Authors: J.K. Norry
Personal evolution is something every good philosopher should take seriously, and I give in to it every now and then. It’s great fun to admit that you were wrong about nearly everything on a regular basis, as you reach for the next level of what’s right for you. I couldn’t have been more wrong than I was about this. After writing my first fantasy trilogy, I knew I had to write about this next.
This book will stand on its own, if you want it to. The next one will too. They do go together, however; and there’s even more of this story being told elsewhere. If you sign up for ‘
The Secret Society of Deeper Meaning
’, my secret newsletter, you’ll learn a lot more about this world. Before you go there, or read this, there’s something you should know about me:
I haven’t hung up my philosopher’s hat, but I have realized that I can wear it just about anywhere. Every aspect of life has a deeper meaning, and different points of view are anchored in their own deeper meaning. Even the monster has a point of view; perhaps they have a purpose all their own, as meaningful to them as ours is to us. Perhaps there is a deeper meaning to the zombie. Let’s hope this hat is machine washable; things are about to get bloody.
Prologue
The general glanced at the clock on the wall. He smiled. The hands stood at noon, the same hour he had eaten lunch nearly every day for twenty years. The general pushed out his chair and reached under his desk. His fingers wrapped around the handle of the cooler, his belly grumbling in anticipation. Tina had made meatloaf last night, and the only thing he liked better than Tina’s warm meatloaf for dinner was Tina’s cold meatloaf for lunch. In the same moment that the cooler thunked on the desk, his phone chirped and began flashing red light. The general pressed the flashing button.
“It’s noon,” he said calmly.
“I know, General, I’m sorry,” the rushed clipped male voice came back to him through the device. “It’s Doctor Ryan. He says he needs to talk to you. He says it’s urgent.”
“Well, go down there,” the general responded, still calm. “See what it is that’s so urgent, then come interrupt my lunch if you think I will agree.”
“Sir.” The secretary hesitated. “He has put the lab on lockdown. He won’t let anyone in or out, and he says he will only talk to you.”
The general sat up straighter. “Doctor Ryan? Are you sure?”
“Sir.” The general’s secretary was a very serious young man. Of course he was sure. Heaving a sigh, the general stowed the cooler under his desk for later. He checked his sidearm, more out of habit than anything. Then he stood and made his way to the door.
His secretary stood to attention behind his own small square of desk.
“At ease,” the general nodded.
The secretary’s stance barely relaxed at the words.
“Shall I come with, sir?”
The general waved his hand. “All the way down there? No need. I’ll call if I need any notes taken or calls made.”
He didn’t mean to be insulting; the general simply wanted to be alone with his thoughts. His brisk hurried pace brought him quickly to a bank of elevators. Passing his hand over the lighted screen next to the small set of doors in the middle, the general stepped inside as the steel panels whooshed open. A pleasant nondescript female voice spoke as the doors shut.
“General Roberts, access level five,” the disembodied voice announced. “Which floor, sir?”
“The lab,” he snapped. “Floor F.”
“Floor F,” she repeated. “Research. Going down.”
The elevator stopped descending three floors down, and the general frowned when the doors opened.
“Sir!” The young man stood on the other side of the open doors, saluting. The general checked his lapel.
“Sergeant,” he snapped. “Are you cleared to ride this elevator?”
“Sir, no sir!” The man was still saluting him. “I was waiting for that one.” He pointed with the hand not glued to his forehead.
“Where are you going?”
“Up, sir. I was going to-”
“Not anymore.” The general cut him off. “Get in.”
He was accustomed to taking orders. The sergeant moved as if the general’s words were his own thoughts. He stood there while the doors whooshed closed, obviously anxious but moving as little as possible. At least he wasn’t saluting anymore.
“Sir,” the sergeant stammered. “Permission to speak freely.”
The general immediately regretted following the impulse to invite him along. The walk would be even longer than the elevator ride, and now they were both going to seem interminable. He sighed inwardly.
“What’s on your mind, Sergeant?”
“I just wanted to say, sir.” The sergeant straightened. “I am honored to serve under you. I requested this post. I consider you to be a fine example of our race, and I hope to learn as much as possible from your example.”
“Our race?” The general furrowed his brow. “You mean humans?”
“Sir, no sir.” The sergeant mirrored his confused look. “I mean African Americans.”
The general shook his head. He hadn’t even noticed the color of the other man’s skin, not consciously. He didn’t want to explain to this young man that that was the point, at least for him. The general wanted to walk in silence.
“That’s an ethnicity, not a race,” he responded curtly. “We’re headed to research, not a press conference. These people are scientists, not politicians or internet trolls. They know that we all came from Africa, and that we all share the same phenotype. Racism to them means humans believing themselves to be better than other actual races, like the way our ancestors felt about neanderthals. If you want to learn, talk less from your point of view and listen more to others. Especially here.”
As if on cue, the doors parted and the general stepped out. He walked briskly, giving the other man no choice but to catch up or be left behind. The sergeant caught up as he paused at the first of many checkpoints. Bulletproof sheets of glass moved aside as he waved his hand over the screen. He motioned the sergeant through.
“Unauthorized entry,” a disembodied neutral female voice said calmly. “Sergeant Benjamin Taylor not cleared for entry.”
“Clearance code six-four-alpha-five,” the general announced. “He’s accompanying me on a training exercise.”
The voice did not reply, but the next set of doors opened silently.
“Central,” the general spoke up. “Where is Doctor Ryan?”
“Research lab three,” she answered immediately. “The laboratory is on lockdown, per the doctor’s orders.”
“Patch me through to him.”
There was no ring, or beep; just a moment’s pause before she announced the connection.
“General Roberts,” she said. “Doctor Ryan.”
“General?” His voice sounded strained and tense.
“Doctor Ryan.” The general spoke at normal conversational level. Central could pick up a pin drop in a hurricane, according to her creators. He talked calmly while walking as quickly as he could.
“What’s going on down here, Doctor? My secretary told me you put the lab on lockdown and said you would only talk to me.”
“You’re here, then?” The doctor nearly cried the words.
“Almost,” the general assured him. “We’re on our way.”
“Who’s with you?”
“Sergeant…” The general glanced at his lapel. “Taylor.”
“Who?” Now Ryan sounded confused as well as anxious. “Never mind. Is he armed?”
The general paused in his thoughts, and in his steps. “We’re both armed, Doctor. And we’re here.”
The general could see him through the thick glass. Ryan had his back to them, and he turned at the words. There was obvious relief on his face, and he stepped to the lighted screen on the other side of the glass to put his hand on it.
“Open doors for five seconds, then resume lockdown,” the doctor said loudly. “Authorization code-”
The glass slid aside, and he broke off.
The general stepped through immediately. The other man hesitated, and the doors slid shut just after he slipped through them.
Ryan frowned. “I’m not sure you want him to see this.”
The general remembered all the other times Ryan had been dramatic about something. He had found himself peering into a microscope, or at a lighted screen, staring at some swirl of colors or line of numbers that were as incomprehensible as the scientist’s accompanying explanation. Ryan had never put the place on lockdown, but he did get a little too excited about his research from time to time. It had been part of what had prompted the general to ask him to buy him a beer after work, all those beers ago. The general didn’t talk about his job, except to be grateful for it; Ryan was obsessed with his work. More than once the general had hushed the other man in a crowded bar, laughing while he reminded him that the topic of conversation was top secret.
“It will be fine,” the general assured Ryan. “We are all aware that only half of this facility is a matter of public record. As far as the world is concerned, we are all just prison guards here. We house political and religious prisoners of war, and that is the only thing we do. All of our research is done in a facility that does not exist by doctors that officially work at other sites in other capacities. Technically, Doctor Ryan, you’re not even here, nor is there a here in which to be. Officially, nothing that happens down here actually happens; it’s why you have carte blanche when it comes to what and how you research. Surely our young sergeant is aware of all of this.”
The sergeant was listening, wide-eyed while the general spoke. When the words ended with a calm proclamation about his nonexistent knowledge, he only hesitated for a moment. Then, he nodded. He looked as frightened and anxious as Ryan when he did.
“Sir,” the sergeant gulped. “Yes, sir.”
The general turned to Ryan. “Show us.”
“Well, first I have to tell you,” he responded. “You need some context before you see anything.”
“Talk fast, then,” the general said, glancing at his watch. “I have meatloaf waiting. And use words that we might actually understand wherever possible.”
“In all seriousness, this will make waiting on Tina’s meatloaf well worth it, General.” The doctor was falling into his usual measured vocal cadence. The general shook his head, in disapproval at the personal concession, and in disbelief. Ryan had tasted Tina’s meatloaf; this must be serious indeed.
“Okay, Chris,” Roberts replied. “Then tell us.”
“You know, of course, that there is a genetic sequence coded into every human’s DNA that is dormant,” the doctor began.
“Let’s just assume we don’t know anything,” the general smiled.
“Well, everyone should know that,” Ryan scoffed. “If you’re going to carry extra genetic baggage around everywhere, you should at least be aware of it.”
“We are carrying extra genetic material?” The general frowned. “As baggage?”
The doctor waved his hand. “Of course not; I’m using layman terminology, as requested. It makes more sense when I can just say that there is an inactive section of the human DNA strand that appears to serve no actual purpose.”
“Is that exciting news?” the sergeant asked. Apparently he was paying even less effective attention than the general.
“Of course not!” the scientist cried. “Everyone knows that!”
The general allowed himself a small smile.
“Doctor Ryan,” he said calmly. “Please proceed.”
“Of course,” the doctor retorted, giving the sergeant one more disgusted glance before going on. “I have always been curious about this inactive code. I have long had a theory that this is not the first time that a race has developed genetic material that is a blueprint for change. Environmental and social pressure may cause it to appear, although the cause of the phenomenon is irrelevant if the code cannot be activated. The change must be studied if we are to determine the direction that nature is trying to take us.”
The sergeant looked from the scientist to the general, his face a frowning mask of confusion. The general frowned inwardly; he rested his hand on the butt of the pistol holstered at his side.
“Did you say change?” The general spoke cautiously.
“Yes!” Ryan nodded effusively. “Change, as in physical transformation. I am saying that a physical transformation is locked inside of our genetic coding.”