Elara’s hands went cold. Silas had spliced human neural tissue into a plant. He’d turned a fruit into a biological hard drive for memories.
For three years, the Institute had published “Issues”—peer-reviewed, ethically sanctioned studies on genetically modified organisms. Issue 1 was drought-resistant wheat. Issue 9 was a blight-proof orange. They were dull, safe, and public.
Issue 17 was different. It had no author listed. It had no abstract. And it had been deleted from every server, every backup, and every printed log the day after it was created. Officially, it never existed. Unofficially, the Institute’s founder, Dr. Silas Thorne, had called it “the fruit that sees you back.” Issue 17 Forbidden Fruit.rar
Elara double-clicked.
She scrolled down.
Day 1: K. Meeks ate one aril. Reported tasting “honey and copper.” Immediately recalled her sixth birthday—not her memory, but her mother’s. She wept for an hour. Day 3: K. Meeks ate three arils. Experienced a fire that destroyed a barn in 1987. The memory belonged to a stranger in Oregon. Day 5: K. Meeks refused to return the remaining seeds. She was found in the greenhouse, having consumed seventeen arils. Her pupils were fixed. She whispered names of people she’d never met, described cities she’d never visited, and cried in languages she’d never learned. She was no longer one person. She was a chorus. Conclusion: The Forbidden Fruit does not grant wisdom. It dissolves the self. Recommend permanent quarantine.
Beneath the image were the clinical notes. Elara’s hands went cold
Field Test Results – Subject: K. Meeks, Volunteer.
Genetic lineage: Spliced with bioluminescent neural tissue from Homo sapiens (donor: Thorne, S.). Result: Fruit produces neurochemical dopamine response upon visual consumption. Each seed, when ingested, records the eater’s sensory memory for 72 hours and transfers it to the next consumer. They were dull, safe, and public