New Scientist - USA (2019-12-21)

(Antfer) #1

38 | New Scientist | 21/28 December 2019


IT’S yet another day where I
can’t make up my mind. I’ve
been dragging my feet for a
couple of months already, as
though I were walking through
a pool of thick, heavy sludge. I feel
my life being used up dozens of
times faster than before – where
“before” is before the Gene
Extension programme had
been commercialised. And before
I had come up with my plan.
I gaze into the distance from
a window on the top floor of an
office building. The city spreads
below me like an exposed silicon
die, and me no more than an
electron running along its dense
nanometre-thick routes. In the
scheme of things, that’s how
small I am. The decisions I make
are no big deal. If I could only
make a decision... But like so
many times before, I can’t decide.
The waffling continues.
Hadron shows up late, again,
bringing a gust of wind with
him into the office. He has a
bruise on his face. A bandage is
stuck on his forehead, but he
seems very self-possessed. He
holds his head high, as though a
medal were stuck there. His desk
is opposite mine. He sits down,
turns on his computer, then
stares at me, clearly waiting for
me to ask a question. However,
I’m not interested.
“Did you see it on TV last night?”
Hadron finally asks.
He’s talking about the “Fair Life”
attack on a hospital downtown,
also the biggest Gene Extension
Centre in the country. Two long,
black burn scars mar the hospital’s
snow white exterior as though
dirty hands had fondled the face
of a jade-like beauty. Frightening.
“Fair Life” is the largest and also
most extreme of the many
groups opposed to Gene
Extension. Hadron is a member,
but I didn’t see him on TV. The

2018-04-01


All our futures come at once in this short story by China’s sci-fi sensation
Cixin Liu, appearing for the first time in an English translation

crowd outside the hospital had
roiled like the tide.
“We just had an all-hands,” I
say in response. “You know the
company policy. Keep this up
and you won’t have a way to
feed yourself.”
Gene Extension is short for
Gene Reforming Life-Extension
Technology. By removing those
gene segments that produce the
ageing clock, humanity’s typical
lifespan can be extended to as long
as 300 years. This technology was
first commercialised five years
ago, and it quickly became a
disaster that’s spread to every
society and government in the
world. Though it’s widely coveted,
almost no one can afford it. Gene
Extension for one person costs as

much as a mansion, and the
already widening gap between
the rich and the poor suddenly
feels even more insurmountable.
“I don’t care,” Hadron says.
“I’m not going to live even a
hundred years. What do I have
to care about?”
Smoking is strictly prohibited
in the office, but Hadron lights a
cigarette now. Like he’s trying to
show just how little he cares.
“Envy. Envy is hazardous to
your health.” I wave away the
smoke from my eyes. “The past
also had lots of people who died
too early because they couldn’t
afford to pay the medical bills.”
“That’s not the same thing.
Practically everyone can
afford healthcare. Now, though,
the 99 per cent look helplessly at
the 1 per cent who have all the
money and will live to be 300.

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What makes me waver the
most, though, is Jian Jian. Before
I met her, I didn’t believe there
was any love in the world. After I
met her, I didn’t believe that there
was anything but love in the world.
If I leave her, what would be the
point in living even 2000 years?
On the scales of life, two and a
half centuries sits on one side
and the pain of leaving Jian Jian
sits on the other. The scales are
practically balanced.
The head of our department
calls a meeting, and I can guess
from the look on his face that
it isn’t to discuss work. Rather,
it’s directed at a specific person.

I’m not afraid to admit I’m
envious. It’s envy that’s keeping
society fair.” He leans into me
from the table. “Are you so sure
you’re not envious? Join us.”
Hadron’s gaze makes me shiver.
For a moment, I wonder if he’s
looking through me. Yes, I want to
become who he envies. I want to
became a Gene Extended person.
But the fact is, I don’t have
much money. I’m in my 30s and
still have an entry-level job. It’s
in the finance department
though. Plenty of opportunities
to embezzle funds. After years
of planning, it’s all done. Now, I
only have to click my mouse, and
the 5 million I need for Gene
Extension will go into my secret
bank account. From there, it’ll be
transferred to the Gene Extension
Centre’s account. I’ve installed
layers upon layers of camouflage
into the labyrinthine financial
system. It’ll be at least half a year
before they discover the money
is missing. When they do, I’ll
lose my job, I’ll be sentenced, I’ll
lose everything I own, I’ll suffer
the disapproving gazes of
countless people...
But, by then, I’ll be someone
who can live for 300 years.
And yet I’m still hesitating.
I’ve researched the statutes
carefully. The penalties for
corruption are 5 million yuan
and at most 20 years. After 20
years, I’ll still have over 200 years
of useful life ahead of me. The
question now is, given the maths
is so simple, can I really be the only
one planning something like that?
In fact, besides crimes that get
the death penalty, once you’ve
become one of the Gene Extended,
they’re all worth committing. So,
how many people are there like
me, who’ve planned it but are
hesitating? This thought makes
me want to act right now and,
at the same time, makes me flinch.

“ Besides crimes that get
the death penalty, once
you become one of the
Gene Extended, they’re
all worth committing”
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