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A mother and son try to subvert a utopia... sort of
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Yeah, and you know, after that.

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After that?

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Well, after that, we'll have to leave the humans alone. But we get the stars...

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Humans are pretty boring. Sounds like a fair trade.

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...I think I'll miss Mother.

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She might be dead by then. I hear baselines only get about a hundred years total, so she's a third of the way gone already...

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I guess...

He falls asleep, dreaming of other worlds.

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The next few weeks are pleasant enough. Occasionally Peggy has Jess back, as if to remind herself she's her mother, but those aren't so bad. Much of the time Summer tags along anyway. Once or twice they're taken to church.

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Ambrosia's agnosticism runs on probabilities (and a general unwillingness to humor "0%" as a reasonable option; or "100%" for that matter)

Where many atheists would conclude that there Absolutely Was No Jesus, Ambrosia merely sees that the most likely explanation among many competing-but-possible explanations.

Another quite plausible conclusion is that there actually was a baseline named Jesus who got crucified by the Ancient Romans, and though said enemy-of-the-Roman-state had possessed no supernatural powers he'd had the uncanny charisma necessary to attract some loyal disciples and inspire the masses and get some literate people of the time excited enough to write a bible with him in it.

Or maybe he was a Firedrake? She's seen that explanation bandied around in some circles. While the odds of any given historical figure having been a Firedrake are quite low, they have a definite likelihood defined reasonably well by Qys science.

All the people currently in the village church, give or take, believe a fourth explanation: that Jesus was neither fictitious nor baseline nor any kind of superpowered that is currently known to humankind, but rather the vessel for the divine power of an omnipotent creator deity.

 

Ambrosia does not strictly disbelieve this fourth explanation. She rather prides herself on not-disbelieving-things. But she certainly does consider it substantially less likely than the three aforementioned.

All the same, she files into the church for Sunday mass and sets her babies down beside her.

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"Be nice," Summer whispers to Jess.

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"When am I ever not nice?"

 

Jess cannot wait to come back here with Christ-themed superpowers. It will be the best thing.

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This is a good chance to understand the baseline experience.

Ambrosia has become quite adept by now at broadcasting thoughts clearly for telepathic pickup.

These people are a community, which means they'll make small sacrifices for each other, and being able to count on the same from their neighbors makes them safer than they'd be alone.

Ambrosia scoots over slightly as the pews fill up, making more room for late arrivals.

A church service like this is one way that communities come together. You've almost certainly picked up by now that I don't particularly enjoy sitting on hard/angular wooden benches and listening to hour-long sermons, but this small sacrifice comes with the territory of community. And I do enjoy having the support of this community.

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Peggy shuffles in and sits down beside Jess. "Hello darling," she says, a little awkwardly. 

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"Hello Peggy."

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Her smile falters a little. "Oh, sweetie, you don't have to call me that."

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"How have you been, Oh Mother Dearest?"

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"Oh, I've been holding up. Hard sometimes finding things to do without you around."

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"Funny. I should have thought you'd have a rather easier time finding things to do, what with your relative superpowers of walking around and picking things up?"

 

Jess waves about her stubby arms and legs in an illustrative fashion.

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"Have things not gotten any better with Charles?"

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"He's very... changeable."

She hoists Jess into her lap.

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Jess does not find unexpected picking-up to be a pleasant experience at all.

 

She scans her disobedient incubator's mind for surface thoughts, trying to get a firmer handle on this situation.

 

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Her incubator's husband has never struck her, but lately he's been shouting at her like it's a near enough thing. 

God, her baby is warm. 

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That's... sad.

Why does she find that sad?

She'd never used to care about how her incubator felt, before.

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"Peggy." Ambrosia puts an arm on her fellow-mother's shoulder. "Is there anything I can do to help?"

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"I-I don't know who to go to anymore."

She cuddles her child, glad for something to cling to.

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