A week into the new order, a mother found a zombified man on her porch. He tended her toddler’s fever with mechanical tenderness and left before dawn. The mother wept, torn between gratitude and an ache she could not name. A nurse in the central ward hummed a lullaby to a roster of neutral faces each night. A boy learned to draw the zombified’s faces, sketching the same distant eyes over and over.
We tried to reverse it. We formulated counter-serums aimed at restoring limbic function. They worked in vitro, then in rodents, then in a man who had been vaccinated three days earlier. For the first hour after administration, he wept for hours of lost memories—names he could not place, birthdays he suddenly mourned. He staggered toward a window and shouted into the empty street, calling a voice only he remembered. Joy returned, raw and blinding; so did the pain. A week into the new order, a mother
I slept less and thought more. I read my notes again, deeper. The adjuvant targeted a receptor family abundant in limbic tissue—emotional centers. It dampened panic circuits and amplified homeostatic drives. In the body’s calculus, survival spared the species but clipped what made a life human. My work had traded narrative for continuity: less suffering at the cost of story. A nurse in the central ward hummed a