"Good enough." Boots under one arm, computer pad under the other, he shuffled out, trying to keep himself from sliding on the tiles.
When the door swung shut, Aria let her shoulders sag. She couldn't have said who wore her out more, Allenden or Evran.
Words and plenty of them. Iyal and her cohorts honked like geese sometimes about the contents of Aria's blood and bones.
"You are saying that some person decided how I should be?" Aria had asked Iyal once.
Iyal had come into the lab just to stare at her. A recent analysis had just come out of the machines and Iyal was more confused than usual.
"Basically, yes. Not you, personally, of course, but at least one set of your ancestors. Probably more than one."
"That's not unheard of." Iyal leaned against the wall. "I've met GE descendants before. What's incredible about you is what your…engineers bred for."
"What is that?"
"I don't know." She threw up her hands. "That's the problem. Usually it's obvious. Strength, speed, intelligence, creativity. You, though, you make no sense."
Zur-Iyal spread her hands. "Let me try to explain this. We've talked about cells, right? Cells in a body communicate via a series of messengers. Chemicals emitted by one cell cause a reaction in second cell. That second cell might undergo an internal change, or it might send off its own messenger. That's extremely simplified, of course."
"Of course," said Aria humbly.
Zur-Iyal's eyebrows went up. Her puckered mouth twitched into a half smile. "Deserved that, I suppose." Iyal was quicker than most of them to pick up on when Aria was acting. Around Iyal she had to be extremely careful how she played the Notouch.
"All right," Iyal went on, "your people are, obviously, from the same Evolution Point as mine. That should mean you have the same messengers in your cells, plus or minus three or four to allow for your native environment.
"As far as I can tell, your cells will react to twenty separate messengers that aren't present in any other known Human variant. Then there's your brain." She shook her head. "The brain, as we know it, is a complicated, disorganized organ with three or four backups for every function. It stores information, but it stores it wherever there's room and reacts according to a branch of chaos theory. That doesn't even begin to cover how it decides whether the information gets stored as short-term, or long-term, or muscular memory." She scowled at Aria. Aria didn't flinch. She had learned fairly early on that Zur-Iyal's scowls had nothing to do with her personally. The woman was annoyed with her cells, or her brain, or whatever it was that she couldn't understand today. "Your brain, on the other hand, is more tightly organized than a Vitae datastore. I can predict, PREDICT, where a given piece of information is going to end up, down to the cell. Your short-term memory is ridiculously huge, and your long-term memory defies description, and you've got no backups." She frowned even more deeply. "You should be a flipping genius, but you're not. You should be totally impossible, but you're not. Although for the life of me I don't know why." Again she shook her head. "I find it hard to believe that someone so carefully constructed has no idea of her function." Zur-Iyal looked at her very hard, as if trying to pull the ideas out with her eyes.
"Would help if I could, Zur-Iyal," Aria told her honestly. "But there's too much I don't understand."
"I was afraid you were going to say that." Iyal had sighed and stumped out again.