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Chapter no 9

The Rosie Project (Don Tillman, #1)

โ€œI threw her in as a wild card,โ€ said Gene, when I woke him up from the unscheduled sleep he was taking under his desk the next day.

Gene looked terrible and I told him he should refrain from staying up so lateโ€”although for once I had been guilty of the same error. It was important that he eat lunch at the correct time to get his circadian rhythm back on schedule. He had a packed lunch from home, and we headed for a grassy area in the university grounds. I collected seaweed salad, miso soup, and an apple from the Japanese cafรฉ on the way.

It was a ๏ฌne day. Unfortunately this meant that there were a number of females in brief clothing sitting on the grass and walking by to distract Gene. Gene is ๏ฌfty-six years old, although that information is not supposed to be disclosed. At that age, his testosterone should have fallen to a level where his sex drive was signi๏ฌcantly reduced. It is my theory that his unusually high focus on sex is due to mental habit. But human physiology varies, and he may be an exception.

Conversely, I think Gene believes I have an abnormally low sex drive.

๎“is is not true; rather I am not as skilled as Gene in expressing it in a socially appropriate way. My occasional attempts to imitate Gene have been unsuccessful in the extreme.

We found a bench to sit on and Gene commenced his explanation. โ€œSheโ€™s someone I know,โ€ he said.

โ€œNo questionnaire?โ€ โ€œNo questionnaire.โ€

๎“is explained the smoking. In fact, it explained everything. Gene had reverted to the ine๏ฌƒcient practice of recommending acquaintances for dates. My expression must have conveyed my annoyance.

โ€œYouโ€™re wasting your time with the questionnaire. Youโ€™d be better o๏ฌ€ย measuring the length of their earlobes.โ€

Sexual attraction is Geneโ€™s area of expertise. โ€œ๎“ereโ€™s a correlation?โ€ I asked.

โ€œPeople with long earlobes are more likely to choose partners with long earlobes. Itโ€™s a better predictor than IQ.โ€

๎“is was incredible, but much behavior that developed in the ancestral environment seems incredible when considered in the context of the current world. Evolution has not kept up. But earlobes! Could there be a more irrational basis for a relationship? No wonder marriages fail.

โ€œSo, did you have fun?โ€ asked Gene.

I informed him that his question was irrelevant: my goal was to ๏ฌnd a partner and Rosie was patently unsuitable. Gene had caused me to waste an evening.

โ€œBut did you have fun?โ€ he repeated.

Did he expect a di๏ฌ€erent answer to the same question? To be fair, I had not given him a proper answer, but for a good reason. I had not had time to re๏ฌ‚ect on the evening and determine a proper response. I guessed that โ€œfunโ€ was going to be an oversimpli๏ฌcation of a very complex experience.

I provided Gene with a summary of events. As I related the story of the dinner on the balcony, Gene interrupted. โ€œIf you see her againโ€”โ€

โ€œ๎“ere is zero reason for me to see her again.โ€

โ€œIf you see her again,โ€ Gene continued, โ€œitโ€™s probably not a good idea to mention the Wife Project. Since she didnโ€™t measure up.โ€

Ignoring the incorrect assumption about seeing Rosie again, this seemed like good advice.

At that point, the conversation changed direction dramatically, and I did not have an opportunity to ๏ฌnd out how Gene had met Rosie.ย ๎“e reason for the change was Geneโ€™s sandwich. He took a bite, then called out in pain and snatched my water bottle.

โ€œOh shit. Oh shit. Claudia put chilies in my sandwich.โ€

It was di๏ฌƒcult to see how Claudia could make an error of this kind. But the priority was to reduce the pain. Chili is insoluble in water, so drinking from my bottle would not be e๏ฌ€ective. I advised him to ๏ฌnd some oil. We headed back to the Japanese cafรฉ and were not able to have any further conversation about Rosie. However, I had the basic information I needed. Gene had selected a woman without reference to the questionnaire. To see

her again would be in total contradiction to the rationale for the Wife Project.

Riding home, I reconsidered. I could see three reasons that it might be necessary to see Rosie again.

  1. Good experimental design requires the use of a control group. It would be interesting to use Rosie as a benchmark to compare with women selected by the questionnaire.

  2. ๎“e questionnaire had not produced any matches to date. I could interact with Rosie in the meantime.

  3. As a geneticist with access to DNA analysis, and the knowledge to interpret it, I was in a position to help Rosie ๏ฌnd her biological father.

Reasons 1 and 2 were invalid. Rosie was clearly not a suitable life partner.ย ๎“ere was no point in interaction with someone so patently inappropriate. But reason 3 deserved consideration. Using my skills to assist her in a search for important knowledge aligned with my life purpose. I could do it in the time set aside for the Wife Project until a suitable candidate emerged.

In order to proceed, I needed to reestablish contact with Rosie. I did not want to tell Gene that I planned to see her again so soon after telling him that the probability of my doing so was zero. Fortunately, I recalled the name of the bar she worked at: the Marquess of Queensbury.

๎“ere was only one bar of that name, in a back street of an inner suburb. I had already modi๏ฌed the dayโ€™s schedule, canceling my market trip to catch up on the lost sleep. I would purchase a ready-made dinner instead. I am sometimes accused of being in๏ฌ‚exible, but I think this demonstrates an ability to adapt to even the strangest of circumstances.

I arrived at 7:04 p.m. only to ๏ฌnd that the bar did not open until 9:00

p.m.ย Incredible. No wonder people make mistakes at work. Would it be full of surgeons and ๏ฌ‚ight controllers, drinking until after midnight before working the same day?

I ate dinner at a nearby Indian restaurant. By the time I had worked my way through the banquet and returned to the bar, it was 9:27 p.m.ย ๎“ere was a security o๏ฌƒcial at the door, and I prepared myself for a repeat of the

previous night. He examined me carefully, then asked, โ€œDo you know what sort of place this is?โ€

I am quite familiar with bars, perhaps even more familiar than most people. When I travel to conferences, I generally ๏ฌnd a pleasant bar near my hotel and eat and drink there every evening. I replied in the a๏ฌƒrmative and entered.

I wondered if I had come to the right location.ย ๎“e most obvious characteristic of Rosie was that she was female, and the patrons at the Marquess of Queensbury were without exception male. Many were wearing unusual costumes, and I took a few minutes to examine the range. Two men noted me looking at them and one smiled broadly and nodded. I smiled back. It seemed to be a friendly place.

But I was there to ๏ฌnd Rosie. I walked to the bar.ย ๎“e two men followed and sat on either side of me.ย ๎“e clean-shaven one was wearing a cut-o๏ฌ€ย T-shirt and clearly spent time at the gym. Steroids could also have been involved.ย ๎“e one with the mustache wore a leather costume and a black cap.

โ€œI havenโ€™t seen you here before,โ€ said Black Cap.

I gave him the simple explanation. โ€œI havenโ€™t been here before.โ€ โ€œCan I buy you a drink?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re o๏ฌ€ering to buy my drink?โ€ It was an unusual proposition from a stranger, and I guessed that I would be expected to reciprocate in some way. โ€œI think thatโ€™s what I said,โ€ said Black Cap. โ€œWhat can we tempt you

with?โ€

I told him that the ๏ฌ‚avor didnโ€™t matter, as long as it contained alcohol.

As in most social situations, I was nervous.

๎“en Rosie appeared from the other side of the bar, dressed conventionally for her role in a collared black shirt. I was hugely relieved. I had come to the correct place and she was on duty. Black Cap waved to her. He ordered three Budweisers.ย ๎“en Rosie saw me.

โ€œDon.โ€ โ€œGreetings.โ€

Rosie looked at us and asked, โ€œAre you guys together?โ€ โ€œGive us a few minutes,โ€ said Steroid Man.

Rosie said, โ€œI think Donโ€™s here to see me.โ€ โ€œCorrect.โ€

โ€œWell, pardon us interrupting your social life with drinks orders,โ€ Black Cap said to Rosie.

โ€œYou could use DNA,โ€ I said.

Rosie clearly didnโ€™t follow, owing to lack of context. โ€œWhat?โ€ โ€œTo identify your father. DNA is the obvious approach.โ€

โ€œSure,โ€ said Rosie. โ€œObvious. โ€˜Please send me your DNA so I can see if youโ€™re my father.โ€™ Forget it, I was just mouthing o๏ฌ€.โ€

โ€œYou could collect it.โ€ I wasnโ€™t sure how Rosie would respond to the next part of my suggestion. โ€œSurreptitiously.โ€

Rosie went silent. She was at least considering the idea. Or perhaps wondering whether to report me. Her response supported the ๏ฌrst possibility. โ€œAnd whoโ€™s going to analyze it?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m a geneticist.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re saying if I got a sample, you could analyze it for me?โ€ โ€œTrivial,โ€ I said. โ€œHow many samples do we need to test?โ€

โ€œProbably only one. Iโ€™ve got a pretty good idea. Heโ€™s a family friend.โ€

Steroid Man coughed loudly, and Rosie fetched two beers from the refrigerator. Black Cap put a twenty-dollar bill on the counter, but Rosie pushed it back and waved them away.

I tried the cough trick myself. Rosie took a moment to interpret the message this time, but then got me a beer.

โ€œWhat do you need?โ€ she asked. โ€œTo test the DNA?โ€

I explained that normally we would use scrapings from the inner cheek, but that it would be impractical to obtain these without the subjectโ€™s knowledge. โ€œBlood is excellent, but skin scrapings, mucus, urineโ€”โ€

โ€œPass,โ€ said Rosie.

โ€œโ€”fecal material, semenโ€”โ€

โ€œIt keeps getting better,โ€ said Rosie. โ€œI can screw a sixty-year-old family friend in the hope that he turns out to be my father.โ€

I was shocked. โ€œYouโ€™d have sexโ€”โ€

Rosie explained that she was making a joke. On such a serious matter! It was getting busy around the bar, and there were a lot of cough signals happening. An e๏ฌ€ective way to spread disease. Rosie wrote a telephone number on a piece of paper.

โ€œCall me.โ€

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