Prologue
It seems the current corona virus outbreak disproportionately affects males. Mortality rates for infected males are almost double that for women in some countries. In Hong Kong, for example the mortality rate for men is 21.9% compared with 13.2% for women. Of course, there could be many reasons for this, associated with lifestyle and other factors. I don't think anyone is suggesting that it's got anything to do with the Y chromosome - even people that think that a treatment for malaria is a good idea for this virus, that or drinking bleach.
But suppose it was...
Now, suppose it wasn't just the mortality rate but the infection rate as well. And, suppose it wasn't almost double but ten times. And suppose that males were seen as the main carrier of the disease: a Mandemic
What would a world look like in which men became a threatened gender?
Would women take on the role of shielding men to prevent them become infected? Would we see isolation measures for men, keeping them off the streets, while women could socialise freely? Men masked in public? The idea of women as guardians, protecting the men that were uninfected from the risks to wider society and - because of the need to reproduce - the future of the species? Separation of the genders except in certain controlled circumstances, strictly enforced?
1. Two Lane Blacktop
Patricia Nielsen - "Pat" or "Paddy" to her friends who knew her Irish heritage - adjusted the bands that held her surgical mask in place. They rubbed on the back of her ears. It had been a long shift and it wasn't over yet. Her ears were sore and she was hot behind the mask, even with the patrol car's aircon.
Still, she needed to make sure her mask was in place before she got out. The risk of infection was just too great still. The last thing she needed was a dose, even if, for most women, the treatments that they now had meant it wasn't as serious as it had been. The same wasn't true for men though. That was why she had been given the role as a quarantine enforcement officer. She checked the taser in its pouch on the left side of her belt and the handcuffs she carried too.
She looked in her rear view mirror at the vehicle she had pulled over. Time to talk to the driver. She got out of her patrol car and walked back along the hard shoulder to where the pickup truck was parked. Patricia could see a woman was driving. There was nothing wrong with that. She was wearing an approved protective face covering. It was just that when the pick up had overtaken her, there had been what looked like a man in the passenger seat. And if that was the case, Patricia would want to know that appropriate precautions were being taken in addition to the mask that he was wearing.
As she drew level with the pickup the driver wound down the their window. "Good morning officer. I wasn't speeding, was I?"
The woman's car radio was playing. The news was spelling out the latest infection and mortality rates and advising residents that the hospital on the north side of town no longer had any capacity for male infection victims. If infection rates kept at their current level it seemed that the local medical centres wouldn't be able to cope either. The news bulletin was followed by an advert. "Hanson's Comfort Male Genital Enclosures - helping secure our nation's future". Pat smiled to herself. 'Comfort' might be the brand name but, from what she knew of them, most men would rather they didn't have to wear them.
"No, Ma'am. I'm with the Quarantine Division," she showed the driver her badge, "not Traffic. I just wanted to check your passenger. Are you his guardian?"
The driver gave a sigh, as though she had to put up with this more often than she would like. "Yes, I've got his paperwork here." She reached forward to the glove compartment, took out a folder and passed it to Patricia. "There's a current virus-clear certificate, home confinement registration and his guardianship registration."
Patricia checked the papers. Alice Manley's driver-id photograph tallied and the paperwork for her husband, Mark was complete. "They seem fine," she responded, pleased that it looked like this was going to be a routine stop. "Can I ask where you are going? You'll be aware of the prohibition on unnecessary journeys and the shielding regulations for men?"
"Yes of course. We're on our way to the Medical Centre. No suggestion of infection. It's just that he's got a problem with his enclosure. They suggested I should bring him in. I can give you a number to check if you want. Do you want to check his enclosure?"
"That's OK," Patricia was happy with the woman's response. She looked across at the woman's passenger. He turned his head towards her, head shrouded in a latex hood, eyes behind thick goggles, an air filter breathing valve over his nose and mouth. Somehow, even with his identity shrouded by the protective equipment, he looked resigned, woeful. Pat knew that these two weren't going to be any trouble. She had been doing the job for long enough to know when someone was quarantine running. She was pretty sure the man's enclosure would be in place, close fitting and locked as the regulations required. "I'm sure it's all fine," she said. Besides she didn't want to have to put the man through the indignity of standing by the side of the road with his trousers around his ankles if she didn't need to and, besides, that carried the risk of his becoming infected too. "I'm sure you'd rather get on. I can always call the Med Centre, anyway. Have a good day." She took a step back, waved them off and walked towards her patrol car. She watched as the pickup pulled back on to carriage way and drove off. As it passed her the featureless, rubber-shrouded face of the male in the passenger seat was looking out of the pickup towards her.