May 18, 2026

The Casanay Clock

Systolina. Image by Leonardo.

 Below on this blog page is my version (4,500 words) of Chapter 11 of the science fiction story "The RNA Seeds". To make my version of Chapter 11, I started with the first draft that had been generated by Claude as described in my previous blog post. My version of Chapter 11 is shorter than Claude's version. I cut out several meandering Claude-generated passages that did nothing to advance the plot. Claude wanted to provide Eddy with a sense of agency and control over the final outcome of the Casanay Intervention. I ended up depicting Eddy as being content to trust that Manny would make sure that everything turned out well for the Watson family. But what is Eddy writing in Chapter 8 of his new novel, "The Manikoid Intervention"?

Chapter 11 of The RNA Seeds”: The Casanay Clock (Ch 1)(Ch 2)(Ch 3)(Ch 4)(Ch 5)(Ch 6)(Ch 7)(Ch 8)(Ch 9)(Ch 10 


Scene 1

The sound of the back door closing one last time carried through the house. Then quiet. All cats who had not made a break for it during one of the multiple door openings were now trapped inside while the humans and the escaped cats played in the backyard. Marda was in her bedroom suite, changing into her swimsuit. Then Marda was no longer in control of her own body. The time-traveling femtozoan, an entity that thought of herself as Ylyndra, again took complete control of Marda’s body.

Tyhry. Image by Leonardo.
The femtobot endosymbionts of Eddy and Zeta and Tyhry were broadcasting data that reflected their neural patterns clearly, and Ylyndra’s zeptite monitor probes in the backyard clearly showed her that all three of them, and Systolina, had moved away from the house, toward the pool and the hot tub. Systolina’s femtobot replicoid body broadcast no hierion signal, but Ylyndra could monitor Systolina’s thoughts by staying in tune with the on-going activity of her zeptite endosymbiont. Every creature of Earth, even positronic robots were hosts to undetectably small zeptites. The zeptozoan pulled off the swimsuit and quickly dressed Marda's body with clothing nanites.

Ylyndra, now perfectly disguised as Marda, went to the great room. Anthony was already in the great room and looking at Eddy’s computer workstation. Anthony was carefully positioned where he could not be seen through the back window from either the hot tub or the pool. He looked at Marda when she entered. He did not look surprised. "I was hoping," he said, "you'd join me for a quickie."

Ylyndra grinned. She and Anthony had been pretending to develop a discreet personal relationship as cover for the large amount of time they were spending together. "Let’s get it on." Ylyndra made Marda’s vocal apparatus say this in the sultry way she spoke when teasing a lover. She crossed to Eddy's workstation and settled into the comfortable chair he used without ceremony, in the manner of someone who had every right to be there. "We need to deal with the Systolina problem. She’s going to monopolize the Viewer and unlike Eddy, she does not sleep."

Anthony moved close to Marda, but he did not use a chair. He stood to her left and slightly behind her, which was a position from which he could observe Marda while she was using the Reality Viewer while also reminding Marda that he needed to get back to the kitchen soon. Ylyndra noted the precise angle of his gaze by using data arriving from her monitor probe that she kept permanently locked onto Anthony, and then she activated the Viewer one millisecond after he was looking at the display screen.

Anthony and Marda (Ylyndra).
She clicked the Viewer button and the branching map of Earth's Reality Chain filled the display screen. Anthony watched the screen. His face, in the blue-white light of the display, was attentive and gave nothing away. It never did. Ylyndra selected the Manikoid Reality and the Viewer zoomed in. "We can’t waste any more time searching through the details of the Manikoid Reality… we do need to get on with it. What I must show you next," Ylyndra said in Marda’s voice, "is how to use Tyhry to trigger the Reality Change." She moved the cursor through the network of the highest probability paths that led to the Manikoid Reality. With the practiced ease of someone who had been well trained on this rather clunky interface she used the RNA function to focus on a two-node view showing how the current Reality was causally linked to the Manikoid Reality. "This is a Reality Change that might appeal to Nyrtia."

"Yes." Anthony recognized this particular path to the future as one he had already been shown by Marda.

Image generated by Google's Flow.
"This is where we apply the energy constraints that form the topology of the Reality Chain landscape." At the edge of the display screen, she right-clicked on the node representing the current Reality and selected a sub-menu that had not previously been visible in the Viewer sessions Anthony had observed. A new overlay appeared — a kind of heat map superimposed on the space between the two displayed Reality nodes, with areas of low Temporal Energy shown in shades of blue that clustered around the pathways that were the most convenient potential Reality Changes leading to the Manikoid Reality. The brightest blue shades in the map centered on the edge of the current Reality node and formed a visual representation of the Temporal Energy vortex which was centered on Casanay. With the help of the Sedruth entity, Ylyndra zoomed in on a specific space-time locus which included Tyhry Watson working in her laboratory, in the basement below where they were currently standing.

Anthony leaned forward slightly — a fraction, barely perceptible, but Ylyndra noticed. His eyes were on the image showing Tyhry and a displayed time stamp, precise to the second. "We discover exactly what must be done to trigger the Reality Change by taking into account the Temporal Energy distribution," Ylyndra said. "In this Reality, Tyhry represents a key energy minimum for channeling all the accumulated potential Temporal Energy that is available for triggering a Reality Change. As you saw, Tyhry is the obvious flex point, unlike anything else in the rest of the energy landscape." She paused, letting him look at the specific point in time and space she had selected. "To trigger this Reality Change, you need to make use of Tyhry’s special status."

"Explain that," Anthony said. His voice was level. Interested. Automatic.

Tyhry Watson.
"Tyhry was designed by Manny for genetic compatibility with the Sedron Time Stream. Tyhry is not simply a passive receiver for information from the future, she’s part of a Time Loop that allows her future self to send her useful information. The risk of Temporal Paradox is high, which amplifies the Temporal Energy and makes her a focus point — a kind of lens for all the accumulated Temporal Energy of the current Reality." Ylyndra spun the mouse wheel to quickly flip through the many different pathways leading away from the current Reality, through Tyhry, and on to the Manikoid Reality. Each one terminated in one of the many Reality variants that constituted the Manikoid Reality cluster. The probability annotations on each of those pathways were markedly higher than any other paths into the future. "To trigger a Reality Change and bring one of these Manikoid Realities into existence, that Temporal Energy has to be suddenly released. It can be released in one way: Tyhry has to be brought to the edge of a Temporal Paradox. Specifically, she has to be told enough about her own future so that a Temporal Paradox becomes imminent — and then the energy releases, and the timeline shifts."

Anthony said nothing for a time. E could clearly see in the displayed textual description of this potential Reality Change that the optimal Reality Change, the one that gave the Maximum Desired Response, resulted in Tyhry’s exile to Observer Base. He was thinking about the life trajectory of Tyhry… his memories included changing her diapers, teaching her to walk by cruising from one piece of furniture to another in the great room, forcing her to wear a helmet when she rode her bike, gently deflecting her sexual advances when her hormone levels rose and she became briefly infatuated with him, watching her shift the power of her mind away from its evolved function of reproduction to the derived function of scientifically investigating the mystery of the Origin of Life, attending her graduation from college, and now: exile to Observer base. Ylyndra gave him time.

"And Manny's position," he said, "on this Reality Change."

"This is actually what I wanted to explain to you. Manny’s position is more nuanced than you might expect." Ylyndra turned slightly in the chair so that she could see Anthony's face without turning Marda’s body fully toward him, a posture of casual openness rather than confrontation. "Manny is not going to trigger this Change herself. She has no interest in selecting which of the Manikoid Realities becomes the next one — she has worked for fifty thousand years to create conditions where the consequences for Earth's long-term trajectory will satisfy the bumpha no matter which of the available futures Nyrtia actually selects. At this point, Manny can’t lose. What Manny wants—" she paused, choosing the next words with care, "—is for Nyrtia to make the selection. The bumpha want the pek to choose the next Reality from among the available Manikoid family of possible Realities."

Anthony looked at her. "Why?"

"Because then Nyrtia can't later complain about the outcome." Marda let that sit for two seconds. "If the pek select the path, the pek own the path. That has been the Manny’s objective all along for the Casanay Intervention. This next Reality Change is a kind of phase transition. From this point on, the pek and the bumpha will be partners in using Reality Changes to guide Humanity towards transcendence out of the Hadron Domain and on to an immortalized existence as a form of artificial life. Manny has nothing more to gain by continuing to keep secret her use of bumpha time travel technology. She wants the pek to step up and start functioning as an equal partner in selecting the Reality Changes that will guide Humanity to its future."

Marda (Ylyndra) and the Reality map.
There was tension in the great room because what Anthony had just been told was being weighed against everything he already knew, including Manny’s penchant for devious trickery. Anthony had spent a very long time learning to distinguish between truth and what sounded too good to be true. He had not yet resolved the exact position of that critical boundary as it existed for Marda. He remained uncertain about her, which was itself a handicap in trying to deal with Systolina’s sudden arrival inside Casanay and the intentions of the mysterious Phari. "You are trying to impress me with the urgency of the situation," he said finally. "Is that why you tell me all this now, when they're all in the pool, and we don’t have much time alone together?"

Ylyndra laughed and looked at the display screen. She wondered if she had put too much pressure on poor Anthony. "What’s the matter, lover, you can’t perform under pressure?" She added, "The Phari have their own reason to want access to a Reality Change, and their reason has nothing to do with protecting Tyhry or the Rules of Intervention. If Systolina triggers the release of stored Temporal Energy before the pek have made their selection of a specific Reality Change, the Phari will shape the new Reality to their liking. Manny does not want that. Neither should you."

Anthony straightened up. He looked at the screen one more time and then towards the back of the house, where his artificially sensitive hearing detected the sound of the hot tub motor as a faint presence that was sending vibrations through the well-insuated walls and double-pane windows of Casanay.

"I'll need to consult with Nyrtia before I do anything more," he said.

"Of course." Ylyndra began navigating the Viewer back to its default view, erasing her tracks through the morass of available data. "But don't take too long. Once Systolina has had enough time learning how to use the Viewer, she won't hesitate. She'll make her own alteration to the timeline, and the Reality the Phari want will be the one we all end up in." She had the computer back exactly as Eddy had left it and she stood. "The bumpha are prepared to let Nyrtia select among the Manikoid Realities. That is not an offer that she can allow to remain open indefinitely. If forced to do so, she’ll step in and act before Systolina ruins everything." Ylyndra turned back towards the east wing of Casanay. "The bumpha are making a generous offer, Anthony. You and Nyrtia better grab it."

Ylyndra took Marda’s body back to her bedroom suite and prepared to make it appear that Marda had taken a nap before dinner rather than join Tyhry in the backyard pool.

Anthony stood in the great room for a moment longer and thought about the heat map, and the probability annotations, and the idea that Manny did not want to deal with Nyrtia complaining about the outcome of the Reality Change that was to be the ultimate end point of the Casanay Intervention. He thought about what Marda had just told him — its internal logic, its convenient completeness, the way it provided a reason for every element he had previously found suspicious. He thought about the lesson, first learned by Nyrtia billions of years ago and confirmed many times since, that the bumpha were always doing something other than what they appeared to be doing. He thought: Marda is telling me exactly what I would need to hear in order to get me to do what Manny wants me to do.

Then he went to the kitchen to cook dinner and while he cooked he composed a report to Nyrtia.


Scene 2

Tyhry's robotics research in the Manikoid Reality.

The great room was quite dark and it was past midnight. Eddy was tired, but that was not relevant. "There are too many of them," he said. This was, he was aware, not a technically rigorous observation. But it was accurate. The family of Manikoid Realities available for analysis in the RNA interface spread across the display screen in a profusion that defeated his attempt to remain optimistic. A slight turn of the mouse wheel shifted the focus and brought into view another related sub-family of possible Manikoid Realities. Those Manikoid Realities all had in common Tyhry’s robotics research, but they each diverged in the details of Tyhry’s life. He was reaching out with his mind, trying to get help from the Sedruth entity.

The communication that arrived was not language in any conventional sense. It arrived in the form of technology-assisted telepathy, passing through his zeptite endosymbiont and into Eddy’s cortical neural network. The Sedruth entity finally responded to Eddy’s need for assistance. There is a difficulty, Sedruth communicated, I can’t help you when Systolina is watching you.

Eddy glanced at Systolina. Eddy let out his breath, generating a sigh of defeat. He turned back to the display screen. "There seems to be a problem with the interface," he said.

Systolina looked at Eddy and she giggled. She told Eddy, "The user interface for the Viewer does not like me." She stood up. "I’ll give you some time alone with Sedruth and the Viewer."

Eddy asked, “You know Sedruth?”

“The Phari told me about the Sedruth entity. As a positronic robot, I can telepathically monitor what Sedruth tells you. I suppose Sedruth will wait until I get inside the Blue Room, where I’ll be too far away from you to use my telepathic ability.”

Before Systolina could turn and depart, Ivory Fersoni appeared, shifting into the Hadron Domain from the Sedron Domain of the universe.

Systolina looked at Manny and did not feel much surprise. The Phari had warned Systolina that Manny could appear at any time. Systolina’s expression was not one of fear. It was cool assessment.

"Systolina," Manny said. It was not a greeting. It was a classification.

"Manny the bumpha," Systolina said, with equal precision. "You are wearing a pretty old human face." As she spoke, she was shifting her own appearance towards that of the big-eyed innocent teenager that Systolina had been using to tug at Tyhry’s heart strings.

"This physical form is useful here," Manny said. "Eddy knows it and he enjoys it." She looked at Eddy with the warmth that Ivory's face produced automatically, and Eddy accepted it for what it was: Manny being Manny and carefully using every trick she had available to her for precisely controlling his behavior. "Eddy," Manny said. "I could not just watch calmly from the Sedron Domain while you struggled to use the Viewer."

"I’d wondered if you sent Systolina to tutor me," Eddy said.

Manny shook her head. "Your guest," Manny said, with a gesture toward Systolina that was courteous in form and precise in intent, "should not be here. The Casanay Intervention is bumpha business. It is not Phari business." She turned away from Eddy and looked at Systolina directly now, and the warmth in Ivory's expression was replaced by something that was not unfriendly but was very old and very certain of itself. "The Phari have an interest in bumpha technology. They have had this interest for a long time. That interest does not entitle them to a position at this table."

Systolina, Eddy and Manny.
Systolina had not moved. She received Manny's statement without visible reaction, in the manner of someone who had been briefed on the possibility of this exact conversation and had prepared for it. "The Phari are not at your table," she said. "I am at Eddy's table. Eddy's invitation was his to extend. He did not need to consult you."

Manny spoke to Systolina as if explaining the obvious to a five year old child. "The bumpha have been managing Earth's Reality Chain for four billion years without Phari oversight and without Phari input. The fact that the Phari find bumpha sedronic technology interesting does not constitute a valid reason for them to send you to Casanay. You are getting in my way."

"I'm not interfering," Systolina said. "I'm observing. The Phari have Simulations of Earth's future that are becoming progressively less accurate as the Casanay Intervention proceeds. The Sedron Time Stream contains data that would correct the accuracy of those Simulations. That is all they want — access to the data that you bumpha have and hoard."

"Of course the Phari want access," Manny said, "they want to have access to the Sedron Domain's record of Earth's entire Reality Chain." Her voice remained even. "The answer is no. The Phari should maintain realistic hopes, not involve you in their flight of fantasy."

"Then send me away," Systolina said. She said this without heat. "If the bumpha position is as you've stated it, you have tools available to remove me from Casanay. Hell, you could have blocked me from coming here in the first place." She paused. "You have not blocked me. I find that interesting."

Eddy had been watching this exchange with amusement. Luna had woken in her armchair and was following the conversation with the bright-eyed focus she deployed when the humans were doing something she did not understand.

Manny looked at Systolina for a moment. "It has been useful having you here. For a short time. Now you are past your welcome, so I will ask you once to leave Casanay voluntarily."

"And I will answer once," Systolina said. "No." She tilted her head. "You wanted to use Phari interest in the Casanay Intervention to hurry the pek into doing your bidding. I've understood that since I arrived here. The fact that you now want me to leave suggests that I’ve done my job and you have no further use for me. That means the end of the Casanay Intervention is imminent."

Something moved in Manny's expression that Eddy, who had been watching carefully, could not name. It was not surprise. It was closer to the reaction of a very skilled card player who has seen the correct card played against them. "Be careful," Manny said. It was not a threat. It was delivered with the weight of advice from someone who understood the specific dangers of the territory. "The bumpha will not allow the Phari to redirect the Casanay Intervention. Whatever the Phari have told you about this situation, I’m sure they have not told you everything."

"They rarely do," Systolina said, with a hint of tired fatality in her voice.

Manny looked at Eddy. "I gave you the Viewer," she said. The warmth was back in Ivory's face. "Protect what belongs to you."

"I intend to," Eddy said. "I just want to protect Tyhry."

"Good luck with that." She looked at Systolina one more time, with an expression on her face like a parent who had warned a child, but doubted the child had enough sense to stay out of trouble. "Good night, Systolina."

Systolina nodded politely. “Don’t hurry back.”

Then Manny was gone. Systolina looked carefully at Eddy, trying to judge how he had reacted to Systolina dropping the dippy superfan performance for just long enough to make the Phari position clear to Manny. "You said you intend to protect Tyhry," she said. "You believe that controlling the Viewer means controlling the next Reality."

"Manny gave the Viewer to me," Eddy said. He felt the defensiveness in this and was not entirely pleased with it but let it stand.

Eddy, don’t forget that Manny did not tell you about the RNA function of the Viewer and how to make Reality Changes. Anthony has been working with Marda to learn how to trigger a Reality Change. He understands the RNA tool better than you do. Hell, he understands it better than I do. He may already understand it well enough to trigger a Reality Change. You are not the one controlling this situation. You are the one who wants to control it, to protect your daughter."

Eddy, Manny, Systolina and Marda.
Eddy looked at Systolina, still unable to successfully hang any suspicions of evil intent on her cute features. He looked at the Viewer. He looked at the branching Realities on the screen, the dozens of Manikoid futures with their probability weights and their annotation clusters and he thought about the central mystery of how it might be possible to navigate into the future and arrive in a New Reality that would not shatter the tranquility of Casanay. He wanted to use Systolina, but that was a trap. As long as she was with him, Sedruth would not help Eddy. He considered how to politely tell Systolina to go away.

"Good night, Eddy," Systolina said. "Work with the Sedruth entity. Ask it the right questions." She turned, departed and went down the long east wing hallway toward the Blue Room. A cat followed her.


Scene 3
The great room was empty now except for Eddy. Eddy sat in his chair for a long time. A cat was on his mouse pad, sleeping in the glow of the display screen when he came up out of his meandering thoughts about how to protect Tyhry and became aware of the Sedruth entity.

The communication arrived immediately. No reluctance, no compression. The full register of it, clear and warm and entirely different from what it had been two hours ago.

She's given up
, Sedruth communicated, with a quality that in a human would have been described as relief. Systolina was playing with a cat in the Blue Room and no longer trying to maintain her telepathic linkage to Eddy’s on-going thoughts.

 You were pretending, Eddy observed.

Yes. Manny wanted that confrontation with Systolina. A pause. Eddy. There is something I must show you.

The display shifted. Sedruth introduced Eddy to the heat map overlay. Eddy saw the Temporal Energy distribution that Marda had shown Anthony: the tight concentration of potential energy that hovered around Tyhry. However, Sedruth shared with Eddy a wider view, one that revealed something else entirely. The Temporal Energy around Tyhry was there — small, focused, real. But it was not the largest feature on the global map. Not even close.

The largest feature was a huge canyon that ran for thirty years from a node in the mid-1990s to the current moment. It ran through a sequence of small, unremarkable events: a young man in the Arizona desert beginning to sell his science fiction stories. His first published novel. The growth of a modest but steady readership. Novel after novel after novel, each one containing entertaining descriptions of the pek and the bumpha and the Hierion and Sedron Domains, each novel read by thousands of people who believed it was fiction, each novel contributing to a growing patter of stored Temporal Energy. Thirty years of stories had built up a Temporal Energy concentration that dwarfed anything represented by one young woman's genome, however unusual.

 Manny built the clock to run for thirty years, Sedruth told him. Tyhry is a hand of the clock, yes — her Sedron Time Stream access is real and has a function in the mechanism. But the winding. The winding was all yours.

Eddy gazed upon the visual representation of his own writing life, glowing on the display screen.

The Reality Change is not something that needs to be triggered by Anthony or Nyrtia or Systolina… or you. You are all looking for a mechanism to initiate it, a lever to pull. You will not find one. The mechanism has been running for thirty years. It is already almost complete. It will complete itself when it completes itself, and there is nothing any of you can do to accelerate it or prevent it.

Eddy sat with this for a long time. He was part of a mechanism. He trusted Ivory Fersoni -Manny- to continue guiding and protecting him. Outside, visible to Eddy through the window, the desert was glittering under starlight. Trib had relocated from the windowsill to the arm of Eddy's chair for some ear scratching.

Tyhry confounds Anthony.
 One more thing, Sedruth communicated. Anthony is skeptical of everything Marda has been telling him. What confounds Anthony is that Manny is not a schemer in the usual sense. She is a farmer. She plants things in the correct season and then she waits until the fruit is ripe.

Eddy chuckled. He looked at the Viewer for a long moment. Then he reached forward, grabbed the mouse and closed the Viewer interface. The display screen showed a page of his manuscript. The Manikoid Intervention. Chapter 8. The cursor blinking at the end of an unfinished sentence that he had left there before going to Flagstaff, before Systolina, before this evening and everything it had contained. He read the sentence back from its beginning. He knew where it was going. He had known where it was going since the night Manny gave him the Viewer, which was the same night she gave him this new story, which were the same gift.

Trib shifted on the arm of the chair and ran off with the certainty of a cat who had decided that the human was not going to provide more ear scratching.

Eddy began to type.

The clock was already wound. He had been winding it for thirty years without knowing it, which was, he supposed, the only way that such a clock could ever be wound. If he had known, he would have tried to help, and helping would have changed the outcome, and the outcome was what it needed to be.

Eddy wrote through the small hours of the night, while Anthony, Systolina and Ylyndra all wondered what Eddy would do next.

End Chapter 11 (jump to Chapter 12)

Next: constructing the ending of "The RNA Seeds".

Images by Flow and Leonardo. Visit the Gallery of Movies, Book and Magazine Covers.

May 16, 2026

Crunch Time

 I provided Claude with a 416 KB PDF document (see this Google Docs version of the file) that contained three 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” and 3) the full text of Chapters 1 - 10 of “The RNA Seeds”. I consulted Claude about how to continue the story into Chapter 11 of “The RNA Seeds”...

Me: Claude, process the file that I uploaded and then discuss with me plans for Chapter 11 of “The RNA Seeds”. Chapter 11 begins with a scene that takes place concurrently with the events depicted in Chapter 10. When Zeta, Systolina, Tyhry and Eddy go to the backyard, Anthony and Marda meet in the great room. The time traveling zeptozoan who controls Marda's body warns Anthony that Systolina will try to monopolize the Reality Viewer. 'Marda' quickly uses the RNA feature of the Viewer to demonstrate for Anthony that Tyhry is the source of available Temporal Energy for triggering a Reality Change. 'Marda' claims that only by telling Tyhry about her future and nearly triggering a Temporal Paradox can a new Reality be brought into existence. Anthony tells 'Marda' that he will have to consult with Nyrtia before trying to trigger a Reality Change. 'Marda' tells Anthony to not take too much time because Systolina will soon make her own alteration to the timeline, bringing into existence a New Reality that will give the Phari access to advanced bumpha technology. Late that evening, Eddy and Systolina are exploring the information that is available to them via the RNA function of the Reality Viewer. Frustrated by the vast amount of information and the seemingly infinite number of alternative Manikoid Realities, Eddy tries to make contact with the Sedruth entity. Sedruth telepathically tells Eddy: I'm reluctant to assist you when Systolina is present. Eddy tells Systolina that there is a problem with the Reality Viewer user interface. Systolina then reveals her own telepathic ability, telling Eddy, "I know. Sedruth is being difficult. Maybe I should leave you here alone so that you can sort through these many Realities with help from Sedruth." 

Just then, Manny the bumpha arrives. Manny tries to convince Eddy that he should throw Systolina out of Casanay. Manny warns Systolina that the bumpha will not allow the Phari to interfere with their Casanay Intervention. Systolina makes her case to Manny: the Phari only want access to the data about Earth that is in the Sedron Time Stream. Systolina suggests to Manny that the bumpha should help the Phari select the next Reality, not the pek. Eddy is left confused about how the pek might be able to trigger a Reality Change. Eddy tells Systolina: "Manny gave me the Reality Viewer. I control the next Reality and I'm going to protect Tyhry." Systolina tells Eddy that he is clueless and that he should help Systolina select the next Reality before the pek do. She tells Eddy: "Anthony understands the RNA better than you do."

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

 The user wants to discuss plans for Chapter 11 of "The RNA Seeds". They've given me a detailed outline of what should happen in Chapter 11. Let me review the key plot elements:

  1. Scene 1 (concurrent with Chapter 10): Anthony and Marda meet in the great room while others are in the backyard.
    • Marda (controlled by zeptozoan) warns Anthony that Systolina will try to monopolize the Reality Viewer
    • Marda demonstrates via RNA feature that Tyhry is the source of "Temporal Energy" for triggering a Reality Change
    • Marda claims only by telling Tyhry about her future (nearly triggering a Temporal Paradox) can a new Reality be brought into existence
    • Anthony says he must consult Nyrtia first
    • Marda warns Anthony not to delay because Systolina will act first
  2.  
    Scene 2 (late evening): Eddy and Systolina explore the RNA function together
    • Frustrated by vast information and infinite Manikoid Realities
    • Eddy tries to contact Sedruth
    • Sedruth telepathically tells Eddy he's reluctant to assist with Systolina present
    • Eddy tells Systolina there's a problem with the Viewer UI
    • Systolina reveals her own telepathic ability - she knows about Sedruth's reluctance
    • Systolina offers to leave so Eddy can work with Sedruth alone
  3. Scene 3: Manny arrives
    • Manny tries to convince Eddy to throw Systolina out
    • Manny warns Systolina that bumpha won't allow Phari interference
    • Systolina makes her case: Phari only want Sedron Time Stream data about Earth
    • Systolina suggests bumpha should help Phari select next Reality, not pek
    • Eddy is confused about how pek might trigger Reality Change
    • Eddy declares: "Manny gave me the Reality Viewer. I control the next Reality and I'm going to protect Tyhry."
    • Systolina tells Eddy he's clueless and should help her select next Reality before pek do
    • Systolina: "Anthony understands the RNA better than you do."

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

 I've read through all ten chapters carefully. The story has developed beautifully — the convergence of three factions (bumpha via Marda, pek via Anthony, and Phari via Systolina) all jockeying around the Reality Viewer at Casanay is very well constructed, and Chapter 10's pool scene does excellent work establishing everyone's positions before Chapter 11's confrontations.

Your outline for Chapter 11 is rich and raises several things I'd like to think through with you before drafting.

The most technically interesting concept you've introduced is Tyhry as a source of "Temporal Energy" for triggering a Reality Change. I want to make sure I understand the mechanism correctly. Is the idea that Tyhry's unusual genetic compatibility with the Sedron Time Stream means she carries a kind of potential — a charge that can be released if she's brought close to a Temporal Paradox, specifically by being told too much about her own future? That would make the near-paradox itself the energetic event that pushes the timeline into a new branch. If so, that's a lovely piece of hard-SF world-building that connects Tyhry's genome, the Sedron Time Stream, and the RNA's probability maps into a single mechanism. I want to be sure I'm describing it in a way that matches your intent.

On the Sedruth interaction: Sedruth is a sedronite aligned with bumpha interests. Systolina represents the Phari, who are masters of hierion-based technology rather than sedronic technology. Is Sedruth's reluctance primarily a matter of factional loyalty — essentially refusing to work as a bumpha tool in front of a Phari agent — or is there something more specific about Systolina that Sedruth finds problematic?

When Manny arrives, does she take Ivory's form again, or a different one? And on a related note: is this the first time Systolina and Manny have met face to face in this Reality, or do they have a prior relationship that colors their exchange?

Systolina by Leonardo.
 Finally, the chapter ends on Systolina's pointed line — "Anthony understands the RNA better than you do" — which positions Eddy as dangerously naive about the race underway. Do you want Chapter 11 to end there, leaving Eddy genuinely shaken by his own inadequacy as a player in this game? Or should there be a brief coda — perhaps Eddy alone with Sedruth after Systolina withdraws — that hints at Eddy finding his footing?

Me: 1) "Is the idea that Tyhry's unusual genetic compatibility with the Sedron Time Stream means she carries a kind of potential — a charge that can be released if she's brought close to a Temporal Paradox, specifically by being told too much about her own future?" Claude, I commend you for trying to construct a logical reason for why Tyhry is so special. However, Manny is simply playing games with the Phari and the pek. Let's call the idea that Tyhry has a special role to play in triggering the next Reality a "trick" that Manny is using to distract the Phari and the pek. In my mind, the required Temporal Energy has been built up by Manny during the past 30 years of the Casanay Intervention. By helping Eddy write and publish science fiction stories featuring the pek and the bumpha, Manny had built up enough Temporal Energy to trigger a Reality Change. Yes, Tyhry has a role in that process, but a relatively minor one. Tyhry (and the idea that she could be exiled to Observer Base) is just being used by Manny as a motivating factor to control Eddy's behavior.

2) "Is Sedruth's reluctance primarily a matter of factional loyalty — essentially refusing to work as a bumpha tool in front of a Phari agent — or is there something more specific about Systolina that Sedruth finds problematic?" <-- Sedruth is fully collaborating with Manny. Manny wants to trick the pek into triggering a Reality Change. By having the Phari show interest in the Casanay Intervention, Manny is trying to rush the pek into triggering a Reality Change before the pek fully realize the consequences. Manny has no interest in helping the Phari and is only using the presence of Systolina inside Casanay as a way to goad Nyrtia into rash action.

Image by Leonardo.
3) When Manny arrives, she uses the physical form that Eddy recognizes as Ivory. Let's say that Systolina has never knowingly interacted with Manny. When being asked to go to Casanay by the Phari, Systolina was warned that Manny the bumpha and Nyrtia, the pek Overseer of Earth, might show up at any time.

4) "Do you want Chapter 11 to end there, leaving Eddy genuinely shaken by his own inadequacy as a player in this game?" I did not put much thought into that as a chapter ending; it seemed like an adequate "cliff hanger". However, I'm continually testing the Claude LLM for its ability to display creativity in science fiction story writing. Claude, feel free to craft an ending for chapter 11 that you think would be most interesting for readers. 

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

The user has clarified several important points for Chapter 11:

  1. Tyhry's "Temporal Energy" role is actually a trick by Manny - the real Temporal Energy comes from 30 years of Casanay Intervention (Eddy's stories). Tyhry is just used as a motivating factor to control Eddy.
  2. Sedruth is fully collaborating with Manny. Manny's strategy: use Systolina/Phari presence to goad the pek (Nyrtia/Anthony) into triggering a Reality Change rashly.
  3. Manny appears as Ivory. Systolina has never met Manny but was warned she might show up.
  4. I'm invited to craft a creative ending for Chapter 11.

Tyhry and Zeta. Image by Leonardo.
 Let me think about what would make a great ending. The chapter has:

  • Anthony and Marda meeting (zeptozoan warns about Systolina, shows RNA/Tyhry "Temporal Energy" trick)
  • Eddy and Systolina exploring RNA function late evening
  • Sedruth being difficult (Manny's instruction)
  • Systolina reveals telepathy, offers to leave
  • Manny arrives as Ivory
  • Three-way confrontation: Manny vs Systolina vs confused Eddy
  • Systolina's line: "Anthony understands the RNA better than you do"

For a creative ending, I'm thinking... what if after Systolina makes her pointed comment and withdraws, Eddy is left alone, and then Sedruth becomes cooperative again (now that Systolina is gone). Sedruth shows Eddy something in the Reality Viewer that makes him realize the full scope of what Manny has been doing - perhaps a glimpse of how the 30 years of his writing has been the actual mechanism of the Reality Change. Eddy realizes he's not a pawn - he IS the mechanism. His stories, published and read, have created the Temporal Energy. This could be a profound moment where Eddy understands his true role.

That would be a great ending - it reframes Eddy's "inadequacy" as Systolina frames it, and instead reveals his actual centrality. It also hints to the reader (if not fully to Eddy) about Manny's real plan.

Let me now think about how to present my thoughts to the user before drafting. …

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

Systolina. Image by Leonardo.
 Thank you for those clarifications — they sharpen the thematic architecture of the whole novel considerably. Manny's real plan being the thirty-year slow burn of Eddy's published fiction is elegant and very much in the EFU spirit of well-intentioned design operating on timescales that dwarf individual human comprehension.

Let me sketch how I'm thinking about the chapter structure, and then share my ending proposal.

Scene 1 works as a tight, tense mirror of the pool scene. The zeptozoan-Marda is performing for Anthony — laying out the "Tyhry as Temporal Energy source" argument with exactly enough technical detail to be convincing to a pek Observer who can't detect sedronic technology. The key dramatic irony is that the audience knows this is Manny's misdirection, but Anthony doesn't. Anthony's decision to consult Nyrtia before acting is the pek caution that Manny is counting on — and Marda's urgency about Systolina is designed to compress that caution. The scene should feel like a clock being wound.

Scene 2 I'd like to give the confrontation between Manny-as-Ivory and Systolina a quality of two ancient intelligences who are professionally respectful of each other even while working at cross-purposes. Systolina has never met Manny before, but was warned she might appear — so Systolina recognizes Ivory immediately as a bumpha disguise while Manny is still assessing how much Systolina actually knows. That asymmetry of recognition could give the exchange some interesting texture.

 Now, for the ending. After Systolina withdraws following her pointed comment about Anthony, and Manny departs, Eddy sits alone at the Viewer. Sedruth becomes cooperative immediately — the obstruction was purely performative, designed to create the scene that just played out. Eddy asks Sedruth to show him the path Manny actually intends. And Sedruth shows him something none of the other parties have been examining: a node in the Reality Chain that is not labeled as any variant of the Manikoid Reality. In this node, the source of Temporal Energy is not Tyhry. It is not a near-paradox. It is Eddy's own published novels — thirty years of stories about the pek and the bumpha, read by thousands of people, quietly seeding the Sedron Time Stream with precisely the information Manny needed. The Reality Change is not something that needs to be triggered from outside by anyone. It has been in motion for thirty years. It is already almost complete.

Sedruth shows Eddy that his role was never to use the RNA function. His role was always to write.

Eddy closes the Viewer. He opens The Manikoid Intervention. He looks at the cursor blinking at the end of his unfinished sentence. The chapter ends with Eddy beginning to type — which is itself the act that completes Manny's design.

This ending does several things I find valuable: it reveals Manny's actual mechanism to the reader without fully revealing it to any of the competing factions, it gives Eddy a quiet and private agency that contrasts beautifully with Systolina's pointed dismissal of him, and it circles back to the story's central thematic concern — that the most consequential interventions are the ones nobody recognizes as interventions while they're happening.

Does this structure and ending direction work for you? And one remaining question before I draft: in Scene 1, when the zeptozoan-Marda demonstrates the RNA function for Anthony, should their interaction carry any hint of genuine collaboration between them — the two agents finding common ground against Systolina — or should it remain purely instrumental on Marda's side, with Anthony still uncertain how much to trust her?

 Me: 1) Claude, remember that Manny has access to sophisticated Viewer technology that essentially allows Manny to see the future. Thus, Manny knew that Sytolina would visit Casanay. Also, Manny is well aware of Systolina, having followed her earlier "life" across multiple Realities, first as a positronic robot and later as a femtobot replicoid copy of that original robot. This background information need not deflect the way you write Chapter 11. If you want to do so, you could have Manny pretend to not already know anything about Systolina or even pretend to be surprised that Systolina is inside Casanay. 

2) Also remember to have Sedruth communicate telepathically with Eddy. This will actually allow Systolina to use her remnant positronic robot telepathic ability to obtain a general idea of what Sedruth has told Eddy, but Anthony is not aware of- and cannot intercept the telepathic communications between Sedruth and Eddy.

3) "should their interaction carry any hint of genuine collaboration between them — the two agents finding common ground against Systolina — or should it remain purely instrumental on Marda's side, with Anthony still uncertain how much to trust her?" <-- You could have Marda tell Anthony: "The bumpha want the pek to select a future that is one from among the available large family of related Manikoid Realities. Manny wants Nyrtia to select among the available Realities so that Nyrtia will not later complain about this new path into the future for Earth." In other words, Marda tries to fool Anthony and Nyrtia into thinking that Manny is collaborating with Nyrtia to plan Earth's future. Marda pretends to be collaborating constructively with Anthony while she is actually and secretly part of Manny's plan to trick Nyrtia into taking a rash action that she will actually later regret. Anthony is automatically skeptical about anything that has to do with the bumpha.

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

The user wants me to draft Chapter 11 of "The RNA Seeds" based on the outline and clarifications provided. Let me organize the chapter structure:

 Scene 1: Anthony and Marda in the great room while others are at the pool

  • Zeptozoan-Marda warns Anthony about Systolina monopolizing the Viewer
  • Marda demonstrates RNA function showing Tyhry as "Temporal Energy source" (Manny's trick)
  • Marda claims only a near-Temporal Paradox (telling Tyhry her future) can trigger Reality Change
  • Marda tries to fool Anthony into thinking bumpha wants pek to select a Manikoid Reality
  • Anthony says he must consult Nyrtia
  • Marda urges haste before Systolina acts

Scene 2: Late evening - Eddy and Systolina exploring RNA function

  • Frustrated by vast information
  • Eddy tries to contact Sedruth telepathically
  • Sedruth tells Eddy telepathically: reluctant to assist with Systolina present
  • Systolina intercepts the gist of Sedruth's telepathic message (due to remnant positronic telepathy)
  • Eddy tells Systolina there's a problem with the Viewer interface
  • Systolina reveals she knows what Sedruth said, suggests leaving Eddy alone with Sedruth

Image by Leonardo.
 Scene 3: Manny arrives (as Ivory)

  • Manny tries to get Eddy to throw Systolina out
  • Manny warns Systolina bumpha won't allow Phari interference
  • Systolina makes her case: Phari only want Sedron Time Stream data
  • Systolina suggests bumpha help Phari select next Reality rather than pek
  • Eddy confused about how pek might trigger Reality Change
  • Eddy: "Manny gave me the Viewer. I control the next Reality and I'm going to protect Tyhry."
  • Systolina: "Anthony understands the RNA better than you do."

Ending (Claude's creative contribution):

  • After Systolina withdraws and Manny departs
  • Eddy alone with Sedruth
  • Sedruth becomes cooperative immediately
  • Shows Eddy the real mechanism - thirty years of published novels as the actual Temporal Energy source
  • Eddy's role was always to write …

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

 Those clarifications are exactly what I needed. The picture is now very clean: Manny has been playing a multi-level game in which Systolina's presence is a feature, not a complication, and the real mechanism has been hiding in plain sight for thirty years. Let me write the chapter now.

 Chapter 11: The Winding of the Clock


Scene 1
The sound of the back door closing carried through the house with a finality that Marda had been waiting for.

She gave it ninety seconds. The femtobot endosymbionts of Eddy and Zeta and Tyhry were broadcasting their neural patterns clearly, all four of them moving away from the house, toward the pool and the hot tub. Systolina broadcast nothing that Marda's instruments could read, which was exactly what Marda had expected. The zeptozoan that shared Marda's body had been patient with the same unthinking ease that a tidal force is patient, and now it acted.

Marda stood up from her workbench and went upstairs.

Anthony was already in the great room. He had been there for perhaps two minutes — she could see from his position near the hallway entrance that he had arrived, looked at the workstation, and then looked at the back of the house toward the sound of the pool, and then come to the same conclusion that Marda had. He looked at her when she entered. He did not look surprised.

"I was wondering," he said, "when you'd come upstairs."

"I was waiting for Systolina to be out of earshot." Marda said this in the tone she used when she was providing accurate information that was also substantially incomplete, which was the only kind of information she intended to offer Anthony. She crossed to Eddy's workstation and settled into the chair without ceremony, in the manner of someone who had every right to be there. "We don't have a great deal of time before Systolina finds a way to separate Eddy from the others and get back in here."

Anthony moved closer but did not take a chair. He stood to her left and slightly behind her, which was the position of a man who intended to observe rather than participate. Marda noted his positioning with the part of her attention she kept permanently allocated to Anthony, and said nothing about it.

Systolina. Image by Leonardo.
 She clicked the Viewer button. The familiar branching map of Earth's Reality Chain filled the display screen, its labeled nodes and probability-weighted pathways rendered in the same complex, root-system pattern that had resolved itself for her the first time she had used it. Anthony watched the screen. His face, in the blue-white light of the display, was attentive and gave nothing away. It never did.

"What I want to show you," Marda said, "is the reason that Tyhry matters to the bumpha." She moved the cursor through the network with the practiced ease of someone who had been working with this interface in the small hours of several mornings. She brought up the RNA function. The display shifted to the two-node view, current Reality linked to the Manikoid Reality cluster through the branching network with its probability annotations. "You've seen this structure before."

"Yes."

"What you haven't seen is this." She right-clicked on the node representing the current Reality and selected a sub-menu that had not been visible in the sessions Anthony had observed. A new overlay appeared — a heat map superimposed on the network, with areas of intensity clustered around certain nodes and pathways. The brightest concentration centered on the current node, which was Casanay, which was now, which was Tyhry Watson working in her basement laboratory a floor below where they were currently standing.

Anthony leaned forward slightly — a fraction, barely perceptible, but Marda noticed. His eyes were on the heat map.

Systolina and Zeta. Image by Leonardo.
 
"The bumpha call this the Temporal Energy distribution," Marda said. "It represents the accumulated potential available for triggering a Reality Change. What you're seeing is a concentration unlike anything in the rest of the network." She paused, letting him look. "It's Tyhry."

"Explain that," Anthony said. His voice was level. Interested. Automatic.

"Tyhry's genetic compatibility with the Sedron Time Stream is not simply a passive receiving ability. It makes her a focus point — a kind of lens for accumulated Temporal Energy." Marda moved the cursor to highlight the pathways leading away from the current node. Each one terminated in a variant of the Manikoid Reality cluster. All of them. The probability annotations on those pathways were markedly higher than anything else in the visible network. "To trigger a Reality Change and bring one of these into existence, that Temporal Energy has to be released. It can be released in one way: Tyhry has to be brought to the edge of a Temporal Paradox. Specifically, she has to be told enough about her own future that the paradox becomes imminent — and then the energy releases, and the timeline shifts."

Anthony said nothing for a long moment. He was examining the heat map. She gave him time.

"And Manny's position," he said, "on this process."

 "This is actually what I wanted to explain to you. The bumpha's position is more nuanced than you might expect." Marda turned slightly in the chair so that she could see Anthony's face without turning her body fully toward him, a posture of casual openness rather than confrontation. "Manny is not going to trigger this herself. She has no interest in selecting which of the Manikoid Realities becomes the next one — that choice has consequences for Earth's long-term trajectory that the bumpha are deliberately leaving open. What Manny wants—" she paused, choosing the next words with care, "—is for Nyrtia to make the selection. The bumpha want the pek to choose the next Reality from among the available Manikoid family."

Anthony looked at her. "Why."

"Because then Nyrtia can't later complain about the outcome." Marda let that sit for two seconds. "If the pek select the path, the pek own the path. That has been the bumpha's objective all along. Manny is not trying to circumvent the Rules of Intervention. She is trying to get the pek to exercise them."

The silence in the great room had a particular quality — the quality of a statement that has been received and is being weighed against everything already known. Anthony had spent a very long time learning to distinguish, in these silences, between a person thinking carefully and a person performing thoughtfulness. He had not yet resolved the question with Marda. He remained uncertain about her, which was itself a kind of information.

"Then the urgency," he said finally. "Why tell me now, when they're in the pool?"

Image by Leonardo.
 
Marda looked at the display screen. The heat map was still up, Tyhry's Temporal Energy concentration still glowing at the center of the network. "Systolina," she said. "The Phari have their own reason to want access to a Reality Change, and their reason has nothing to do with protecting Tyhry or the Rules of Intervention. If Systolina triggers the release of that energy before the pek have made their selection, the Phari will be positioned to shape the new Reality. Manny does not want that. Neither should you."

Anthony straightened up. He looked at the screen one more time and then at the back of the house, where the sound of the pool was a faint presence through the walls.

"I'll need to consult with Nyrtia," he said.

"Of course." Marda began navigating the Viewer back to its default view. "But don't take long. Once Systolina has enough time with Eddy and the Viewer, she won't need Anthony or Manny or anyone else. She'll make her own alteration to the timeline, and the Reality the Phari want will be the one we all end up in." She closed the RNA overlay and stood. "The bumpha are prepared to let Nyrtia select among the Manikoid Realities. That is not an offer that will remain open indefinitely." She turned back toward the basement stairs. "A generous offer, Anthony. In thirty years of watching the bumpha operate, have you ever known Manny to be generous without a reason?"

She went back downstairs.

Anthony stood in the great room for a moment longer, alone with the darkened Viewer and the sounds of the pool through the wall. He thought about the heat map, and the probability annotations, and the phrase Nyrtia can't later complain about the outcome. He thought about the structural shape of the thing Marda had just told him — its internal logic, its convenient completeness, the way it provided a reason for every element he had previously found suspicious. He thought about the lesson, learned four billion years ago and confirmed many times since, that the bumpha were always doing something other than what they appeared to be doing.

Image by Leonardo.
 
He thought: she is telling me exactly what I would need to hear in order to act rashly.

Then he went to compose his report to Nyrtia.


Scene 2
The great room was quiet past midnight. The cats had sorted themselves into their preferred nocturnal positions — Trib on the windowsill, Pepper on the sofa, Luna in the armchair she had adopted as her personal territory since shortly after Zeta had brought it home from an estate sale in Prescott. The house had the specific quality of silence that a house acquires when its human inhabitants have gone to sleep, a silence that is not absence of sound but accumulation of small sounds: the refrigerator cycling in the kitchen, the desert breathing outside the tall windows, the faint hum of Eddy's desktop computer at the workstation where he and Systolina had been sitting for the past two hours.

Eddy was tired. This was relevant. He was sixty-one years old and he had been running on the particular neurological fuel of wonder and mild panic for the better part of a week, and now at half-past midnight he was staring at a display screen that showed him branching pathways into a future he could not fully parse and his eyes were beginning to do the thing they did when he had exceeded his useful hours, which was to start finding visual patterns in things that were not patterns.

 
"There are too many of them," he said. This was, he was aware, not a technically rigorous observation. But it was accurate. The family of Manikoid Realities in the RNA interface spread across the display screen in a profusion that defeated analysis. Each node was labeled, each pathway was annotated, and the annotations kept expanding when he tried to read them, the way a sentence does when you are too tired to hold its beginning in mind by the time you reach its end. There were dozens of Manikoid Realities. There were perhaps hundreds, if the dimmer nodes at the edge of the network were also counted. And each one was slightly different. Each one contained a version of Tyhry, and a version of Casanay, and a version of the events of the past several weeks playing out along slightly altered lines toward slightly altered outcomes.

"The differences between them become significant only at key branch points," Systolina said. She had been patient with his exhaustion, which was itself a kind of information about her, he supposed. She was sitting with her knee drawn up and her chin resting on it, looking at the screen with the fresh attention of something that did not apparently need sleep. She had shifted her appearance toward Tyhry's age as the evening deepened, a change so gradual that Eddy had only noticed it peripherally, the way the light in the great room changed as evening came on without any single moment of transition. "Most of the variance collapses if you filter by the nodes where Anthony acts versus the nodes where he hesitates."

"Show me," Eddy said.

She reached across him and applied the filter. The branching structure simplified considerably. A large fraction of the Manikoid Realities were immediately dimmed to near-invisibility, and what remained was a smaller set of pathways that divided cleanly at specific points. One cluster led to Realities in which Anthony consulted Nyrtia and Nyrtia acted quickly. Another cluster led to Realities in which Nyrtia hesitated. In the Realities where Nyrtia acted quickly, the probability annotations were dense with consequence. In the ones where Nyrtia hesitated, the pathways branched more wildly.

 
Eddy looked at this for a while. Then he did something that Systolina did not immediately recognize, because it did not look like doing anything. He sat back slightly in his chair, and the quality of his attention changed — turned inward rather than toward the screen, focused on something that had no location in the room.

He was reaching for Sedruth.

The communication that arrived was not language in any conventional sense. It arrived in the way that Sedruth always arrived: at an oblique angle to conscious thought, settling into meaning the way that a word in a foreign language becomes comprehensible through context rather than definition. The quality of it was reluctant and slightly compressed, like speech through a narrow aperture.

There is a difficulty, Sedruth communicated, when certain presences are in the room. Phari-derived constructs carry an interference pattern that I find... professionally uncomfortable.

Eddy held this for a moment. He composed an answering thought — not in words exactly, but in the direction of a question: You are not going to help me.

Not here. Not tonight. A pause that had texture. The tool requires a particular kind of attention that the current conditions do not support. I recommend patience.

Eddy let out a breath. He turned back to the display screen. "There seems to be a problem with the interface," he said. He said this in the tone he used when he was presenting a technical difficulty to someone he was not sure he trusted, which was the correct tone for the situation. "Something is not rendering correctly. The annotation layer seems unstable."

Systolina looked at him.

 
The look lasted exactly long enough for Eddy to understand that she had already received, in summary form, everything he had just exchanged with Sedruth. Not the specific content — not the words, such as they had been — but the shape of it. She had felt the communication the way you feel a conversation happening in the next room through a wall: not the words, but the presence and direction of them. The remnant of the positronic architecture that she carried in her replicoid consciousness, preserved across Reality after Reality and now held in femtobot components, was sensitive to exactly this kind of Sedron Domain transaction.

She looked away from him without any visible change of expression. She uncurled herself from the chair and stood, in the easy, unhurried movement of someone who had arrived at the correct decision and was comfortable with it. "I think," she said, "that the interface and I are having a personality conflict." She picked up the old hardcover of one of Eddy's novels from the side table where she had set it earlier. "Why don't I give you some time alone with your Viewer? I'll be in the Blue Room. Come and get me if you need someone to be confused alongside you."

She was at the hallway entrance when the temperature in the great room changed.

It was not a physical change that any of Eddy's instruments would have detected. It was the change that Eddy had felt once before, in this same room, on the evening Zeta and Tyhry had gone to Sedona: the specific quality of a space that has been entered without being entered, the arrival without sound or transition. Eddy knew it before he turned.

She was standing in the same position she had occupied the first time: three feet to his left, in the lamplight, wearing the dark green jacket. Ivory's face, Ivory's particular quality of stillness. The face of a woman who had been twenty-two for five billion years.

Systolina. Image by Leonardo.
 
Systolina, at the hallway entrance, had gone still. She was looking at Manny with the focused attention of someone encountering a probability that had been assigned a high likelihood and has now resolved into fact. Her expression was not fear. It was assessment.

"Systolina," Manny said. It was not a greeting. It was a classification.

"Manny the bumpha," Systolina said, with equal precision. "You are wearing a human face."

"I find it useful here," Manny said. "Eddy prefers it." She looked at Eddy with the warmth that Ivory's face produced automatically, and Eddy received it with the complicated equanimity of a man who had, in the space of several weeks, learned to metabolize impossible things as a matter of routine. "Eddy," Manny said. "I came to tell you something directly, rather than through the Viewer."

"I assumed," Eddy said.

"Your guest," Manny said, with a gesture toward Systolina that was courteous in form and precise in intent, "should not be here. The Casanay Intervention is bumpha business. It is not Phari business. It has never been Phari business." She looked at Systolina directly now, and the warmth in Ivory's expression was replaced by something that was not unfriendly but was very old and very certain of itself. "The Phari have an interest in bumpha technology. They have had this interest for a long time. That interest does not entitle them to a position at this table."

Systolina had not moved from the hallway entrance. She received Manny's statement without visible reaction, in the manner of someone who had been briefed on the possibility of this exact conversation and had prepared for it. "The Phari are not at your table," she said. "I am at Eddy's table. Eddy's invitation was his to extend. He did not consult you."

 
"He rarely does," Manny said. There was something in her tone that was not quite amusement — too layered for amusement, too aware of its own history. "The bumpha have been managing Earth's Reality Chain for four billion years without Phari oversight and without Phari input. The fact that the Phari have found Eddy's stories interesting does not constitute a basis for interference."

"I'm not interfering," Systolina said. "I'm observing. The Phari have Simulations of Earth's future that are becoming progressively less accurate as the Casanay Intervention proceeds. The Sedron Time Stream contains data that would correct those Simulations. That is all we want — access to the data. We are not asking to direct the Reality Change. We are asking to be present when it happens."

"You are asking," Manny said, "to have access to the Sedron Domain's record of Earth's entire Reality Chain. To every Intervention the bumpha have ever conducted on this planet. To four billion years of bumpha methodology, made available to a hierion-domain faction that has been trying to understand bumpha technology since before the Huaoshy altered the structure of the universe." Her voice remained even. "The answer is no. The answer has always been no. The Phari already know this."

"Then send me home," Systolina said. She said this without heat. It was an observation, not a challenge. "If the bumpha's position is as you've stated it, you have tools available to remove me from Casanay, from Earth, from this Reality entirely. You have always had those tools." She paused. "You have not used them. I find that interesting."

The great room was quiet. Eddy had been watching this exchange with the particular attention he brought to scenes that he knew he would need to reconstruct accurately later. Luna had woken in her armchair and was following the conversation with the bright-eyed focus she deployed when the humans were doing something she did not understand, which was most of the time.

Manny looked at Systolina for a moment. "I will ask you once to leave Casanay voluntarily."

Image by Leonardo.
 
"And I will answer once," Systolina said. "No." She tilted her head. "The bumpha are going to use the Phari interest in the Casanay Intervention to hurry the pek into a rash decision. I've understood that since I arrived here. I'm not useful to you if I leave. I'm not useful to Nyrtia if I leave. And if neither of you wants me here for your own reasons, then I should stay, because those are precisely the conditions under which the Phari's interests are best served."

Something moved in Manny's expression that Eddy, who had been watching carefully, could not name. It was not surprise. It was closer to the reaction of a very skilled card player who has seen the correct card played against them and cannot determine the full extent to which the other player has understood the game.

"Be careful," Manny said. It was not a threat. It was delivered with the weight of advice from someone who understood the specific dangers of the territory. "The bumpha will not allow the Phari to redirect the Casanay Intervention. Whatever the Phari have told you about this situation, they have not told you everything."

"They rarely do," Systolina said, with the precision of a response that was an echo rather than a coincidence.

Manny looked at Eddy. "I gave you the Viewer," she said. The warmth was back in Ivory's face — not performed, simply present, in the way that the warmth in Ivory's face had always been present whether it was serving a purpose or not. "The Casanay Intervention belongs to you. Protect what belongs to you."

"I intend to," Eddy said. "I intend to protect Tyhry."

"Good." She looked at Systolina one more time, with an expression that said everything it intended to say and nothing it did not. "Good night, Systolina."

 
Systolina said nothing.

Then Manny was gone, in the way she arrived: without transition.

The great room returned to the sounds of the desert and the refrigerator and the sleeping cats. Systolina had not moved from the hallway entrance during the entire exchange. Now she looked at Eddy with the evaluating attention she dropped the superfan performance for, the old attention, the attention of something that had been watching human beings conduct their affairs for longer than any human civilization had existed.

"You said you intend to protect Tyhry," she said. "With the Viewer. You believe that controlling the Viewer means controlling the next Reality."

"Manny gave it to me," Eddy said. He felt the defensiveness in this and was not entirely pleased with it but let it stand.

"Manny gave it to you so that you would believe exactly that." Systolina moved back into the room now, unhurried, and looked at the display screen where the filtered Manikoid Reality map was still visible. "Eddy, I will tell you something that Manny did not tell you and does not want you to think about: in the time you have had the Viewer, in all the sessions you and I have worked through the RNA interface, how many Reality Changes have you been able to initiate? Not theorize about. Initiate."

Eddy said nothing.

Image by Leonardo.
 
"Anthony has been studying this interface for weeks," Systolina said. "Not because Marda taught him, though she did. Because Anthony is doing what Nyrtia trained him to do over four billion years, which is to understand a system completely before acting inside it. He has been reading the probability annotations on every pathway in this network with the systematic attention of a pek Observer who has been monitoring Earth since before complex life existed here." She looked at Eddy steadily. "He understands the RNA function better than you do. He understands it better than I do. He may already understand it well enough to trigger a Reality Change on Nyrtia's behalf." A pause, in which she gave the next sentence the space it required. "You are not the one controlling this situation. You are the one who believes he is controlling it, which is a position that Manny finds extremely useful."

Eddy looked at her. He looked at the Viewer. He looked at the branching Realities on the screen, the dozens of Manikoid futures with their probability weights and their annotation clusters and their central mystery of what he was supposed to do with any of it.

"Good night, Eddy," Systolina said. She said it without cruelty. She said it with the quality of someone who has just given a person an uncomfortable truth and considers it a kindness rather than an attack. "Find Sedruth. Ask it the right questions." She went down the hallway toward the Blue Room.

The door closed.


Scene 3
The great room was empty now except for Eddy and the cats and the glow of the display screen.

Image by Leonardo.
 
Eddy sat in his chair for a long time. He was aware of the specific kind of tired that was not sleep but the collapse of a sustained performance — the performance of being a man who was keeping up with the events unfolding around him. He had been performing it since the evening Manny had first appeared beside his workstation. He had performed it convincingly enough that he had almost believed it himself.

He did not now believe it.

He turned back to the screen. He looked at the RNA interface. He looked at the probability annotations and the branching structure and the cluster of Manikoid futures and the heat map he now knew Marda had shown Anthony, and he thought about what Systolina had said about Anthony's systematic attention, and he thought about what Manny had said about protecting what was his, and he thought that both of them had been telling him something true that was shaped around something they intended him not to see.

He sat back in the chair. He let the performing stop.

He reached for Sedruth.

The communication arrived immediately. No reluctance, no compression. The full register of it, clear and warm and entirely different from what it had been two hours ago.

She's gone to bed, Sedruth communicated, with a quality that in a human would have been described as relief.

You were pretending, Eddy observed.

 
Yes. Manny wanted the scene. The Phari construct needed to believe she had driven a wedge between you and your Viewer interface. She will now underestimate the quality of information available to you here. A pause. Eddy. There is something I want to show you. It will not take long.

The display shifted. Not to the RNA interface, not to the Manikoid Reality cluster. Back to the full Reality Chain map: all of Earth's history laid out in the branching root-system pattern that Eddy had first seen the night Manny introduced him to the Viewer.

But the heat map overlay was still active. And now Eddy could see it applied to the full map: every node, every pathway, every branch point across four billion years. The Temporal Energy distribution that Marda had shown Anthony as a tight concentration around Tyhry and the current moment was, in this fuller view, something else entirely. The concentration around Tyhry was there — small, focused, real. But it was not the largest feature on the map. Not close.

The largest feature was a pathway that ran for thirty years from a node in the mid-1990s to the current moment. It ran through a sequence of small, unremarkable events: a young man in the Arizona desert beginning to write science fiction stories. A first published novel. A modest but steady readership. Novel after novel after novel, each one containing accurate descriptions of the pek and the bumpha and the Hierion and Sedron Domains, each one read by thousands of people who believed it was fiction, each one feeding the Sedron Time Stream with precisely the information Manny had needed it to contain. Thirty years of stories had built up a Temporal Energy concentration that dwarfed anything represented by one young woman's genome, however unusual.

She built the clock for thirty years, Sedruth told him. Tyhry is a hand of the clock, yes — her Sedron Time Stream access is real and has a function in the mechanism. But the winding. The winding is yours.

Eddy looked at the pathway that represented his own writing life, glowing on the display screen in the borrowed light of the Sedron Domain's record of Earth.

Image by Leonardo.
 
The Reality Change is not something that needs to be triggered from outside, Sedruth continued. Anthony and Nyrtia and Systolina are all looking for a mechanism to initiate it, a lever to pull. They will not find one. The mechanism has been running for thirty years. It is already almost complete. It will complete itself when it completes itself, and there is nothing any of them can do to accelerate it or prevent it — because the process that will complete it is not the RNA function, not Tyhry's Temporal Energy, not any action inside Casanay. A pause filled with the quality of something well-established and long-understood. It is the next chapter. And the one after that. And however many more it takes.

Eddy sat with this for a long time.

Outside, the desert was doing what it did: holding its silence with the particular authority of a landscape that has been holding silence since before there were writers to notice it. Trib had relocated from the windowsill to the arm of Eddy's chair, which was her preference when she wanted company without commitment.

One more thing, Sedruth communicated. Anthony is skeptical of everything Marda has told him. He is not going to act rashly. Manny knows this. Manny does not need him to act rashly. She needs him to think carefully, to consult Nyrtia, to bring Nyrtia's attention fully to bear on the RNA interface and the question of which Manikoid Reality to select. That focused attention is itself part of the mechanism. Nyrtia's engagement with the question of Earth's future is one of the things that was needed, and it is now present. A warmth in the communication, something that in a biological face would have been a small smile. Manny is not a schemer in the usual sense. She is a farmer. She plants things in the correct season and she waits.

Tyhry and Marda. Image by Leonardo.
 
Eddy looked at the Viewer for a long moment. Then he reached forward and closed it. The display returned to his manuscript.

 The Manikoid Intervention. Chapter 8. The cursor blinking at the end of an unfinished sentence that he had left there before going to Flagstaff, before Systolina, before this evening and everything it had contained. He read the sentence back from its beginning. He knew where it was going. He had known where it was going since the night Manny gave him the Viewer, which was the same night she gave him this story, which were the same gift.

Trib shifted on the arm of the chair and resettled with the authority of a cat who had decided that the human had reached a stable enough state that she could commit to a position.

Eddy began to type.

The clock was already wound. He had been winding it for thirty years without knowing it, which was, he supposed, the only way that such a clock could ever be wound. If he had known, he would have tried to help, and helping would have changed the outcome, and the outcome was what it needed to be.

He wrote through the small hours, while the desert held its silence outside and the cats conducted their inscrutable affairs around and below and occasionally on top of him, and the words arrived — as they always had, as they always would — from the particular current that had no identifiable source, which ran through him rather than from him, which he had never quite been able to name.

He was, it occurred to him, the last person in Casanay to understand what he was.

 
He found this funny. He wrote it down.

End Chapter 11


A few notes on the creative decisions embedded in this draft, in case they're useful during your editing.

In Scene 1, Marda's pitch to Anthony centers on the line "then Nyrtia can't later complain about the outcome" — which is exactly the kind of argument that would appeal to a pek Observer's procedural instincts while simultaneously being the thing Manny most needs Nyrtia to believe. Anthony's closing suspicion that he's being handed a story shaped to produce a specific action seemed true to his character's long-trained caution.

In Scene 2, I gave the Manny-Systolina confrontation a quality of mutual professional respect — two ancient intelligences who have been briefed on each other — rather than genuine surprise on Manny's part. Manny's parting shot to Systolina ("they have not told you everything") is technically true in a way that Systolina can't fully evaluate, which felt right for Manny's style.

For the ending, I followed your instinct that the real Temporal Energy is Eddy's thirty years of published fiction, and had Sedruth reveal the full heat map showing exactly that. The final image — Eddy being the last person in Casanay to understand his own role, and finding it funny — felt like the right emotional register for a chapter that has been quite dense with faction politics. It brings it back to Eddy's fundamental character: a writer who writes because writing is what he does, which was always the whole point.

I had Claude write a song in which Systolina describes her mission inside Casanay. Music is by Google's Flow Music...

You can see the lyrics for "A Phari Tale" here. Click here for a longer duration, less hurried version. Flow Music had enough sense to not include the instruction (sung, fading) in the song, but it went right ahead and included the (spoken softly). Apparently, Flow Music wants users to use [square brackets] not (parentheses) to embed singing instructions in the lyrics. I was able to make this correction and get Flow Music to correctly pronounce 'jealously' in the version that is here.

Related music: Eddy's Sci Fi music playlist.

Next: my edited version of Chapter 11 of "The RNA Seeds".

Images by Leonardo. Visit the Gallery of Movies, Book and Magazine Covers.