This could be monumental.
Finally, after five years, he'd worked out seemingly all of the kinks.
The formulas were accurate and the solution was stable.
Nearly all the test runs on the lab rats had positive outcomes and the solution was traveling efficiently through the blood stream. The only problem that remained was finding a human to implant the solution in. Based on all of his research with the rats, the particles would only stay in the blood stream long enough if they were injected into an infant. Luckily, Elise was under the impression that her newborn daughter was at the park with her father, which gave him the time he needed.
As he stuck the syringe into the baby's delicate forearm, she squirmed a bit in his arms. He pressed down on the top of the needle and watched as the blue fluid entered the child's vein. After a few minutes of anxious observation, the child remained stable and showed no sign of rejection of the solution. "That's my girl" he whispered.
