PROGENITOR: a fiction in the style of science It happened on a particularly breezy spring day in a radiantly blooming garden that there lived an insect. Not an insignificant insect, mind you, which I can tell by the way you're reading this is exactly the sort you were initially picturing. In fact insects are far more significant than most of us give them credit for. The dobsonfly, for instance. One look and you're bound to say, "Now there is a significant insect." Right before running away from it. Unfortunate, you know, because that particular dobsonfly really wanted to be friends with you. Oh, well, it thought. Back to the dobsonfly equivalent of internet dating sites. The dobsonfly equivalent of internet dating sites, we should mention, consists mainly of flying about until one smells a dobsonfly of the opposite sex, then following the smell to the source and trying to manipulate it into a copulatory position with oneself. Not unlike our human dating sites, really. We can only assume that this is rousingly unsuccessful most of the time, as we've only ever seen one dobsonfly in person, and it seemed preoccupied with the state of its own dwindling population. But enough about dobsonfly significance. Let us turn toward the subject of our own insignificance. In the maddening scope of the universe, you are no more significant than one of the billions of atoms that comprise a single strand from a fly's leg hair. "Take THAT!" drones the buzz of an insect chorus. And I agree. Never let size be the determinate factor in your estimation of a being's worth. Single-celled microbes have lain waste to entire populations. So it happened that there was a very significant insect, significant because it carried a microbe that would ultimately lay waste to an entire population. But also significant because of what it would become. A butterfly? No. Good guess though. A butterfly isn't one thing becoming another. It's just the first thing reaching its full potential. It's the caterpillar's best self. No, our insect was about to become something entirely different because its very DNA was about to change. Its DNA and the DNA of the hitherto harmless disease it carried. The catalyst for this change was a wormhole. Not the theoretical space travel sort, but the very common sort found in your own garden, tunneled by real worms. But what sort of insect could fly into a tiny hole tunneled by real worms? A gnat? Why not? A gnat. It was no trouble, as the hole itself was abnormally large because the worms who tunneled it had themselves been privy to slight alterations in the bits of their DNA that dictated size. And so, eager to show off their newly altered bits of DNA to the neighbors, they abandoned the wormhole and went squiggling off to be swallowed up immediately by robins and sparrows, then somewhat digested before being vomited back into the mouths of those robins' and sparrows' sons and daughters. In all the confusion, neither the robins, the sparrows nor the worms saw the gnat steal into the wormhole, but steal he did. Yes, he. Indeed the gnat of our story was male. Not that it should matter to you, who likely have such little experience in gnat genitalia that the knowledge of its sex will have no bearing on our tale whatever. Oh, but it does! For the only reason our little gnat corrected course and dove for the worm tunnel is that he spotted what he thought was the intergnational symbol for 'male' on the ground by the hole, and it happened that the he fancied a wee. But this was not the intergnational symbol for 'male', at least not deliberately. One of the scrappier worms had put up a particularly commendable fight before being swallowed by its predator, and the stray bits of worm gut that lay on the ground by the hole commemorating its struggle coincidentally happened to resemble the intergnational symbol for 'male'. And so the gnat entered and began looking about for the entomological equivalent of a urinal. But there was no urinal. What he did find was a wormhole, and this time it was the theoretical space travel sort. He traversed it, mistaking it for the doorway to a lavatory stall that might offer him some measure of privacy. Instead of privacy he found an alien world peopled by a race of super-intelligent geometry, intergalactic origami that infused him with a working aptitude for their particular language, which happened to be entirely olfactory in nature. A high council was convened, and on a platform under a spotlight the gnat gazed in awe up at all the angled shapes that glowed at him in a hovering semicircle from the surrounding darkness. Vice Chancellor Rhombus emitted an odor that conveyed thusly: "Master Lawrence Gnathanson, as this insect has emitted a smell indicating his preference to be called, comes to us from a world of famine and pestilence, of suffering and of war. Of regurgitating one's prey into the mouths of one's sons and daughters. Let us increase the size of Master Lawrence's mind and populate it with all the solutions to the problems which yet plague his... Hang on, do I smell on him that hitherto harmless disease that we've all been warned about not having developed an immunity to? OH SHIT OH SHIT OHSHITOHSHIT..." And instantly the entire population, every last trapezoid of them, fell dead, leaving only Master Lawrence Gnathanson, on whose shoulders the task of repopulating their world now fell. So he began to lay gnat eggs all over the angled corpses of his decaying hosts. Curious, isn't it? All this time you thought he was a male. Well, I warned you about your ignorance regarding gnat genitalia. He must've been ignorant himself, for it was his own eagerness to use the men's lavatory that brought him to this world in the first place. Though perhaps he was a male, and it was merely a slight alteration in his DNA that ultimately enabled him to lay eggs. Well, no matter. His eggs were everywhere now, and soon they would hatch. Hatch and breed and feed and breed, mutating, growing, thriving, spreading, changing, over eon upon eon, until eventually, over billions of years, his descendants evolved into that marvel of the natural world, the curious form of life now commonly known as Sir David Attenborough. The moral? Don't be so hubristic about your DNA alterations that you can't wait to show the neighbors. If there's one thing your neighbors hate, it's having to wee and rushing into what they thought was a men's lavatory only to find no urinals at all, misled by your coincidentally-shaped-like-the-international-symbol-for-male guts above the door. Oh, well. I suppose now they'll just have to piss all over themselves.