Mike Resnick Death Is An Acquired Trait


DEATH IS AN ACQUIRED TRAIT
by Mike Resnick


As things stand now, the 2043 Kentucky Derby is going to be won by Hi Falutin,
which is a pretty silly name for a horse, but by the time his career is over it
won't seem any sillier than Swaps or Tim Tam or Seattle Slew. He's going to win
by a neck in two minutes one second flat on a fast track, and Barfly, who will
finish third, will be disqualified and placed last for interfering with three
other horses in the homestretch.
Exactly seven thousand one hundred and fifty-six years later, the star known
as Antares will go nova.
And two million and three years after that, the first glimmerings of
intelligence will be noticeable among the strange little mollusks that inhabit
the tidal pools on the fourth planet of the star known as Spica.
I'd tell you my name, but you probably couldn't pronounce it and I probably
wouldn't spell it the same way twice in a row -- it changes a lot, you know (or
maybe you don't know, which really isn't my problem anyway). I think will tell
you where I come from, though. It changes a lot too, but these days we're
calling it Quiggle. Or maybe Quabble. Anyway, it's the sixth planet circling
the star you know as Betelguese. Or, at least, it used to be. I don't think
it's there anymore. Just as well. Seeing it would only depress me -- especially
the spot where I'm buried.
But now I'm getting a little ahead of myself.
Once upon a time I belonged to a race of humanoids that inhabited the sixth
planet of Betelguese, which we used to call Profff in the old days. Also, I use
the word "humanoids" only to give you a point of reference. Actually, I always
thought we were more the human type, and that you guys were the humanoids. But
why quibble? (Say, that's not bad! I think we'll call it Quibble starting next
week.)
I lived during the golden age of my planet, although we called it the mauve
age since gold wasn't all that hard to come by. Huge skyscrapers covered the
surface of our fair world, except where there was water, in which cases
enormous bubble-domed cities floated atop the mighty seas, plying their
commerce between the many majestic continents.
In a matter of a few centuries we achieved space flight, converted all our
appliances and factories to sunpower, eliminated completely and forever any
taint of racial prejudice, outgrew all of our superstitious old religions, and
began probing the secrets of the universe in earnest.
Unfortunately, all this took a little while to accomplish, especially the part
about the secrets of the universe, and while our medical science had progressed
far beyond anything you are ever going to achieve, we nonetheless aged and
died, albeit at a far slower rate than any other life form in the galaxy.
Well, to cut through all the palaver, one of the secrets of the universe we
sought to unlock was the secret of eternal life. We already had lifespans of
more than a millennium, so that seemed the next logical step.
We tried injections, and freezing, and hypnosis, and DNA surgery (yes, we
could operate on DNA molecules back then), and hormone injections, but nothing
seemed to work. Then one day Raxrgh Ghhouule -- that's not his name any longer,
but it's the one I curse all the time -- came up with a solution to the problem
that involved a little biochemistry, a little philosophy, a little physics, and
a couple of other things that I couldn't even pronounce let alone spell. As a
result of his experiments, we became completely free of our physical shells and
became creatures of pure thought. Or maybe pure energy. I was never too clear
on that point, though I don't imagine that it makes any difference at this late
date. (And a late date it is: my body turned to dust almost eight billion years
ago.)
At first we were utterly delighted with our new-found immortality. We retained
our individuality, and while we could no longer see or hear or touch, we gained
a whole plethora of new perceptive senses.
Of course, there were a few things that were lost forever. Like crachhm.
You've never heard of it? Well, crachhm bears a strong resemblance to veal
parmesan, only the spices are more subtle and the cheese is a more delightful
color. Do you know what it's like to go almost eight billion years without a
bite of crachhm?
Then there was my krttz. That's a collective noun for wife, but it means a
little more, since I had four of them, one of each sex. Sex among the five of
us was never all that easy or simple even when we had bodies; without them, it
was absolutely impossible. Not only is it difficult to get very lustful over a
creature of pure energy, but they appeared just like me. Even to think of sex
with them in their new form seemed sort of perverted, if you know what I mean.
Well, after a while -- a few million years or so -- I began to feel less
cheated. After all, I didn't have the wherewithall to eat or copulate anyway,
so it became an exercise of mind over matter, or mind over the memory of
matter, or something like that. Most of us had these initial problems, but we
finally overcame them and turned our thoughts to more important matters.
We probed backward to the dawn of the universe, saw the Primal Atom take form,
and extrapolated the life and death of every star, every planet, every species
of sentient and non- sentient creature, and finally saw the universe come to a
total standstill, completely in the thrall of entropy. Then, since the future
has infinite permutations, we explored every possible future, based on every
conceivable action that might be taken anywhere in the universe.
It was fascinating when we first did it, and it's still mildly interesting
now, but you must realize our dilemma: once you've done the universe, there is
nothing else.
That's when we began to get bored.
Oh, we fought against it. We explored parallel universes, examined an infinite
number of dimensions, even probed back to the universe that existed before the
formation of the Primal Atom. (It was a pretty dull one: no music, and only 23
elements.) It didn't help much; we were still bored.
So we began extrapolating entirely new universes, based at first upon logical
premises, and, later, based on magic, alchemy, anything we could think of. I
can remember extrapolating an entire galaxy based on the assumption that Donald
Duck was God -- and this was five billion years before Walt Disney was born.
But it was no use. Sooner or later, each and every one of us got bored.
I think Rilias Prannch was the first of us to suggest it, though the rest of
us certainly had been toying with the notion: racial suicide. Ah, what a sweet
thought, what a pleasant fancy!
I can still remember the instant that, like lemmings to the sea, we plunged
into a nearby star, prepared to be sizzled to a cinder -- and nothing happened,
except that we found out what the inside of a star looks like.
Then old Klannenn Porbisht suggested turning off all our sensory
perceptions...only no one knew how to do it. I mean, it wasn't as if we had
eyelids we could close or anything like that. It simply wouldn't work.
Finally, Robatt Xazzar tried to extrapolate a heaven and a hell so that we
could determine how to gain admission to either. That was a failure, too.
So we turned our collective brainpower from all other aspects of existence and
creation, and tried to figure out how to bring about our racial death.
We tried just about everything. We tried religion, we tried philosophy, we
tried stretching ourselves so thin that we vanished, we exposed ourselves to
every conceivable type of radiation. We visited planets where Death was
worshipped and revered, and we observed nameless ceremonies in which the living
were killed and the dead were made to live again. We poured over the libraries
of galaxy after galaxy, and even sought an answer amongst the quasars and the
quarks.
Our conclusion, after some three billion years of trying, was that suicide,
while it may well have been a consumation devoutly to be wished, was still
beyond our means.
This only served to spur us on to greater efforts. Every theory, every
equation, every lemma, every prayer, every mystic chant, every hypothesis was
examined, explored, analyzed, inverted, and built upon. Every universe
co-existing with ours in different temporal planes, different vibratory rates,
and different dimensions was visited and thoroughly ransacked for a solution,
but none could be found.
So we went back to our other studies, but always, just beneath the surface of
our examinations, was the ever-present desire to find a way to die. I remember
that we finally got around to playing with Time, turning it inside-out and
upside-down. Ostensibly these were just mental exercises, but each of us knew
the real purpose of our endeavors: if we could just find a way to make Time
flow backward to a point a few seconds before Raxrgh Ghhouule figured out how
to free us from our mortal bodies, we might find a way to silence him and thus
attain blessed oblivion.
But it was not to be. Time buckled here and there, yielded to this pressure
and that, but ultimately we were forced to admit that we could not rend its
fabric and return to that fateful moment.
Then one day little Plooka Pitzm -- one of my own beloved krrtz -- wasn't
there anymore. We were at first disbelieving, then worried, and finally
hopeful. Had she actually found a way to die? It was almost too good to be true
-- and indeed, it wasn't true at all. We found her, at last, in the odoriferous
universe of Blimm (it's made primarily of old Munster cheese, and is three
vibratory levels removed from this one), humming happily to herself. For a
moment I feared that she had lost her mind, but she soon became aware of our
collective presence and explained that, as bored as she was with existence in
general, she was most especially bored with our company, and no longer wished
to be associated with us.
What could we do but accede to her wishes? The problem was that soon many
other members of my race decided to strike out for a solitary life, and this
left even less of us to work on the problem of ending our existence, solitary
or otherwise.
Then, suddenly, Pratsch Pratsch Pratsch (he certainly does like the sound of
his name!) went stark staring mad. He began gibbering like an idiot, singing
bawdy verses gathered from a trillion worlds, and muttering obscenities to
himself, interspersing all this with maniacal giggling.
For a time we debated whether or not to cure him, and finally concluded that
he would be far happier like this than returning to our unending boredom and
sanity. Well, Pratsch Pratsch Pratsch ranted and raved for almost 37 million
years, when finally the madness ran its course amd he became his old self
again. It was then that we began to realize that even total insanity was at
best a temporary oasis in this vast desert of boredom.
So that's where matters stand now. About half my race has decided to cut all
ties with the remaining unit, and on any given day another tenth of us are
quite mad (although, alas, only temporarily.)
We still seek our demise, as a race or as individuals, but it seems less and
less likely. After all, that's the problem with immortality: by definition, you
are deathless.
My only pleasure now is to try to prevent other races from making the same
horrible mistake we made. I think I've just saved the natives of Aldebaren XII
from it, and hopefully I've hindered that chemist on Gamma Epsilon II enough
that he'll never accomplish it either.
And so here I am, talking to you. You see, there's this kid in Omaha who's got
a little gerrybuilt laboratory in his basement. He's got some drycell
batteries, and a few bread molds, and he seems to be on the right track. (It's
not all that hard to do once you get the knack. Ask Raxrgh Ghhouule -- he'll
tell you.)
Anyway, this kid doesn't know what he's doing, but his sister is dating a grad
student from the University of Nebraska, and this student's best friend is...
Well, you get the picture.
There is only one past; it is a fixed and immutable thing. But there are an
infinite number of futures. In most of them the secret of immortality will be
safe from you, but in some it won't be -- and believe me, it's not worth the
risk.
So step in front of an oncoming train, or find some painless but lethal
narcotic, or stick your head in a gas oven.
I've seen your planet form, seen it go from a molten world to a thing of
gossamer beauty. I've watched your race crawl out of the water, stand erect,
sprout thumbs, conquer fire, invent the wheel, harness the atom. I couldn't
love you more if you were my own children. I have only one wish for you.
Death and destruction.
That's a father's prayer.

-- The End --


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