sure,â Stein said, still peering at the X-Ray.
âItâs not a puzzle, itâs a miracle,â Alex said. âItâs magic, is what it is. Itâs messing with my head.â
ââAny sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic,ââ Stein said, setting down the X-Ray.
âWhat?â Alex said.
âItâs a quote,â Stein said. âFrom Arthur C. Clarke.â
âThe 2001 guy,â Alex said.
âYes, the 2001 guy,â Stein said, slightly mockingly. âI take it youâre not a big science fiction reader.â
âWell, what does that mean, for those of us who arenât proud to be nerds?â Alex said.
âThat would be âgeeks,â and I would take it to mean that before you throw your hands up and declare a miracle, you might consider the slightly more rational approach of assuming itâs some sort of technology,â Stein said.
âBrain-stealing technology?â Alex said. âSeems an awfully specific sort of technology.â
âIâd guess itâs not specifically brain-stealing technology, itâs just what this technology is being used for in this case,â Stein said.
âThen, what?â Alex said. âSome sort of transporter technology, like in Star Trek? Maybe that would get the brain out of someoneâs skull, but it doesnât explain how the brain is still functioning. That is, if I believed this was transporter technology, which I donât.â
Stein smiled and tapped the X-Ray. âLet me remind you that what you have hereâor more accurately, what you donât have hereâis a missing yet fully functional brain,â he said. âAlex, this is one case where the most ridiculous explanation you could come up with for how this is happening probably isnât going to be ridiculous enough.â
âThis is what I get for not being a geek in high school, is what youâre saying,â Alex said.
âI suspect you were a geek, all right,â Stein said. âYouâve got all the hallmarks of a Model UN dweeb about you.â
âThanks,â Alex said, wryly.
âBut if you want my suggestion, you need to start thinking like a science-fiction geek. Because this,â Stein pointed at the folder, âis some first class X-Files material right here. Good luck with it.â He smiled and exited Alexâs office.
Alex stared at the space where Brad Stein used to be for several minutes and then picked up the phone.
âYouâre fatter than you were at the reunion,â said Ezra Jefferson to Alex, shaking his hand on the steps of the Air and Space Museum.
âYouâre not, Captain,â Alex said.
âThatâs because the Air Force doesnât believe in fat officers,â Jefferson said, and then pointed to his shoulderboard. âAlso, thatâs Major now.â
âWhen did that happen?â Alex asked.
âWhen I transferred to the Pentagon,â Jefferson said. âWhich you would know if youâd ever bothered to call before now. Iâve been in DC for four months, Alex. And I havenât seen you since our 10 year reunion. Thatâs just wrong.â
âWell, Iâm making it up to you now,â Alex said, and motioned toward the museum. âCome on, letâs go in. Iâm paying.â
âItâs free admission,â Jefferson said.
âItâs just like you to point that out,â Alex said.
âYou still owe me for drinks at the reunion,â Jefferson pointed out, as they went in.
âSpeaking of the reunion,â Alex said, after the two of them had wandered around the museum for a half hour, catching up, âI remember you telling me that youâd been stationed at Nellis Air Force Base right out of Yale.â
âYeah,â Jefferson said. âNellis for a year and then Edwards for a couple of years after that.â
âI
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