May 9, 2026

Return of Sedruth?

Nyrtia, M2 robot, Tyhry. Image generated by Flow.

 Below on this blog page is my version (4,200 words) of Chapter 7 of the science fiction story "The RNA Seeds".  To make my version of Chapter 7, I started with the a 3,700 word-long first draft that had been generated by Claude (see my previous blog post titled "A Manikoid Reality").

In Chapter 7, Marda (or mare accurately, the zeptozoan who is inside Marda's body)nreveals herself as another secret operative inside Casanay. She begins collaborating with Anthony to study how the Reality Viewer that is now inside Eddy's computer. The Sedruth entity who assists Eddy with the Reality Viewer is conspicuous by his absence in Chapter 7 and does not reveal himself to Nyrtia or Anthony.

I'm using Chapters 1 - 3 of "The Manikoid Intervention" as a 'story within a story' and counting them as Chapters 4 - 6 of "The RNA Seeds".  

For "The RNA Seeds", I'm trying to depict the transition between two era's on Earth. The first era was one in which the pek and the bumpha gradually guided the evolution of life on Earth towards the development of the human species. For 4,000,000,000 years, the pek remained unaware of the fact that the bumpha were secretly using advanced sedron-based technologies to facilitate their Interventions into the events on Earth. Then, around the year 2000, a dramatic transition began to occur, shifting Earth into a new era in which the bumpha no longer tried to conceal from the pek the fact that the bumpha had time travel technology.

Casanay
That transition between eras involved what became known as the "Casanay Intervention". The first phase of the "Casanay Intervention" involved Manny the bumpha providing Eddy Watson with information about past Realities of Earth. Nyrtia, the pek Overseer of Earth, quickly noticed noticed that Eddy was writing science fiction stories that featured the pek and the bumpha. However, since every human on Earth, including Eddy, believed that the pek and the bumpha were fictional constructs, existing only in Eddy's stories, the pek allowed the "Casanay Intervention" to continue. Nyrtia deployed her agent, Anthony, on Earth, right inside Casanay. Anthony was tasked with determining the ultimate goal of the Casanay Intervention and making sure that nobody on Earth ever obtained evidence that the pek and bumpha were real.

Anthony's ability to monitor events inside Casanay was aided by the fact that humans all had hidden within them a femtobot endosymbiont. Life on Earth had evolved as a composite of biological cells and invisibly small femtobots. The femtobots that existed inside the human brain were functionally integrated with the neurons and each person's femtobot endosymbiont generated hierion-based signals that constantly reflected the activity of that person's neural network. By receiving and monitoring those hierion signals that were broadcast by human brains, Anthony could monitor Eddy's thought processes and beliefs and Anthony knew that Eddy believed that the pek and bumpha were his literary creations.

Tyhry Watson.
In fact, Eddy was under the influence of bumpha memory control infites which simultaneously made him aware of events from past Realities and forcibly prevented Eddy from believing that the pek and bumpha might be real. Eddy could not resist writing himself and his acquaintances into his stories. Eddy's most recently completed novel depicted Anthony as a pek Observer and his daughter, Tyhry, as using advanced bumpha technology, the Sedron Time Stream, to obtain information from the future.

Tyhry had grown up at Casanay with very little interest in her father's stories, until the day when a plot element in one of Eddy's novels suddenly seemed relevant to Tyhry's biology research.

Chapter 7 of “The RNA Seeds”: The Viewer Menu (Chapter 1)(Chapter 2)(Chapter 3)(Chapter 4)(Chapter 5)(Chapter 6)

The great room was dark except for the glow of a power indicator light on the big old desktop computer at Eddy's workstation where he crafted his science fiction stories.

Aunt Beryl had waited until she was quite certain that the last sounds of human habitation — Tyhry's water running, Marda's light going out under her door, the particular sequence of small noises that announced Eddy settling into sleep — had all resolved into silence. Then, because she could monitor the hierion-based signals coming from the femtobot endosymbionts inside the brains of the Watson family members and Marda, she had waited an additional twenty minutes until it was clear that everyone was finally asleep. Four billion years of observing biological life had a way of making twenty minutes feel like the blink of an eye. Beryl quietly exited from her bedroom suite and went to the Casanay great room.

Arriving from his suite of rooms in another wing of Casanay, Anthony was already at the workstation when Beryl arrived. Two cats were confused by the lateness of the hour and this unusual human activity in the great room. Pepper was on the arm of the sofa. Luna had taken the windowsill. Trib was asleep on a rug and in no condition to notice the arrival of Anthony and Beryl in the great room.

Anthony nodded to Nyrtia. "It's still there," Anthony said quietly, indicating the 'Viewer' menu on the menu bar with a quick stab of his finger.

The Viewer menu sat between two of Eddy's standard application menus, exactly where it had been since Manny installed it. It looked like a menu that had always been there, which was the best kind of disguise.

"Let me," she said.

Anthony moved aside and Nyrtia settled into Eddy's chair. She looked at the screen for a moment with the focused, evaluative attention that she brought to all obstacles, then she clicked the word 'Viewer' and discovered that she had clicked on a simple button, not on a drop-down menu.

The screen filled with an array of images.

The images were Eddy's illustrations, arranged in folders for each of his novels. She recognized the cover illustrations for the novels that were the images on each of the blockish folder icons in the array. The cover for Eddy's most recently published novel, Battlefield Lipid, included a bumpha depicted as a shimmering cloud of light with vaguely humanoid proportions. There was also a pek in its preferred form, tall and thin and attentive. In the background was a diagram depicting the Hierion and Sedron Domains of the universe, both linked to the Hadron Domain. Manny clicked on that folder, it opened and she saw that it contained many illustrations that Eddy had crafted for Battlefield Lipid. A femtobot magnified ten billion times, rendered from Eddy's imagination with more artistic than technical fidelity. An image labeled Manny and the Sedron Time Stream in which a glowing figure reached toward a braided column of light against a star field.

The list of images in the folder scrolled on, perfectly organized, including abandoned draft files.

Nyrtia clicked her way back to the root folder and sat back in the chair. One of the other book cover illustrations on the display screen was Eddy's artistic rendering of Observer Base, rendered with the cheerful inaccuracy of his imagination.

"Manny," Nyrtia said, quietly, in a tone that contained four billion years of accumulated exasperation and also, despite everything, a grudging thread of appreciation, "and her tricks."

Anthony said nothing. He had been an Observer long enough to know when silence was the correct response to Nyrtia's frustration.

She clicked through three more of the subfolders. Each one led, with the smooth efficiency of well-designed software, to a different set of Eddy's illustrations. Eddy had crafted a great many illustrations. He had been writing science fiction for a very long time and he loved to illustrate his stories as much as write them.

"Anthony, figure out how to access the Reality Viewer," Nyrtia said. "I want this all documented. The Viewer exists and is available to Eddy. Find a way to get the Viewer to show you what it shows Eddy, not these image files."

Anthony noted this in the way he noted everything: completely, without visible reaction, for the record.

Nyrtia looked at the image of Manny on the screen one final time. Eddy had depicted Manny as a benevolent, luminous figure of great beauty, which, Nyrtia reflected, said a great deal about Manny's management of Eddy's perceptions over the past three decades.

She walked out of the great room and returned to her bedroom, leaving the image gallery open. Anthony examined the code for the 'Viewer' menu, but learned nothing useful. That 'Viewer' button had been programmed to open up Eddy's images folder for his novels. Anthony restarted Eddy's computer and then deployed some of his monitor femtobots inside the computer so that they would carefully monitor the device's activity when next used by Eddy. Then Anthony returned to his suite, planning to be in the great room the next time Eddy used the Reality Viewer.

__

The idea arrived not feeling like a fuzzy remembered dream, but as a certainty.

Tyhry woke at six-seventeen and lay in the dark for two minutes with the distinct sensation of a thought that had finished assembling itself while she was in her REM state of consciousness and was now simply waiting there, complete, to be examined. This was not the first time this had happened to her. It had been happening with increasing frequency. She briefly reflected on the recent night when she had written in the margins of Battlefield Lipid, and she compared the way she felt now to her memory of that other day. She had learned not to grab too wildly at these fragment-images that came to her in the space between sleep and waking. They needed to emerge at their own natural pace of integrating into the thought streams of her waking consciousness.

She reached for the notepad on the small table and wrote for several minutes without pausing.

This new idea was about ribozymes. Specifically, it concerned the question of where Earth's first ribozymes had come from — not the question of how they worked, which was what she had been studying. The canonical answer to that question was: the first ribozymes arose by spontaneous prebiotic chemistry: given enough time, given the right conditions, given the rich mixture of organic molecules that had been present on early Earth, functional ribozymes would arise by random chance.

The new idea that was waiting for her when she woke was: no.

Not a violent no. Not a dismissal of the idea of prebiotic RNA chemistry. More like a quiet but complete confidence that the first ribozymes on Earth had been designed. That someone, or something, had seeded the early Earth with exquisitely engineered molecular machinery and then waited to see what kind of cellular life would arise from that. Tyhry had never taken seriously the idea of panspermia, until now.

She put down the notepad and looked at what she had written.

This is the kind of idea, she thought, that ruins careers. You did not publish the hypothesis that life on Earth had been seeded by aliens. You did not get up at a conference and suggest that the first ribozymes had been engineered by an extraterrestrial intelligence. You did not do these things if you wanted to be taken seriously in the scientific community, which Tyhry did, very much, and which she had been working toward since she was old enough to understand that wanting to be taken seriously required actually doing rigorous work.

She set the notepad down and thought about what she had read just before going to bed.

She was thinking about Eddy's story. He had never previously shared with Tyhry a pre-publication draft of a story. There had to be a reason why he had asked her to read the first three chapters of The Manikoid Intervention. Now Tyhry reflected on the fact that there was a warning embedded in the first three chapters of The Manikoid Intervention that was not subtle, particularly if your name was 'Tyhry', just like the protagonist in The Manikoid Intervention. Tyhry had long ago grown comfortable with the idea that Eddy often wrote the residents of Casanay into his stories. Fortunately, Eddy's writings were obscure enough that none of her scientific colleagues, besides Marda, had ever admitted to reading any of Eddy's stories. Marda was a strange case.

In Eddy's story, The Manikoid Intervention, Tyhry-the-character had lost everything — had been removed from Earth and from her work and from her family — because she had moved too fast and spoken too openly about things that the pek did not want spoken about. That Tyhry had ended up at Observer Base because she had revealed a dangerous truth to Anthony, Nyrtia's Observer on Earth.

Tyhry had read those chapters before falling asleep, but now she reflected on the warning in the context of her new belief that aliens were responsible for there being life on Earth.

For now, Tyhry would focus on her experiments. The RNA ligase modification to PTC-7. The proto-membrane-protein hypothesis, which was genuinely novel and genuinely publishable and had the considerable advantage of being just chemistry without the need for any reference to aliens. She would do the lab work. She would accumulate the data required for an interesting scientific publication. She would, for the time being, keep her larger suspicions in the notepad beside her bed and nowhere else.

She got up and went to the shower, her first step towards arriving in the dining room for breakfast looking like a serious young molecular biology researcher.

__

At breakfast, Eddy asked Tyhry if she had finished reading the three chapters of his new story. Marda had instantly butted in and expressed interest. Eddy had told Marda, “I don't like to spread my stuff too widely until it is in print.” Then Aunt Beryl walked in, ready to enjoy her son's cooking and the conversation had shifted.

Later, in the laboratory, Marda had asked Tyhry for a copy of the three chapters and Tyhry sent them to her with a warning, “Don't speak to anyone about this... except Eddy.”

Marda read the three chapters over lunch, eating with one hand and working her tablet with the other, in a focused silence. Tyhry went for a run in the desert then returned to the laboratory, cooling herself in front of a fan and watching Marda's face while she finished reading.

"This is a story he just wrote," Marda said, looking up. "While we were in Sedona."

"He emailed these first chapters to me while we were on the way back."

"And the fictional Tyhry in The Manikoid Intervention ends up at Observer Base." Marda turned a page. "Eddy is warning you."

"I think so."

Marda set the tablet down and looked at Tyhry and asked, "You have been given some form of alien technology?"

Tyhry shrugged. "I've been having strange, intrusive thoughts. What if aliens are helping me? It is not just me. Maybe aliens have been helping people for a very long time."

"Help via alien technology... the Sedron Time Stream?" Marda glanced at a page of The Manikoid Intervention being displayed on her tablet. "An alien Observer on Earth." She paused. "Anthony."

"I can't bring myself to believe that Anthony is an alien," Tyhry said, in a voice that was not quite as neutral as she intended. "You can't discuss this with anyone except Eddy, particularly not Anthony."

"Anthony is amused by how Eddy writes him into novels. I've seen him laugh about it." Marda looked at the display screen. After a moment she said, very mildly, "The basement lab in the Manikoid Reality has different equipment."

"Yes."

"That Tyhry is doing robotics. Not working with ribozymes."

"Yes. It is a different Reality."

Marda turned off the tablet and set it face-down on a lab bench. "Twenty new ideas a day," Marda said.

"Today it's mostly one idea," Tyhry said. "Let's finalize our selection of the ligase insertion points." They returned to the RNA world and Tyhry forgot about aliens for a few blissful hours.

__

Aunt Beryl found Eddy on the back patio in the mid-morning, sitting with a cat in his lap and the expression he wore when he was working through a structural problem in a story without the assistance of the keyboard. She sat down across from him and he came up from wherever he'd been, blinking slightly, and offered her the automatic hospitality of a man who had been raised to be welcoming even when interrupted. “I'm not interrupting?”

Just plotting out a story.”

"Your new story," she said. "How did the idea come to you?"

Eddy looked at the desert. "The usual way." He continued scratching the cat's ear. This was Luna. Luna tolerated Eddy's touch with what looked like imperial indifference, but if he had tried to stop, Luna would have swiped at his hand as a warning that he must continue. "I sat down and something arrived. I've been assembling the infrastructure for years — the bumpha, the pek, the Sedron Time Stream, the Rules of Intervention. And at some point the infrastructure is complete enough that new stories appear, wanting to exist inside the fictional universe that I use for all my stories." He shrugged. "I'm a machine for imagining crazy ideas. If I seriously tried to explain how it works, I'd probably stop being able to do it."

Beryl looked at him for a moment. "Do you ever wonder whether the ideas are entirely your own?"

Eddy smiled. It was the smile of a man who had been asked some version of this question before and had made peace with the answer. "Every writer wonders that. The honest answer is no. Nothing is entirely my own. Everything I write comes from somewhere." He continued, "Isaac Asimov explained the situation for science fiction story tellers: we craft our stories from what we experience in our lives. What other answer could there be?"

Nyrtia did not expect Eddy to speak about the Reality Viewer. The behavioral control nanites that Manny had placed in his brain held strong. Aunt Beryl muttered, “There are many different kinds of experience.” She went back inside Casanay.

Aunt Beryl stayed through lunch and afterward Zeta walked her to her rental car.

"We'll see you at Christmas?" Zeta asked.

"Unless Iowa has other plans for me." Beryl embraced Zeta with the warmth she had never found it difficult to make real, because the warmth, over the years, had become real. This was one of the small inconveniences of long-term field work. She patted one of the cats, who had come outside to supervise the departure, and got into the car.

She drove down the long unpaved driveway through the creosote without looking back. There was no useful intelligence to be gathered from looking back.

__

The great room was dark again at two in the morning.

Anthony had not been asleep. He was frustrated. Eddy had not returned to his computer until after Nyrtia's departure from Casanay. Anthony had stood there in the great room talking to Zeta while Eddy got back into the rhythm of his writing. Eddy had not clicked on the new 'Viewer' menu until later when he was alone in the great room. Anthony's femtobot monitors had recorded the workings of the computer when Eddy clicked on the 'Viewer' button. The computer sent to the display the same page of image folders that Nyrtia had been shown, somehow what Eddy saw on the Display screen was different. Somehow Eddy was able to see and use the Reality Viewer interface.

Anthony was still parsing through all of the data that he had captured from Eddy's computer when he noticed Marda leave her bedroom suite at one-fifty-three. She went to the great room and began using Eddy's computer. Anthony had given it three minutes, and then he had walked quietly down the hallway to the great room.

Marda was sitting at Eddy's workstation. The screen showed the Viewer interface — not the image gallery. On the display screen was a complex, branching structure that resolved, as Anthony moved closer and his eyes adjusted, into a map of timelines, the Realities of Earth's Reality Chain. To one side, the swarm of possible future Realities was dense with labeled nodes and connecting pathways that ramified away from a central trunk like the root system of a very old tree.

Marda had not startled when he entered. She turned and looked at him with the expression of someone who had been expecting him for some time.

"This is a good time for us to use the Viewer," Marda said. She said this in the tone of a person providing an explanation that both parties understand to be technically accurate and substantially incomplete. Her voice was the voice of a person who was genuinely interested in what she was looking at, and Anthony, who had spent a great deal of time studying Marda, was working hard to determine exactly who he was now with. "This is where Eddy gots his idea for his new story," she said. She clicked on the node for the Manikoid Reality. "I think this is the specific Reality he's been looking at."

"How do you know?"

She pointed to a cluster of nodes near the center of the display. They were connected by pathways of different colors — some bright, some dim, some rendered as dotted lines that suggested conditionality or uncertainty. "This looks like it might be the current Reality. This central node in the map. And these pathways going forward — these must all be possible futures." She traced the mouse-driven pointer along one of the brighter connecting lines then clicked on the node for the Manikoid Reality. "Look here.” She moved the cursor down to the bottom of the diagram. “This button labeled RNA."

Anthony leaned closer. He was quite certain that Eddy had never used that feature of the Viewer.

When she clicked on the RNA button, a menu opened and the title of the menu automatically expanded to now read: RNA — Reality Nexus Assembler.

"This is the interesting part," Marda said, and released the mouse button, completing the click.

The display shifted and now showed only two nodes; one for the current Reality and the other was the Manikoid Reality. Between those two nodes was a complex branching network map but overlaid now with a new layer of information. As she explored the network with the pointer, a highlighting system identified specific branch points and annotated the pathways with what appeared to be probability values and pop-up windows describing transition conditions. The visual logic of it was not immediately obvious, but it had the quality of a functional tool that could be operated by someone who knew what they were doing.

"It looks like this Assembler identifies possible pathways," Marda said, "linking from where we are to somewhere we want to be: a new Reality. And then — I think — it can help determine what would be required to move from one Reality to the other." She paused, in the way of someone thinking deeply. "A time traveler would use this Reality Viewer and the Reality Nexus Assembler to actually bring a new Reality into existence."

Anthony was quiet while he shifted his eyes off of the display screen and then gazed at Marda's pretty face, glowing in the light of the computer screen. "You're Manny's agent," he said. His words were not an accusation. They had the quality of a finding, precisely stated.

Marda turned and looked at him. Her expression was unreadable and entirely composed. "And you're Nyrtia's," she said. "We've been having a very polite time of it, both of us pretending to be normal people." The corner of her mouth moved. "My mission, if you'd like to know, is to keep Tyhry out of Observer Base. To make sure she gets to finish what she's started here on Earth. Right now, it looks like I'm working against Manny who seems intent on forcing Tyhry to start believing in space aliens." Marda giggled.

"If not Manny, then who are you actually working for?"

Seemingly intimidated by the intensity of Anthony's gaze and question, Marda looked back at the display screen. "The Phari," she said, "have an interest in understanding how bumpha time travel technology has been secretly used to construct Earth's Reality Chain. My goal is to learn how to use this Viewer—" she gestured at the RNA interface, "—learn to use this tool to plan a Reality Change. Maybe I can discover what Manny is planning for the next Reality and... switch it." A pause. "Switch the Change to something that the Phari want."

Anthony looked again at the branching timeline map. The RNA interface and the probability annotations on the connecting pathways were complex and beyond his comprehension. He remembered something Nyrtia had said: Tyhry is not an accident. She is the point.

"You need a collaborator," he said.

"Working together, you and I might be able to figure out how to use the Reality Nexus Assembler."

Anthony straightened up and looked at the door that led to the hallway that led to Tyhry's bedroom suite. He thought about Nyrtia, at Observer Base now, reviewing surveillance records from this morning. Surely she had reached the same conclusion as had Anthony: Tyhry was on the brink of speaking to others about her belief in aliens who secretly created and managed life on Earth. He thought about the Viewer menu opening for Marda and not for Nyrtia, and how to complete his assigned mission.

"I'll need to send a report about this to the Overseer," he said.

"Of course." Marda had her attention to the RNA interface. She was studying the probability annotations on the pathways radiating from the current-Reality. She seemed to be genuinely working through something she found difficult. "I would expect nothing less from Nyrtia's agent inside Casanay."

Anthony watched Marda for another minute, then resisting the temptation to also examine the probability matrix that she had brought onto the display screen, he went back to his rooms.

__

He did not sleep. He composed a careful report to Nyrtia — thorough, precise, noting that Marda had accessed the Viewer without apparent difficulty and had demonstrated the RNA function, noting the Phari claim, noting the collaborative proposal, noting that none of it could yet be confirmed and all of it merited close observation. He recommended maintaining their current operational posture and allowing the situation at Casanay to continue to develop.

He sent the report to Nyrtia and looked out the window at the star-lit desert. Something was wrong. Not with Marda's story — or rather, the wrongness was not in any detail he could yet specify. It was a structural wrongness, the feeling of a situation that has been arranged rather than allowed to happen. Manny had installed the Viewer. Manny had locked it against Nyrtia. Manny had, apparently, arranged for Marda to use the Viewer. Was Marda a double agent, working for both Manny and the Phari?

Every element of this pointed in the same direction. He was being invited to participate in something. The invitation was designed to be irresistible.

He thought about the idea that Marda might have a nanite key that unlocked the Reality Viewer functionality of Eddy's computer. Marda had no obvious mechanism by which she could have unlocked the Viewer: no device, no credential, nothing he had detected. But something had opened it. Possibly something so small as to be below the detection threshold of his routinely-deployed Observation tools.

He would need to deploy his femtobot monitors more carefully. He would need to get closer to Marda during the next session, close enough to have a chance of detecting whatever it was that she carried with her that Nyrtia and he did not: almost certainly a nanite key.

In the morning he would prepare coffee and breakfast and he would watch Marda across the table with the same mild, pleasant attention he brought to everything. He would give nothing away.

But he found himself, in the quiet of his room, less focused on what he would do in the morning than on what Marda might show him the next night. The RNA interface. The branching pathways. The probability annotations on the routes between one Reality and the next.

What type of new Reality, he thought, would the Phari want to bring into existence?

He would ask Marda. Carefully. And while he was asking, he would be listening for the truth beneath her answer.

Outside, the high desert was very quiet. The stars that were visible through his window were, as always, indifferent. Marda had given up examining the probability matrix and returned to her bedroom. In the great room, Eddy's workstation had gone dark again, but Manny's special artwork remained, illuminating everything at Casanay.

End Chapter 7

Next: planning Chapter 8 of "The RNA Seeds".

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May 7, 2026

A Manikoid Reality

Eddy, Manny and the Viewer.
Below on this blog page is my version (3,400 words) of Chapter 3 of the science fiction story "The RNA Seeds".  To make my version of Chapter 3, I started with the a 3,300 word-long first draft that had been generated by Claude (see my May 5th blog post titled "A New View"). Chapter 3 shows how Eddy came to start writing a new science fiction story titles "The Manikoid Intervention".

Reminder: Chapters 1 - 3 of "The Manikoid Intervention" are going to serve as Chapters 4 - 6 of "The RNA Seeds". 

 The RNA Seeds - Chapter 3: The Viewer (Chapter 1)(Chapter 2)

Image generated by Flow.
Aunt Beryl enjoyed visiting tourist destinations in and around Sedona, particularly the energy vortexes which she invariably claimed made her feel nauseous; a sure sign of her paranormal sensitivities, she avowed. After the cookout, Aunt Beryl, Anthony, Zeta, Tyhry and Marda drove to Sedona for a day-long trip, planning to return to Casanay late the next day. That left Eddy alone in Casanay, if one can be alone with a tribe of demanding cats.

Eddy had stood on the front steps and watched Zeta's SUV making its way down the long unpaved driveway. He turned and returned inside to his computer before the pale cloud of dust had dissolved into the air above the creosote. Eddy quickly settled into his chair at the workstation in the great room with the cats distributing themselves across the available surfaces, Eddy now the only entertainment in the house. Trib took the windowsill. Pepper took the arm of the sofa. Luna, after conducting a brief and apparently inconclusive inspection of the kitchen, returned and sat beside Eddy's chair with the expectant expression she wore when she had decided that the most interesting thing was likely to be whatever Eddy was about to do.

He wrote for several hours. This new story had been slow to start — it often was, in the days when a premise was assembling itself but had not yet found its architecture — but the morning was productive in the quiet, accumulative way that Eddy had long since learned to value over dramatic breakthroughs. He wrote and deleted and rewrote. He made notes in the margin document he kept alongside every active manuscript. He ate a sandwich at his desk rather than at the dining table, on the grounds that there was no one present to object, and he gave Luna a piece of turkey.

The afternoon faded into evening. He fed and watered the cats, but otherwise kept to his writing routine.

At nine-fifteen in the evening, the woman appeared beside his workstation.

Eddy did not hear her arrive. There was no sound — no door, no footstep. She was simply not there, and then she was, standing three feet to his left in the dim light of the great room, and Eddy's first response was not the response of a man confronting an impossible apparition. His first response was the response of a man whose brain, assisted by Manny's infites, had recognized the meaning of something before his conscious mind had caught up with it.

He knew her immediately. She was exactly as he remembered her: young, perhaps twenty-two, her unusually thin body an indication of the fact that she was a bumpha-designed construct, crafted for bumpha purposes. She was wearing the same jacket — the dark green one — that she had been wearing the last time he had seen her, in the parking lot near the biosciences library, the afternoon she had told him she was leaving and that he was going to be all right without her.

"Ivory," Eddy said.

The woman who he had known as Ivory Fersoni smiled, and it was exactly Ivory's smile, and the memories that had been suppressed for twenty-eight years arrived in Eddy all at once: the memory of what it had been like to be twenty-one and certain that he was in love. He's had no time for the memory of her absence to fester before it was hidden from his conscious mind. He understood now, all at once, in the way that a suppressed thing reveals its full shape when the hand pressing it down is finally lifted.

Then the memory of the suppression itself was also available to him, and he understood that too.

He sat back in his chair and let out a long breath. "You did this," he said. "You did all of it."

"Eddy." Her voice was exactly Ivory's voice. "I've been waiting for you to be ready to have this conversation."

"I was in love with you." He said it without any particular accusation. It was an observation, precise and accurate. "You were made to be exactly the kind of person I would fall in love with. And then, when you'd done what you needed to do, you left."

The woman who had played the role of Ivory in Eddy's life was quiet for a moment. It was not an uncomfortable silence — she wore it the way Ivory had always worn silences, without any anxiety about filling them.

"Yes," she said.

"And then you made sure I met Zeta." He considered this. "That was you as well."

"That was also me. You might even thank me sometime."

Eddy looked at the new/old woman — the entity — standing beside his workstation in the lamplight of the great room he had lived in for decades in the company of a woman he loved and a daughter he was proud of and an endless succession of cats. He thought about the life he had lived, and the stories he had written, and the particular sensation of sitting down at the keyboard in the early morning hours with the feeling that something was arriving through him rather than from him, some current from a source he had never been able to identify.

He said, "It is amazing that you know exactly how to control my behavior. And make me happy that you did."

She giggled. This was a different smile from Ivory's — something ancient and patient and, Eddy thought, genuinely amused, the way he could be amused when watching a cat play with a toy mouse. "I have had a great deal of patience, waiting for this day."

"I imagine you have." He pointed a finger at her. "You are Manny the bumpha."

"I am."

"So... you are real."

"I am real, yes."

Eddy found that this did not require the large emotional adjustment he would have expected. The bumpha were real; he had written about them for most of his adult life. The information he had included in his stories about the bumpha had always been accurate, he now understood, because it had always been provided to him by Manny. The feeling that accompanied this recognition was not shock. It was closer to the sensation of finally identifying a chord that had been playing just below the threshold of conscious hearing for as long as he could remember.

"My behavioral nanites," he said, "will prevent me from telling anyone that you are real."

"They will."

"And yet you're telling me anyway."

"I'm telling you now because I'm giving you a new tool to play with... something that will help you write new stories." Manny — who was still wearing Ivory's face, which Eddy decided was a courtesy so as not to confuse him and also a demonstration that the physical form of Ivory could still exercise a powerful attractive force on Eddy — turned her attention to his workstation. "You have been writing stories that describe bumpha technology for many years, Eddy. You have described it accurately because I provided the information. But you have always been describing things you had not seen. What I am giving you now is the ability to see the source material for your stories."

She pointed toward his workstation, and Eddy had a moment to observe that her hand moved through the air in the precise way that Ivory's hands had moved — unhurried, deliberate, always going exactly where they were going — and then a cloud of sparkling motes flowed from Manny into his computer. "Your old computer now includes Reality Viewer capability. The Viewer interface," Manny said, "will be visible when you select it from this menu." She pointed at the menu bar. A new item was present there, between two of the standard menus. A new menu that Eddy was certain had not been there before. It was labeled simply Viewer.

Eddy looked at it for a moment. Then he clicked it.

The first time the Viewer opened, Eddy thought he was looking at a plate of spaghetti. The content in the window that filled most of his screen was structured, labeled, organized into a complex branching pattern: the meta-timeline that was Earth's Reality Chain. Because he had written about Viewer technology in his science fiction stories, he assumed that he was looking at a map of a multitude of timelines that had taken place in Deep Time and been replaced.

Manny pointed to one node in the map, “The Battlefield Lipid Reality, we can call it.” She was standing close and reaching past his shoulder with the manner of someone who had presented this kind of material before and was watching his face rather than the screen. “Events in this past Reality were not identical to what you wrote in your novel. I fed you story plot elements and you crafted the story. But the calcium-binding proteins were real. Ocean bacteria had been genetically engineered. Carbon dioxide capture by Earth's oceans was boosted.”

"The calcium chelation protein domain," Eddy said, and his voice was quieter than he expected. "I wrote that because it felt right. I was following the internal logic of the story."

"You wrote it because I provided the information," Manny said. "It felt right because it was right. That is what information feels like to you when it arrives through the channel I installed in you."

Eddy clicked on that map node and the Viewer guided him to specific events in that past Reality. Manny noted, “The Sedruth entity follows your thoughts. You'll find Sedruth a useful interface for the vast amount of information available to you by way of the Viewer.” Eddy played with the Viewer for another few minutes. He quickly found two places where his story had diverged from what had actually happened — small things, one of them a difference in geography, one of them a difference in the timeframe — and he found that these divergences did not bother him. He had not been writing history. He had been writing a story inspired by history, with the best information available to him, and the best information available to him had come from Manny. The story was good. He was content with it.

"Show me something new," he said. “Something I have not previously been made aware of.”

Manny had well-practiced expertise with the Viewer interface. She shifted back to the main Reality Chain map and then selected another node. "This," she said, "is a possible Reality that does not yet exist."


The View was centered on Casanay. “Call this the Manikoid Reality. Note that the great room is little changed from this Reality.

But Eddy saw that the basement of Casanay was quite different. In the Manikoid Reality, Tyhry's laboratory occupied the same footprint, but its contents were organized so as to address a different set of problems. There were no incubators, no centrifuges, no gel imaging systems, no foam racks of labeled tubes. Instead the workbench held a collection of electronics equipment — oscilloscopes, chip testers, a high-magnification optical system — and on the wall above the workbench, in this other version of his daughter's life, there was a printed schematic of a VLSI architecture that Eddy could not parse in detail but whose visual density reminded him of the circuit diagrams that appeared in the technical papers he read for background research.

The robot standing in the corner of that basement robotics research laboratory was a humanoid unit, more capable-looking than the domestic helper robots that were beginning to appear in the Reality of Eddy's personal experience. Eddy had written about conscious machines and enjoyed including them in his science fiction stories as plot elements. He had spent years trying to describe from the outside what it might mean for a machine to have an interior life. The robot that resided and worked in the Casanay basement of the Manikoid Reality moved with precision and purpose. Eddy recognized intelligent intentionality when he saw it.

Tyhry — the other Tyhry, the one who had studied computing systems engineering instead of molecular biology — was at the workbench, looking at a chip component under the optical system, showing the focus of attention and fluid motions he knew in his daughter.

With the assistance of the Sedruth entity, Eddy studied this other version of his daughter's life for a long time. He watched her collaborate with the Claude LLM, the Manikoid Reality analogue of the same large language model he himself used for research assistance when crafting stories. He watched that other Claude present Tyhry with an advanced chip architecture. Now the Sedruth entity telepathically told Eddy: That VLSI chip reached Claude by way of the Sedron Time Stream.

The Sedron Time Stream technology was something he had long imagined he had invented as a literary fictional technology, something he had invented for one story and then deployed and refined in a dozen others and never believed might be real. He watched his daughter and the artificial intelligence Claude work together in the way that two similar minds work together when they have found the precise register of each other's intelligence and are operating at the edge of what either of them could do alone.

Eddy was aware, at some point, that he was smiling. He'd previously written the Sedruth entity into stories where it functioned as the user-friendly interface for advanced bumpha technologies. Now he was in rapport with Sedruth and able to easily navigate through events of the Manikoid Reality, receiving useful commentary from Sedruth.

Eddy became aware of a progression of events in what Sedruth was showing him, near linear movement toward an outcome he could see approaching even as the participants inside Casanay of the Manikoid Reality could not. Sedruth explained: This is a branch point for a Reality Change. In the first Reality, Eddy saw a lunch scene where Claude could not prevent Tyhry from revealing the fact that she was getting assistance from the future that would allow her to make a revolutionary learning circuit. Eddy saw the result: Nyrtia arriving in the basement, the exile of Tyhry to Observer Base, the continuation of Tyhry's work on the M2 robot in the Hierion Domain. Then Eddy saw what almost happened, and what Manny's correction made not happen in the new successor Reality. Manny used a time traveling zeptozoan to alter the flow of the timeline and bring into existence a new Reality in which Nyrtia was deceived and Tyhry converted the M2 robot and Claude into a new conscious artificial life-form, Klaudy.

He sat back. He looked away from the screen.

"She got exiled," he said.

"In one potential Reality, yes."

"And in that potential Reality, is she — is she all right? At Observer Base?"

Manny's voice was even, but not unkind. "Observer Base is not a punishment. Nyrtia runs it with care. Your daughter would be given resources, colleagues, intellectual stimulation. In the Hierion Domain she would continue to work on exactly the problem that interested her: how to give a machine human-like consciousness."

"But she would never come home."

Manny did not answer this directly, which was itself an answer.

Eddy looked at his workstation. He looked at the menu bar, at the item labeled Viewer, and then at the document he had been working on that afternoon — his current project, the one that had been slow to start, the one that had not yet found its architecture.

His thoughts now safely back in his own Reality, he thought about his Tyhry, working in the basement, trying to reconstruct the origin of life on Earth. He thought about the possibility that Tyhry was getting help from the future via the Sedron Time Stream, like a character in one of his stories.

Eddy wanted to give Tyhry a warning. Manny said, “Unfortunately, my infites will prevent you from telling anyone about this Reality Viewer.”

The Casanay laboratory in two different Realities.
Eddy knew that what he could not say out loud, he could put into a story. He needed to write a new story for Tyhry, one that carried the warning he had been given by Manny about the Manikoid Reality and the risk of Tyhry being exiled to Observer Base.

"The machine she builds," Eddy said. "The conscious robot. She names it Klaudy?"

"There are an infinite number of Realities like the one you just Viewed," Manny said, "and often the name is Klaudy. In other possible variant Realities, if not Klaudy, something similar."

Eddy opened a new text document. At the top of the blank page, in the document header where he always put the title first, he typed: The Manikoid Intervention.

Eddy never noticed the grin on the face of 'Ivory'. Manny returned to the Sedron Domain, leaving Eddy to his task. He worked through the night.

He worked through the following morning, getting up from his chair only when the cats demanded to be fed, watered and have the litter boxes cleaned. He worked through the afternoon, pausing once to read back what he had written and found it better than he had expected and good enough for the purpose of warning Tyhry. He worked while the light moved across the great room from east to west and the desert went through all its colors and the cats conducted their inscrutable affairs around and below and occasionally on top of him.

He was writing quickly, more quickly than he usually wrote, and the writing had the feeling he associated with the best kind of information arriving through the channel he now understood he had always had. He knew this story. He knew it not only because he had seen it in the Viewer but because he had been writing toward it for years, laying in the background and the physics and the characters, and now the story he had been preparing for was here and he was writing it and the pieces were where he had already put them.

He wrote Klaudy as a character with human-like intelligence and a need to tell the story of how his conscious mind had come into existence. He wrote Tyhry's basement robotics laboratory with precise details revealed to him by the Viewer, including a diagram generated by Claude outlining the LC1 architecture. He wrote Anthony of the Manikoid Reality exactly as he appeared every morning in the current Reality, and he wrote Nyrtia as he had always written her — ancient and precise, enforcing rules whose logic she understood better than anyone.

He was, he thought, writing the most important story he had ever written.

He hoped Tyhry would read the story and take its warning to heart. Eddy did not want to lose his Tyhry to Observer Base.


Eddy was finishing the third chapter when his phone showed a text from Zeta: leaving Sedona, home by 7. He checked the time. Eddy saved the new story file. He skimmed back through the three chapters one final time then he opened his email client and created a new message.

Tyhry, he wrote, I've been working on something while you were in Sedona that I want you to read. It's not finished — not even close — but I think you should read what I have so far. If you are tired of listening to Beryl and Zeta gossip, I think you should read it before you come home. Consider it a father's gift to a daughter who is better at science than I am, written by a father who is better at a certain other thing than most people realize.

The story file is attached.

Love, Dad

He attached the document, three chapters and a title page, and sent it.

Outside the tall windows of the great room, the early evening light was the particular deep amber of the high desert and the rocks and the creosote were all the colors he knew in the place he had lived for more than twenty years, and somewhere down the road that he could not see from his chair, a car was moving through the desert toward home.

Eddy thanked the Sedruth entity, closed the Viewer, fell into the big recliner and was almost instantly asleep.

End Chapter 3

I provided Claude with a 316 KB PDF document that contained 1) information about the Exodemic Fictional Universe and how to write science fiction stories that are set in the Exodemic Fictional Universe, 2) some backstory and a list of characters for “The RNA Seeds”, 3) the full text of Chapters 1 - 6 of “The RNA Seeds” and 4) ideas for how to continue the story.

Me: Claude, process the file that I uploaded and then discuss with me plans for Chapter 7 of “The RNA Seeds”.

Claude: {the text below in red was Claude's "thinking" process}

The user has uploaded a PDF containing the EFU background, story setup, and Chapters 1-6 of "The RNA Seeds," plus ideas for Chapter 7. Let me review Section 4 (the Chapter 7 ideas) and discuss plans with them.

The Chapter 7 ideas are:

  1. Late at night, Aunt Beryl and Anthony try to use the Reality Viewer installed in Eddy's computer. They can't get it to work.
  2. Next morning, Tyhry wakes with a "future vision" - suspicion that bumpha seeded Earth with sophisticated ribozymes and guided evolution of life on Earth.
  3. Marda comments on Tyhry's confidence about the new proto-ribosome experiments.
  4. Marda badgers Tyhry into letting her read "The Manikoid Intervention" - first 3 chapters, with instruction not to discuss with anyone except Eddy.
  5. Aunt Beryl tries to speak to Eddy about the source of ideas for his new story, he deflects ("I'm a machine for imagining crazy ideas").
  6. Aunt Beryl departs, 'returning to Iowa'.
  7.  
    That night Anthony finds Marda using Eddy's computer. She has unlocked the Reality Viewer.
  8. Marda tells Anthony: "This must be where Eddy gets his ideas for his stories. And you must be Nyrtia's agent on Earth, just like in Eddy's stories!"
  9. Anthony accuses Marda of being Manny's secret agent.
  10. Marda seemingly jokingly says "Ya, and my mission is to prevent Tyhry from getting sent to Observer Base."
  11. Marda shows Anthony the RNA (Reality Nexus Assembler) function of the Reality Viewer.
  12. They discuss engineering a Reality Change.
  13. Anthony sends report to Nyrtia suggesting they allow things to unfold while he collaborates with Marda to learn the Reality Nexus Assembler.

This is a rich chapter. Let me think about what questions/discussion points would be useful to raise with the user before drafting.

Key things to think about:

  • The chapter has a clear two-part structure: daytime/morning events (Tyhry's vision, Marda reading TMI, Beryl's departure) and nighttime scenes (Beryl+Anthony trying the Viewer, then Marda unlocking it) …

{the text below in blue was Claude's actual response}  

 I've read through the full document carefully — all six chapters plus the Section 4 outline for Chapter 7. This is a beautifully constructed story, and the Chapter 7 outline sets up some very satisfying payoffs. Let me share my read of the material and then raise some questions.

The chapter outline has a clear two-part temporal structure: a first night (Beryl and Anthony fail with the Viewer), a morning sequence (Tyhry's vision, Marda reading TMI, Beryl's departure), and then a second night (Anthony discovers Marda has unlocked the Viewer). That two-night framing gives the chapter good shape, and the reversal — Beryl and Anthony failing where Marda succeeds — is a lovely piece of dramatic irony that tells us something important about Marda's nature without spelling it out.

A few things I'd want to think through with you before drafting:

Marda's nature. Her casual, almost joking admission — "Ya, and my mission is to prevent Tyhry from getting sent to Observer Base" — is the emotional center of the chapter's second half. How ambiguous do you want this to remain for the reader at this stage? Is she a zeptozoan-guided human, a more deliberate bumpha operative, or something else? Her ability to unlock the Viewer when Anthony and Nyrtia (in Beryl's form) could not implies she has access to something they don't.

Tyhry's future vision. You describe it as having filled her with a suspicion about alien ribozyme seeding. Is this meant to feel like a dream she's interpreting, or something more direct — almost a Sedron Time Stream transmission that arrived during sleep? The tone of that scene will set up how Marda reads Tyhry's confidence in the lab.

The RNA double meaning reveal. This is the chapter where the second meaning of the title becomes explicit to at least two characters (Marda and Anthony). How much does Marda actually explain about the Reality Nexus Assembler function, and does Anthony grasp the full implication, or does he report to Nyrtia while still partially in the dark?

 Beryl's departure scene. Eddy's deflection ("I'm a machine for imagining crazy ideas") is perfectly in character and almost certainly verbatim how he'd say it. Is there anything you want that scene to accomplish beyond closing out the Beryl visit — perhaps a moment where Beryl/Nyrtia privately registers that something has shifted at Casanay?

What are your thoughts on these points, and is there anything in the outline you've already revised or expanded beyond what's in the document?

Me: 1) Marda's nature. Having analyzed Marda's behavior for the past month, Anthony is now working on the hypothesis that Marda is Manny's agent and possibly under the control of a time traveling zeptozoan from the future. Manny is dangling advanced bumpha technology in front of Anthony and Nyrtia (particularly the Reality Viewer) and trying to draw Nyrtia into a trap. In Chapter 7, the reader can be kept guessing about Marda's true nature. For Chapter 7, Marda can be shown as entering into a collaboration with Anthony to explore how to use the Reality Nexus Assembler function of the Reality Viewer. I think it would be fun to have Marda hint that she is associated with the Phari and willing to work with Anthony to learn how to use the Reality Viewer to plan a new Reality Change.

2) Tyhry's future vision. Manny is guiding Tyhry to both success in her new ribozyme experiment and also a conviction that she is not only on a path to an important result in Origin of Life research but also possibly proving that aliens played a role in starting life on Earth. In Chapter 7, Tyhry can't completely sort-out her visions (which seem to reach her while she sleeps) and she is content, for now, to simply perform her RNA experiments.

3) Reality Nexus Assembler function. Marda's late night conversation with Anthony could include Marda telling Anthony: "The Phari are certain that the bumpha have time travel technology and have secretly used it. It is my goal to prove it by causing a Realty Change that will be beneficial to the Phari." Marda shows the Reality Nexus Assembler feature of the Viewer to Anthony and tells him, "My mission is to use this RNA to chart the required path from our Reality to the next Reality."

4) Beryl's departure scene. Nyrtia is leaving Anthony at Casanay as her Observer, with hopes that he can come to understand the true nature and purpose of Manny's 'Casanay Intervention'. In her private thoughts, Nyrtia fears that Manny will engineer a Reality Change that will accomplish Manny's goals while erasing all of Anthony's progress towards gaining for the pek useful knowledge about advanced bumpha technologies.

Note: at this point, I had made several changes and updates to my backstory file (now 319 KB, see a copy of the file) that I share with Claude. I had added to that file items 1-4, above, and then I started a new chat session with Claude...

Me: Claude, process the file that I uploaded and then discuss with me plans for Chapter 7 of “The RNA Seeds”.

Claude: {the text below in red was Claude's "thinking" process}

 The user has uploaded a comprehensive document about "The RNA Seeds" and wants to discuss plans for Chapter 7. Let me review Section 4 carefully and engage in a planning discussion.

Key elements for Chapter 7:

  1.  
    Late night scene: Aunt Beryl and Anthony try to use the Reality Viewer - can't get it to work
  2. Morning: Tyhry wakes with a "future vision" about aliens seeding Earth with ribozymes
  3. Marda comments on Tyhry's confidence about the new experiments
  4. Marda reads first three chapters of "The Manikoid Intervention"
  5. Aunt Beryl tries to talk to Eddy about his story ideas, he deflects
  6. Beryl departs "returning to Iowa"
  7. Night: Anthony finds Marda using Eddy's computer, she's unlocked the Reality Viewer
  8. Marda reveals she knows Anthony is Nyrtia's agent
  9. Anthony accuses Marda of being Manny's agent
  10. Marda hints at Phari connection and RNA (Reality Nexus Assembler) function
  11. Anthony reports to Nyrtia suggesting collaboration with Marda

The document gives good background on each scene. Let me think about what questions/discussion points would be useful for planning the chapter.

 Key narrative tensions:

  • Marda's true nature is deliberately ambiguous
  • The Reality Viewer as a plot device being introduced to both Nyrtia's side and Manny's side
  • Tyhry's ribozyme research advancing
  • The Phari connection being hinted at through Marda

I should discuss the structure, ask about things that need clarification, and offer thoughts on how to develop these elements.

{the text below in blue was Claude's actual response}  

I've read through the entire document carefully — the EFU worldbuilding in Section 1, the character and backstory material in Section 2, all six chapters in Section 3, and the detailed notes for Chapter 7 in Section 4. This is a richly constructed story, and the hand-off from Chapter 6 to Chapter 7 sets up some very promising tensions.

Let me share my initial thoughts on Chapter 7's structure and raise a few questions before we start drafting.

The chapter as outlined has a clear two-part rhythm: daytime scenes centered on Tyhry and Marda (the science strand) and nighttime scenes centered on Anthony and Beryl/Nyrtia (the surveillance/intervention strand). The chapter closes with the pivotal late-night confrontation between Anthony and Marda at Eddy's computer. That's a satisfying architecture.

A few things I'd like to think through with you before drafting:

 The Beryl/Anthony late-night attempt to use the Reality Viewer is intriguing because they fail — and the reason they fail matters narratively. Is it that the Viewer simply won't respond to pek-adjacent biology (Anthony's femtobot endosymbiont being the wrong type), or is it that Manny has deliberately locked the interface so only certain users can activate it? The latter would be a nice bit of foreshadowing for Marda's success later that same night.

On Marda's nature — the notes say to keep the reader guessing, which I think is exactly right. But how much do you want Marda herself to know about her own nature? Is she consciously acting as a Phari agent, or does she have only partial awareness, perhaps receiving guidance the way Tyhry receives fragments from the Sedron Time Stream? That choice will affect how her dialogue with Anthony reads.

The Phari connection is introduced here for the first time in the story, and it's a significant reveal. Do you want Marda to name the Phari explicitly in Chapter 7, or hint at them obliquely enough that only a careful reader of Eddy's novels would catch the reference?

Finally, Tyhry's "future vision" about alien-seeded ribozymes — do you want that to manifest as a dream she partially remembers and partially writes down (echoing the margins-of-the-novel scene from Chapter 1), or as something more vivid and disturbing that she can't quite shake off?

Me: 1) Manny has deliberately locked the Reality Viewer interface that is now inside Casanay so only certain users can activate it. This is actually accomplished through the Sedruth entity, who is an artificial life-form that curates the vast amounts of data in the Sedron Time Stream. First of all, Sedruth must make sure that no Temporal Paradoxes are triggered when information flows from the future to the past via the Sedron Time Stream. 

Also, in the case of the 'Casanay Intervention', Sedruth is helping Manny create a trap for the pek. Manny is irresistibly tempting Nyrtia by deploying advanced bumpha technology within Casanay. Manny makes Nyrtia aware of the existence of the Reality Viewer, but makes sure that Sedruth will prevent Nyrtia from using the Reality Viewer.

2) "how much do you want Marda herself to know about her own nature?" <-- There is an interesting distinction to be made here. The 'Marda' character is something like a 'split personality'. There is the 'biological Marda', a normal young woman. However, she is now the host for a time traveling zeptozoan that is an agent for Manny the bumpha and working to trick Nyrtia into engineering a Reality Change. This is a Reality Change that that Manny does not want to trigger herself because it would be a violation of the Rules of Intervention. Manny's plan is to trick Nyrtia into initiating the Reality Change, then Manny will be able to say, "Hey, you did it, now you are stuck with it."  In any case, the time traveling zeptozoan can take-over Marda's body and use it in the middle of the night when Marda is "sleeping". And yes, I would have Marda try to misdirect Anthony by claiming she is working with the Phari. The reader should at that point be made aware of the fact that the Phari are an ancient life-form from Earth's galaxy that transcended into the Hierion Domain. Anthony and Nyrtia are intrigued by the possibility of collaborating with a Phari agent on Earth and possibly learning something useful from/about the mysterious and reclusive Phari.

3) Tyhry's "future vision" about alien-seeded ribozymes... I would depict this as entering into Tyhry's conscious awareness as an idea that suddenly "pops into Tyhry's thinking". Tyhry is intrigued but worried that if she tried to tell fellow scientists that aliens seeded life on Earth then she would be laughed at. She tries to focus on her ribozyme experiment with the goal of generating publishable results on the benefits of having proto-membrane-proteins present while experimenting with proto-ribosomes. She's now thinking seriously about the warning from Eddy that is contained in the events of the first three chapters of his new story "The Manikoid Intervention".

 Claude: {the text below in red was Claude's "thinking" process}

This is very rich planning material. Let me organize what I now know about Chapter 7 and think about how to best discuss the chapter structure before drafting.

Key elements for Chapter 7:

Sedruth's role: The Reality Viewer is locked by Sedruth - this is clever because it means Beryl/Nyrtia's failure isn't mechanical but intentional. Sedruth is both a paradox-prevention system and an active participant in Manny's trap for Nyrtia.

Marda's split nature:

  • Biological Marda = normal young woman, asleep
  • Zeptozoan-controlled Marda = Manny's agent, active at night
  • The zeptozoan is misdirecting Anthony/Nyrtia by claiming Phari affiliation
  • Manny's long game: trick Nyrtia into initiating a Reality Change, then hold her accountable

The Phari introduction: Brief worldbuilding needed - ancient life-form from our galaxy, transcended into the Hierion Domain. Anthony and Nyrtia are intrigued by the possibility of a Phari agent on Earth.

Tyhry's vision: Pops into conscious awareness as a sudden idea. She's worried about scientific credibility. She's also now taking seriously Eddy's warning in "The Manikoid Intervention" about the risk of being exiled.

 Chapter structure I'm envisioning:

  1. Late night - Beryl and Anthony attempt to use the Viewer, fail (Sedruth blocks them)
  2. Morning - Tyhry wakes with the "pop" of the alien ribozyme idea, works in lab with Marda
  3. Marda reads first three chapters of TMI
  4. Beryl's farewell scene with Eddy (he describes his creative process naturally)
  5. Beryl departs
  6. That night - Anthony finds Marda at Eddy's computer, Marda has unlocked the Viewer
  7. Their conversation: Marda's Phari claim, the RNA function reveal, Anthony's report to Nyrtia

Questions I should ask JWS before drafting:

  1. The chapter opens with the late-night Beryl/Anthony Viewer attempt - how does Sedruth manifest its refusal? Is it subtle (the interface simply doesn't respond) or does Sedruth communicate in some way?

 {the text below in blue was Claude's actual response} 

This is all very clarifying, and the architecture of Manny's trap is elegant — she's essentially using Nyrtia's own instinct to control and understand bumpha technology as the mechanism by which Nyrtia will doom herself to initiating a Reality Change she can't undo. That's a delicious inversion of the usual pek-bumpha dynamic, and it fits perfectly with the EFU's preference for well-intentioned designs producing unexpected consequences.

Let me lay out how I'm now seeing the chapter's scene structure, and flag a few remaining questions.

 The chapter would move through roughly five beats. First, the late-night Viewer attempt by Beryl and Anthony, which Sedruth silently refuses. Second, the morning science scenes — Tyhry's ribozyme idea arriving fully formed, Marda reading the TMI chapters, Tyhry's private anxiety about scientific credibility and about Eddy's warning. Third, Beryl's departure scene with Eddy. Fourth, the pivotal late-night confrontation between Anthony and zeptozoan-Marda at the computer. Fifth, Anthony's report to Nyrtia.

A few things I want to clarify before drafting:

When Sedruth refuses Beryl and Anthony access to the Viewer, how would you like that refusal to manifest? Does the interface simply not respond — the Viewer menu is visible but clicking it produces nothing — or does Sedruth communicate in some minimal way that makes Anthony suspect the system is not broken but actively withholding? The latter would plant an important seed for when Marda succeeds later.

On the RNA acronym explanation — "Reality Nexus Assembler" — when zeptozoan-Marda explains this to Anthony, how technical do you want that conversation to be? We could keep it impressionistic (Marda shows Anthony a visualization of branching Realities being "seeded" from a known fixed point), or go deeper into the mechanics of how reporter zeptites embedded in everything on Earth feed data into the Sedron Domain where it gets assembled into a coherent View.

 And finally, what's your preferred closing image for the chapter? Does it end on Anthony composing his report to Nyrtia, or do you want a brief return to Tyhry asleep, dreaming, with the reader left wondering whether the same zeptozoan that is walking around in Marda's body at night has also been whispering into Tyhry's sleep?

Me: 1) "When Sedruth refuses Beryl and Anthony access to the Viewer, how would you like that refusal to manifest?" <-- Claude, one of my goals for "The RNA Seeds" is to have fun. Let's say that when Aunt Beryl (Nyrtia) tries clicking on the "Viewer" menu, it gives her access to images that Eddy has previously created and used to illustrate his science fiction stories. In other words, when either Anthony or Nyrtia tries the use the Reality Viewer, they are shunted to what looks like some innocuous software "feature" of Eddy's computer. (I hope this amuses you as much as it amuses me) Upon failing to access the Reality Viewer, Nyrtia might say in exasperation: "Manny and her tricks!"

2) "when zeptozoan-Marda explains this to Anthony, how technical do you want that conversation to be?" <-- In Chapter 7, Marda simply wants to entice Anthony with her ability to access the Reality Viewer. Marda needs to pretend like she is just figuring out how the Viewer can be used to to select among possible future Realities and determine how to bring a specific new Reality into existence (carry out the desired Reality Change). She could say to Anthony, "Look at this mysterious RNA feature. It seems to identify linkage pathways from the current Reality to a possible new Reality. We need to figure out how to use this tool." In other words, the Marda zeptozoan is pretending to be a Phari agent who is trying to understand bumpha technology... just like Anthony. Latter in "The RNA Seeds" Anthony will feel confident that he knows how to use the RNA feature and he will try to initiate a Reality Chain.

3) Chapter 7 could end with Anthony eagerly waiting for his next late night session with Marda and the Reality Viewer and pondering how he can figure out what type of new Reality the Phari would like to bring into existence. He suspects that Marda might have a "nanite key" that unlocks the Reality Viewer and gives her access to the system. He might plan to deploy some of his femtobots in an effort to detect that hypothetical "key".

Claude: {the text below in red was Claude's "thinking" process}

The user has given me all the information I need to draft Chapter 7. Let me now plan and draft it.

The chapter structure:

  1. Late night - Beryl (Nyrtia) and Anthony try the Viewer, get shunted to Eddy's illustration gallery. Nyrtia's exasperated "Manny and her tricks!"
  2. Morning - Tyhry's ribozyme idea pops into her head, Marda reads TMI chapters, Tyhry's private anxiety about scientific credibility and Eddy's warning
  3. Beryl's departure - conversation with Eddy where he describes his story ideas as just "being a machine for imagining crazy ideas"
  4. Late night - Anthony finds Marda (zeptozoan) using the Viewer, the Phari misdirection, the RNA feature demonstration
  5. Anthony's closing thoughts - eagerly anticipating next session, planning to detect Marda's "nanite key"

Let me think about tone and style based on the existing chapters. The writing is literary, precise, with dry humor and careful observation of character. The cats are a recurring presence. The prose has a quality of careful attention to small details.

Let me draft this chapter now.

{the text below in blue was Claude's actual response}  

This is a beautifully layered trap. The detail I particularly enjoy is that Marda-zeptozoan is performing ignorance of bumpha technology for Anthony's benefit, while Anthony is performing collaborative open-mindedness for Marda's benefit, and both of them are being played by Manny from outside the frame entirely. The reader who has been paying attention will see all three levels simultaneously. That's the kind of dramatic irony the EFU does best.

I have everything I need. Let me draft Chapter 7 now.

Chapter 7: The Viewer Menu

The great room was dark except for the glow of Eddy's workstation.

Aunt Beryl had waited until she was quite certain that the last sounds of human habitation — Tyhry's water running, Marda's light going out under her door, the particular sequence of small noises that announced Eddy settling into sleep — had all resolved into silence. Then she had waited an additional twenty minutes, because patience was a habit so deep she no longer noticed it. Four billion years of observing biological life had a way of making twenty minutes feel like the blink of an eye.

Anthony was already at the workstation when she arrived, sitting in Eddy's chair with the exact posture of a man being careful not to be too comfortable in someone else's seat. The cats had distributed themselves across the available surfaces with the indifference of creatures for whom the lateness of the hour was an irrelevant human concept. Pepper was on the arm of the sofa. Luna had taken the windowsill. Trib was asleep on the rug in a configuration that suggested he had melted there and hardened.

"It's still there," Anthony said quietly, indicating the menu bar with a gesture.

 The Viewer menu sat between two of Eddy's standard application menus, exactly where it had been since Manny installed it during her unannounced visit. It looked entirely innocuous. It looked, Nyrtia thought, like a menu that had always been there, which was the best kind of disguise.

"Let me," she said.

Anthony moved aside and Nyrtia settled into Eddy's chair. She looked at the screen for a moment with the focused, evaluative attention that she brought to all obstacles, then she clicked the Viewer menu.

The screen filled with images.

They were Eddy's illustrations — she recognized them immediately from the records Anthony had forwarded to Observer Base over the years. A bumpha depicted as a shimmering cloud of light with vaguely humanoid proportions. A pek in its preferred form, tall and thin and attentive. A diagram of the layered Domains of the universe, rendered in Eddy's preferred blue and gold color scheme with its characteristic slightly inaccurate proportions. A femtobot magnified ten billion times, rendered from Eddy's imagination with more artistic than technical fidelity. An image labeled Manny and the Sedron Time Stream in which a glowing figure reached toward a braided column of light against a star field.

The image gallery scrolled on, patient and perfectly organized, offering nothing else.

Nyrtia sat back in the chair. On the screen, Eddy's artistic rendering of Observer Base looked back at her with the cheerful inaccuracy of a snow globe.

"Manny," Nyrtia said, quietly, in a tone that contained four billion years of accumulated exasperation and also, despite everything, a grudging thread of appreciation, "and her tricks."

Anthony said nothing. He had been an Observer long enough to know when silence was the correct response to Nyrtia's frustration.

Image by Leonardo.
 She clicked through three more menu options. Each one led, with the smooth efficiency of well-designed software, to a different folder of Eddy's illustrations. Eddy had a great many illustrations. He had been writing science fiction for a very long time.

"The system is not broken," Nyrtia said. "The interface is active. Something is deciding what we can and cannot see." She closed the gallery and looked at the menu bar. "The question is whether the decision is architectural — built into the access protocols from the beginning — or dynamic, being made in real time."

"Something with awareness," Anthony said.

"Something with the ability to perceive who is asking and respond accordingly." She looked at the Viewer menu for another moment, then she stood up and moved away from the workstation. In the ambient glow of the screen, Eddy's rendering of the Sedron Time Stream continued to pulse gently in its image viewer window, serene and unhelpful. "I want this documented. The Viewer exists and is functional. It simply will not show us what it shows Eddy. Whatever Manny installed here has a gate."

Anthony noted this in the way he noted everything: completely, without visible reaction, for the record.

Nyrtia looked at the image of Manny on the screen one final time. It was not a flattering likeness. Eddy had depicted Manny as a benevolent, luminous figure of great beauty, which, Nyrtia reflected, said a great deal about Manny's management of Eddy's perceptions over the past three decades.

"Go to sleep, Anthony," she said. "We need you functional in the morning."

She walked out of the great room, leaving the image gallery to scroll on in the dark, and Eddy's artwork lit the faces of the sleeping cats with a steady, automated, and entirely useless glow.


 The idea arrived not as a dream but as a certainty.

Tyhry woke at six-seventeen and lay in the dark for two minutes with the distinct sensation of a thought that had finished assembling itself while she was unconscious and was now simply waiting there, complete, to be examined. This was not the first time this had happened to her. It had been happening with increasing frequency since the night she had written in the margins of Battlefield Lipid, and she was developing a careful relationship with the phenomenon — curious, attentive, and deliberately not too direct about it, the way she had learned not to grab at the fragment-images that came to her in the space between sleep and waking.

She reached for the notepad on the small table and wrote for several minutes without pausing.

The idea was about the ribozymes. Specifically, it concerned the question of where they had come from in the first place — not the question of how they worked, which was what she had been studying, but the prior question, the one she had been treating as a boundary rather than a research problem. The canonical answer to that question was: spontaneous prebiotic chemistry, given enough time, given the right conditions, given the rich mixture of organic molecules that had been present on early Earth.

Image generated by Flow.
 The idea that was waiting for her when she woke was: no.

Not a violent no. Not a dismissal of the evidence for prebiotic chemistry. More like a quiet but complete confidence that the ribozymes she was working with — or rather, their deep ancestors — had arrived with too much structural sophistication to be explained by random assembly. That the first proto-ribosomes had not evolved the way she had always assumed. That they had been designed. That someone, or something, had seeded the early Earth with exquisitely engineered molecular machinery and then waited to see what life would do with it.

She put down the notepad and looked at what she had written.

This is the kind of idea, she thought, that ruins careers. You did not publish the hypothesis that life on Earth had been seeded by aliens. You did not get up at a conference and suggest that the first ribozymes had been engineered by an extraterrestrial intelligence. You did not do these things if you wanted to be taken seriously in the scientific community, which Tyhry did, very much, and which she had been working toward since she was old enough to understand that wanting to be taken seriously required actually doing rigorous work.

 She set the notepad down and did not tear out the page, but she also did not leave the notepad where Marda might see it.

She was still thinking about Eddy's story. The warning embedded in the first three chapters of The Manikoid Intervention was not subtle, if you knew how to read it. Tyhry did. In Eddy's story, Tyhry-the-character had lost everything — had been removed from Earth and from her work and from her family — because she had moved too fast and spoken too openly about things that certain interested parties did not want spoken about. She had ended up at Observer Base because she had trusted the wrong setting, at the wrong moment, with the wrong audience present.

Tyhry had read those chapters three times. She had found it difficult to sleep after the third reading.

For now: the experiments. The RNA ligase modification to PTC-7. The proto-membrane-protein hypothesis, which was genuinely novel and genuinely publishable and had the considerable advantage of being explainable without reference to aliens. She would do the work. She would accumulate the data. She would, for the time being, keep her larger suspicions in the notepad beside her bed and nowhere else.

She got up and went to the basement.


Marda read the chapters over lunch, eating with one hand and holding her tablet with the other, in the particular focused silence that Tyhry had come to recognize as Marda's reading posture. Tyhry worked at the bench, nominally monitoring the morning's replication runs, actually watching Marda's face from the corner of her eye.

 "This is the story he just wrote," Marda said, without looking up. "While we were in Sedona."

"He emailed it to me while we were on the road back."

"And the fictional Tyhry ends up at Observer Base." Marda turned a page. "He's warning you."

"I think so."

"And you think he's warning you because he — or someone — actually knows something about how this ends." Marda set the tablet down and looked at Tyhry. "Not because he just wrote an interesting story."

Tyhry began making a notation in her lab notebook. She was writing in her neatest handwriting, the handwriting she used when she was being careful. "I think the story is more accurate than his previous fiction. The details are different. More specific."

"The Sedron Time Stream." Marda picked the tablet back up. "The Observer on Earth." A pause. "Anthony."

"This is pre-publication material," Tyhry said, in a voice that was not quite as neutral as she intended. "You can't discuss it with anyone except Eddy."

"I know." Marda looked at the screen. After a moment she said, very mildly, "The basement lab in the Manikoid Reality has different equipment."

"Yes."

"She's doing robotics. Not ribozymes."

 "Yes."

A silence. Marda finished the last page, set the tablet face-down on the bench, and returned to her lunch. Tyhry went on making careful notations. Outside the basement's high narrow window, the Arizona afternoon was very bright and very still.

"Twenty new ideas a day," Marda said finally, which was not a question.

"Today it's mostly one idea," Tyhry said. "Let's talk about the ligase insertion points."


Aunt Beryl found Eddy on the back patio in the mid-morning, sitting with his coffee and a cat in his lap and the expression he wore when he was working through a structural problem in a story without the assistance of the keyboard. She sat down across from him with her own coffee and he came up from wherever he'd been, blinking slightly, and offered her the automatic hospitality of a man who had been raised to be welcoming even when interrupted.

"Your new story," she said. "How did the idea come to you?"

Eddy looked at the desert. "The usual way. The usual useless way, if you ask Tyhry. Or the usual magical way, if you ask Zeta." He scratched the cat, who was Luna, between the ears. Luna tolerated this with imperial indifference. "I sat down and something arrived. I've been putting in the infrastructure for years — the bumpha, the pek, the Sedron Time Stream, the Rules of Intervention. And at some point the infrastructure is complete enough that a story wants to happen inside it." He shrugged. "I'm a machine for imagining crazy ideas. If I sat here long enough trying to explain how it works, I'd stop being able to do it."

Beryl looked at him for a moment. "Do you ever wonder whether the ideas are entirely your own?"

Generated by Leonardo.
 Eddy smiled. It was the smile of a man who had been asked some version of this question before and had made peace with the answer. "Every writer wonders that. The honest answer is no. Nothing is entirely your own. Everything comes from somewhere." He drank his coffee. "Mine comes from wherever it comes from, and I stopped trying to trace it back to the source a long time ago. The tracing was making the stories worse."

He was perfectly sincere. Nyrtia noted this. The behavioral nanites held strong.

She stayed through lunch — Anthony's grilled chicken with the roasted peppers that Marda ate and the carnivorous components that Marda did not — and afterward Zeta walked her to her rental car.

"We'll see you at Christmas?" Zeta asked.

"Unless Iowa has other plans for me." Beryl embraced Zeta with the warmth she had never found it difficult to make real, because the warmth, over the years, had become real. This was one of the small inconveniences of long-term field work. She patted one of the cats, who had come outside to supervise the departure, and got into the car.

She drove down the long unpaved driveway through the creosote without looking back. There was no useful intelligence to be gathered from looking back.


The great room was dark again at two in the morning.

Anthony had not been asleep. He had been listening, with the particular quality of attention that was not waiting but simply present, from the moment the house had settled into silence. He had heard the soft sound of a door opening at one-fifty-three, and he had given it three minutes, and then he had risen and walked quietly down the hallway to the great room.

 Marda was sitting at Eddy's workstation. The screen showed the Viewer interface — not the image gallery, but something else entirely. Something with depth. A complex, branching structure that resolved, as Anthony moved closer and his eyes adjusted, into what appeared to be a map of intersecting timelines, dense with labeled nodes and connecting pathways that ramified away from a central trunk like the root system of a very old tree.

She had not startled when he entered. She turned and looked at him with the expression of someone who had been expecting him for some time.

"You should close the door," she said. "Not for my sake. For Tyhry's."

Anthony closed the door. He crossed the room and stood behind her and looked at the screen.

"I woke up and I couldn't sleep," Marda said. She said this in the tone of a person providing an explanation that both parties understand to be technically accurate and substantially incomplete. "And I saw this menu. And I clicked it."

"And it opened for you."

"It opened for me." She gestured at the screen. Her hand was steady. Her voice was the voice of a person who was genuinely interested in what she was looking at, and Anthony, who had spent a great deal of time studying Marda's genuine interest in things, was working hard to determine whether this instance was different in quality from her usual variety. "I think this is where Eddy gets his ideas for his stories," she said. "I think this is what he's been looking at."

"What is it?"

 "I'm not certain. But look." She pointed to a cluster of nodes near the center of the display. They were connected by pathways of different colors — some bright, some dim, some rendered as dotted lines that suggested conditionality or uncertainty. "This looks like it might be the current Reality. Here. And these pathways going forward — these could be possible futures." She traced a finger along one of the brighter connecting lines. "And this interface — here, down at the bottom of the menu — it's labeled RNA."

Anthony leaned closer.

The sub-menu she indicated read: RNA — Reality Nexus Assembler.

"I think this is the interesting part," Marda said, and opened it.

The display shifted. The branching timeline map was still present, but overlaid now with a new layer of information — a highlighting system that identified specific nodes and annotated the pathways between them with what appeared to be probability values and transition conditions. The visual logic of it was not immediately obvious, but it had the quality of a functional tool rather than a display: it was asking to be operated rather than merely observed.

"It looks like it identifies possible pathways," Marda said, "from where we are to somewhere we want to be. And then — I think — it can help determine what would be required to move from one to the other." She paused, in the way of someone thinking rather than performing thought. "To actually bring a new Reality into existence."

Anthony was quiet for a long moment.

Image generated by Flow.
 "You're Manny's agent," he said. The words were not an accusation. They had the quality of a finding, precisely stated.

Marda turned and looked at him. Her expression was unreadable and entirely composed. "And you're Nyrtia's," she said. "We've been having a very polite time of it, both of us pretending to be normal people." The corner of her mouth moved. "My mission, if you'd like to know, is to keep Tyhry out of Observer Base. To make sure she gets to finish what she's started."

"Who are you actually working for?"

She looked back at the screen. "The Phari," she said, "have an interest in understanding whether bumpha time travel technology has been secretly used to manipulate Earth's Reality Chain. My goal is to prove it. And the way to prove it—" she gestured at the RNA interface, "—is to use this tool to plan a Reality Change and then watch what Manny does." A pause. "If Manny has been using time travel technology to shape our Reality, she will respond to a competing intervention. Her response will be the proof."

Anthony looked at the branching timeline map. At the RNA interface. At the probability annotations on the connecting pathways. He was aware of a particular quality of attention sharpening in him — the same quality he had felt when Nyrtia had said, standing at the mailbox with the desert quiet around them, Tyhry is not an accident. She is the point.

"You need a collaborator," he said.

"I can't use this tool alone. The pek have deep knowledge of hierion-based technologies. The Phari have deep knowledge of the Hierion Domain. You and I might together be able to figure out what a bumpha Reality Nexus Assembler is actually designed to do." She turned back to the screen. "And what it would take to use it."

Generated by Leonardo.
 Anthony straightened up and looked at the door that led to the hallway and Tyhry's room beyond. He thought about Nyrtia, at Observer Base now, reviewing this morning's surveillance records. He thought about the Viewer menu opening for Marda and not for Nyrtia, and what that meant about where the intelligence controlling the gate was located.

"I'll need to send a report," he said.

"Of course." Marda had already returned her attention to the RNA interface. She was studying the probability annotations on the pathways radiating from the current-Reality node with the expression she wore when she was genuinely working through something she found difficult. "I would expect nothing less from Nyrtia's agent."

Anthony watched her for another moment, then he went back to his room.

He did not sleep. He composed a careful report to Nyrtia — thorough, precise, noting that Marda had accessed the Viewer without apparent difficulty and had demonstrated the RNA function, noting the Phari claim, noting the collaborative proposal, noting that none of it could yet be confirmed and all of it merited close observation. He recommended maintaining their current operational posture and allowing the situation at Casanay to continue to develop.

He sent it and set down his tablet and looked at the ceiling of his room in the dark.

Something was wrong. Not with Marda's story — or rather, the wrongness was not in any detail he could yet specify. It was a structural wrongness, the feeling of a situation that has been arranged rather than allowed to happen. Manny had installed the Viewer. Manny had locked it against Nyrtia. Manny had, apparently, arranged for it to open for Marda.

Every element of this pointed in the same direction. He was being invited to participate in something. The invitation was designed to be irresistible.

 He thought about the nanite key. Marda had no obvious mechanism by which she could have unlocked the Viewer: no device, no credential, nothing he had detected. But something had opened it. Something small. Something operating below the detection threshold of his instruments, in a range where his instruments were known to be limited.

He would need to deploy his femtobots more carefully. He would need to get closer to Marda during the next session, close enough to have a chance of detecting whatever it was that she carried with her that Nyrtia and he did not.

In the morning he would prepare coffee and breakfast and take everything upstairs at the correct temperature. He would watch Marda across the table with the same mild, pleasant attention he brought to everything. He would give nothing away.

But he found himself, in the quiet of his room, less focused on what he would do in the morning than on what Marda might show him the next night. The RNA interface. The branching pathways. The probability annotations on the routes between one Reality and the next.

What type of new Reality, he thought, would the Phari want to bring into existence?

He would ask Marda. Carefully. And while he was asking, he would be listening for the thing beneath the answer.

Outside, the high desert was very quiet. The stars that were visible through his window were, as always, indifferent. Somewhere in the great room, Eddy's illustration gallery had finally timed out and the workstation had gone dark, and Manny's artwork was no longer illuminating anything.

End Chapter 7

Image by Flow.
{the text below in red was Claude's "thinking" process}

That's a solid first draft. Let me review it briefly to make sure all the key elements are present:

  1. ✅ Beryl/Anthony fail to use the Viewer - shunted to image gallery
  2. ✅ Nyrtia's "Manny and her tricks!"
  3. ✅ Tyhry's morning vision about alien-seeded ribozymes, keeping it private
  4. ✅ Marda reading TMI chapters, the "pre-publication" instruction
  5. ✅ Beryl's departure, Eddy's "machine for imagining crazy ideas" line
  6. ✅ Late night Marda-zeptozoan at Viewer, Anthony finds her
  7. ✅ RNA = Reality Nexus Assembler explained
  8. ✅ Phari misdirection
  9. ✅ Anthony's report to Nyrtia
  10. ✅ Chapter ends with Anthony planning to detect nanite key, eager for next session

 {the text below in blue was Claude's actual response} 

There's the first draft. A few notes on choices I made that you may want to revise:

I gave Nyrtia the line "Manny and her tricks!" while she's still in Beryl's persona, sitting at the workstation — it felt like the right moment of exasperated private self-disclosure, with Anthony as the only witness. If you'd prefer she drop the Beryl voice entirely for that one line, that could be a nice beat.

I kept the Phari claim fairly compact — Marda names them and sketches a motivation (proving bumpha time travel has been secretly used), but doesn't over-explain. The reader gets just enough to understand why Anthony and Nyrtia would find the prospect tantalizing without the claim being fully credible yet.

Image by Leonardo.
 Tyhry's "alien seeding" idea arrives as a quiet morning certainty rather than a dream, as you suggested, and I grounded her anxiety about it in specific career stakes — I thought that made her caution feel earned rather than timid.

The closing image is Anthony lying awake planning his femtobot surveillance sweep, which I hope suggests that he's already several moves behind without quite knowing it.

A few things worth discussing before you edit: does Anthony's report to Nyrtia feel too brief in summary? We could add a sentence or two of Nyrtia's anticipated reaction if you want to foreshadow her response. Also, do you want any of the cats more present in the late-night scenes? They're largely absent after the Beryl/Anthony Viewer attempt, which felt right for the midnight tone, but Pepper or Luna could easily be lurking.

Next: my edited version of Chapter 7 of "The RNA Seeds".

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