Editing 6 Billion A.D./The League Fights Back

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==The Splunks==
 
==The Splunks==
  
Gas clouds gathered over the viewport. Vespa sat up in her bunk. What if, she asked herself, it wasn't a virus at all? What if, instead, they were dealing with some other organism? Perhaps even a different type of organism? Was it multicellular? Was it a new kingdom?
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Gas clouds gathered over the viewport.
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Vespa sat up in her bunk. What if, she asked herself, it wasn't a virus at all? What if, instead, they were dealing with some other organism? Perhaps even a different type of organism? Was it multicellular? Was it a new kingdom?
 +
 
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-
  
 
Rushing back to the data center, she almost forgot to put on her uniform. There, in the dark -- the automatic lights hadn't gone on at this hour, and she didn't bother to turn on any other lights -- Vespa focused in on her visor.
 
Rushing back to the data center, she almost forgot to put on her uniform. There, in the dark -- the automatic lights hadn't gone on at this hour, and she didn't bother to turn on any other lights -- Vespa focused in on her visor.
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Plants, animals, fungi, bacteria, archaea, virii. Something else? It had been millennia since anyone had revised that taxonomy. What if there were a missing kingdom?
 
Plants, animals, fungi, bacteria, archaea, virii. Something else? It had been millennia since anyone had revised that taxonomy. What if there were a missing kingdom?
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Setting to work, Vespa modeled various organisms that could match the symptoms produced in victims of the pandemic. It looked like it came from a virus. Maybe it was a single-celled organism with a different cell type? A completely different layout at its heart?
 
Setting to work, Vespa modeled various organisms that could match the symptoms produced in victims of the pandemic. It looked like it came from a virus. Maybe it was a single-celled organism with a different cell type? A completely different layout at its heart?
 +
 +
-
  
 
She went back to basics. Remodeling a new species. She started by assembling DNA strands. Finding that the model automatically produced mitochondria, and certain common cellular processes, she began tweaking parameters. As she adjusted the data, her visor almost instantly updated to show the developing species.
 
She went back to basics. Remodeling a new species. She started by assembling DNA strands. Finding that the model automatically produced mitochondria, and certain common cellular processes, she began tweaking parameters. As she adjusted the data, her visor almost instantly updated to show the developing species.
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-
  
 
Gradually, organisms took shape. The new kingdom models crawled around her visor. She watched in amazement as an unprecedented life form moved about.
 
Gradually, organisms took shape. The new kingdom models crawled around her visor. She watched in amazement as an unprecedented life form moved about.
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-
  
 
The "splunks", as she had begun referring to them, oozed into the shapes of colonies in Vespa's visor. Splunks were not virii, although they did bear some resemblance. However, they had a different method of reproducing, in which cells half-merged with each other while dividing. A sort of mix of cell division and sexual reproduction. This seemed to imbue the splunks with an ability to adapt to their environment more rapidly, although they reproduced more slowly than virii.
 
The "splunks", as she had begun referring to them, oozed into the shapes of colonies in Vespa's visor. Splunks were not virii, although they did bear some resemblance. However, they had a different method of reproducing, in which cells half-merged with each other while dividing. A sort of mix of cell division and sexual reproduction. This seemed to imbue the splunks with an ability to adapt to their environment more rapidly, although they reproduced more slowly than virii.
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-
  
 
She began the tests. In her model, Vespa poured various virtual acids, bases, radioactive materials, and other data onto her splunks. In each case, the splunks survived. Often, they came out of the tests even stronger than before.
 
She began the tests. In her model, Vespa poured various virtual acids, bases, radioactive materials, and other data onto her splunks. In each case, the splunks survived. Often, they came out of the tests even stronger than before.
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-
  
 
For weeks, Vespa experimented with her virtual splunks. She didn't mention them to her supervsor, her coworkers, or anyone. On occasion she thought of saying something to Rigel. She wasn't entirely sure why she thought of telling him, but for some reason he was the one who came to mind. Still, she continued to work in secret.
 
For weeks, Vespa experimented with her virtual splunks. She didn't mention them to her supervsor, her coworkers, or anyone. On occasion she thought of saying something to Rigel. She wasn't entirely sure why she thought of telling him, but for some reason he was the one who came to mind. Still, she continued to work in secret.
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-
  
 
Vespa's private trove of splunks multiplied. The populations did well, taking over a good chunk of her allotted storage capacity. Vespa removed many of her old virus models, to make room for the new splunks.
 
Vespa's private trove of splunks multiplied. The populations did well, taking over a good chunk of her allotted storage capacity. Vespa removed many of her old virus models, to make room for the new splunks.
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 +
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After the local equivalent of a month, her coworkers suspected something was up. Vespa often came into work in a huff, even more so than usual. She seemed possessed, having a certain excitement. From a suspicion, her coworkers developed a curiosity, then an insistence on finding out what she was doing.
 
After the local equivalent of a month, her coworkers suspected something was up. Vespa often came into work in a huff, even more so than usual. She seemed possessed, having a certain excitement. From a suspicion, her coworkers developed a curiosity, then an insistence on finding out what she was doing.
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"Is it work-related?" one of Vespa's coworkers asked her.
 
"Is it work-related?" one of Vespa's coworkers asked her.
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"I see," said the coworker, contemplating the implications.
 
"I see," said the coworker, contemplating the implications.
  
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Vespa's splunks soon became locally famous. The cat was out of the bag. After her coworkers found out, her supervisor found out. Soon, he was having splunk meetings, splunk teams, splunk projects, splunk everything.
 
Vespa's splunks soon became locally famous. The cat was out of the bag. After her coworkers found out, her supervisor found out. Soon, he was having splunk meetings, splunk teams, splunk projects, splunk everything.
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 +
-
  
 
"So far, they've reproduced the symptoms in our experiments far better than any other candidate," wrote Vespa's supervisor in his work records. He would send these records back to the League base on a regular schedule. "Not yet sure whether these are the culprit. However, they are the first real possibility we've encountered."
 
"So far, they've reproduced the symptoms in our experiments far better than any other candidate," wrote Vespa's supervisor in his work records. He would send these records back to the League base on a regular schedule. "Not yet sure whether these are the culprit. However, they are the first real possibility we've encountered."
  
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"That's exhilarating!" exclaimed Rigel. She had finally told him, later than she had first wanted to, but at least she was the one to break it to him.
 
"That's exhilarating!" exclaimed Rigel. She had finally told him, later than she had first wanted to, but at least she was the one to break it to him.
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"Not exactly," she said, losing some of her color. "It's now a possibility, but it's still a long ways away, if at all."
 
"Not exactly," she said, losing some of her color. "It's now a possibility, but it's still a long ways away, if at all."
  
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Looking out of her viewport again, Vespa dreamed of a cure. She pictured her splunks leaping out of her visor, into production. Into matter, into real test tubes. She could see her splunks undergoing routing medical tests. Maybe even passing. Maybe leading to a cure for a disease that had already taken millions of lives.
 
Looking out of her viewport again, Vespa dreamed of a cure. She pictured her splunks leaping out of her visor, into production. Into matter, into real test tubes. She could see her splunks undergoing routing medical tests. Maybe even passing. Maybe leading to a cure for a disease that had already taken millions of lives.
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Vespa slept. It was the first time in months that she got a full night's sleep. When she awoke she was feeling chipper. What a difference, after all those dark, difficult days and nights in the data center!
 
Vespa slept. It was the first time in months that she got a full night's sleep. When she awoke she was feeling chipper. What a difference, after all those dark, difficult days and nights in the data center!
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In production, the workers looked skeptically at the model. "What, we're supposed to make this?" asked one. "It's not even a virus. Looks sort of like one, or a failed one. But I'm not sure what this is, or how we're supposed to produce it."
 
In production, the workers looked skeptically at the model. "What, we're supposed to make this?" asked one. "It's not even a virus. Looks sort of like one, or a failed one. But I'm not sure what this is, or how we're supposed to produce it."
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Rigel looked over his dirty uniform. The stains, the smells, they washed over him in a wave of pleasure
 
Rigel looked over his dirty uniform. The stains, the smells, they washed over him in a wave of pleasure
 
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"I'm skeptical," he said.
 
 
"Of what?"
 
 
"Of the virus. The pandemic. The whole thing."
 
 
"How can you be skeptical of that?! Millions of people have already died."
 
 
"So? Maybe propitious conditions in the universe have developed, in such a way as to ''both'' kill millions of people ''and'' propagate the virus?"
 
 
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Rigel looked around. No one was there. On his visor, he could see the test results.
 
 
-
 
 
The cells in his body were rapidly dying. Soon, he would have to choose -- between immorality or death.
 
 
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"Of course I could be wrong," said the skeptic. "I'm not declaring myself right or anything. I'm just declaring ''you'' wrong."
 
 
"But how can you say I'm wrong? Most of us agree, even the League scientists would say that the virus pandemic is the cause of these deaths."
 
 
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-
 
 
The League leadership studied the charts. By all indications, it looked as if the universe would continue its scheduled collapse. In that case, maybe it wasn't such a big deal that the League was also scheduled to collapse, some of them thought darkly.
 
 
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In the data center, Vespa developed a new model. This model took off from her previous work on the Splunks. As the Splunks multiplied, she could see that her models took on many of the same shapes as the theories predicted a disease agent would require. Maybe she was onto something.
 
 
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In the dim starlight, a green-tinged ray broke through the dust. Even so far from their habitats, the plants around this planet had cast their hue.
 
 
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The ship approached the planet's orbit. Soon, it would land. Crew would descend onto the planetary surface. Data samples would be collected. Specimens recorded, labeled, some added to the ship's stock. But not yet.
 
 
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==Plants Unleashed==
 
==Plants Unleashed==
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Vespa thought of Rigel. Her favorite topic. Vespa hadn't realized that the ''Vermitrius'' she had carried got loose onboard. She hadn't realized that it had rapidly reproduced, spreading itself throughout the ship. Yet, now that its cells filled the air, filled her head, she had an eerily complete understanding of many things, including the fact that the ship was now full of the plant. In her mind's eye, she could even see the exact distribution of plant matter throughout the ship, which her brain had detected subconsciously.
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==7.4==
 
 
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With her ''Vermitrius''-infused insight, Vespa could now see that Rigel had not loved her back as she had loved him, as she had thought that he had loved her too. Instead, she could see in immediately obvious geometric shape how he had cared for her as a friend, which she had misinterpreted as romantic interest in her passionate obsession.
 
 
 
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Turning her thoughts inward, Vespa could see, again in immediately obvious geometric shape, how she loved him anyways, and would continue to do so. She loved him for who he was, and that would not change -- neither who he was, nor how she loved him so.
 
 
 
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Vespa next thought of the ship. Now that she was here, she had to finish her mission. To rescue Rigel. To bring him back to his senses, back to the League, back home.
 
 
 
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==Tragic Loss==
 
 
I lost the will to fight after Sophiy's death. This great illusion of being a hero that I created came crumbling down. I don’t know what I felt. I felt nothing.
 
I lost the will to fight after Sophiy's death. This great illusion of being a hero that I created came crumbling down. I don’t know what I felt. I felt nothing.
  
 
Still, deep inside, I knew that there was more than this. I knew in my head, even if I didn't feel it, that there would come a time when I had a renewed vigor.
 
Still, deep inside, I knew that there was more than this. I knew in my head, even if I didn't feel it, that there would come a time when I had a renewed vigor.
 
It would be a challenge to pull myself out of this one. Still, at least a challenge was ''something''.
 
  
 
==The Victory of the Order==
 
==The Victory of the Order==
  
Morp raised a triumphant glass.
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Morp raiseed a triumphant glass.
  
 
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"Interesting."
 
"Interesting."
  
==Space Mosquitoes==
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==Another Section==
 
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* The...
Down on the planetary surface, things looked far different. The maps had all been wrong. Or, if not quite wrong, then at least far from precise enough.
 
 
 
Where the map had shown a slight hillock, there had in fact been a looming volcano. Where the map had shown a possible water deposit, there had been a vast lake.
 
 
 
The crew soon ignored the maps, relying on their own knowledge. Some even started their own map, which lacked the smoothness of the official maps, yet had ten times their accuracy. Discrete copies soon started spreading among crew.
 
 
 
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In the samples that crew brought back onboard, various previously undiscovered biota were found. These were duly classified. At each planetary landing, larg heaps of data were gathered and sent back out of the pandemic region.
 
 
 
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The pandemic seemed to have no end in sight. Each hint that it may have plateaued was almost instantly responded to by new waves of infection.
 
 
 
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"Have we lost the ability to fight a disease?" asked a medical researcher at a meeting of epidemiologists.
 
 
 
"Did we ever have it?" answered another.
 
 
 
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"At least it's something!" said an epidemiologist, looking at the results in her visor.
 
 
 
"It doesn't stop the spread of the pandemic," said a sour-faced interlocutor.
 
 
 
"No, but it gets us one step closer. If we know that the disease agent travels through space mosquitoes, then we can instruct people to zap them. And we can buy more repellent."
 
 
 
"But I thought you said that wasn't the whole story?"
 
 
 
"The space mosquitoes are just one piece of the puzzle. There may be a second or even a third intermediary species."
 
 
 
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Rigel swatted away at some more space mosquitoes. They were gnawing away at a hole that had grown in his uniform. At least he didn't have to worry about more infections, since he was already sick, he thought to himself.
 
 
 
As Rigel thought about his loss of Sophiy, about his disease, about his desertion, and all this now with space mosquitoes, he didn't see how things could get any worse.
 
 
 
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One of the loud transporters went by, annoying Rigel. As he continued working, the thought of ending it all crossed his mind. What if he just detached his connector cord, floated off into space, never to be heard from again?
 
 
 
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No, he thought. It wasn't his style. Even if he did die from all this, he would at least go to the end.
 
 
 
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Back on board the League ship, Vespa hovered nervously. She too had worries. Her Rigel, whom she loved even if he didn't return the favor, had still not been heard from. The League was dissipating. And tne pandemic, which she was officially here to fight against, seemed to be doing all the winning.
 
 
 
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Vespa stared into her visor. Finally, she had it.
 
 
 
Watching her Splunk models reproduce, she could see how they were so infectious. At least she thought she could.
 
 
 
The cell of each Splunk looked more or less like the cell of any garden variety virus. From a distance. But zoomed in by a thousand times, Vespa could make out finer details. The Splunks were laced in a fine lattice, the likes of which she had never seen on any of the thousands of virus species she had examined up close.
 
 
 
The lattice appeared to give the Splunks a speed boost. Even more important, with their higher velocity and streamlined shapes, the Splunks could penetrate into host cells -- without triggering the host's immune defenses. From there, it was standard operating procedure: extend the piercing rod deep into the host cell, install the Splunk DNA, and let it go from there.
 
 
 
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Rigel floated through space. Even with his connector still attached, part of him could feel the emptiness of space. Part of him longed for the emptiness of space.
 
 
 
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==Navigation==
 
==Navigation==
  
 
{{Template:6 Billion A.D.}}
 
{{Template:6 Billion A.D.}}

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