Second year, he decided, was going to be fun again.
He erased the whiteboard slowly, leaving one corner untouched: a small, wobbly mitochondrion with a question mark inside it. Then he reopened his laptop, deleted slide seven, and started rewriting his lecture from scratch.
Finch felt a small, unfamiliar thrill. Not annoyance. Not defensiveness. Recognition .
At 2:55 PM, Finch stopped. The clock showed five minutes early—a first in his career. 2nd year biology lectures
The bell rang. As students filed out, someone actually clapped—just once, awkwardly, then stopped. Finch didn’t mind.
“You’re absolutely right,” he said. He closed his laptop. “Class, turn to page 287 in your textbook. Now draw a large ‘X’ through the entire diagram.”
Mira stood, walked to the screen, and pointed a purple-nailed finger at the cristae—the folded inner membrane. “Textbooks show these as static shelves. But last month, Nature published cryo-EM data showing they oscillate. They pulse. The folds change shape depending on calcium concentration. Which means the electron transport chain complexes aren’t fixed in place—they’re moving relative to each other in real time.” Second year, he decided, was going to be fun again
The room went silent. Twenty-eight other second-year students snapped awake. Even the guy in the back who’d been scrolling through football scores looked up.
Finch adjusted his glasses. “Go on.”
Professor Alistair Finch had been delivering the same second-year biology lecture on cellular metabolism for eleven years. He knew the exact moment when eyes would glaze over (slide seven: the Krebs cycle diagram), when pens would stop scribbling (slide twelve: ATP synthase rotation), and when the first quiet yawn would ripple from the back row (slide four, without fail). He was a good lecturer—clear, thorough, even witty in a dry, British way—but he was fighting a force older than mitochondria: the 2 PM post-lunch stupor. Finch felt a small, unfamiliar thrill
“For next week,” he said, “everyone read the Nature paper. Mira, you’ll lead the first ten minutes of discussion.”
“So,” he said, slightly out of breath. “The Krebs cycle still works. ATP still gets made. But the story is messier than I told you last year. And that’s the real second-year lesson: everything you learned in first year is a lie. A useful lie. But a lie nonetheless.”
He looked at Mira. She was smiling, purple pen hovering over her notebook.
He spent the next forty minutes off-script. He drew wild, frantic diagrams on the whiteboard: oscillating membranes, drifting protein complexes, mitochondria that looked more like jellyfish than factories. He brought up the Nature paper on the projector and walked them through the supplementary materials. Students who hadn’t spoken since the first week asked questions. The football-score guy took notes.