A Deep-Sea DNA Test Matched Us Too Closely, Then the Lab Tried to Erase It-mochi

The first question sounded harmless enough when I typed it.

Why can a spacecraft travel more than 15 billion miles away from Earth, while the deepest known point of our ocean sits only about 6.8 miles beneath us?

It was supposed to be the opening line of a public education report.

Clean. Curious. Safe.

The kind of sentence a federal research office could publish on a Tuesday morning without anyone losing sleep.

Then I added the second question.

Why did we learn to look so far outward before we learned to look all the way down?

That was when my supervisor stopped reading.

Dr. Nolan Vance removed his glasses, folded them once, and placed them beside my printed report.

“Delete it.”

His voice did not rise.

That was the thing about him. He never sounded angry when he was threatening someone.

He sounded administrative.

I stood across from him inside Lab 4C, a restricted analysis room attached to an ocean-mapping program outside Silver Spring, Maryland. The walls were white. The floors were polished gray. The glass observation window looked into a second room filled with monitors, sample coolers, and two technicians pretending not to listen.

A storm had rolled through earlier, and rain ticked against the narrow windows behind the blinds.

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