White mars by Brian W. Aldiss & Roger Penrose. Chapter 19, 20

I said nothing.

The people on screen were now gathering in the main thoroughfare. This was recognisably the day the third marathon was held. There were the runners, many with false wings attached to them. There were the officials who ran the race. There were the crowds.

A whistle blew and the runners started forward, struggling for space, so closely were they packed, even as they had done weeks previously.

‘All this takes real heavy puting power, even using the quantputer,’ Steve said. ‘That’s why we are running some weeks behind real time. We’re working on that problem.’ The runners began to trot, jostling closely for position. ‘I guess we’ll catch up eventually.’

‘Want to bet on who will win?’ Dayo asked mischievously.

‘You see this is a kind of rerun of the marathon,’ Steve said. ‘And now, I just tap on a couple of keys…’

He did so. The screen was filled with phantom creatures, grey skeletons with strange pumping spindles instead of legs, naked domes for heads, their teeth large and bared. The inhuman things pressed onwards, soundless, joyless … The Race of Death, I thought.

‘We got the X-ray stuff off the hospital,’ Steve said. ‘It’s spare diagnostic equipment…’

The skeletons streamed on, with ghostly grey buildings as background, racing through their silent transparent world.

Steve tapped his keyboard once more and the world on the screen became again the one we recognised as ours.

With a flash of humour, he said, ‘You have your Utopia, Tom. This is our baby. How do you like it?’

‘But in the wrong hands…’ I began. A feeling of nausea silenced me.

Dayo took my arm. ‘I want you to watch yourself as an emulation, Tom. Please, Steve…’

Steve touched a couple of keys on his keyboard. The scene changed. An office block along the marathon course came into focus. Moving through the window, the emulation picked out a man and two women, standing close together, watching the runners pass their building. I recognised Cang Hai, Mary Fangold and myself.

My emulation clutched his head and went to the back of the room to sit on a sofa. Cang Hai came over to it and stood there in silence, looking down at its – my – bowed head. After a moment, I stirred myself, smiled weakly at Cang Hai, rose, and returned to the window to watch the runners.

‘I don’t remember doing that,’ I said.

‘The CV, Steve,’ Dayo prompted.

The key. My details, my birth date and place, my CV. Momentarily my skeletal self was there, grey, drained of all but emptiness, long bony fingers clutching at my ostrich egg of skull. Then: ‘Diagnosis: Suffers from untreated brain tumour’. Only later did it occur to me that had I died then, my emulation would have continued to live, at least for a while.

I found Steve gazing at me and stroking his beard. ‘You better get yourself looked after, chum,’ was all he said.

The old R&A hospital was greatly enlarged in order to cope with its new general functions. Entry was through an airlock, the hospital atmosphere being self-contained against external emergencies and slightly richer in oxygen than in the domes in order to promote feelings of well-being. Extensive new wards had been built and a nanotechnology centre added, where cell repair machines were housed.

I must confess to feeling nervous as I entered the doors. I was greeted warmly by the hospital personnel manager, Mary Fangold.

As we shook hands, her dark blue eyes scrutinised me with more than professional interest.

‘You’re in good hands here, Tom Jefferies,’ she said. ‘We are all admirers of your Utopian vision, which is carried out in our hospital as far as is possible. I hope to take care of you personally. We are treating only a few persistent sore-throat and eye cases at present.

‘We regard those who are ill and enter here less as patients than as teachers who bring with them an opportunity for us to study and repair illness. Our progress is less towards health than towards rationality, which brings health.’

When I remarked that, despite her kind sentiments, the old, the ageing, would become a burden, she denied it. No, she said, the burdens of old age had been greatly exaggerated in former times. The old and experienced, the DOPs, cost very little. On Earth, many of them had savings that they gradually released after retirement on travel and suchlike. Thus they contributed to society and the economy. Their demands were much fewer than were those of the young.

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