The World at the End of Time by Frederick Pohl

Then she laughed. “Well,” she said, “why don’t I show you? Would you like to watch me work?”

Nrina was a creature shaper. Viktor began to realize that this woman was a major VIP, a star, famous through the habitats. She was remarkable even among the small number of greatly respected people who designed living architectures. The gorilla menials had come from their labs. So had the food animals and plants; so had the gorgeous and bizarre-smelling blossoms that decorated the spaces of their lives. Although their biggest business was making babies to order, she and her assistant, Dekkaduk, could make almost anything.

Dekkaduk was not pleased at Viktor’s visit. He insisted that Viktor wear the gauzy robe over his cache-sex, and then fussily demanded he wear a hat, too. “Who knows what parasites might be in that disgusting fur on his head?” Dekkaduk demanded. He was nearly bald himself.

“Why, Dekkaduk,” Nrina said, laughing, “probably about the same sorts of things as in my own hair. By now.” Dekkaduk flushed furiously.

Nevertheless, Viktor wore the cap.

When Dekkaduk considered Viktor sufficiently sanitary, he turned away, glowering, and started work. He used the desk keypad to set up a large picture on the wall screen. It was a three-D representation of a young woman. She looked something like Nrina, but her hair was cocoa where Nrina’s was butter, and her eyes were closer set. “Who is she?” Viktor asked politely, and Dekkaduk glared at him.

“You must not talk to us while we are working,” he scolded. “But I will answer this question for you. She is no one. She hasn’t been born yet. This is only what her parents want her to look like, and so we will arrange it. Now don’t ask more questions until we are through.”

So Viktor watched the image of the child who was not only not yet born but not even conceived, as Nrina and Dekkaduk matched the DNA strings that would produce that height, that color of eye, that taper of finger and that delicate arch of foot. That part of the process was not interesting for Viktor to watch, simply because he could not follow what was happening. Under the holographic image was a changing display of symbols and numbers—specifications, Viktor supposed, though he couldn’t read them. No doubt they had to do with not only external appearances but nerve structures and disposition and . . . well, who knew what characteristics these people would want in a child?

But whatever the desire was, Nrina could supply it. She had no problem preparing the genetic blueprint that filled the order, and then it was only a matter of cutting and splicing and matching in.

The things they did were not merely a matter of surface appearance. They weren’t even mostly surface appearance. The most important thing they built into every new baby was health.

There were all kinds of hereditary traits that had to be added or deleted or simply changed around a little. The effect was vast. The boys who came from Nrina’s laboratory would never lose their virility or develop that benign prostatic hyperplasia called “old men’s disease.” The girls, however long they lived, would never acquire the “widow’s hump” of osteoporosis. Bad genes were repaired on the spot.

Single-gene disorders were the easiest to deal with, of course. They came in three main kinds. There was the kind where a bad gene from either parent made the trouble; the recessive (or homozygous) kind where there wasn’t any trouble unless it came from both parents; and the X-linked recessives that affected only males. All Nrina had to do with such conditions was a little repair work. If there was something wrong with the Apo B, C, and E genes Nrina made it right—and reduced the risk of a future coronary. If the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl-transferase gene was defective, a good one was patched in, and the child would not have Lesch-Nyhan disease. Codon 12 of the c-K-ras gene could be supplemented with a single nucleotide, and therefore went the risk of most pancreatic carcinomas and a lot of the colorectal ones, too. So Nrina’s handmade children were exempt from many of the ills the flesh was (otherwise) heir to. No child born of their laboratory would ever have Epstein-Barr, or sickle-cell anemia, familial hypercholesterolemia, Huntington’s disease, hemophilia, or any other of the hereditary nasties. Their arteries shrugged cholesterol away. Their digestive tracts contained no appendix; there were no tonsils in their throats.

For that reason Nrina knew very little of surgery. In some ways her grasp of medical science was centuries behind old Earth’s—or even Newmanhome’s. Dealing with Viktor’s freezer-ulcerated leg was about as far as they could go. No one in Nrina’s world was competent to cut out a lung or chop a hole in a side for a colostomy bag. No one ever needed such things. Oh, they did die—sooner or later. But usually later; and usually because they were simply wearing out; and almost always because they knew that death was coming and chose not to stay around for the final decay.

When they had finished with the day’s production Viktor paused as he slipped out of his cloak. “Could you do anything you wanted to to them?” he asked. “I mean, could you give a baby six toes? Or two heads?”

Dekkaduk gave him an unforgiving look. “Thank you,” he said, “for reminding us how primitive you are. Of course we could, but we never would. Who would want it?”

Even Nrina sighed. “Sometimes you are almost too odd, Viktor,” she complained.

When Nrina at last pronounced Viktor’s brain as cloudless as it was likely to get (“You will not remember everything, Viktor, and you will seem to remember some things that never really happened . . . but only a little, I think”), he began to think seriously about his future.

The big question, of course, was what future did he have in this place?

Reason told Viktor that the fact that he had any future at all was a great, big plus. He took some comfort from that. Anyway, he didn’t need a lot of comforting, for making love to Nrina was a grand aspirin for all aches of the soul. Sometimes his trick memory would throw up a sudden misplaced image. Then he found himself thinking of lost Reesa, with a kind of melancholy ache that nothing was ever going to heal. That didn’t last, and meanwhile Nrina was there. She was willing and adventurous in bed, and when they were not making love she was—well, much of the time—affectionate, kind, and friendly.

It was true that she was simply not interested in some of the things that mattered to Viktor. The mystery of what had happened to the universe, for instance. Of course, she pointed out, there should be plenty of material on just about everything somewhere in the teaching files, if Viktor wanted to use them. He could even use her own desk, she added—when she wasn’t using it herself, of course. When Viktor complained that the mentor didn’t seem able to turn up the really interesting stuff, Nrina even took time to try to instruct him in some of the desk’s refinements.

The desk really was a desk—sort of. At least, it looked like a kind of old-fashioned draftsman’s table. It was a broad, flat rectangle, tipped at an angle, with a kneeling stool before it and a kind of keypad in the lower left-hand corner. The symbols on the keys meant nothing at all to Viktor, but Nrina, leaning gently over his shoulder and smelling sweetly of her unusual perfume and herself, showed him how to work the pads. “Can you read the letters, at least?” she asked.

“No. Well, maybe. I think so,” he said, squinting. “Some of them, anyway.” The written language had not changed a great deal, but it had become phonetic; the alphabet had eleven new letters. Nrina rapidly scrolled down to “cosmology,” after getting Viktor to try spelling it in the new alphabet.

Nothing appeared in the screen.

“That is quite strange,” she said. “Perhaps we’re spelling it wrong.” But though they tried half a dozen different ways, the desk obstinately refused them all. Nor was it any more help with “time dilation” or “relativistic effects” or even “quantum mechanics.”

“What a pity,” Nrina sighed. “We must be doing something wrong.”

“Thanks,” Viktor said glumly.

“Oh, don’t be unhappy,” she said, cajoling. Then she brightened. “There are other things you can do,” she said. “Have you ever tried calling anyone? A person, I mean? I have to call Pelly anyway. Here, let me show you how to call.”

“You mean like a telephone?”

“What is ‘telephone’? Never mind, I’ll show you.” She tapped the keypad, got a scroll, stopped it at that name, and tapped the name. As Viktor opened his mouth she said quickly, “This is my personal directory—there’s also a general one which I will show you how to use, but I don’t use the big one when I don’t have to. Would you? Wait a minute, here he is.”

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