Amanda is still going on about the Vyrus.
– But I’m thinking primal thoughts now. Earthy. Who needs space? I mean, we all came from something. That LUCA thing? That’s our slime. The primordial one they’re always going on about in PBS specials. But what was it that took the pre-nucleus slime and gave it a nucleus? Made it into nuclear cellular stuff.
A slide that looks like an organ that’s been pierced from the inside by glass rods.
– Take some pre-LUCA bacteria. No nucleus. A cell without a nucleus. Perfectly normal stuff. Lots of it all over the place. And say, I mean, say for fun there’s a pre-LUCA virus. Which is generally considered primal bullshit because what’s a virus living off of back then, but we don’t care about that because we all know just how weird stuff really is. So we have this thing, this virus, with a strong ability to mutate and persist, and we have it penetrating some bacterium. And what, I mean, what if it mutated into a nucleus? I mean. And all.
Been here an hour, I think. Still plenty of time before Predo crashes in, I think. But time to get it together and figure out-
Wait, what did she say?
– What did you say?
– I said.
She spins toward me.
– I said, Joe, I said what if we’re all, all of us, what if all life is descended from a virus? I mean.
– Wait.
– I mean, the Vyrus, I mean. What if. Because-
– Wait.
– There’s more.
– I didn’t finish fucking high school. Wait.
She waits.
I think a little. But it’s not like it helps.
So I take a drink instead. And that shakes it loose.
– Why aren’t we all infected?
– HERV. Human endogenous Retrovirus.
I take another drink. No help.
– I don’t think any of this matters.
She spins her chair.
– It’s the remains of viral material scattered in the human genome. But it’s not all the same.
She points one index finger at herself and the other at me.
– My HERV is different from your HERV.
I rub my eye. I have a headache. A bad one. I want to punch someone. It reminds me of how I felt every day at school.
– I was infected.
– Yeah-huh.
– Someone chewed on my neck to get at my blood and some of his blood got into me and I was infected. That happened.
– OK.
She spins again.
– But not really.
She flicks another slide. Two shapes. One with a corkscrew of material sprouting from its side, looking like it’s stretching toward a hole in the other blob.
– I mean, that happened and all, but what you were was more like you were triggered.
She points at the screen.
– Like this.
She taps a button.
The corkscrew grows.
– The Vyrus, active, it’s got a prong. Usually. Some Vyrus doesn’t. Active, inactive. No prong.
The tip enters the hole on the other blob and begins to twist, drawing them closer together.
– Inactive, the Vyrus has a, and I know it’s all very sexual and all, but I didn’t make it up so don’t blame me, but it has a hole. The inactive Vyrus.
It twists in until the two shapes are snug together.
– Watch, this is the gross part.
The blob with the corkscrew starts pushing into the tiny hole, pulling itself inside.
– Gah.
With a final lurch it disappears, as if it were sucked in at the end.
– Aaand now we get an eclipse phase where everything looks normal for a while. We can zip past that.
She taps a button, the image vibrates, blurs, stops when she taps the button again.
– Here.
The blob shivers, pulses and turns inside out, erupting from the tiny hole, coalescing, and suddenly still. Warted now, in a violent yellow, and with a prickle of corkscrews clustered where the hole was.
– And that’s what happened.
I’m looking at the screen. She’s looking at me.
I shake my head.
She nods.
– An active Vyral cell, with a nucleus stolen from a cell in its host’s body, enters a new host and infects an inactive Vyrus with no nucleus. Gives it the tools to reproduce. And it does.
She taps the screen.
– This little fucker will screw just about any cell it can get to. Screw in, mutate, pop out more and more specialized components. I mean. And now, now, it’s not just that it’s active and ready to go to work on the host where before it was just this dormant scrap of HERV all this time, hitching a ride on the genome, now it’s ready to drop into a new body and look for another bit of Vyral HERV with the right kind of hole.
She waves a hand.
– It’s a randy dude, alright.
She twists toward me.
– See, Joe, that’s what I mean. I mean, it was always there in you. Just waiting. Just waiting for the right person to come along and wake it up.
She touches my arm.
– What it is, is it’s you. Just on the outside now.
I think of the worm, eating its own tail. The kind of sense that makes, that’s the kind of sense what she’s saying makes. Follow it around all the way, you come back to the head. Take that last bite, and then what? Where do you go from there?
Some stuff, I can’t swallow.
I walk over to Phil and kick him fully awake.
– Get up and roll me a smoke.
He gets up and rolls me a smoke and I light it.
– Predo’s gonna be here in a little while.
Amanda is watching the recording play out again.
– Uh-huh.
I look at the door to the living quarters.
– You and Sela the only ones left in here?
– I mean.
– Because it’s time to go now. I got a plan for how we get out and past Predo, but we got to start now.
– Really, I mean.
– So if anyone else is here we need to get them together and move.
– Joe.
On the screen, the active Vyrus cell is infecting the other again.
Amanda watches.
– It’s not like I’m going to let you take her with you.
– I figured you and Sela would both come.
The new Vyrus explodes out of itself.
– High school diploma or not, Joe, you’re not stupid. Don’t pretend.
Phil’s by the exit with his hand on the knob.
– Someone say something about leaving?
I’ve got a hand on the door to the living quarters.
– For the sake of argument, Amanda, say I am that stupid.
She lets go with a good old-fashioned bored-with-the-world teenager sigh like she used to do when I first met her.
– I’m not going to let you take her with you.
I’m pushing the door open.
Amanda is restarting the Vyral infection.
– You can’t take Chubby’s daughter.
The door is open.
On the bed, legs twisted together, a teenage pregnant girl and a boy, sleeping.
I look at Amanda.
She gets up from her chair.
– I need her here.
She crosses to me, pointing back at her monitors.
– This is, I mean, this is just getting started. A cure, that’s still what, I mean, all this.
She lifts her arms to the building around us.
– Why? Because a cure. And I mean, Predo, whatever, because we’re not afraid. We have.
She chews the ends of her hair.
– We have stuff, Joe. We’re not defenseless girls.
She lets the hair fall from the corner of her mouth.