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Authors: Michelle Meyers

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Mystery

Glass Shatters (18 page)

BOOK: Glass Shatters
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“I
MEAN, IT’S CRAZY
, I
KEEP SEEING THAT SMALL
, translucent jellyfish, floating around the tank, fully formed, fully functioning, one hundred percent alive. And I can’t help thinking—I’ve done it! I’ve unlocked the secret, the process by which all adult cells can be transformed into stem cells and then cultivated to become whatever we’d like. The implications are just extraordinary. We could create new tissue from small samples of existing human cells. Patients would no longer have to waste away waiting on transplant lists—they would be able to use their own tissue to grow new, healthy organs using three-dimensional printing. And that’s only the beginning. I could revolutionize the potential of cloning, and if my hunch is correct, the boundaries of life and death themselves. Because this jellyfish that I created—it’s not just a heart or an eye or a tentacle. I was able to combine the tissues in such a way that they are able to function together as an entirely new, viable life. This is a step beyond Dolly, beyond the embryonic cloning practices of the past. Using just a few cells with intact DNA, I can replicate an organism so that the copy is at the same level of physical and mental maturity as its original predecessor. Don’t you see? The myths of science fiction are becoming a reality. A four-year-old jellyfish would spawn a clone that was four years old as well. And perhaps someday a forty-year-old human could do the same.”

I pause to catch my breath, gulping down a glass of tap water from the countertop. I’m in Iris’s kitchen, pacing back and forth as she places a chocolate Bundt cake into the oven. My hair’s sticking up in sweaty tufts, and I can feel my cheeks glowing hot and red under the kitchen lights. Iris gazes up at
me, biting her lower lip. She has a concerned expression on her face, as a mother might for a delusional child.

“Charles, are you sure you don’t want to sit down?”

“I can’t, because, you know, here’s the thing—since the genome was first discovered, scientists have wondered why it is that some sequences of DNA code for the production of proteins that are absolutely vital to keeping the body alive, while other sequences of DNA seem to have no function, to be entire wastelands of unutilized adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine. But as it turns out, this isn’t the case. While I’m not yet sure of the mechanism by which it happens, my observations have indicated that these sites are actually repositories for memory. Somehow our memories get transcribed on these sequences, meaning if an organism were replicated, the copy would be physically identical but could also potentially have the same memories as the original. Which, if perfected in human beings, would mean that cloning could enable a person’s deceased loved ones to come back to life. Not literally, of course, it wouldn’t be the exact originals, but maybe these clones, these replacements could yield people just as good.”

Iris sets the timer on the oven and then comes over to me, placing her hand on my wrist. “Charles, please, sit down.” She leads me to the dining room table and takes a seat across from me. Ava coos and cackles from the other room, engrossed in her own imagined universe.

“Look, I know what I’m saying might sound crazy, but trust me, it isn’t. This could end up being one of the greatest discoveries of the twenty-first century … what is it? Why are you looking at me like that?”

Iris frowns. “Charles, it’s just—this isn’t the first time you’ve said things like this.”

“What do you mean, ‘things like this’?”

“I mean, these exact ‘discoveries,’ Charles. About the cells and the new tissues. How the DNA sequences somehow have our memories in them. How we could clone people and bring them back to life.”

“What are you talking about?”

“About six months, just before you disappeared or went away or whatever happened, I don’t remember every single word you said, but I swear, you came in one night and you were saying almost exactly the same things you’re saying now. And after that, you started becoming more distant. Ava and I hardly saw you anymore.”

“Oh.” There’s a sinking feeling in my stomach, a heaviness right at the base of my ribcage. “Well, I guess the news isn’t as exciting as I thought.”

Iris turns to me. “Be excited, Charles. Be as excited as you want. But be careful. I don’t want to lose you again.”

I
DON’T GET HOME UNTIL JUST BEFORE MIDNIGHT
. T
HE
wind whips through the trees, possessed, the phone wires crackling in response. I shut the door quietly and peel off my jacket, not wanting to disturb the old man, wherever he may be sleeping. I try to be careful, but a moment later, my foot catches on a dining room chair that’s been left in the entryway. I stumble forward and almost fall face first. The chair thuds against the hardwood floor. I wonder why there’s a chair
in the middle of the room. I flip the light switch by the living room and then jump back with a start. The old man has been sitting in the entryway this entire time, his back straight like a plank against the wall, gazing catatonically into the distance. He doesn’t move as I approach him, although I can tell by the gentle rise and fall of his chest that he’s not dead. I notice a line of red rope burn around his neck. The skin is rubbed almost raw in some places. I look up and see several of the marionette strings hanging in a loop in the rafters above.

The old man suddenly opens his eyes, thick black pupils looking up at me.

“Talk to me,” I say. “How can I help you if I don’t even know who you are?”

He remains silent.

“I know what you tried to do,” I continue. “Please, just talk to me.”

The old man pauses. He licks his crusty lips. There’s some sort of white dust settled on his shoulders, like paint or crumbled drywall. “They were staring at me. The marionettes. I just couldn’t stand them staring at me anymore.”

“Then we should get rid of them. They’re not doing either of us any good.”

The old man shakes his head no.

“Is it because they were Julie’s?” I ask him.

“They have the answers,” he says, speaking to nobody. “I know they do. I just need to figure out the right questions.”

PART III

T
he weeks pass by unintentionally, rapidly but without substance, like a film montage. My conversations at work feel artificial, rehearsed, and after my strange encounter with Iris, I wonder if everything I’m doing now is just recycled material. But then why wouldn’t Peter say something? Why wouldn’t he tell me that I’m conducting research I’ve already done, that I’m making discoveries I’ve already made? I want to trust Steve, to imagine that he’s on my side, but all I’ve been able to get out of him is small talk. We talk about the weather, about petri dishes and multiplying cells, about mundane weekend plans involving sleeping in and grocery shopping. Whenever I try to draw out information from him about the past, like someone so delicately trying to extricate a single thread from a piece of fabric, he closes down and walks away, claiming to be busy with some sort of experiment.

In fact, the only person I feel like I can be honest with is Katie. There’s an innocence to her demeanor, a sense of genuineness, and I get the feeling that she truly cares about what I have to say. Every time I see her, my heart gives a slight twinge, and I realize that there’s something of Julie in her, that I see shadows of my wife in her smile, her gestures.

One morning I knock on the door to Katie’s office for our appointment. Silence. I try knocking again. Usually she opens the door before I even knock, as if she has some intuitive knowledge of my presence. But today she’s five, ten, fifteen minutes late. I pace back and forth, fiddling with a paperclip in my lab coat pocket. Finally I twist the knob. The door is unlocked.

“Hello?” I call out as I enter. I don’t want to disturb Katie’s privacy. I expect the office to be empty, or for Katie to be listening to music on her iPod, nodding her head, having lost track of time. Instead, I discover her sitting at her desk, biting her nails. The overhead lights are off and the curtains are drawn.

Katie looks like an apparition of her former self. Her face is empty of color, her mascara smudged around her eyes. Her sweater is unevenly buttoned and her hair is flat and drab against her ears. The room has been torn apart, all of the degrees pulled off the walls, all the potted plants turned over. Katie looks up at me bewildered.

“Charles …”

“It’s ten o’clock.”

“I know,” Katie replies vacantly.

“What’s wrong?”

Katie doesn’t say anything. I make my way toward the desk. Katie slumps in her chair. I crouch down, and very gently, I wrap my arms around Katie. Her eyes dart back and forth, and then she leans in close to me, her lips against my ear.

“Charles, I’m not who you think I am,” she whispers, so quietly I can barely hear.

I open my mouth to speak. She puts her hand up over my face, like she’s afraid someone might read my lips. “What are you talking about?”

Katie lets out a deep breath, takes another one in. “I’m not a therapist,” she says, still in a whisper.

“What?”

“I’m not a therapist. I didn’t study psychology. I’m a research assistant.”

“A research assistant? For who? What do you mean?”

“Peter hired me. To observe you. To study you.”

I sit down on the carpet, shaking my head. “Peter? Why would he want to do that?”

“I don’t know. I don’t know why, he didn’t tell me anything more than he thought I needed to know. He said it was for research, for his research. I don’t know what that means.”

“Research? Research on what? On me?”

“I don’t know.” She massages her temples. “I’m just a college student. There was a flier on the bulletin board in the Bio Department. And when I heard that you were going to be involved, that I would get to work one-on-one with such a famous scientist …”

“A college student? Look, Katie, what exactly did Peter tell you? What did he want?”

“I was supposed to pretend to be a psychologist. He was interested in your memory. He has hidden video cameras set up around the room. I tried to disable them all, but I’m not sure … well, I’m done. I’m out.” She looks up at me with a mournful expression. “He has your lab rigged too. One of the jellyfish tanks has a one-way mirror. I don’t know which. And
I’m pretty sure your house as well … I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have ever—he promised me a job at a major research institution when I finished. He said he had connections at Stanford and Harvard.”

“What about the degrees on the walls?”

“It was all fake, Charles. All of it.”

I pull Katie closer, my lips against her ear. “Why are you telling me all of this? Why now?”

“Because I like you. And because I’m starting to get the feeling that I’m in over my head.” She packs up the last of her belongings into her purse.

“Please, if there’s anything else—”

“I’m sorry, I have to go.” And with that, Katie is out the door before I can say another word. I try to follow her, I push myself forward, but my head is spinning, a kaleidoscope of colors and images whirling before me.

BOOK: Glass Shatters
10.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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