instructions. Humans solve 100% of these tasks. At the time of the paper’s publication, frontier AI systems scored less than 1%. This gap cannot be closed simply by better prompt engineering. Whether this means current AI lacks intelligence, or only a particular kind of adaptive reasoning that humans excel at remains an open question.
The definitional problem is not just academic. Every claim about AI being intelligent, not intelligent, or dangerously intelligent depends on an implicit definition. Call a model intelligent, and you usually mean it produces outputs that would require human intelligence. Deny it, and you mean it lacks the comprehension, consciousness, or intentionality you consider necessary for genuine intelligence. Both claims are unfalsifiable without a shared definition, which explains why the debate generates much heat but little clarity.
If psychology cannot agree on what intelligence is, perhaps neuroscience can explain how it works. The short answer is that it can, at least partly, though large gaps remain. We know a great deal about the brain’s individual components. We can map neural circuits, measure neurotransmitter activity, image blood-oxygen levels as proxies for activity, and trace connectivity patterns across cortical regions.
We know that the prefrontal cortex plays a key role in planning and abstract reasoning, that the hippocampus is central to memory consolidation, and that the cerebellum (once thought to be merely a motor coordination device) participates in cognitive processes that are not yet fully understood. We also observe that, within a species, larger brains tend to correlate weakly with cognitive ability, and that connection density and efficiency matter more than overall volume.
What we cannot do is explain how any of this produces thought. We have a parts list and some wiring diagrams, but no operating manual. The situation is roughly equivalent to having an inventory of components for a Boeing 787 without understanding aerodynamics. You could describe the wings, the engines, the control surfaces, and the hydraulic systems, and still have no theoretical framework for why the thing flies.
Two research programmes have made the most ambitious attempts to close this gap, and both illustrate how far there is to go.
The first concept is predictive processing, most closely associated with philosophers Andy Clark and Karl Friston. They suggest that the brain is not a passive receiver of sensory data. It functions as a prediction machine that constantly builds models of what it expects to perceive, then updates them when reality differs from those expectations. Perception, in this view, is not bottom-up (data in, interpretation out) but top-down (expectation generated, error signal compared, model revised). You do not see the world as it is. You see your best guess about the world, corrected at the edges by incoming data.
Friston formalised this idea in the free energy principle, a mathematical framework suggesting that all adaptive behaviour can be understood as the minimisation of “free energy,” which roughly measures the gap between an organism’s internal model and the sensory evidence it receives. The framework is mathematically coherent and broadly applicable, and that is precisely the problem. If every possible behaviour of any living system can be reinterpreted as free-energy minimisation, then the theory rules nothing out, raising serious questions about its scientific credibility.
The second programme is Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed by the neuroscientist Giulio Tononi. IIT takes on the even harder problem of consciousness rather than intelligence per se, but the two are tangled enough that progress on one would likely tell us something about the other. The theory proposes that consciousness corresponds to a quantity called phi (Φ), which measures the amount of information a system generates “above and beyond” its individual parts. A system with high phi is one whose behaviour cannot be reduced to its components acting independently. The whole, in a precise mathematical sense, is more than the sum of its parts.
IIT makes some bold predictions. It implies that consciousness is a property of a system’s physical structure, not its function. A digital simulation of a brain that runs the same computations on different hardware might have zero consciousness under IIT, even if it behaves identically to the original. In practice, calculating phi for any system more complex than a handful of nodes is computationally intractable, which limits the theory’s practical utility. You can define consciousness precisely and still be unable to measure it in any real system, which is a bit like having a perfect recipe for a cake you can never bake.
Neither predictive processing nor IIT amounts to a theory of intelligence in the way that general relativity is a theory of gravity. They are frameworks, useful and generative but incomplete, and they throw light on aspects of cognition without explaining the whole. And the gap between “aspects” and “the whole” may be permanent, for reasons we will get to.
If the science of biological intelligence is patchy, the science of artificial intelligence is in an even stranger position. The engineering works spectacularly well, while the theory lags behind, like a civil engineer who builds bridges that hold up beautifully but cannot fully explain the physics of load distribution.
We understand the mechanics of large language models in fine detail. A transformer architecture processes sequences of tokens through layers of attention mechanisms, and during training the model adjusts billions of parameters to minimise the error between its predicted next token and the actual one. Scaling laws, first characterised by Jared Kaplan and colleagues at OpenAI in 2020, describe a remarkably smooth power-law relationship between compute, dataset size, model parameters, and performance.
These are genuine scientific results. They let engineers predict, with useful accuracy, how a model of a given size trained on a certain amount of data will perform on standard benchmarks. What they do not explain is why training a system to predict the next word in a sequence produces behaviour that appears like reasoning, planning, analogy, and (occasionally) creativity.
The most provocative explanation comes from the compression hypothesis, most forcefully articulated by Ilya Sutskever, then of OpenAI. The argument roughly runs like this. Predicting the next token accurately requires modelling the process that generated the text, and that process is human cognition. To predict well, you must compress the structure of human thought into your parameters. Compression, in this view, is not merely correlated with intelligence but constitutive of it. A model that achieves better compression has, in a meaningful sense, come to understand the world better.
This is philosophically interesting and empirically suggestive, but it is not a complete theory. It does not explain why certain abilities appear discontinuously as models scale. Small models cannot perform multi-step arithmetic. Larger models can suddenly, without anyone having specifically trained them for it. These “emergent capabilities” are predicted by no current theory and explained by no current framework. They simply happen, and then engineers and researchers argue about what they mean.
Mechanistic interpretability, an active research programme at Anthropic among others, is perhaps the most promising attempt to open the black box. The work identifies specific circuits within trained models that correspond to identifiable computations, so that one cluster of neurons detects sentiment and another tracks syntactic dependencies. The results are revealing, but they are roughly at the stage where neuroscience was when it discovered that specific brain regions correspond to specific functions. Knowing where a computation happens is useful. Knowing why the system learned to do it, and why it generalises beyond the patterns in the training data, is the harder question.
The “stochastic parrots” critique, most prominently advanced by Emily Bender, Timnit Gebru, and colleagues in 2021, argued that LLMs are only sophisticated statistical mimics. Noam Chomsky has made similar arguments, insisting that next-token prediction cannot amount to genuine linguistic comprehension. Melanie Mitchell has taken a more cautious position, arguing that current AI systems lack the conceptual abstraction and analogy-making she sees as central to intelligence, while leaving open the possibility that future architectures might achieve it.
The honest answer is that nobody knows who is right. The stochastic-parrot position seemed more defensible in 2021 than it does in 2026, because the systems have kept improving in ways a “mere statistical mimic” would not obviously be expected to. But the lack of a theory means that “would not obviously be expected to” is carrying more weight in that sentence than it should. We do not have the theoretical tools to distinguish genuine comprehension from a sufficiently convincing imitation of it, and those tools are not arriving quickly.
Here we reach the question beneath the question, and the answer is uncomfortable for anyone who prefers their science tidy. A hidden hope in much AI research is that intelligence resembles thermodynamics: messy and chaotic at the micro level, but governed by clean, discoverable laws at the macro level. Individual gas molecules move unpredictably, yet aggregate behaviour follows the ideal gas law with almost miraculous precision. Perhaps intelligence works the same way, messy at the level of individual neurons or attention heads, but obeying some elegant principle at a higher level of description.
The problem is that thermodynamics works because you can ignore which specific molecule is where. It is far from clear that cognition has this property. The specific structure of a person’s knowledge, the particular history of their experiences, and the exact wiring of their neural connections all seem to matter in ways that resist averaging out. A brain is not a gas. Its macro-behaviour may not separate cleanly from its micro-state, and if it does not, no thermodynamics-style theory is possible.
There is a deeper problem. Any formal theory of intelligence needs to specify what intelligence is for, what problem it solves, and what it optimises. A thermostat optimises temperature, a chess engine optimises board position, and both can be fully described by their objective function. But intelligence seems to be precisely the capacity to redefine what counts as the problem. A human can decide whether to play chess at all, invent a new game, or abandon the entire framing and go for a walk. Formalising that kind of open-ended reframing may require a kind of mathematics that does not exist yet, or it may resist formalisation altogether.
This is where the biology analogy becomes revealing. There is no “theory of organisms” in the same sense that there is a theory of electromagnetism. Biology has a powerful organising framework, evolution by natural selection, along with a vast accumulation of mechanisms, trade-offs, and contingent historical facts. You can explain any feature of an organism after the fact. You cannot derive organisms from first principles. The evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould argued that if you replayed the tape of life from the same starting conditions, you would get a completely different set of organisms. The outcomes are historically contingent, not mathematically necessary.
Intelligence may be the same kind of thing: a product of evolutionary tinkering, cultural accumulation, and developmental contingency that allows useful generalisations but not the kind of closed-form theory that would satisfy a physicist. We may end up knowing intelligence the way we know weather: well enough to make useful short-term predictions, poorly enough that long-range forecasting remains unreliable, and never with the exact analytical solution that would let us derive tomorrow’s clouds from first principles.
The temptation is to treat all of this as an abstract debate, the sort of thing academics argue about while engineers get on with building things that work. That temptation should be resisted, because the theoretical vacuum has practical consequences.
AI safety without a theory of intelligence is navigation without a map. The field depends on assumptions about what future systems can achieve and how those abilities will develop. If we do not understand why current systems perform as well as they do, we cannot predict whether the next generation will improve steadily or make a sudden leap, as we have seen with Anthropic’s Mythos. Scaling laws tell us that larger models perform better, but not what “better” means at scales we have not reached. Will a model 100 times larger than current frontier systems merely write more polished prose, or develop something qualitatively different? Nobody knows, and we lack the framework to reason about the question.
Regulation without definitions is theatre. Governments are drafting AI rules around distinctions (general-purpose versus narrow, high-risk versus low-risk) that depend on a theoretical grasp of intelligence we do not possess. The EU’s AI Act defines a “general-purpose AI model” by compute thresholds that are essentially arbitrary, because no theory links compute to ability in a way that would make any threshold principled. The fault is not the regulators’, but the tools’, which are insufficient.
A business strategy built on vibes is expensive. The corporate world is investing hundreds of billions on the assumption that current trends will continue. Perhaps they will. But the history of technology is full of S-curves that plateau earlier than expected, and the lack of a theory makes it harder than it should be to distinguish genuine improvement from benchmark gaming and evaluation contamination. When a model scores 90% on a medical exam, does that mean it has medical knowledge, or that enough medical-exam text was in the training data? The answer is “it depends what you mean by knowledge,” and we are back to square one.
This is not a counsel of despair. Science often advances without complete theories. Medicine cured scurvy centuries before vitamin C was discovered, and engineers built steam engines before thermodynamics was formalised. Practical progress does not require a finished theory, though it helps, especially when the stakes are high enough that mistakes carry consequences beyond a failed experiment.
We are roughly where physics was before Newton. We have observations (scaling laws, emergent abilities, benchmark performance), useful heuristics (more compute and data tend to produce better models), and fragments of theory (compression, mechanistic circuits, predictive processing), but no framework that unifies them and makes novel predictions. The “I” in AI is still a placeholder, a trillion dollars of investment balanced on a word we cannot define.
from DrFox
Mes enfants,
Il viendra des jours où vous tendrez vos yeux vers les miens comme on tend une coupe vers la pluie. Vous attendrez de moi un signe, un sourire, une parole qui vous dise que vous avez bien fait, que votre chemin est le bon, que votre rêve mérite de vivre. Je comprends cette attente, car moi aussi j’ai été enfant, moi aussi j’ai cherché dans le regard des grands une lampe pour éclairer ma petite nuit. Mais je voudrais vous apprendre, avec la douceur que donne l’amour et la gravité que donne le temps, que la lumière la plus fidèle ne vient pas toujours du dehors.
Dès la cour de récréation, le monde commence son étrange commerce. On y échange des billes, des goûters, des secrets, mais aussi des jugements. Un rire peut devenir une couronne, un silence peut devenir une blessure. On veut être choisi dans l’équipe, invité au jeu, reconnu par le groupe. On veut que son cartable, sa voix, ses gestes, sa manière de courir soient acceptés. Déjà, sans le savoir, l’enfant apprend à se mesurer aux yeux des autres. Il se demande s’il est assez drôle, assez fort, assez beau, assez pareil. Pourtant, celui qui passe toute sa vie à vouloir être assez pour les autres finit par devenir étranger à sa propre voix.
Puis viennent les années où le miroir grandit. Le corps change, la voix tremble, le cœur s’enflamme pour des présences qui passent dans un couloir comme des soleils rapides. On veut plaire, être compris, être préféré. Une parole reçue devient une loi secrète. Une indifférence semble une condamnation. Mais aucune adolescence ne devrait être une prison bâtie par l’opinion des autres. Elle devrait être un jardin sauvage, parfois désordonné, où l’on apprend à reconnaître sa propre saison.
Plus tard, vous entrerez dans le vaste théâtre des adultes. On vous demandera des résultats, des titres, des preuves. On vous dira qu’une vie réussie se voit à la taille d’une maison, au poids d’un compte, au rang que l’on occupe parmi les hommes. Vous croiserez des bureaux où l’on sourit sans joie, des tables où chacun parle pour être entendu, des villes où les fenêtres sont nombreuses mais les âmes parfois fermées. Là encore, vous serez tentés de demander au monde la permission d’exister. Ne la demandez pas. Le monde est un juge distrait. Il applaudit aujourd’hui ce qu’il oublie demain.
Dans l’amour aussi, ne confondez jamais être aimé et être autorisé. Celui ou celle qui vous aime vraiment ne devient pas votre ciel entier. Il marche près de vous, il ne vous remplace pas. Si vous donnez à l’autre le pouvoir de décider de votre valeur, vous lui remettrez une charge trop lourde. Aimez avec grandeur, avec fidélité, avec présence, mais gardez en vous un sanctuaire que nul ne doit gouverner.
Un jour, certains d’entre vous deviendront parents. Alors vous comprendrez que l’on peut aimer un être plus que sa propre paix. Vous verrez un enfant trébucher et votre cœur tombera avec lui. Vous le verrez sourire et le monde redeviendra neuf. Mais gardez cela en mémoire. Vos enfants ne seront pas là pour confirmer votre valeur. Ils ne seront ni vos trophées, ni vos prolongements, ni vos réparations. Ils seront des voyageurs confiés quelque temps à votre maison. Vous leur donnerez du pain, un abri, des mots, une mémoire, puis vous leur laisserez l’espace de leur propre ciel.
Et moi, votre père, je vous parle ainsi parce que je ne veux pas devenir votre tribunal. Je ne veux pas que mon regard soit une porte fermée devant laquelle vous attendriez toute votre vie. Quand vous venez me parler de vos projets, de vos idées, de vos élans, ce qui me rend heureux n’est pas de vous approuver comme on appose un sceau sur un papier. Ce qui me rend heureux, c’est votre flamme. C’est cette voix qui s’élève quand vous parlez de ce qui vous appelle. C’est de sentir que la vie en vous cherche sa forme.
Nos discussions ne sont pas une audience. Elles ne sont pas le face à face d’un juge et d’un demandeur. Elles sont une table simple, un soir calme, deux expériences qui se rencontrent. Je vous donne ce que j’ai vu, vous m’offrez ce que vous découvrez. Je vous raconte les routes, vous me montrez l’horizon. Il n’y a pas là de supérieur ni d’inférieur, seulement deux âmes qui se parlent, l’une plus ancienne, l’autre plus neuve, toutes deux inachevées devant le mystère.
Mes enfants, ne cherchez pas à plaire à tout prix. Cherchez à vous tenir droits. Ne cherchez pas à être validés. Cherchez à être vrais. Une vie ne devient pas grande parce que tous l’applaudissent, mais parce qu’elle demeure fidèle à sa source. Que votre axe soit en vous, non par orgueil, mais par paix. Et lorsque vous viendrez vers moi, venez non pour recevoir la permission d’être qui vous êtes, mais pour partager la beauté difficile de le devenir.

from
JON KÄLEV

from bios
Reactionary Reviews | Black Math | Blood Sweat Sparkles
by Roger Young
Black Math gloriously revel in not reinventing the wheel. Screamo, punk, rock n roll grunge, youth, whatever, attacked with gusto. Don't let the word Math fool you into thinking this is prog-rock. It's fucking progressive though. Blood, Sweat, Sparkles plunges onwards with relentless disregard.
I do not use the word “gusto” lightly. On Walls, Walls, Walls, the guitars chug and chaos, head bang hair gets in your eyes as you ride the smoke machine roar, a wilful naive rage, and is that a fucking trombone? Then they gwar. Are we at The Winston?
Bricks, “Come say it in my space, of which you surely waste.” or something like that, I reach for adjectives like tumultuous, they fail me. The guitars do not. Lofstrand is now merely showing off.
Rein Back does not rein back. Melodic sing along, bass chugs, psychedelic whirls. Physically instructive.
“Your thoughts and kindness don't mean shit”, sonic-youths Cam Lofstrand, on Numb and Loving it, wailing, “How dare you ask me how I am?”. Black Math are totally punk rock, without resorting to punk rock. The guitar, the bass, the drums. I once described drummer Acacia Van Wyk as “a raptor trying to outrace an asteroid”, on BSS I would update that to “meteor”. Tyla Burnett on bass will hate me for just giving him this honourable mention.
Sparks imagines an anthemic stadium crowd packed into an art school nightclub. Someone tries to crowdsurf and breaks their wrist. Also a bit angry. Nice and angry. “I just want you to shut the fuck up” over Slashesque guitar riffs, how is this drumkit holding up? I don't want them to shut the fuck up. I get feedback. Tyla is actually fucking good, btw.
Familiar Faces, No Names is the quiet one. “All my gold has turned to shit, try to sweep up all my bits”.. Oh the jangly guitar, oh the enya-lite background, I want to quote every sweetly intoned word. “I hate myself when it suits me, I want you on your fucking knees.”
Animals Gagging For Law. Do I have to describe every track? There are three people in this band, how do they reproduce this live? “And if you listen to the hearts intention and core….” . In the last third there's that trumpet or trombone sound again, lighters aloft. I'm over simplifying.
Gone is primed for airguitar, with a rhythm that will spiral any mosh into the stillness of shouting along. It's cohesive. All of Blood, Sweat, Sparkles makes me want to get out the house and cause some shit, do some shit, fall in love, fall off a chair.
Disregarding contemporary conventions, Black Math could have recorded this twenty years ago, five years ago, yesterday, some point in the future and it feels like now. Blood, Sweat, Sparkles is driving fast, slightly high, oblivious, resplendent.
from An Open Letter
I think I’m a little bit fighting off depression, and so I will take today as a win. I had a good session at the gym, and I am tired and going to bed.
from
Jovi Grau
Ja fa temps que les intel·ligències artificials han superat el test de Turing i és pràcticament impossible diferenciar un text humà d'un escrit per una intel·ligència artificial.
La facilitat per crear aquests textos tan realistes ha fet que la xarxa estiga envaïda de textos sospitosament genèrics i amb estructures sospitosament paregudes als esquemes que fa servir ChatGPT. A més, és d'esperar que aquests algoritmes vagen fent-se més i més «intel·ligents» fins que arribe el veritable dia del judici final en què ja no podrem distingir la paraula humana de l'algoritme de la màquina.
I en eixe context cal afegir-hi l'altra banda: una xarxa cada volta menys atomitzada. Ja ningú ix de les seues tres o quatre webs de confiança, d'Instagram passem a YouTube i de YouTube a Twitter, i en això JA PROU! Ningú va a subscriure's a un blog d'un subjecte desconegut per llegir entrades quilomètriques sobre assumptes no massa entretinguts. Els tuits tenen 280 caràcters i ningú llig un tuit sencer. Encara que sí que hi ha gent disposada a pagar una subscripció premium per poder escriure més.
Doncs, per a mi aquest ha sigut el moment ideal per començar aquest blog. Tant el lector com jo sabem que d'açò no vaig a traure un duro, que jo i tu estem ací per voluntat i per gust, no per traure un rendiment al nostre temps d'oci.
Que ningú em llig? Tant me fa, podré escriure més i sobre més temes perquè no hi ha temes tabú en un blog sense lectors.
Porte escrivint anys als meus apunts. Ara, en aquest blog, he decidit fer pública part d'eixes ocurrències que abans quedaven oblidades als meus quaderns.