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The End of Men(58)

Author:Christina Sweeney-Baird

“Of course. If this helps any of the other programs along, all the better.”

“We should liaise with the press people, make an announcement once we’ve figured it all out. Release the workings, our findings, everything. We’ll have a Skype conference and answer questions.”

“Yet another way in which we’re taking inspiration from Amanda Maclean.”

George’s eyes crinkle as he smiles. “I’d love to meet her one day.” He pauses, in thought or anxiety, I’m not sure which. “Do you think anyone else is making progress? Are they further along than we are?” George asks, his hands cupping a mug of hot water. “Or do you think they’re all as fucked as we are?” he adds.

“Well, I don’t know about that but I do know an adage an old, wise man used to say to me. The harder you work, the luckier you get.”

A grin bursts across George’s face. “Fuck off, I’m not that old!”

“If you say so, old man.” And with a smile, and not a little hope and trepidation, we get back to work.

LISA

Toronto, Canada

Day 149

Oh my God. George Kitchen and that mousy American girl from the CDC and some random geneticist have identified the male vulnerability to the virus. This coming weeks after Amanda Maclean, Sadie Saunders and Kenneth McCafferty discovered the origins of the virus. I’m feeling both left behind and grateful they’ve publicized their work. I hate feeling grateful. I want to have something other people can feel grateful to me for. I call the best geneticist I work with and one of the only people I would call a work friend. She pisses me off very rarely and doesn’t take any shit. I like her immensely.

“Nell, it’s Lisa.”

“Lisa, I’ve told you before. I can see who it is on my phone, we’ve had caller ID since the nineties.”

“What do you want me to say? Hello, and then just launch in to it? Have you seen the news?”

“I’ve been in the lab all day. I just stepped out to get lunch.”

“George Kitchen, Elizabeth Cooper and some geneticist called Amaya Sharvani have done it. They’ve identified the gene sequence responsible for female immunity.”

“Of course Amaya Sharvani would have something to do with this.”

I’ve never heard of her. “Is she good?”

“Only thirty-six, she’s phenomenal. She had four papers out last year, does amazing work at Great Ormond Street. Yeah, she’s good. Never mind that, how did she figure it out?”

“Twins, one fraternal with an immune father and only one twin immune. One set of identicals both immune with a dad who wasn’t. Partly luck she had those sets of patients. Then they homed in on the genes, did the sequencing, and here we are. The entire world is floored by their genius.”

“Now now, Leese. I can hear a familiar green tinge to your voice.” I can tell Nell is smiling. She loves making fun of me. It’s really annoying.

“I’m not jealous.”

“And yet, you’re the one to bring up that word.”

“I’m thrilled they’ve made this discovery.”

“But you wish it had been you.”

I laugh. “And don’t you?”

Nell sighs. “Of course. The difference is that I can accept there might be people in the world who are more intelligent than I am, Lisa. A concept you seem to struggle with.”

I’d like to think I’m handling this conversation with the dignity and grace befitting a professor of an esteemed institution but instinctively I let out a kind of growl that makes me think of my dad when my mom would turn the TV off.

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