Vapour Trails

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VAPOUR TRAILS

By Touch the Light

I'm not sure if this qualifies as a tg story or not. I'll warn potential readers now that it's basically a conversation between two brothers in a pub, and makes no reference whatsoever to the transition process as an individual might experience it. Those of you who care to investigate further may think, like I do, that the story's saving grace is its brevity.

VAPOUR TRAILS

This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper

T S Eliot — The Hollow Men

Andrew Nicholls paid for his pint of bitter and carried it across to the table where his brother Keith was flicking through the football section of the Sunday Mirror.

“All right?” he said, pulling out a chair.

“Not so bad,” replied Keith as he frowned at one of the match reports. “Think they’ll go down?”

Andrew’s eye caught the headline dominating the paper’s front page. Another celebrity relationship had turned sour, it seemed.

He took a sip of beer.

“They’ve got a chance if they beat Oxford next week,” he suggested.

“For me it’s the Crewe game,” said Keith. “That’s the one they can’t afford to cock up.”

Andrew murmured his agreement. The truth was, he’d started losing interest in football. The sport was under a death sentence. The same players, all getting that little bit slower with every season that went by. The crowds were dwindling too; youngsters had better things to do with their money these days.

He allowed his gaze to wander as he waited for Keith to finish reading. They both liked drinking here. Staincliffe Park was a relatively affluent estate, built in the late 1980s to house middle-income professionals with young families and high credit ratings. The Kittywake, situated on the edge of the development closest to the sea front, reflected the optimism of that era. The décor was tasteful, the marine paraphernalia that blighted so many of the area’s other pubs kept to a minimum. The piped music was soft and unintrusive. There was a carvery, and a spacious beer garden. The range of single malts available at the bar was a feature Andrew found specially appealing.

Finally Keith put down his newspaper.

“Fancy coming back to ours after we’ve had a couple more?” he asked. “Bev won’t mind. She always makes far too much for the two of us anyway.”

“Another time, maybe,” said Andrew.

“You mean you’re just going to sit in that empty house for the rest of the day with the headphones on and a bottle of cheap plonk beside your elbow?”

Andrew thought about answering, then reconsidered. Keith still didn’t know about the affair.

Thou shalt not uncover the nakedness of thy brother’s wife.

It was an easy enough rule to follow — as Angela had reminded him when she was packing her bags.

Give it a couple of decades and for the vast majority of women that kind of problem would be a thing of the past.

He lifted his glass once again, gulped down a good third of the rich, ruby liquid. Through the door at the opposite end of the pub entered two couples; between them skipped five little girls, all in ribbons and pretty dresses.

“That’s who I feel really sorry for,” said Keith. “They haven’t a clue what the world’s going to be like when they grow up.”

“They’ll just have to adapt. It’ll be better than if it was the other way round.”

“You’re not kidding. There’d be bloody carnage!”

“I was on about the sperm banks,” Andrew said after they’d stopped laughing. “I saw an article the other day where they reckon there’s enough stored up already to keep us going for more than a century. And there’s what…thirty or forty years before the donations stop coming in?”

“It’s still just a stay of execution.”

“Yeah, but where there’s life…”

Keith shook his head.

“We’re being cleansed from the system, Andy. We’ve infected the planet, left our shit all over it and now it’s decided to flush us down the pan before we can do any more damage. Isn’t only us either. It’s dogs, cats, rabbits, birds, fish, the lot. The entire food chain’s about to be fucked, simply because we’re at the top of it.”

“You make it sound like nature’s doing this deliberately.”

“How do we know it isn’t? We’ve had nearly twenty years to find a rational explanation for what’s happening. The finest brains in every country working their socks off, spending billions upon billions, and they’ve got precisely nowhere. Maybe they’re not supposed to.” Keith drained the last of his beer and got to his feet. “Going for a tab?”

Andrew followed his brother outside. He lit up, shielding the flame of his lighter from the freshening breeze. Overhead, two vapour trails sliced through the near cloudless sky. Their clean geometry was a testament to humanity’s mastery of its environment, visible proof of its ability to overcome the most daunting of obstacles.

Suddenly he felt a chill. He’d always believed that his life formed part of an ongoing story, that no matter how insignificant his achievements may have been, they would add to those of a species destined for greatness. He couldn’t accept that the whole of human history was just another evolutionary cul-de-sac.

Tell me, Muse, of the man of many devices, who wandered far and wide after he had sacked Troy’s sacred city…

Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow…

The alteration of motion is ever proportional to the motive force impressed…

Four thousand holes in Blackburn, Lancashire…

That’s one small step for a man…

That it had all been for nothing.

Could there be a spark of hope in the theory that was gaining popularity on certain web sites, where an increasing number of people subscribed to the idea that mankind was being given one last chance to mend its ways by becoming womankind?

Or were they merely clutching at non-existent straws?

Andrew glanced back at the sky. The trails were slowly dissipating, their definition diminishing.

They didn’t belong there.

END NOTES:

The five consecutive quotes above are from The Odyssey, The Gospel of St Matthew, The Principia Mathematica, A Day In The Life and of course the Apollo XI moon landing.

The earlier Bible quote can be found in the Book of Leviticus.

This story was partly inspired by the feature film 'Children Of Men'.

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Comments

A most compelling story.

A subject that many have debated with the introduction of Eco-friendly and recycling technology.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

We're Just Animals

It wasn't a comment on modern technology as such, more on our tendency to leave a mess wherever we go. As all animals do. It's just that we do it on a much larger scale.

Ban nothing. Question everything.

This Was Definitely A One-Off

Thanks Dorothy. But this was a one-off, an exploration of how two ordinary people might react twenty years after it became clear that the species was doomed. Not by a rogue asteroid or an expanding sun but the spontaneous abortion of male embryos across the planet. Life's going on because it has to.

Ban nothing. Question everything.

Very Cool!

But seriously and not to attack men, the problem of no boys being born and then the absence of sperm for artificial insemination, doesn't seem to threaten our humyn race that much. Basically to continue reproduction, all that has to happen is for a fertile egg nucleus to be injected into another fertile egg then placed back in its mother. The injected nucleus might have to be stripped of some of its components and it might have to be injected into the whole egg's nucleus, rather than just into its cytoplasm, but science/agriculture is almost capable of this right now. It would take less than ten years for this to be taking place in medical centers all over the world. There would be some cost to the medical funding source; that and the elimination of unplanned pregnancies should cause world population to drop. Just this might save our species from the larger problem of our turning the Earth into an environment unfriendly to medium to large life forms.

A bigger problem would be if boys, but no girls were born. An artificial womb and placenta growing procedure would need developing; it should be grown for the perspective male mom's stem cells. Probably new sex/pregnancy/lactation endocrine organs would be needed; getting shots all the time might not give fine enough hormone level control. This problem might take twenty or twenty five years to provide a reliable medical fix. In the mean time, living wimyn would go into menopause; if there were no male moms yet, even a bank of frozen eggs or frozen embryos wouldn't help. OTOH, Menopause for the most recently born girls would probably be fifty years or more away. Plenty of time for male mom creation.

Both of these sci-fi gender problems pale in comparison to our already existing problems: global heating and climate/weather catastrophes, lost of clean fresh water and fertile soil, habitat and life form mass destruction and the humyn nature of the majority just not able to comprehend or work toward solutions to such planet scale, long term problems.

Oh, thanks for the story!

Hugs and Bright Blessings,
Renee

I Thought As Much

I had an idea something like that was possible. I didn't bother researching it because I wanted to concentrate on the mood rather than the science. I'm aiming for the level of J G Ballard and it's like climbing Mount Everest with two broken legs.

Ban nothing. Question everything.

Even Men are Mostly Female

They give us the business about MEN being superior to women and all that. However the X chromosome is around 1200 genes, and the Y is around 48 genes. We'd all be female except for the flood of Testosterone that deforms an otherwise generally lovely body. All Zygotes are female until the last third of the first trimester, and then disaster strikes around half of us. OH the shame !

G

Never Did Biology At School

Sadly I never did Biology at school. It was only covered in the General Science course they gave to kids who had no chance of passing their O levels in Physics and Chemistry. I had to look up 'zygote' in the dictionary, and even then I was none the wiser. A diploid cell resulting from the fusion of two haploid gametes. Er, sorry...? Then it said a fertilized ovum and the penny dropped.

Ban nothing. Question everything.

Excellent subject.

I covered something similar to this in my story Mare's Tales on FM in 2001. One surviving fertile male (Passing asteroid with radiation,)and the subsequent search for him as he sneaks around the planet doing secret impregnations whilst the 'authorities' go frantic trying to find him.

I also wrote another novel some thirty years ago (The lonely seeds.)but it never succeeded in getting into print.

It's a subject that has always fascinated me and I'll probably come back to it at some later date.

Excellent take on the subject. Thanks for presenting another angle and food for thought.

Bevs.

Hugs.

bev_1.jpg

Y: The Last Man

Did you ever see 'Y: The Last Man', a comic strip written by Brian K Vaughan? It's about the only survivor of a plague that kills every living thing with a Y chromosome - except the guy's pet monkey. You'd think he might be able to look forward to a rather cosy existence - in fact it turns out to be anything but.

The first 9 issues are on You Tube. As these things go, it's not bad at all.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gf-26pirN1k&feature=share&lis...

Ban nothing. Question everything.

It's all about balance

Angharad's picture

and losing the attitude that we're special - we're not, except in our ability to despoil on larger scales that anything short of a tsunami. The sexes need to be in balance, the populations need to be in balance and the biosystems need to be in balance. Isn't it nice to think people are volunteering for a one way trip to Mars, so we can mess that up as well as Earth and the Moon.

There are too many of us consuming too much of the earth's resources:

When the Last Tree Is Cut Down,
the Last Fish Eaten,
and the Last Stream Poisoned,
You Will Realize That You Cannot Eat Money

Sounds about right to me, pity six billion others can't see it.

Nice story.

Angharad

Angharad