Persis took several deep breaths and schooled her features into her signature vapidity. Panicking wouldn’t help anything now. She joined Justen and Noemi as they discussed the lab results, keeping her mouth shut and her ears open.
Noemi slid the first brain model up beside the second. “We’ve postulated that the Reduction drug hinders neural pathway functioning and development in the aristo brain, but if you look here”—she pointed at the other—“you can see that the response in the reg’s brain shows a marked difference. Here there is a chemical binding of nerve endings. It seals off neural pathways permanently.”
Justen was simply nodding as if this all made perfect sense. Perhaps to a medic, it did. “What does that mean?” Persis asked. For once, she didn’t have to play stupid. She really did feel out of the loop.
Noemi looked at her, and from the question in the older woman’s eyes, Persis could tell Noemi was wondering how much of Persis’s behavior was just for show. The medic had never had much patience with the subterfuge aspects of the Wild Poppy, but then again, Noemi knew from firsthand experience how difficult it could be for a woman to get things done on this island. Though she was obviously the most talented medic at the sanitarium, she was kept in the role of administrative official while a man was given the chief title. Noemi held a place of sympathy in her practical little heart for Isla and Persis and their conundrum.
“It’s the biological equivalent of putting a bit of resin at the tip of a rope to keep it from unraveling,” she explained. “In an aristo brain, we’ve seen that recovery from the drug involves creating new pathways—basically rerouting neurons around the damaged parts. But when the Reduction drug enters the regs’ systems, it changes their brains’ ability to reroute those pathways—forever.”
“And this is happening to all of them?” Justen asked.
“We’ve genetested them for DAR, of course,” Noemi replied, “given the similarity of symptoms. None are susceptible.”
“Are the patients lucid enough to give you a medical history?” he asked. “Do you know if they’re natural or Helo Cured?”
“If they’re natural regs, they can’t Darken,” Persis broke in before she even realized what she was doing.
Justen looked at her, his lips compressed into a tight line. He looked as stricken as she felt, as lost. There was no danger, in this moment, that he might see beneath her mask. Whatever he was thinking, his head was too full of it for anything else. “Yes. DAR only affects those regs whose ancestors took the Helo Cure. That’s why it’s called Dementia of Acquired Regularity. Not natural regularity.”
“We haven’t tried to get that information out of them,” Noemi said. “But even if they aren’t capable of telling us, we can test for it. Do you think it might be relevant?”
Justen jerked his head up and down. His jaw twitched as if he was clenching every muscle in his face. “Relevant, yes, but not helpful. We should test, just to make sure, but I think you’ll find that all your patients are descended from Helo-Cured regs. If my hypothesis is correct, a natural reg wouldn’t have this problem.”
“Why not?” Persis asked, honestly curious this time.
Noemi looked grave as she put the pieces together. “He’s saying the problem is connected to how the cure works, Persis. The reason Reduction was so insidious for all those centuries is that it couldn’t be gengineered out of our genetic code. No matter what people tried, the genes would mutate right back into place in the developing embryo.”
“Right, but Persistence did something different.” Everyone knew that.
“Yes,” said Noemi. “The Helo Cure didn’t seek to fix the flawed code. It merely bypassed the architecture of Reduction, changing the way the brain developed in the womb. And that changes the way it functions. A natural reg, whose genetic code mutated the flaw of Reduction out, has a brain like an aristo’s. But a Helo-Cured reg has an— Well, I don’t want to call it an artificial boost. But it’s a different kind of brain from other humans.”
Justen gave Persis a curious look. “Does this really interest you?”
“How my brain might work?” Persis snapped. “A little.” Let him think she cared on behalf of her mother. That she was still thinking about DAR. He could allow Persis Blake to be serious about that, at least.
“All right. Imagine a road that’s perpetually flooded,” Justen said. “That’s Reduction. The road exists, but it’s useless. With aristos and natural regs, the road’s built on higher ground. It doesn’t get flooded. With the Helo Cure, we built a bridge. However, the flooded road is still there. The flaw that causes Reduction still exists in the reg’s genetic code, but there’s a workaround now. That’s what Persistence Helo did. She gengineered an early end to the Reduction.”
Before Persistence Helo and her cure, only one in twenty Reduced births resulted in a naturally reg offspring. If they waited around for generations, Reduction would have died out eventually. But Persistence Helo, like Persis, didn’t have that kind of patience. She fixed the entire population in one fell swoop.
Even though that meant side effects.
“There are some,” Justen said, “who argue that DAR is more common in genetic lines that were farther away from producing natural regs. But there’s no way to know now.”
“And that’s not relevant to this case,” Noemi added, practical and focused as always. This is why Persis had wanted her so badly for the League. She was older than most of her other confidants, and she rolled her eyes at many of Persis’s ideas, but her heart was true. Like everyone in the League of the Wild Poppy, Noemi Dorric cared only that Galateans were being tortured, and that it was wrong. She wasn’t political; she wasn’t snobby. She just wanted to stop people from being hurt.
And now it looked like that was a lot harder than anyone had imagined.
“So the damage being done to the reg refugees is connected to the way their brains work?” Persis asked.
Justen nodded. “We’d know for sure if the Poppy comes across a Reduced prisoner who’s a natural reg. And they’re much rarer.”
If the Wild Poppy had her way, she’d start rescuing Galateans long before they became victims of this terrible drug.
Justen was still studying the lab results, his gaze intense, almost manic. Persis knew that look—it’s the one she wore when the Wild Poppy was in charge. It was the one where everything fell away except a singular focus on her quest. There was no chance of taking him on a splashy public outing this evening, no matter what Isla wanted. Tonight, people needed him.
It was a glory to behold, actually. She’d agreed to host Justen the way she’d support anyone who wished to take refuge from the revolution, but she hadn’t expected what she’d find in him. His medical skills might be a boon to her mother and now a boon to these poor Galateans, too. But even more than that, Justen had taught her the truth about the revolution.
All the other refugees she’d talked to after their detox so far had been real enemies of the revolution. Their feelings about it were purely negative, which was understandable, given their experiences. Upon meeting Justen, she saw a different side entirely, a side that she might have sympathized with before everything had gone so terribly wrong. Persis never would have understood Remy’s mind-set had she not seen it in her brother first.
These were the true revolutionaries, these Helos, these citizens who believed that things in Galatea had been bad, that they had to change—but were horrified at the way Citizen Aldred had perverted their desires into cruelty, revenge, and torture. And the fact that Justen and Remy could hold these feelings while being raised in Aldred’s house—it was a testament to their inner strength.