By Matthew Spence
“I
cannot make you understand. I cannot make anyone understand what is happening
inside me. I cannot even explain it to myself.”
―
Franz Kafka, The Metamorphosis
“People
are changing,” Sean’s roommate said.
Sean
glanced over at him. Farley was fairly nondescript and would have been
difficult to pick out of a crowd or a lineup. If they weren’t roommates Sean
probably wouldn’t have remembered him if they’d only met once.
“What
do you mean?” Sean asked. “People don’t change; they’ve been the same for
thousands of years.”
“I
don’t mean psychologically, I mean physically. Haven’t you seen the news?”
Farley gestured at the TV, which was currently showing a Netflix series that
they both watched. “What I mean is, they’re physically changing.”
“You’ll
have to clarify that for me,” Sean replied.
Farley
switched to CNN. An anchor was talking about a new pandemic, showing a chart
involving animals and people.
“And
joining us now is Doctor Stillwater from the Centers for Disease
Control…doctor, perhaps you can explain
this for our viewers.”
“Of
course.” The doctor was a youngish man, but he seemed very authoritative when
he spoke. “What’s happening is essentially a rewriting of human DNA. We share more than 90 per cent of
ours with apes, and more than fifty percent with pigs, chickens, mice, and even
plants such as bananas. Increased solar radiation seems to have triggered the
genes that regulate natural DNA mutations, resulting in cross-species copying,
creating a chimera effect. It’s causing people to develop the characteristics
of those animals that we share most of our DNA with, a kind of reverse
evolution, if you will…”
“People
are turning into animals?” Sean asked, muting the sound. The scene on the TV
switched over to video of a man who had clearly developed animistic
characteristics such as a thick main of feathers. It looked like a costume, but
Farley insisted it was real.
“Animals
and in some cases plants like the man said. It seems to be spreading.”
Sean
stared at the TV. It was the first time he’d really paid attention to the news
or anything on TV in a while, usually he had it on with the sound muted or
turned down while he was doing something else.
Sean
wasn’t quite sure of what to make of it. Life had previously been predictable
but mostly calm for him. Now that routine had been upset, and it made him
uncomfortable. But was that the point of what he was seeing?
“Is
anyone doing anything about it? Aside from talking about it, I mean?”
“Some
scientists say they’re working on genetic treatments. Human animal hybrid
genes. But people seem scared of trying something like that.”
Sean
nodded. “I don’t blame them. All that Frankenstein stuff scares me, too.”
Farley
shook his head. “But we shouldn’t be scare of it, should we? Change can be
good. There’d be no progress without
it.”
Sean
knew that Farley had a point. But how could there be progress if humanity’s
genes were taking it backward?
For
the next several days there was slow but steady news about the so-called Gene
Pandemic. It wasn’t really a virus; it was mutations being caused by the Sun,
so people were advised to wear protection against it when they were outdoors
and to stay indoors as often as possible. There was a surge in sales of skin
lotion and sunglasses that people wore even on cloudy days. But the mutations
kept happening-Sean noticed that some of his office co-workers had stopped
showing up to work and was told that they’d been changed, into what his manager
didn’t seem to know, but they’d developed symptoms of fur and feathers and in
at least once case folds of vegetable skin. Now increasingly worried, Sean went
to the local clinic, where to his relief he tested negative for any genetic
changes. Then, one day after getting home from work, he was informed by the
landlord that Farley had disappeared.
“He
just walked out and hasn’t been back since,” the landlord said. “I know this
sounds cold, but since you both signed the lease, I may have to have him
charged with trying to break it, and you might have to find another roommate.
I’ll wait until you do, but for your own sake I hope he comes back soon…”
The
question of his rent was soon rendered moot, however, as the landlord herself
changed a few days later. She became a type of large bird, something that
seemed to big to fly, but she did, taking off through her office windows one
day and not returning.
All
Sean could do now was wait, and wonder. Was Farley all right? Was he happy
being an animal now, if he was one? Would Sean himself be happier without him?
Farley was part of the “herd” so to speak, so maybe he was better off. Even so,
Sean found himself missing his company, while at the same time it was getting
harder for him to remember what his former roommate looked like. He felt badly
about that. People, even nondescript ones, deserved to be remembered.
Sean
found himself sniffing the air. He seemed to be developing an enhanced sense of
smell, and could hear things that were obviously further away, outside of
normal human hearing range.
He
sighed and sat back in his recliner as he turned the TV on. It was still
working, so he went over to Netflix to watch the show that he and Farley had
both liked. The actors’ voices were becoming harder to understand, but he still
liked watching the action.
Farley
was becoming increasingly difficult to remember. Sean now had trouble
remembering his own name and found himself lying on the floor, covered in fur,
having discarded his clothing, but it didn’t seem to matter. He tried to
remember what he could, hoping it would be enough. In the meantime, he barked
for someone to let him outside so he could go to the bathroom.
About the author:
Matthew Spence was born in leveland, Ohio. His work has most recently appeared
in Tall Tale TV. More details of the author can be found here:
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