see you.'
'My schedule is almost always ‘tight’ in Father Church’s service, My Lady,' he said wryly, 'but believe me, time with you could never be wasted.'
'My goodness!' Allison murmured with a smile and a dangerous set of dimples. 'I could wish the Star Kingdom would import a little Grayson manners!'
'Ah, but that would hardly be a fair exchange for your own presence here, My Lady!' Sullivan replied with a broad grin of his own. 'Your Kingdom would get only an outward expression of our appreciation for beauty and charm, whereas we would get their reality.'
Allison chuckled appreciatively, but she also shook her head and unsealed the briefcase, and Sullivan sat back in his own chair, nursing his teacup. The teasing gallantry faded from his expression, and he crossed his legs and watched alertly as she set out a tiny holo projector and keyed her memo pad to life.
'Your Grace,' she said much more seriously, 'I have to tell you that I felt some trepidation about requesting this meeting. As you know, I’ve been working on mapping the Grayson genome for over six T-months now, and I’ve discovered something which I’m afraid some of your people may find... disturbing.' The bushy brows knitted together in a frown—not of anger, but of concentration and, possibly, a little concern—and she drew a deep breath.
'How much do you know about your planet’s genetic background, Your Grace?'
'No more than any other layman, I imagine,' he said after a moment. 'Even our doctors were several centuries behind your own in that regard before the Alliance, of course, but we Graysons have been aware of the need to keep track of our bloodlines and avoid inbreeding since the Founding. Aside from that and the genealogical and family health history information my own and my wives’ physicians have requested from us over the years, I’m afraid I know very little.'
He paused, watching her intently, and she felt the unasked 'Why?' floating in the air between them.
'Very well, Your Grace. I’ll try to keep this as simple and nontechnical as I can, but I have something I need to show you.'
She switched on the holo unit, and a holographic representation of a chromosome appeared in the air above the coffee table. It didn’t look very much like an actual magnified chromosome would have, for it was a schematic rather than visually representative, yet Sullivan’s eyes flickered with interest as he realized he was looking at the blueprint for a human life. Or, to be more precise, a
'This is the long arm of what we call Chromosome Seven, Your Grace,' she told him. 'Specifically, this—' she tapped a macro on the holo unit and a cursor flashed, indicating a point on the image '—is a gene with a long and sometimes ugly history in medical science. A single gene mutation at this site produces a disease known as cystic fibrosis, which drastically alters the secretory function of the lungs and pancreas.'
It was also, she did not mention, a disease which had been eradicated over a millennium and a half ago on planets with modern medical science... and one which still turned up from time to time on Grayson.
'I see,' Sullivan said after a moment, then quirked one eyebrow at her. 'And the reason for telling me this, My Lady?' he inquired politely.
'The reason for telling you, Your Grace, is that my research and mapping suggest quite conclusively to me that this portion of the genetic code of your people—' she jabbed an index finger at the cursor in the holo image '—was deliberately altered almost a thousand years ago.'
'Altered?' Sullivan sat upright in his chair.
'Altered, Your Grace. Engineered.' Allison drew a deep breath. 'In other words, Sir, you and all your people have been genetically modified.'
She sat very still, awaiting the potential eruption, but Sullivan only gazed at her for several seconds without speaking. Then he leaned back, reclaimed his teacup, and took a deliberate sip. She wasn’t certain if he was buying time for shattered thoughts to settle or simply deliberately defusing the tension, but then he set saucer and cup back in his lap and cocked his head.
'Continue, please,' he invited, and his voice was so calm she felt almost flustered by its very lack of agitation. She paused a moment longer, then glanced down at her memo pad and scrolled through two or three pages of preliminary, hysteria-soothing notes it had just become obvious she wasn’t going to need.
'In addition to my purely laboratory research,' she said after a second or two, 'I’ve been doing some extensive searches of your data bases.'
'You thought that perhaps those records had been suppressed?' Sullivan asked her, and chuckled at her expression. 'My Lady, for all your frankness, you’ve been very cautious in your choice of words. Bearing that in mind, did you really think it would require a—what is the Manticoran slang phrase? a
'I... hadn’t thought of it that way, Your Grace,' Allison said slowly, and this time Sullivan laughed out loud.
'No, My Lady, but you’ve been rather more polite about it than some off-worlders have. We are a people of custom, and one which has traditionally embraced a highly consensual Faith and way of life, yet our Faith is also one of individual conscience in which
'Yes, Your Grace.' Allison shook herself again, then smiled crookedly. 'Yes, indeed,' she said, and nodded much more comfortably at the holo image.
'As nearly as I can reconstruct what must have happened, Your Grace, at least one person, and possibly several, in your original colonial medical team must have been real crackerjack geneticists, especially given the limitations of the technology then available. As you may be aware, they were still using viruses for genetic insertions rather than the precisely engineered nanotech we use today, and given the crudity of such hack and slash methodologies, his—or their—achievements are truly remarkable.'
'I am less surprised to hear that than you might think, My Lady,' Sullivan interposed. 'The original followers of Saint Austin were opposed to the way technology had, as they saw it, divorced men from the lives God wished them to lead. But they recognized the advances in the life sciences as the gift of a loving Father to His children, and their intention from the beginning was to transplant as much of that gift to Grayson as they could. And that was certainly as well for all of us when our ancestors discovered what sort of world they had come to.'