May 10, 2026

Systolina and the Phari

Casanay backyard.
 I provided Claude with a 286 KB PDF document that contained four sections: 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 - 7 of “The RNA Seeds” and 4) some ideas for how to continue “The RNA Seeds”.

Google Docs. In order to 1) make use of the Google Docs spelling and grammar check and 2) provide links to documents with the information that I share with Claude (example), I put information about "The RNA Seeds" into a Google Docs text file. However, when I exported that file as a PDF, suddenly I had a 901 KB file. Apparently, Google Docs is now larding up exported files with useless information that is invisible to users like me. I exported my "RNA Seeds" text file in RTF format, opened it in Apple's Text Edit, then cut and pasted the text into a new OpenOffice odt file. When I saved that in PDF format I got a slim 286 KB PDF document.

 Me: Process the file that I uploaded and then discuss with me plans for Chapter 8 of “The RNA Seeds”. 

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

The user has uploaded the PDF containing Chapters 1-7 of "The RNA Seeds" and wants to discuss plans for Chapter 8. I've read the document thoroughly. Let me review what's been established and what Section 4 says about Chapter 8 plans.

 From Section 4, the plans for Chapter 8 include:

  1. Eddy continues writing "The Manikoid Intervention"
  2. Anthony and Marda continue nightly sessions with the Reality Viewer, learning to create conditions for a Reality Change
  3. Marda shows Anthony a version of the Manikoid Reality where Nyrtia prevents Manny from accelerating conscious robots and obtains Phari technology for long-range teleportation
  4. Anthony and Nyrtia eventually learn to trigger a Reality Change bringing the Manikoid Reality into existence
  5. Systolina arrives at Casanay — first meets Eddy and Zeta at a book signing in Flagstaff, presents as a fan
  6. When alone with Eddy, discusses "The Manikoid Intervention" as if already published
  7. Eddy invites Systolina to visit Casanay
  8. In the basement lab, Marda and Tyhry move quickly from success to success in RNA experiments
  9. Tyhry believes she has received help from the future in designing hydrophobic protein experiments with ribozymes

Let me now think about what questions I should ask to help plan Chapter 8, and share my reading of what's been established.

Image generated by Flow.
{the text below in blue was Claude's actual response}  

I've read through the full document — all seven chapters plus the background material and Section 4 notes. The story is in excellent shape. The writing has a wonderfully dry, precise quality, and the way the EFU's layered cosmology surfaces naturally through the characters' interactions is very effective. Chapter 7 in particular lands well, with Marda's reveal to Anthony being the perfect cliffhanger.

For Chapter 8, Section 4 gives a fairly rich set of ingredients. Let me sketch what I see as the main structural elements you've outlined, and then raise some questions that would help me draft well.

The chapter seems to have three parallel tracks running simultaneously: the nightly Viewer sessions between Anthony and Marda, which are gradually educating Anthony about the RNA/Reality Nexus Assembler interface; Eddy's continued writing of "The Manikoid Intervention" in the great room, now with the Viewer available to him as source material; and the basement laboratory, where Tyhry and Marda are moving from success to success with the ribozyme/hydrophobic protein experiments.

Then there's the Systolina thread, which Section 4 says begins at a book signing in Flagstaff. That's a delightful idea — a positronic robot presenting as a fan of Eddy's fiction, able to discuss "The Manikoid Intervention" as if it's already published.

 A few things I'd want to work out before drafting. First, how much time passes in Chapter 8? The Flagstaff book signing implies some planning and elapsed time — is this days, weeks? Second, what does Tyhry know about Marda's true identity at this point, and does she learn anything new in Chapter 8? Third, regarding Systolina's cover identity — what form does she take when she meets Eddy at the signing, and does she travel to Casanay in the same chapter or does that arrival get saved for Chapter 9? Fourth, how much do the RNA experiment successes get dramatized — does Tyhry get a specific exciting result in Chapter 8, or is it more of a montage of progress?

What direction appeals to you most for opening the chapter?

Me: Systolina is the focus of Chapter 8. Chapter 8 begins one week after the end of Chapter 7 at breakfast just before Eddy and Zeta will drive to Flagstaff for the book signing event. At breakfast, Eddy gushes excitedly about how nicely "The Manikoid Intervention" is "flowing from his pen". He plans to read a teaser passage from the new story to his fans at the book signing event. When asked by Zeta about her RNA experiments, Tyhry depicts herself as delighted with the progress that she and Marda have made during the past week. Privately, in her own thoughts, Tyhry fears that the experiments have been 'too successful' with every experiment giving interesting positive results demonstrating the benefits to a proto-ribosome of having hydrophobic proteins present in the ribozyme reaction tubes. Tyhry and Marda had success on the first try in building RNA ligase activity into a proto-ribosome which seemed 'magical' to Tyhry. 

Image generated by Flow.
During the drive to Flagstaff, Zeta asks Eddy why he is suddenly changing his policy of not speaking about new stories before they are published. Eddy says that "The Manikoid Intervention" is special and he can't resist announcing to his fans that he has a new novel on the way. At the book signing, Systolina (appearing to be a ditsy young woman with too much time on her hands) aggressively introduces herself to Eddy, inviting Eddy and Zeta to dinner after the book signing event is completed. Eddy is surprised to learn that Systolina seems to know all about "The Manikoid Intervention". Eddy quickly comes to believe that Systolina is Manny is disguise. After dinner in Flagstaff, Systolina, Eddy and Zeta return to Casanay with Systolina expressing excitement that she will get to observe the methods that Eddy uses to write his "amazingly unique science fiction stories that demonstrate how fiction can be as strange as truth".

Tyhry has no idea that Marda is meeting nightly with Anthony for secret sessions using the Reality Viewer. The lab work of Marda and Tyhry does not have to be described in any detail in in Chapter 8.

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

Image by Leonardo.
 The user wants me to draft Chapter 8 of "The RNA Seeds". Let me organize what I know about the chapter:

  1. Opens at breakfast, one week after Chapter 7
  2. Eddy gushes about "The Manikoid Intervention" flowing well
  3. He plans to read a teaser at the book signing
  4. Tyhry reports progress on RNA experiments but privately fears they've been "too successful"
  5. Drive to Flagstaff: Zeta questions Eddy's change in policy about not discussing unpublished work
  6. At the book signing: Systolina appears as a "ditsy young woman" who aggressively introduces herself
  7. Systolina seems to know all about "The Manikoid Intervention" - surprises Eddy
  8. Eddy thinks Systolina is Manny in disguise
  9. After dinner, Systolina comes back to Casanay with them
  10. Tyhry doesn't know about the nightly Anthony/Marda Viewer sessions
  11. Lab work doesn't need detail

Let me think about Systolina's cover persona. She's described as a "ditsy young woman with too much time on her hands" - this is a fun contrast to what she actually is (an ancient positronic robot). The name she uses as a cover... the user refers to her as "Systolina" which is presumably her actual name. I should probably have her introduce herself by that name since it's unusual enough to be distinctive.

Tyhry, M2 robot, Nyrtia. Image generated by Flow.
 Key character dynamics:

  • Eddy thinks Systolina = Manny in disguise (because she knows about The Manikoid Intervention)
  • Systolina is actually from Observer Base, a positronic robot
  • She's connected to the Phari project
  • She's presenting as a fan of Eddy's writing

Let me think about what "ditsy" means in terms of her character presentation - probably overly enthusiastic, asks too many questions, seems to stumble onto things she shouldn't know. The contrast between her apparent airheadedness and the depth of her knowledge about The Manikoid Intervention would be what tips Eddy off.

Now let me think about the breakfast scene - the cats will be there, Anthony cooking, Marda present.

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

Here is a first draft of Chapter 8.


Chapter 8: The Fan

 The morning was already warm before anyone had finished their first cup of coffee. Anthony had opened the tall windows on the east side of the great room to catch the early air before the heat settled in, and a light wind moved across the breakfast table, stirring the napkins. The cats had distributed themselves with their usual authority: Trib in the chair that belonged to nobody in particular, Pepper on the windowsill monitoring the driveway for deliveries that never came before ten, Luna under Eddy's chair in the specific location from which she could most efficiently solicit bacon.

Eddy was in an excellent mood. This was not unusual, but the quality of it was — more focused than his ordinary contentment, directed outward, like a man who has been sitting on a piece of good news long enough that it has become necessary to share it.

"Three chapters have become seven," he said, to no one in particular, in the tone of someone resuming a conversation that other people had not realized was ongoing. "And the seventh one landed exactly where I wanted it."

Zeta, who had been reading something on her tablet with the focused attention she brought to financial instruments and quarterly reports, did not look up. "The new story."

"The Manikoid Intervention." Eddy helped himself to more coffee from the carafe Anthony had placed beside his plate. "I have never had a story come this quickly. It has the feeling of something that already existed — I am just transcribing it."

"Like a secretary," Marda suggested, from her end of the table. She was eating her egg substitute with the slightly combative cheerfulness she had developed for meals at Casanay where the carnivorous tendencies of the Watson household were on full display.

"Like an extremely talented secretary," Eddy agreed.

 Anthony set a fresh rack of toast on the table and returned to the kitchen. Eddy followed him with his eyes in the way he sometimes did — a brief, evaluating look that could have meant anything. Then he returned his attention to his plate.

"Tyhry," Zeta said, setting down her tablet. This was the tone that meant she was redirecting the conversation with surgical precision. "How is the laboratory work proceeding?"

Tyhry looked up from the omelet she had been systematically demolishing. "Very well. Really well, actually." She smiled at her mother. Marda did not look up from her egg substitute. "The ligase modification to PTC-7 has been producing interesting results all week. Every run."

"Every run," Zeta repeated, in the tone of a woman who had learned that in biology, as in finance, every run succeeding was a statistic that required scrutiny.

"Every run," Tyhry confirmed. Her voice was warm and steady, the voice of a scientist presenting a satisfying result, and it gave away nothing of the thing that had been sitting with her since the third consecutive positive result — the way a line of reasoning that is too clean sometimes gives a mathematician the cold feeling that something has been arranged.

She gave Luna a piece of bacon. Luna departed under the table to eat it in private. Outside, the high desert morning was moving through the sequence of pale colors it performed every day before settling into its aggressive midday brightness.

"We should leave by ten," Anthony said, from the kitchen doorway. "The Saturday traffic on Eighty-Nine sometimes backs up past the junction."

"I'll be ready," Zeta said. She looked at Eddy. "You should know that your fans will not forgive you if you're wearing that particular shirt."

 Eddy looked down at the shirt, which was a comfortable old plaid that he found deeply satisfying. "This is a perfectly good shirt."

"It is comfortable and clean and I love you very much. Go change before we leave."

Eddy's expression produced the specific sequence of movements that indicated he intended to object, had thought better of it, and was now constructing a narrative in which changing the shirt had been his own idea. He rose from the table.

"I may read from the new story," he said, as he went. "I am considering reading the first chapter of The Manikoid Intervention to the fans today."

Tyhry and Marda looked at each other across the table.

Zeta said, "The new story that you haven't published yet."

"The new story that the fans will want to hear about." Eddy's voice came back from the hallway, partially muffled by direction. "This one is special. I feel it."

Marda waited until the hallway was quiet. "Every story is special," she said quietly, into her egg substitute.

"He doesn't say that about every story," Tyhry said.

"No," Marda agreed. "He doesn't."

This observation sat on the table like an item that both of them had noticed and neither of them wanted to be the first to pick up. Then Tyhry helped herself to the last of the toast and they let the morning continue.


M2 robot, Nyrtia and Tyhry at Observer Base.
 The drive to Flagstaff was ninety minutes through the high desert, climbing slowly through the juniper and ponderosa as the elevation rose. Zeta drove. She drove the way she managed the household's finances — efficiently, without drama, slightly faster than was technically advisable. Eddy occupied the passenger seat with the cats left behind and the comfortable sense of a man who was heading toward people who were glad to see him.

They were past the first long curve above the valley when Zeta said, "You've never read from an unpublished story to the fans before."

Eddy looked out the window at the passing juniper. "There is a first time for things."

"That is generally true," Zeta agreed. "You have a specific reason for this particular first time."

This was not a question. Eddy was quiet for a moment, watching the landscape. He had been with Zeta for long enough to understand the difference between a question and a statement that was holding a space open for the answer it already expected.

"I want Tyhry to hear it," he said, finally. "I have sent her the first chapters and she has read them. But I want her to hear someone else respond to it. I want her to see that it is — that what I have written is being taken seriously."

Zeta said nothing. She drove. The road curved again and below them on the left the valley went wide and golden and very far.

"She is a scientist," Eddy continued. "She does not read my stories seriously. She has been kind about them since she was a child, but I know the difference between Tyhry being kind and Tyhry paying attention." He paused. "This story she should pay attention to."

 "Because of the warning," Zeta said.

Eddy turned and looked at her.

Zeta's eyes remained on the road, but the corner of her mouth moved. "Eddy. I have read every novel you have ever written. I live in the same house as your daughter and your computer and your cat and your Reality—" She stopped. "And your process," she amended smoothly. "The Tyhry in your new story ends up in a very uncomfortable situation as a result of receiving assistance from outside conventional channels."

Eddy said, "Yes."

"And our Tyhry," Zeta said carefully, "has been having a productive week in which every experiment has worked."

The road climbed further and the ponderosa pines grew denser and the light changed quality, filtered now rather than direct. Neither of them said anything for several miles.

"How long have you suspected?" Eddy asked, at last.

"That something unusual is happening to Tyhry in the laboratory?" Zeta overtook a slow-moving camper van and settled back into the right lane. "Since the third positive result in a row. A single breakthrough result can be inspiration and good experimental design. Three in a row is something else." She glanced at him briefly. "I don't ask about what I don't need to ask about. But I pay attention."

"The behavioral nanites in my brain," Eddy said slowly, "prevent me from believing that the bumpha are real."

Zeta said nothing.

"So I can't say what I actually believe," Eddy continued. "I can only say: read the story. The part about what happens to Tyhry. That is what I need you to help her understand."

 Zeta drove in silence for another half mile. Then she said, "I'll make sure she reads the whole thing."

Flagstaff appeared in the distance, the dark spine of the San Francisco Peaks rising behind it.


The bookstore was called Parchment and Pine. It occupied a corner storefront on a street of low buildings near the old downtown, and on the second Saturday of each month it hosted a small literary event that had developed, over the years, a loyal and slightly eccentric regular attendance. Eddy's signing was on the hand-lettered board by the front door: E. Watson, 2PM, featuring remarks on his upcoming project. The word 'upcoming' was Zeta's addition — she had been very firm about it.

The room was arranged with folding chairs facing a small table where Eddy sat with a stack of his novels and a glass of water that he would not drink. Forty-three people came. Eddy knew most of them by name, and the ones he didn't know by name he knew by face, and the ones he didn't know by face he could classify accurately within thirty seconds: the ones who had been brought by a friend, the ones who had found his work late and come with the specific attentiveness of new converts, and the ones who had been coming for years and had a proprietary feeling about the whole enterprise.

He read for twenty minutes from Battlefield Lipid, the published novel, as a warm-up. He was good at readings. He had been doing them long enough to know that what the audience wanted was not to be impressed by the prose but to feel that the person at the front of the room was genuinely enjoying himself. Eddy always was.

Then he set down the published novel and said, "I have something else I want to share with you today. An excerpt from a new story that is not yet finished and that I have not yet shared with anyone except my family."

The room went quiet in the particular way that a room full of people who care about something goes quiet when that thing is offered to them.

 He opened his laptop, where the manuscript was waiting, and read the first three pages of The Manikoid Intervention. The opening section, in which Klaudy describes the experience of receiving the LC1 schematic from what the narrative coyly declined to identify as anything other than "a source outside normal channels." He read it well. He had always read his own work well.

When he finished, the applause was genuine and a woman near the back asked immediately about the title, and someone else asked about the setting, and a third person said it felt different from his other work — less ironic — and Eddy was in the middle of explaining that the story was built on the same fictional universe as all his other novels but was exploring a different kind of question, when the young woman arrived.

She arrived from the back of the room, moving with the particular forward momentum of someone who had decided something and was executing it before the decision could be reconsidered. She was perhaps twenty-five, dressed with the comfortable carelessness of someone who had the money to not worry about impressions and had concluded that the best way to demonstrate this was to dress as if she had dressed in the dark. Her hair was braided in two plaits and she was carrying, conspicuously, three of Eddy's novels, including a very old edition of his third book, which had been out of print for eleven years and which Eddy would not have expected to see outside of a specialty dealer.

"Mr. Watson," she said, with the energy of someone who had been waiting, "I have to tell you that The Manikoid Intervention is the most important thing you have ever written."

The room was still in the Q&A phase of the event and several people looked at her with the mild indignation of people whose turn had been appropriated.

Eddy looked at her with the particular focused attention he gave to things that required classification. "Thank you very much," he said. "You'll appreciate that I've only just read three pages of it to anyone outside my household."

 "I know." She beamed at him with the guileless directness of someone for whom social conventions were things that happened to other people. "I mean — I know it's early. But sometimes you know something is important before it's finished. The framing is exactly right. The question of what it means to receive information from a source you can't account for — and how that changes the receiver — that is precisely the question." She paused. "The Sedron Time Stream is a very elegant solution to the problem."

Eddy looked at her for a moment. The room, which had been following this exchange with the polite attention of an audience waiting for its narrative to resolve, had ceased to exist in any meaningful sense for him.

"You're familiar with my earlier work," he said. His voice was entirely level.

"All of it." She held up the old novel. "I have this one in the original edition. I found it at an estate sale in Prescott three years ago." She lowered her voice to a volume that the front rows could still hear. "I would very much like to take you and your wife to dinner and explain some of my thoughts about the direction the story might take."

Eddy said, "I see."

Zeta appeared from the signing table on his left with the quiet efficiency she deployed when she was both assessing a situation and managing it simultaneously. She looked at the young woman, at the armful of Eddy's novels, and at Eddy's face, and she drew a conclusion which she filed for later use. "We'd be delighted," she said. "Our people here need a few more minutes of Eddy's attention, and then we'll be free."


They ate at a place on the main street that had a quiet corner table and decent food and the important quality, for Eddy, of noise levels that would cover a conversation without obscuring it. The young woman had introduced herself as Systolina — she offered it without a last name, with the ease of someone for whom the name was sufficient — and she ordered confidently and with no apparent interest in what anything cost.

 Throughout dinner she was, on the surface, exactly as she had appeared in the bookstore: enthusiastic, tangential, prone to sudden changes of subject, given to expressions of admiration that were specific enough to be accurate but delivered with a warmth that managed to seem unpremeditated. She had read everything. She knew the fictional universe with the comprehensive familiarity of someone who had assembled the whole of it into a single mental model, which was more than most readers managed and more than Eddy's actual fans usually demonstrated without a great deal of prompting.

It was the specificity that gave her away.

Not to Zeta. Zeta was watching and cataloguing and had, Eddy knew, reached her own conclusions that were not the same as his. But Eddy — Eddy had been writing about the bumpha and the pek for thirty years. He had written Manny into stories in which Manny took a dozen different forms. He had written Manny as a marine biologist, as a retired librarian, as a graduate student in ecology, always with the same quality of attention — present, genuine, operating at two registers simultaneously, the surface character and the underlying interest. He knew the texture of Manny's interest in his work, because he had written it over and over again, and having written it he recognized it when he encountered it.

The surface performance was excellent. The content beneath it was not quite right for a human fan. It had the quality of knowledge that had not been acquired but possessed — not the knowledge of a reader who had assembled it over years and could describe where she had encountered each piece, but the knowledge of someone for whom it was simply, entirely, organically there.

"The scene in chapter three of The Manikoid Intervention," Systolina said, over dessert — she had ordered dessert with the decisiveness of someone who found human customs around food interesting rather than necessary — "where the copy of Tyhry learns for the first time that she has been made into a replicoid. You've written that scene before, in different forms, but this version is better. There's less explaining. Nyrtia doesn't over-explain what's happened. She just tells Tyhry what she is made of now, and waits."

"I haven't published those chapters," Eddy said.

"You read from them today."

"I read three pages."

"Yes." She looked at him. Her expression was completely open and completely unreadable, in the way that complete openness can be unreadable when it is too precise.

"I emailed the chapters to my daughter," Eddy said. "Three days ago. The file is on my home computer. I have not shared it with anyone else."

Systolina said nothing. She was watching him with an attention that, he noticed, had very little of the ditsy quality of the past two hours in it. Some of it had burned off over dinner, gradually, as if there was a limited supply of it and she had used most of it up.

"I thought you were Manny," Eddy said.

"I know."

"You're not."

 "No." She smiled, and the smile had none of the performed quality of the earlier ones. It was specific and direct and carried with it the suggestion of someone who found the situation genuinely interesting. "I'm not. But I am — like Manny — very interested in what you're writing and why. And I would like very much, if you'll have me, to see where you work."

Zeta had set down her fork at some point in this exchange and was now watching both of them with the contained attention of a woman who has followed a financial instrument long enough to know when the position is about to change.

"Casanay," Zeta said.

"If I may."

Zeta looked at Eddy. Eddy looked at Systolina.

"You seem to know a great deal about what happens in the story," he said. "How does it end?"

Systolina considered this with a seriousness that seemed, this time, entirely genuine. "I know how I hope it ends," she said. "Whether it ends that way depends partly on you. And partly on Tyhry." She picked up her coffee cup. "Which is why I wanted to see the place where it's all happening."


The drive back to Casanay in the dark, Systolina's rental car following Zeta's SUV up the interstate and then north through the desert, was quiet. Eddy watched the headlights of the car behind them in the passenger side mirror and said nothing for a long time.

 "She knows too much," he said, finally. "She knows the content of chapters I have not shared."

"She does," Zeta agreed.

"She said she's not Manny."

"She did."

Eddy turned this over. The desert on either side of the road was invisible, present only as a quality of depth in the dark. "That means she is something else that knows what Manny knows. Or is able to know what I know."

"That follows," Zeta said.

"I have written characters like this," Eddy said, slowly. "Ancient artificial life-forms in the Hierion Domain. Access to past Realities through the Sedron Time Stream. Patience on a scale that makes Manny look like she's in a hurry."

Zeta did not say what she was thinking, which was characteristic of Zeta and which Eddy had, after more than twenty years, learned to read as agreement.

"She wants something from Tyhry," he said.

"That seems likely."

 "Or from the story." He watched the headlights in the mirror. They were steady, maintaining exactly the right following distance on the dark road, as if the driver knew these curves or had access to information about them in advance. "Or from both. They may not be different things at this point."

The turnoff for the Casanay driveway appeared and Zeta slowed. Behind them, the headlights slowed also.

"Should I have invited her?" Eddy asked.

"I think," Zeta said carefully, "that she was going to end up here regardless. Having her arrive as a guest is more convenient than the alternative." She turned onto the unpaved road. "Besides. She is entertaining."

"She is not what she appears to be."

"Eddy. I have lived with you for twenty-three years. I have read every novel you have ever written and raised a daughter who is conducting experiments in our basement that give correct results every single time." Zeta navigated the familiar dark of the driveway with the confidence of long practice. "I made peace some time ago with the fact that almost nothing in this house is entirely what it appears to be."

Ahead, the lights of Casanay appeared through the creosote, warm and steady in the desert dark. Behind them, the headlights of Systolina's rental car followed smoothly up the unpaved road, raising a fine pale ghost of dust in the high beams that hung in the still air for a long time after the cars had passed.


 Inside Casanay, Tyhry was at her workbench in the basement, reviewing the results of the evening's run, when she heard the sound of three car doors closing in the driveway above her. She counted them with the automatic attention that residents of quiet houses develop for the sounds of arrivals: her parents' car, plus one other. She noted it and returned to her data.

The data was, as it had been for seven days running, interesting. Arrestingly, inexplicably, obstinately interesting. Every run had worked. The ligase modification had integrated cleanly on the first attempt. The aggregating hydrophobic peptides were stabilizing the PTC ribozyme activity in exactly the manner she had hoped, and the stabilization was consistent across conditions that, in her experience, should have introduced more variance than this. There was no rational objection to any of it. The experimental design was sound. The reagents were clean. The controls were correctly constructed.

She had, she thought privately, the data set she had hoped to generate by the end of the year, and she had generated it in a week.

She looked at the printout of the most recent run pinned above her workbench. She looked at it with the specific quality of attention she reserved for things she did not entirely trust, which was not the same as things she doubted. The data was good. She did not doubt the data. She doubted something else — the speed of it, the clean linearity of it, the sense of a path that had been swept clear before she arrived on it.

Image generated by Leonardo.
 A week ago she had written, in the notepad beside her bed and nowhere else, the hypothesis that someone had designed the first ribozymes on Earth. That the RNA seeds had been engineered.

She had looked at that hypothesis every morning since, waiting for it to feel less credible in the daylight than it had felt at six-seventeen in the morning. It had not felt less credible. If anything, each day's results had made it more difficult to dismiss.

Above her, she could hear voices in the great room — her parents, and someone else. A third voice she didn't recognize, female, with an energy to it that reached through the floor.

She pinned the latest printout alongside the others and went upstairs to meet the visitor.

End Chapter 8


A few things I held back or left open for you to consider on revision. The scene where Eddy realizes Systolina is not Manny happens at dinner rather than being dragged out, since the chapter is already fairly long — but the specific nature of what Systolina is remains tantalizingly unresolved from Eddy's perspective, with him having identified her as something Hierion-Domain-adjacent without knowing the word "Phari." Zeta's role is kept mostly in the register of the earlier chapters — she knows more than she says and says exactly as much as is useful. And Tyhry's closing moment, alone with the data, felt like the right note to end on before she goes upstairs into whatever Chapter 9 will bring.

What would you like to revise or redirect?

Next: my edited version of Chapter 8 of "The RNA Seeds".

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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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