Author's Note
: All characters are over the age of eighteen. This is a work of fiction: any resemblance to person's living or dead is coincidence.
Recap
: Dr. Emily McKinnon is the federal administrator of the Wildfire program, a small and obscure program to prepare for the scientific consequences of any first contact, including infectious diseases. Against all probability, this has come to pass, the result of a meteor strike in rural Pennsylvania. Dr. McKinnon has a team of scientists studying the mysterious infection (which causes intense erotic impulses, among other things), but is losing ground to more powerful government forces intent on eradicating this infection at any cost.
>>> Day 2 - Morning : Dr. McKinnon
Dr. Emily McKinnon, PhD, MD, and aspiring government/corporate executive made her way through two layers of soldiers, and was relieved to find that a retinal scan let her into the core research complex.
She had to ask one of the hastily-recruited staff to show her to Jeffrey's lab.
Dr. Jeffrey Kettleman, MD, renegade infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins, was conducting laser surgery by remote control.
McKinnon almost laughed. It looked like he was playing some kind of virtual reality game: his fingers pincering the air, his head helmeted with something out of science fiction.
She didn't interrupt, but reclined until his procedure was complete.
She admired his posture, his careful and clearly methodical motions, and his rather tight, athletic ass.
When he unstrapped the helmet, she cleared her throat.
"Oh, shit, how long have you been here?"
"The last ten minutes were the most peaceful part of the last 24 hours, or possibly the next. I didn't want to interrupt."
"Technically, they shouldn't have even let you in here, but I appreciate you not blowing my concentration. What's up?"
"Jeffrey, you called it. The bio-chem geeks are geeking hard, but they're not going to have anything valuable for weeks. Months. Possibly years."
He shrugged.
"Which is to say: you were right."
He grinned. "About wiring up the survivors? They were fucking hot, too, right?"
McKinnon shrugged. "I did not watch any of the video footage, assuming it exists, and am not sure how that benefits our analysis."
"Christ you are straight laced."
"When I think I am on tape, yes."
Kettleman glanced around the room. "What, we're...?"
"Grow up, Jeffrey. Everything is."
"Fucking hell."
"This will be counted against your permanent record," McKinnon said wryly.
He laughed, and shook his fist at the possible cameras.
"Anyway," he said. "There is video, and I didn't watch it. But their vital signs are
fucking hot
. I mean that in a medically exciting way, as well as a thermal energy way, as well as an indication that they were having an amazing experience. You should have all the data in our lockbox."
"I am not current with the tooling to process raw data. I'm coming to you.."
"You want the big picture."
"I want
answers
Jeffrey. Although I didn't dive into the data, I
did
spend thirty minutes talking with Katherine this morning. I realize that there were more deaths last night, but I am also observing extra-ordinary vitality among the survivors." She moved closer to him: "There are plans built into this program that could nuke Pennsylvania. We could carpetbomb four counties. If we don't have an answer, if we don't have it soon, it could happen. You've seen the headlines?"
"Nukes? Yeah. Typical tabloid rubbish."
"I don't think so. I think HomeSec has it all set up. They want an alibi. Where did a leak like that come from? HomeSec is playing the game, and they are preparing for a war crime: against our own people. My own charter practically mandates it. They've completely sidelined me, which means they don't think they need the science. This is about to become a military project."
Jeffrey leaned back on the counter behind him. In another era that would have been a bank of buttons, dials, meters, readouts. Now it was just acrylic veneer over composite supporting a laptop..
"In addition to a night of hot sex, we had three more deaths. Our survivor count is going down. I heard the President is going to speak at noon. If that's our timeline, there's nothing I can do. In fact, as a member of the human species, I'm not totally sure it's the wrong decision."
"I am."
Kettleman looked at her in surprise.
He argued: "You've seen the science: you're
right
that this is going to take years to understand. Tens of thousands or more new proteins, replicating by unknown mechanisms, with lethal side effects, and possibly targeted at human neurology. This might not be a russian or chinese bioweapon, but I can't tell you it's not
someone's
bioweapon. And what happens when
they
show up?"
"Did you see this?"
She reached over to his laptop and navigated into the shared data folder, brought up a spreadsheet.
"What's that?"
"Core samples. They sent in drones overnight and took core samples from pretty much every dead person in Philipsburg. It's quite a lot of samples. Dr. Rigaud wanted data, and the military provided. Initial analysis - each one of these macroproteins is significantly different than the next. The ones taken from women are about 60% larger and proportionally more complex."
She flipped to a second spreadsheet.
"These are scans from contact tracing in Eastern PA."
Kettleman squinted thoughtfully.
"Wait, what?"
"The contact tracing across the greater Philly region turned up sixty three cases of signature proteins, including a macroprotein. But these protein complexes about 30% the size of what we are baselining in Philipsburg, with no difference between men and women."
"So you're saying the infection has escaped quarantine completely,
and
we have developed immunity? In two days?"
McKinnon just looked at him. "I thought you were supposed to be the smart one."
Kettleman shrugged. "Usually lucky."
"From 1347 to 1351 the black death killed about half the people in europe. Bubonic, pneumonic, and septicemic plague. Bubonic had a mortality rate of about 30%; pneumonic and septicemic were almost always fatal. Bubonic was by far the most common, and caused the most deaths. This year maybe ten people world-wide will die from any of these forms. Why is that?"
"Natural selection; a disease is essentially a parasite, and if it kills it's host it deletes its own vector of transmission."
"Bingo."
"So you're saying the early mortality rate in Philipsburg represents the end of the lethal phase of this protein complex, that by natural selection it has already adapted to human conditions in a way that does not kill the host?"
"It was trial by fire for this thing, landing on a new world. And I'm not sure it's inherently parasitic."
"How so?"
"A parasite essentially consumes its host, it's just a question of how much damage it does. But the survivors? I had another conversation this morning. After being completely sidelined on the last ConCall, HomeSec and the military laying their plans, ignoring everyone else, I arranged a video feed with the survivor out in Philly. Same story as Katherine: she's radiant with health and strength, and has talked the staff into treating her like a queen."
"Quite a roll of the dice: gruesome death for 99.97% of victims, or a boost of health with completely unknown long term effects."
"Or: this thing is not naturally parasitic, but rather symbiotic."
Kettleman pursed his lips thoughtfully.
"Obviously, this is speculation, and far too much is at stake to sway the military from their course of action," she added.
He nodded. "The problem is, Emily, natural selection doesn't work this fast. Maybe if there were an intelligence at work, something consciously modifying its plan based on discovered data... but as complex as this thing is, there's no
mechanism
for intelligence. And we must be as strange to it as it is to us. I see where you're going, but I don't know that we can believe it. So what do we know about all the other cases in the Philly area? I presume they are all isolated and studied?"
"And probably in line for a gas chamber, if the military has its way. There are some indications of increased libido as well as beneficial impact of electrolyte supplements. But it is practically negligible compared to what we saw - and are still seeing - in Philipsburg."
Just then her priority ringtone chimed.
Dr. McKinnon held up a finger and took the call.
"Yes... yes... oh boy... interesting... get her in isolation."
She hung up. "You might like to join me on this. There was another corpse at the school but, turns out, not a corpse. A heavily salted survivor. They're transferring her to a max-isolation chamber now."
"Can we see her?"
"We're going to need to, or you are. She's at death's door and needs help. Let's go."
As they crossed the compound, McKinnon asked: "So what were
you
working on before I showed up? Looked like surgery."
"I was looking for commonalities in the corpses they brought in last night."
"Find any?"
Kettleman looked like he was weighing the benefits of telling her.
"That macroprotein... it is at the center of a network of filaments that mirror most physiological structures."
"Filaments?"
"Threads of loosely bonded proteins. They most densely interpenetrate the neural tissue, but thread their way along vascular and lymphatic systems as well."
"Meaning?"
"Meaning... it's in