by: Robert Nalley | Complete Story | Last updated Jun 15, 2024
Chapter Description: The virus causing age regression was not intended to do that, but came from other motivations.
Tales
from the ARVInn: The Beginning
Professor Janos
Kadalys, from Faculty Bulletin, 2048, Universita Carpatia1 |
Biological
Sciences building, Universita Carpatia, 20522 |
Unfortunately,
he could find no true ‘magic bullet’ that would solve what he saw as a great
barrier to greater knowledge—the fact that he, like everyone, was limited to
just a short period of time to create great work and couldn’t pass along all
that he had learned well enough for someone to continue it. He became more and more extreme in his work,
trying to stem the onward march of the years.
It
is probable that he actually never knew himself that he had succeeded. His work had led him to such obscure methods
and procedures that even he didn’t fully understand some of them. By the late 2040’s, with retirement being
discussed, he was abandoning more and more safety protocols in his
research.
It
was only after some fifty years of biological detective work by WHO and many
individuals that the origin of the Age Regression Virus was traced back to
him. It had spread from so many starting
points all over the world at nearly the same time that it had totally confused
all the procedures in place to observe such events.
As
reconstructed by the medical detectives, it seems that it came about from a
simple error, a bit of miscalculation and just plain bad luck. Professor Kadalys had been working with
viruses as vectors for carrying changes to various genes, trying to influence
their breakdown over time in the process of aging. In trying to get the specific changes he
wanted, he developed viruses that targeted certain receptors in cells, but not
others.
His
laboratory notes, such as remained by then in the Universita Carpatia archive,
indicated he had had high hopes for certain viral results, but could not get
the proof he wanted. What he didn’t know
was that he had succeeded, but his tests were not fine enough to see the
changes being made. His virus did work,
but not on everyone. Because they were
to be selective in the receptors, they would not work on everyone. The points were actually found in only a
small percentage of the total population, as the result of one of a series of
minor mutations. Needless to say, when
the realization came to later scientific investigators, his research was
immediately classified and hidden away by the Czech government, with the hope
of keeping his techniques away from biological warfare research.
The Kadalys
estate is today governmental property, with restricted access. Shown is his residence, 2073.3 |
Kodalys' classes were notable for discussions in depth.4 |
As
we know today, the virus is stubborn in its refusal to perish. It also has a tendency to attach itself to a
host who can spread it without developing its most serious effects. With an incubation period ranging from hours
to weeks in some cases, it has defeated many attempts at contract tracing. Additionally, for those who do not possess
one of the key DNA mutations, the worst effect is hardly more than the common
cold.
It
is probable that, of that class of 28 graduate students, some had begun to
develop the condition before the term ended nine days later. What is known, after decades of research, is
that the virus was carried from the university into at least eighteen countries
on four continents. Compounding this was
the number of connecting flights, railways and buses our bargain-seeking
student carriers made use of as they traveled.
This led to further spread among fellow passengers, crews and airport
and station workers.
Professor
Kadalys himself was not to know of any of this.
As he left the university after turning in his last semester grades and
reports a few days later, he died in a traffic accident on the highway before
Kadalys' Papers,
University Archives 5 |
Exhibit A: Living members of the
initial ARV cohort
1. A.L., b. 2027, United States. Apparent age: approx. 28
months
2. K.G., b. 2026, Germany.
Apparent age: 5 years
3. R.C., b. 2027, Argentina. Apparent age: 11 years.
4. F.T., b. 2027, China. Apparent age: 21 years.
K.G., of Augsburg, Germany, 2105. From
the cover of his book,
Patient Null, Kind für immer, ©2106. Used by permission.6
Prepared
20 September 2110
Credits:
1 Image by
michael pacitti from Pixabay
2 Image by
Neo98 from Pixabay
3 Image by
Daria Nepriakhina from Pixabay
4 Image by
Brodie Vissers from Freerangestock
6 Image by
Tomasz Mikołajczyk from Pixabay
6 Image by Public
Domain Pictures at Pexels
Tales from the ARVInn, 1
by: Robert Nalley | Complete Story | Last updated Jun 15, 2024
Stories of Age/Time Transformation