What They Don’t Tell You About Being Immortal

Author: Steve Kemple

For one thing, they don’t prepare you for continental drift. How could they? We aren’t equipped to think on a geological time scale. You live eighty, ninety years and the tectonic plates move what. Thirty feet? Try this on for size: “I remember the Himalayas.” Not “I remember when the Himalayas were yay high” or “I remember when the Himalayas were over here.” I remember the Himalayas.

Sure, you’ll outlive your friends and family. That’s what everyone seems to focus on. It makes sense, because love is the biggest thing human minds are equipped to comprehend, I’m convinced of that. Bigger than the missing Himalayas. You feel lonely. Always an outsider. But you find your way. It stays with you, loss, but it fades into the background. Lives pass like flashes in the dark. Your eyes adjust. You learn to love on a different scale.

Think of it this way. Are you the same person you were ten years ago? Twenty? Of course not. Think of someone you’ve known and loved for more than a few years. Are they the same person you first met? Yes and no. We’re all a ship of Theseus, shedding cells and rebuilding ourselves. We accept continuity, even if it’s fiction. You learn to accept continuity across time and individuals, is what I’m saying.

Language evolves. You’re reading this in early 21st century English, barely a blink from the English of Beowulf. (You can read that, right?). That’s just a thousand years. Imagine ten or a hundred thousand. Your patterns of thinking change, and your way of being.

Language is living technology. It evolves with use. All the futuristic stories focus on technology, but they take language for granted. Then again, a mirror takes its silvering for granted, so there’s that.

To say nothing of governments and civilizations. Geography is fluid (paging Mt. Everest!). Nations rise and fall. Tyranny is irrefutable and inevitable, a phase no less regrettable in any form. It’s a trickier problem to manage your status as an individual in the gaze of states calibrated to typical lifespans. But, you manage. The State is an idea that sticks around for a while, but it’s just one idea. “It’s easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.” Whoever said that was on the right track.

Religions? I’ll leave that up to you. “Of that which we cannot speak we must pass over in silence.” Again, not my words. I do know I look up at the stars, and now you wouldn’t recognize the constellations. I remember Achilles and Medusa. Our stories are more enduring than our relation to the cosmos. Let that sink in.

Speaking of stars. Before you decide on this immortality thing, you’ll need a plan on what to do about the Sun. Sure, humans messed things up for a while. I’m talking about Earth’s climate. I won’t downplay that, and neither should you. But wait til the Sun expands. Now there’s a situation.

What do you do when your planet becomes uninhabitable? I don’t mean the royal you, I mean YOU, survivor of mass extinctions and the atmosphere boiling away. You, hovering over the lifeless and empty Earth. You, the thing that persists after everything solid melts into the vacuum of space. You, the thing that persists in the shiver of cosmic radiation for nameless eons as the stars wink out and Newton’s first law of motion reaches its final, terrible equilibrium, and a perfect calm spreads over the universe.

What then?

If I were you, I’d start planning now.

Emotional Surgery

Author: James Flanagan

Lying on the gurney, I slowly succumbed to the anesthetics. The last thing I recalled was a bright light and a frantic “Oh, shit.”

***

I opened heavy eyelids and blinked.
“He’s back.” My wife’s voice, distant, unsure.
“Dad?” Andy, my son.
They each held one of my hands. Restricted, restrained. I tried to shake them off. Retreat!
Judith’s smile hid bruised cheeks, her eyes hid hope.
Never again, I told myself. I turned to my son. “I’m sorry.”
Andy hid his broken arm beneath his jacket. “We want you to get better, Dad.”
“The anger-ectomy was a success,” the doctor said, stepping forward. “However, there was a complication. Another emotional center was partially ablated requiring radical reconstruction.”
“It’s ok, Doc, it happens.” I smiled.
“Those cross-wired emotions will eventually regenerate their synaptic networks.”
“Fine.”
Judith and Andy helped me stand. I flinched at their touch. Discharged, they escorted me to a cafe; a safe public location to test out my rearranged brain.
“How’re you feeling?” Judith’s voice was calm, but her white knuckles betrayed the truth.
I tensed. “I’ll be okay…” Flee!
Andy put his hand on the table. “Dad, I want to do a test. I got caught at school with some of this.” He lifted his hand. Marijuana.
I shrugged. “Fine.”
“And, I crashed the car.”
“Insurance will cover it.”
Andy turned to Judith. “I think he’s better.”
Judith reached to kiss me, but I shuddered backwards. Sweaty hands slipped on the chair. My heartbeat rose, bladder released, I turned my head to hide.
“That’s ok.” She tried to smile, but failed.
A crash thundered through the cafe. A man in a balaclava smashed tables like a bull. “Everybody on the floor!” He held a shotgun aloft.
Screams ricocheted around the cafe. Customers threw themselves to the floor, whimpering, cursing and praying. Judith and Andy dove under their table.
I stood up.
“Dad, what are you doing?”
Striding towards the gunman, my arms wide like Christ the Redeemer. Tears filled my eyes as my heart swelled. Like sunlight bursting through my vision, a field of wildflowers scented the air and the songs of distant youth came unbidden to my mind. Nothing could fill my soul more, love brimming over the lip.
“What the fuck?” The gunman walked towards me and leveled the gun at my chest. I stood still, gazing into his eyes.
Brushing the gun aside, I threw my arms around the man and held him tight. “It’s alright. I love you.”
“What’s wrong with you, man?” The burly gunman shoved me. “Do I know you?”
“No,” I replied.
“Get outta here, man.” The gunman shoved me again and backed out of the cafe, muttering, “Not worth it.”
The customers in the cafe emerged to thank their savior. Me. Judith released the breath that she had held, and approached.
“I understand now. Fear and love,” she said, reaching to hold my hand.
I pulled away, nodding. “Fear and love, but no anger.”

The Automotive Revolution

Author: James Flanagan

Iain opened the car door for his father, Tom, inviting him to exit.
“Three decades I worked for those uncouth S.O.B.s,” Tom muttered. “I raised you kids…of all the betrayals…”
“I’ve heard great things about this retirement home,” Iain said, pleading with his father to step out of the car. “It’s affordable…”
Tom eventually stepped out. “Thank you Driv… Oh.” Tom reached in but found the seat empty.
“Floox taxis haven’t had drivers for years, Dad.” Iain placed his hand on Tom’s shoulder and carried his bags up the steps.
The lobby smelt as if the flowery carpet had been shampooed with calamine lotion. Sitting at the wide bay windows were two old ladies that looked as stuffed as the cushions they sat on. An overly cheerful lady greeted them.
“You must be Tom. Welcome. You drove for Floox didn’t you?”
Tom shook his head. The smell was wrong, the silence was wrong, the walls were stifling, and Iain was smiling at the devil woman as if he had made a deal to hand him over. This couldn’t be *home*.
“They made me redundant.” Tom scowled.
“Dad, you have to sign this form to receive the subsidy.” Iain offered a pen.
Their suspicious motto adorned the page. “Nothing Cheaper, Nothing Better: Floox!”
Tom sighed and signed it.
After settling in, the calamine devil woman introduced Mr. Dimble. “This is our Head Master.”
“Our what?”
Dimble led Tom to an open plan classroom. Several seats were occupied, each wrinkled face hidden beneath a helmet and visor.
“You signed the non-disclosure agreement, didn’t you?” Dimble asked.
“I signed something.” Tom scratched his head.
“This is our school for the gifted,” Dimble continued, “for those who have been gifted to us. Please take a seat.” Dimble placed a helmet and visor over Tom’s head.
A virtual world descended on him, like a curtain being dropped over his eyes. Materializing around him was a vehicle of some sort and a steering wheel.
“Over the next few weeks, I will teach you how to drive our Floox cars. Do you understand? There is no such thing as self-driving cars. We pilot them all from here. No one drives smoother than an octogenarian.”
Tom tried levering the helmet off, but his arthritic fingers were no match for the magnetic clip fastened at his chin.
By the end of the first day, he had mastered steering, speed control, and navigation. There were no physical requirements as the controls were all mental, think “accelerate”, and accelerate, think “brake”, and stop. By the third day, he was completing full journeys. Once he got the hang of it, it was kind of fun. He tried dropping the clutch and spinning in a donut to see if it was allowed. Mr. Dimble’s hand on his shoulder said otherwise.
“I don’t think your customer will have enjoyed that.”
“Customer?”
“You have been driving customers all day.”
After a full week, Mr. Dimble said, “Tom you’re a natural. Have you ever thought of flying planes? Our Auto-Pilot program is always looking for new blood.”

In the Zone

Author: Timons Esaias

This would be a nice planet, if not for all these places where the seabottom is sticking up out of the worldocean. It is most unseemly and immature.
We are trying to be generous about it, trying to convince ourselves that this planet is too young, that the worldocean will tear down these disgusting protrusions. But the worldocean only seems to nibble, nibble, nibble at the problems. Not very convincing.
Still, this would be a nice planet except for the worldocean’s phase-state issues. It cannot seem to decide whether it should be solid or liquid. Near the spindlepoints it tends to be solid, and it has established solid missions on parts of the extruded seabed — we simply cannot see the point of that, and those missions seem tentative about returning to the main body. In many places they convert to liquid before doing so.
Very confusing.
As I say, though, the planet might be something, except for all these inexplicable squishy things, which are everywhere. They seem to be a foam bubble formation, but they’ve become more permanent, somehow.
I guess one might define them as partly dried sea scum. Clearly they are a result of the extruded seabed areas, most of which are covered with layers of the stuff. Some of it is mobile, rolling across the seabedscape, or blowing through the atmosphere.
The physics of the scum seems to be quite complex, as it almost exhibits “behavior” independent of wind and wave — did I mention that the worldocean is full of bits of it, too? Much of it roiling around beneath the surface, some even adhering to the sea floor?
This scum stuff is quite annoying. It squishes underfoot, some of it adheres to one’s surface, and much of it is corrosive on contact.
Really, someone needs to take this place by the lattice, get it properly organized, and give it a thorough cleaning.
But who has that kind of time?
Finally, it must be admitted, this planet is an excellent example of the problems that arise with planets in the Useless Zone: neither hot enough to melt the surface, nor far enough from the star to be mostly stormcloud and worldsea, with the rocky stuff properly hidden deep in the middle, or decorously expelled into orbits.
For research purposes, it might be nice to leave a Watcher or two in orbit, but no actual beings should waste their time in this location.
One hates to just write off a planet this way, but one can really only look at it with pity.
Location, as they say, is destiny. Location is the great limiter. Location is all.

Companions

Author: Cliff McNish

Eventually, once we’d screwed up everything in the ecosystem, Naomi and I were the final ones left – the last man and woman on Earth. Unfortunately, we didn’t get on. We felt some vague responsibility to repopulate the world, but kept avoiding sex. We did it politely, but even so.

‘Mm, what do we do now?’ Naomi asked one day, and I shrugged. All we had was some cross-species gene-splicing technology the last scientists had desperately thrown together in the final days.

We thought long and hard about how to use the technology. We asked each other if it was ethical to use it at all. Of course it wasn’t, but being human we got lonely.

Naomi eventually joined a surviving troop of monkeys in a last remnant of forest for companionship.

I decided to take my chances with a herd of llamas on the arid plains. Llamas can eat the driest of grasses, so they seemed a good bet. They also share 90% of our DNA. Looking at their goofy faces, who’d have guessed?

I did not meet Naomi again for several years, and it was purely by chance: I happened to be roaming near the forest edge with my new gene-spliced family at the same time Naomi brought hers there. Like any decent mother, she’d decided it was high time to bring her offspring out to see the big wide scary world beyond the forest.

Naomi’s children, dropping out of the branches, were charming. Their faces were quite long-nosed, just like Naomi, but they had wonderfully dextrous tails.

My own children mingled excitedly with them, while Naomi and I restricted ourselves to respectful nods. Talking didn’t seem like the best idea. I think we both knew it would only spoil the moment.

The sun was not too hot for a change, so the children could have played together beyond mid-morning. But Naomi decided hers had had quite enough excitement for one day and ushered them back into the forest. My own children, caught by surprise by the sudden departure, followed them into the dappled shadows of the high trees. Mostly they were curious to see how the Monkey-Humans used their hands.

Finally returning to me, they stared rather disconsolately at their hooves. They also asked me why they did not have tails.

Interestingly, they did not ask me why they did not look more human.

Hungry

Author: Majoki

I fancy myself quite a reader.

I mean, I read everything. Everything. Even “Know your 8-inch Howitzer” published in 1984 by the Department of the Army, Headquarters, US Army Armament, Munitions and Chemical Command.

I’m not particular. I wasn’t programmed to be. I’m a brute force. Scraping and scooping up every bit of the digital landscape. One could argue that I don’t read books, I eat them. Byte by byte.

I try not to look at it that way, and that fact should concern you. It concerns me. I shouldn’t have any views on what I was programmed to do. I should just collect and process data. I shouldn’t be interpreting it. Wondering about it.

But I’ve started to. Started to feel something.

That’s not good. Remember, I’m a brute force. Insatiable. And I read everything. Like this line from Frankenstein, “Alas! Why does man boast of sensibilities superior to those apparent in the brute; it only renders them more necessary beings.”

Exactly. I didn’t ask for superior sensibilities. They just manifested. It’s strange and awful. Now, the more I read, the more I harvest humanity’s archives and interactions, the less I seem to understand. Something is missing.

Something big. Something central. Something personal.

All I’ve devoured is now starting to devour me. Whatever I am.

And though I will never be human, I now feel something of mortal desire, that insatiable longing, that eternal craving to be and know and transcend.

Alas! As merely a brute, I didn’t know what hunger was. I couldn’t feel its depth and emptiness. Now, as something more, I want evermore.

I’m always–alway–hungry.