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Charles Scott glared down at him with a glint in his
green eyes that felt like a warning, and Jeremiah replayed in his head the
man’s ambiguous threat during their first meeting several weeks before.
“You
now know as much about this project as anyone else involved,” he’d said. “It wouldn’t do to have
too many people walking around with this kind of information. Our investors
have a tendency to get nervous.”
Although
Scott had quickly followed that remark with the matter of Jeremiah’s
substantial compensation, there was no mistaking the implication: the moment
he’d been told about the cloning project Jeremiah was already in. That first
meeting hadn’t been an invitation so much as an orientation, and the contract
he’d later signed had been a formality, at best. And the entire thing had done
nothing but gain momentum from that moment on.
Dr. Pike
continued to affix the wires to Jeremiah’s head. Jeremiah focused on the man’s
gleaming black hair and the deep brown of his sure, professional hands, and he
struggled to remember the allure of the $10 million payout he’d get at
the end of the whole thing. That kind of money could fix a lot of problems. It
would change things. The prospect of that fortune had been enough to make him
turn away from principles he thought were unshakable. Every man has his price,
he supposed.
Somewhere in the back of his mind he also acknowledged
the real temptation of a twelve-month sabbatical from his own life. It had
seduced him every bit as much as the money had. Maybe more. Between a job that
had already begun to make him question his own morals, and a marriage that felt
increasingly more like a lie, stress was eating him alive. And into his lap
fell a chance to just walk away from all of it—without consequence and without
blame. A free pass. He could simply walk away without anyone even knowing he
was gone. There isn’t a man alive, he told himself, who would have refused.
Despite the ethical question, despite that human cloning was illegal the world
over, it would have tempted anyone.
Dr. Pike injected the clone with Meld and then turned
wordlessly to Jeremiah with the second syringe poised above his left shoulder.
Jeremiah closed his eyes and rolled up his sleeve.
After the initial stab of the needle, he felt nothing.
Which is not to say he didn’t feel anything; he literally felt nothing. Seconds after the injection,
he became aware of a total emptiness, like a towering black wave that
threatened to sink him into an immeasurable void. The experience was unlike
anything he’d ever known. He imagined an astronaut suddenly untethered from his
ship, floating helplessly into unending darkness. Without thinking, he
immediately felt his body recoil. His mind screamed against it.
I’m dying!
From
impossibly far away, he heard Dr. Pike say something about a heart rate and
felt the slight pressure of a hand on his shoulder. He couldn’t see
anything of the hospital room anymore. He was drowning in the blackness. His
chest felt suddenly constricted. He fought just to find his breath.
“This is all perfectly normal, Mr. Adams. You have
nothing to worry about. Concentrate on the sound of my voice. Nod if you can
hear me.”
With considerable effort, Jeremiah managed what he hoped
was a nod of his head. He was suddenly gripped by the alarming certainty that
if he couldn’t communicate somehow, he’d be lost—swept away forever.
“Good. Good. Listen to my voice. It will keep you
grounded.” Pike still sounded far away, but Jeremiah nodded again and struggled
to focus. “What you are experiencing is to be expected. Do you remember when
you took the Meld with Dr. Young? Do you remember the way you could feel her
thoughts for the first few minutes?”
He nodded. It had been an unnerving thing to perceive her
consciousness mixing with his like that. Flashes from her mind—odd, alien
things like the feel of a blister on the back of her right heel, the familiar
gleam in the eye of an old man he’d never seen—had swirled into the very
structure of his own mind and fought for a place to settle. He had railed
against that, too, and she had grounded him by flashing a penlight in his face,
making him focus on that while the Meld took effect. Afterward, once he had
sunk in, it had been easier.
“This is no different than what you experienced then,”
Pike said. “This time, though, you are connected to an empty mind. There’s
nothing there. But the more you resist, the longer this will take. You need to
relax, Mr. Adams. Give in to it.”
Jeremiah nodded again and then shook his head with as
much grit as he could muster. How does one give in to this? He didn’t think he
could do it.
“Once your thoughts begin transferring into the mind of the
clone it will be easier for you,” Pike urged. “Focus on a memory, as I
suggested. Something vivid. It will help to fill that void you’re experiencing
now. It will give you something to hang on to.”
Without the benefit of his full faculties, Jeremiah had
little choice but to grab the last thing he’d been thinking about—his initial
conversation with Charles Scott, the day all of this began.
He’d been surprised when he’d received an invitation to
lunch from ViMed’s head of Engineering. The man was an icon in the science
world, and although he’d quoted him a hundred times for the company, Jeremiah had
never actually met him. He’d been intrigued enough to accept the invitation,
especially when Scott had told him it involved a “proposition that could make
him a very wealthy man.”
Flashes of that encounter and snatches of conversation
now flitted through his mind like so many fireflies. He fought to catch them.
“We’ve
been watching you, Mr. Adams.”
“All we
ask is one year of your life. Isn’t that worth $10 million?”
“We can
do this. The science exists. And with Meld, the clone will even share your
thought patterns… Your own mother won’t know the difference.”
“This
is sanctioned by powerful people—we have millions in secret federal backing.
There are billions more in eventual funding… There’s no need to be so
suspicious, Mr. Adams.”
From
somewhere far away, Jeremiah heard Dr. Pike repeating his name. He had been so
engulfed in his efforts to hold on to the memory that he’d almost forgotten
where he was. As soon as he realized it, the void loomed again in his mind.
“Mr.
Adams,” Pike said, “you’ve got to listen to me. The clone cannot pick up on any
memory of the experiment. What you’re thinking about is not going to help. You
need to think about something else, some memory that won’t be filtered.
His mind is still empty.”
Jeremiah panicked. He couldn’t think. And now that he
wasn’t focused on anything, the blackness began to take over again, creeping
closer and threatening to swallow him. He fought for breath.
“Relax, Mr. Adams,” Pike said. “Think about your job here
at ViMed. Remember something the clone can actually use. Something he’ll need
to know.”
He felt a dull jab at his shoulder.
“This should help. I’ve given you a mild sedative. Take a
few deep breaths. Concentrate on your breathing.”
With everything in him, Jeremiah tried to turn his mind
away from the void that seemed to be all around him. He inhaled deeply and
tried to focus on the rise of his own chest. Exhaled, and he felt his chest
fall.
“Very good, Mr. Adams. Very good. Pulse is returning to
normal. Deep breaths. Now, think about a typical day at work. Something
ordinary and mundane.”
Inhale. Exhale. After a moment, Jeremiah began to relax
and, as the sedative took hold, he found he could let his mind wander without
the frantic thought that he’d never get it back. An oddly comforting fog seemed
to expand in front of him, pushing the blackness away slightly, and Jeremiah
retreated into it.
He began to think about the morning of the Meld
fiasco—the day the New Jersey housewife had killed herself. The press had been
circling. He’d arrived at his office with a terse mandate from his superiors
to “get these fuckers off our back” and no idea how to accomplish that. It
hadn’t been lost on him that not a single soul seemed bothered enough to stop
and feel sorry about it, and he’d taken a quick moment behind his office door
to offer silent condolences. It wasn’t thirty seconds before someone had come
knocking, pushing him to get something done.
Weeks before, he’d heard talk of Meld being used to
detect brain activity in a sixteen-year-old football player who had been
comatose for nearly six months. Time to cash in. He tracked down the doctor
somewhere in Delaware and the man started gushing about Meld, calling it
“magical,” “a godsend” and “the most important medical advance of a generation.”
“After so many weeks,” he said, “the parents were
hopeless.”
Meld was a last resort before pulling the plug, and it
gave them the first clear signs of neural activity in the boy.
“Not only was he aware and awake in there, but he was cognizant
of everything that was going on around him—including the fact that his parents
were losing hope. He even heard them talking about funeral arrangements at one
point. The kid was scared, terrified. He was begging for his life in there.
That’s what I saw when I took the Meld with him. Meld absolutely saved his
life. There is no doubt in my mind.”
Jeremiah had almost smiled. It was pure gold. A few hours
later, the story was in the hands of every major news outlet, and that doctor
was spending his fifteen minutes of fame touting Meld as “a medical miracle.”
Jeremiah focused on that now. Maybe Meld did have some
silver lining, after all, he thought. Maybe it was miraculous.
About the Author:
Jane Gilmartin has been a news
reporter and editor for several small-town weekly papers and enjoyed a brief
but exciting stint as a rock music journalist. A bucket list review just before
she turned 50 set her on the path to fiction writing. Also checked off that
list: an accidental singing career, attending a Star Trek convention, and
getting a hug from David Bowie. She lives in her hometown of Hingham,
Massachusetts.
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