Terminal Man

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Authors: Michael Crichton

Tags: #Suspense, #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Science Fiction, #High Tech

FIRST VINTAGE EBOOKS EDITION, MAY 2012

Copyright ©1988 by Michael Crichton

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Originally published in paperback in the United States by Ballantine Books, New York, in 1988, and subsequently published in Great Britain by Arrow Books Limited, an imprint of Random House Group Limited, London, in 1994.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

The Terminal Man
first appeared in slightly different from in
Playboy
magazine.

Vintage eISBN: 978-0-307-81642-9

www.vintagebooks.com

v3.1_r1

To Kurt Villadsen

Acknowledgment

     Martin J. Nathan, M.D., and Demian Kuffler gave technical advice and assistance. Kay Kolman Tyler prepared the graphics. I am indebted to them all.

Contents

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1

Author’s Introduction

R
EADERS WHO FIND THE SUBJECT MATTER OF
this book shocking or frightening should not delude themselves by also thinking it is something quite new. The physical study of the brain, and the technology for modifying behavior through psychosurgery, has been developing for nearly a century. For decades, it was there for anyone to see, discuss, support, or oppose.

Nor has there been any lack of publicity. Research in neurobiology is spectacular enough to appear regularly in Sunday supplements. But the public has never really taken it seriously. There has been so much ominous talk and so much frivolous speculation for so many years that the public now regards “mind control” as a problem removed to the distant future: it might eventually happen, but not soon, and not in a way that would affect anyone now alive.

Scientists engaged in this research have sought public discussion. James V. McConnell of the University of Michigan told his students some years ago, “Look, we can do these things. We can control behavior. Now, who’s going to decide what’s to be done? If you don’t get busy and tell me how I’m supposed to do it, I’ll make up my own mind for you. And then it’s too late.”

Many people today feel that they live in a world that is predetermined and running along a fixed pre-established course. Past decisions have left us with pollution, depersonalization, and urban blight; somebody else made the decisions for us, and we are stuck with the consequences.

That attitude represents a childish and dangerous denial of responsibility, and everyone should recognize it for what it is. In that spirit, the following chronology is presented:

HISTORY OF THERAPY OF PSYCHOSURGERY

 
 
1908
Horsley and Clarke (Great Britain) describe stereotaxic surgical techniques for use on animals.
 
1947
Spiegel and co-workers (U.S.A.) report the first stereotaxic surgery performed on a human being.
 
1950
Penfield and Flanagan (Canada) perform ablative surgery with favorable results in patients with seizure foci.
 
1958
Talairach and co-workers (France) begin chronic stereotaxic implantation of depth electrodes.
 
1963
Heath and co-workers (U.S.A.) allow patients to stimulate themselves, at will, via implanted electrodes.
 
1965
Narabayashi (Japan) reports on 98 patients with violent behavior treated by stereotaxic surgery.
 
1965
More than 24,000 stereotaxic procedures on human beings have been performed in various countries by this date.
 
1968
Delgado and co-workers (U.S.A.) attach “stimoceiver” (radio stimulator plus radio receiver) to freely ambulatory hospital patients.
 
1969
Chimpanzee at Alamogordo, N.M., is directly linked by radio to a computer which programs and delivers his brain stimulations.
 
1971
Patient Harold Benson is operated on in Los Angeles.
 

M.C.

Los Angeles
October 23, 1971

“I have come to the conclusion that my subjective account of my own motivation is largely mythical on almost all occasions. I don’t know why I do things.”

J. B. S. H
ALDANE


The wilderness masters the colonist.”

F
REDERICK
J
ACKSON
T
URNER

TUESDAY,
MARCH 9, 1971:
Admission
1

T
HEY CAME DOWN TO THE EMERGENCY WARD
at noon and sat on the bench just behind the swinging doors that led in from the ambulance parking slot. Ellis, the senior man, was tense, preoccupied, distant. The younger man, Morris, was eating a candy bar. He crumpled the wrapper into the pocket of his white jacket.

From where they sat, they could look at the sunlight outside, falling across the big sign that said
EMERGENCY WARD
and the smaller sign that said
NO PARKING AMBULANCES ONLY
. In the distance they heard sirens.

“Is that him?” Ellis asked.

Morris checked his watch. “I doubt it. It’s too early.”

They sat on the bench and listened to the sirens come closer. Ellis removed his glasses and wiped them with his tie. One of the emergency ward nurses, a girl Morris did not know by name, came over and said brightly, “Is this the welcoming committee?”

Ellis squinted at her. Morris said, “We’ll be taking him straight through. Do you have his chart down here?”

The nurse said, “Yes, I think so, Doctor,” and walked off looking irritated.

Ellis sighed. He replaced his glasses and frowned at the nurse. “I suppose the whole damned hospital knows.”

“It’s a pretty big secret to keep.”

The sirens were very close now; through the windows they saw an ambulance back into the slot. Two orderlies opened the door and pulled out the stretcher. A frail elderly woman lay on the stretcher, gasping for breath, making wet gurgling sounds. Severe pulmonary edema, Morris thought as he watched her taken into one of the treatment rooms.

“I hope he’s in good shape,” Ellis said.

“Who?”

“Benson.”

“Why shouldn’t he be?”

“They might have roughed him up.” Ellis stared morosely out the windows. He really is in a bad mood, Morris thought. He knew that meant Ellis was excited; he had scrubbed in on enough cases with Ellis to recognize the pattern. Irascibility under pressure while he waited—and then total, almost lazy calm when the operation began. “Where the hell is he?” Ellis said, looking at his watch again.

To change the subject, Morris said, “Are we all set for three-thirty?” At 3:30 that afternoon, Benson would be presented to the hospital staff at a special Neurosurgical Rounds.

“As far as I know,” Ellis said. “Ross is making the presentation. I just hope Benson’s in good shape.”

Over the loudspeaker, a soft voice said, “Dr. Ellis, Dr. John Ellis, two-two-three-four. Dr. Ellis, two-two-three-four.”

Ellis got up to answer the page. “Hell,” he said.

Morris knew that two-two-three-four was the extension for the animal laboratories. The call probably meant something had gone wrong with the monkeys. Ellis had been doing three monkeys a week for the past month, just to keep himself and his staff ready.

He watched as Ellis crossed the room and answered from a wall phone. Ellis walked with a slight limp, the result of a childhood injury that had cut the common peroneal nerve in his right leg. Morris always wondered if the injury had had something to do with Ellis’s later decision to become a neurosurgeon. Certainly Ellis had the attitude of a man determined to correct defects, to fix things up. That was what he always said to his patients: “We can fix you up.” And he seemed to have more than his share of defects himself—the limp, the premature near-baldness, the weak eyes, and the heavy thick glasses. It produced a vulnerability about him that made his irascibility more tolerable.

Morris stared out the window at the sunlight and the parking lot. Afternoon visiting hours were beginning; relatives were driving into the parking lot, getting out of their cars, glancing up at the high buildings of the hospital. The apprehension was clear in their faces; the hospital was a place people feared.

Morris noticed how many of them had sun tans. It had been a warm, sunny spring in Los Angeles, yet he was still as pale as the white jacket and trousers he wore every day. He had to get outside more often, he told himself. He should start eating lunch outside. He played tennis, of course, but that was usually in the evenings.

Ellis came back, shaking his head. “It’s Ethel. She tore out her sutures.”

“How did it happen?” Ethel was a juvenile rhesus
monkey who had undergone brain surgery the day before. The operation had proceeded flawlessly. And Ethel was unusually docile, as rhesus monkeys went.

“I don’t know,” Ellis said. “Apparently she worked an arm loose from her restraints. Anyway, she’s shrieking and the bone’s exposed on one side.”

“Did she tear out her wires?”

“I don’t know. But I’ve got to go down and resew her now. Can you handle this?”

“I think so.”

“Are you all right with the police?” Ellis said. “I don’t think they’ll give you any trouble.”

“No, I don’t think so.”

“Just get Benson up to seven as fast as you can,” Ellis said. “Then call Ross. I’ll be up as soon as possible.” He checked his watch. “It’ll probably take forty minutes to resew Ethel, if she behaves herself.”

“Good luck with her,” Morris said.

Ellis looked sour and walked away.

After he had gone, the emergency ward nurse came back. “What’s the matter with
him?
” she asked.

“Just edgy,” Morris said.

“He sure is,” the nurse said. She paused and looked out the window, lingering.

Morris watched her with a kind of bemused detachment. He’d spent enough years in the hospital to recognize the subtle signs of status. He had begun as an intern, with no status at all. Most of the nurses knew more medicine than he did, and if they were tired they didn’t bother to conceal it. (“I don’t think you want to do that, Doctor.”) As the years went by, he became a surgical resident, and the nurses became more deferential. When he was a senior resident, he was sufficiently
assured in his work that a few of the nurses called him by his first name. And finally, when he transferred to the Neuropsychiatric Research Unit as a junior staff member, the formality returned as a new mark of status.

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