Thanks, everyone. My question has been answered. I’d hoped eyes could go from brown to blue but that isn't possible. I do note Max says his eyes went from brown to green but I suspect that does not happen in people with brown skin.
Possibilities:
1. it’s an alt universe. In this universe, eyes can go from brown to blue or green, at least in white people, and that is how the king knows.
2. I once read a story where a maharajah or king who lived in the time of the British Raj had several wives. He was quite old but his latest wife was young. He sent her to be tested to see why she wasnt conceiving when all his other wives had given him several children.
The doc ran tests and found the king could not have kids. Maybe because of low sperm count.
The doc was in a dilemma. If he told the king the truth, the king would realize all the kids he had with his other wives weren’t his after all.
So the doc went to the oldest wife, the senior one, and said, “Tell the youngest to conceive the same way the rest of you did.”
In no time the youngest wife was pregnant.
I read this story years ago in the Times of India. I think writers never really forget anything. Some corner of their mind will dig out some snippet they read and hand it to them when they need it.
So can I use this? How about if my story goes that the king sends his latest wife to the doc. Doc learns King is infertile.
Doc tells king. King realizes none of the kids are his. He decides to kill each one to punish the mothers. When one child escapes the first murder attempt, he tries to figure out who tried to kill him and on whose orders. When he learns the whole story, he then has to protect himself and his siblings, none of who are related to him by blood but who he naturally wants to protect from the crazed king.
For the king to be crazy enough to do this, he first has to be absolutely sure no child is his. What condition could he have that would make it clear none of the kids could be his? I read:
“Other sperm problems affect male fertility. The sperm may not be viable—that is, structurally healthy and capable of fertilization; it may be viable but unable to move correctly; it may contain the wrong number of chromosomes, the packets of genetic information; or it may have been stored too long after its formation. The vas deferens (tubes that carry sperm from the testes to the penis) may be blocked because of a past infection or injury. The man may not be able to ejaculate or his ejaculation may propel the sperm backward into his bladder rather than out through the penis. Other causes of male infertility include insufficient hormone levels, which can be supplemented with oral hormone treatments; prostate disease; untreated diabetes; or other medical conditions.”
I guess I better say the doc found his sperm is totally unviable. I’m a little reluctant because I didn't see this universe as being so medically advanced that the doc would even be able to diagnose something like this.
I googled When was totally unviable sperm first discovered and When was low sperm count first discovered. I found:
“In the 1960s, highly accurate genetic paternity testing became a possibility when HLA typing was developed, which compares the genetic fingerprints on white blood cells between the child and alleged parent. HLA tests could be done with 80% accuracy, but could not distinguish between close relatives.”
A world ruled by kings doesn't sound like it would be modern enough to know the above, but I guess it’s my universe, so I could just say the doc discovered the king is totally infertile, so the kids could not be his. One line should be enough to explain it without going into details of sperm etc.
what do you think of the above idea? is it workable?