What if the only way to cure human suffering is to sacrifice the family?
Evolution is a blind, indifferent architect that designed humans for survival, not well-being. Aris Thorne, the chillingly charismatic leader of the Association for Rational Transformation (ART), intends to fix this design flaw. In a secret eugenics program, he aims to eradicate the biological basis of suffering, ushering in an era of engineered bliss. But this utopia demands a steep price: the end of biological parenthood. Members do not have their own children; they are assigned optimized embryos to raise, sacrificing blood ties for the higher aim.
Bioinformatician Leo Brooks has spent his life trying to quantify and cure his own deep-seated melancholy. When he discovers his missing parents were ART defectors, he teams up with historian Clara Wilson to expose the organization's deadly secrets.
As Leo faces off against Thorne, he is confronted with a terrifying realization. The villain's flawless, cold logic speaks directly to his own desire for a cure, forcing him to ask: if we can engineer a perfect world, do we have the right to refuse?
Written by a scientist from the field, this piece offers a chillingly plausible, visionary look at the next stage of human evolution, and raises thought-provoking questions about the lengths we will go to escape our own biology. It challenges readers to confront the rapidly approaching ethical dilemmas of our own tomorrow.