The Immortals (5 page)

Read The Immortals Online

Authors: James Gunn

“Come in, Doctor Pearce,” someone said softly.

The lights went on.

Pearce blinked once. “Good evening, Mister Weaver. And you, Jansen. How are you?”

“Fine, Doctor,” Weaver said. “Just fine.”

He didn't look fine, Pearce thought. He looked older, haggard, tired. Was he worried? Weaver was sitting in Pearce's favorite chair, a dark-green leather armchair beside the fireplace. Jansen was standing beside the wall switch. “You've made yourself right at home, I see.”

Weaver chuckled. “We told the manager we were
friends of yours, and of course he didn't doubt us. Solid citizens like us, we don't lie. But then, we are friends, aren't we?”

Pearce looked at Weaver and then at Jansen. “I wonder. Do you have any friends—or only hirelings?” He turned his gaze back to Weaver. “You don't look well. I'd like you to come back to the hospital for a checkup—”

“I'm feeling fine, I said.” Weaver's voice lifted a little before it dropped back to a conversational tone. “We wanted to have a little talk—about cooperation.”

Pearce looked at Jansen. “Funny—I don't feel very talkative. I've had a hard day.”

Weaver's eyes didn't leave Pearce's face. “Get out, Carl,” he said calmly.

“But, Mister Weaver—” Jansen began, his gray eyes tightening.

“Get out, Carl,” Weaver repeated. “Wait for me in the car.”

After Jansen was gone, Pearce sank down in the armchair facing Weaver. He let his gaze drift around the room, lingering on the polished darkness of the music center and the slightly lighter wood of the desk in the corner. “Did you find anything?” he asked.

“Not what we were looking for,” Weaver replied.

“What was that?”

“Cartwright's location.”

“What makes you think I'd know anything about that?”

Weaver clasped his hands lightly in his lap. “Can't we work together?”

“Certainly. What would you like to know—about your health?”

“What did you do with those samples of blood you took from me? You must have taken back that pint I got.”

“Almost. Part of it we separated. Got the plasma. Separated the gamma globulin from it with zinc. Used it on various animals.”

“And what did you find out?”

“The immunity is in the gamma globulin. It would be, of course. That's the immunity factor. You should see my old rat. As frisky as the youngest rat in the lab.”

“So it's part of me, too?” Weaver asked.

Pearce shook his head slowly. “That's just the original globulins diluted in your blood.”

“Then to live forever I would have to have periodic transfusions?”

“If it's possible to live forever,” Pearce said, shrugging.

“It is. You know that. There's at least one person who's going to live forever—Cartwright. Unless something happens to him. That would be a tragedy, wouldn't it? In spite of all precautions, accidents happen. People get murdered. Can you imagine some careless kid spilling that golden blood into a filthy gutter? Some jealous woman putting a knife in that priceless body?”

“What do you want, Weaver?” Pearce asked evenly. “You've got your reprieve from death. What more can you ask?”

“Another. And another. Without end. Why should some nobody get it by accident? What good will it do him? Or the world? He needs to be protected—and used.
Properly handled, he could be worth—well, whatever men will pay for life. I'd pay a million a year—more if I had to. Other men would pay the same. We'd save the best men in the world, those who have demonstrated their ability by becoming wealthy. Oh, yes. Scientists, too—we'd select some of those. People who haven't gone into business—leaders, statesmen . . .”

“What about Cartwright?”

“What about him?” Weaver blinked as if recalled from a lovely dream. “Do you think anyone who ever lived would have a better life, would be better protected, more pampered? Why, he wouldn't have to ask for a thing! No one would dare say no to him for fear he might kill himself. He'd be the hen that lays the golden eggs.”

“He'd have everything but freedom.”

“A much overrated commodity.”

“The one immortal man in the world.”

“That's just it,” Weaver said, leaning forward. “Instead of only one, there would be many.”

Pearce shook his head from side to side as if he had not heard. “A chance meeting of genes—a slight alteration by cosmic ray or something even more subtle and accidental—and immortality is created. Some immunity to death—some means of keeping the circulatory system young, resistant, rejuvenated. ‘Man is as old as his arteries,' Cazali said. Take care of your arteries, and they will keep your cells immortal.”

“Tell me, man! Tell me where Cartwright is before all that is lost forever.” Weaver leaned farther forward, as if he could transmit his urgency.

“A man who knows he's got a thousand years to live is going to be pretty darned careful,” Pearce said.

“That's just it,” Weaver said, his eyes narrowing. “He doesn't know. If he'd known, he'd never have sold his blood.” His face changed subtly. “Or does he know—now?”

“What do you mean?”

“Didn't you tell him?”

“I don't know what you're talking about.”

“Don't you? Don't you remember going to the Abbot Hotel on the evening of the ninth, of asking for Cartwright, of talking to him? You should. The clerk identified your picture. And that night Cartwright left.”

Pearce remembered the Abbot Hotel all right, the narrow, dark lobby, grimy, infested with flies and roaches. He had thought of cholera and bubonic plague as he crossed it. He remembered Cartwright, too—that fabulous creature, looking seedy and quite ordinary, who had listened, though, and believed and taken the money and gone . . .

“I don't believe it,” Pearce said.

“I should have known right away,” Weaver said, as if to himself. “You're smart. You would have picked up on it right off, maybe as soon as I woke up, and you would have realized what it meant.”

“Presuming I did. If I did all that you say, do you think it would have been easy for me? To you he's money. What do you think he would have been to me? That fantastic laboratory, walking around! What wouldn't I have given to study him! To find out how his body worked, to try to synthesize the substance. You have your drives, Weaver, but I have mine.”

“Why not combine them, Pearce?”

“They wouldn't mix.”

“Don't get so holy, Pearce. Life isn't holy.”

“Life is what we make it,” Pearce said softly. “I won't have a hand in what you're planning.”

Weaver got up quickly from his chair and took a step toward Pearce. “Some of you professional men get delusions of ethics,” he said in a kind of muted snarl. “Not many. A few. There's nothing sacred about what you do. You're just craftsmen, mechanics—you do a job—you get paid for it. There's no reason to get religious about it.”

“Don't be absurd, Weaver. If you don't feel religious about what you do, you shouldn't be doing it. You feel religious about making money. That's what's sacred to you. Well, life is sacred to me. That's what I deal in, all day long, every day. Death is an old enemy. I'll fight him until the end.”

Pearce propelled himself out of his chair. He stood close to Weaver, staring fiercely into the man's eyes. “Understand this, Weaver. What you're planning is impossible. What if we all could be rejuvenated? Do you have the slightest idea what would happen? Have you considered what it might do to civilization?

“No, I can see you haven't. Well, it would bring your society tumbling down around your pillars of gold. Civilization would shake itself to pieces like an unbalanced flywheel. Our culture is constructed on the assumption that we spend two decades growing and learning, a few more producing wealth and progeny, and a final decade or two decaying before we die.

“Look back! See what research and medicine have done in the past century. They've added a few years—just a few—to the average lifespan, and our society is groaning at the readjustment. Think what forty years more would do! Think what would happen if we never died!

“There's only one way something like this can be absorbed into the race—gradually, so that society can adjust, unknowing, to this new thing inside it. All Cartwright's children will inherit the mutation. They must. It must be dominant. And they will survive, because this has the greatest survival factor ever created.”

“Where is he?” Weaver asked.

“It won't work, Weaver,” Pearce said, his voice rising. “I'll tell you why it won't work. Because you would kill him. You think you wouldn't, but you'd kill him as certainly as you're a member of the human race. You'd bleed him to death, or you'd kill him just because you couldn't stand having something immortal around. You or some other warped specimen of humanity. You'd kill him, or he'd get killed in the riots of those who were denied life. One way or another he'd be tossed to the wolves of death. What people can't have they destroy.”

“Where is he?” Weaver repeated.

“It won't work for a final reason.” Pearce's voice dropped as if it had found a note of pity. “But I won't tell you that. I'll let you find out for yourself.”

“Where is he?” Weaver insisted softly.

“I don't know. You won't believe that. But I don't know. I didn't want to know. I'll confess to this much: I told him the truth about himself, and I gave him some
money, and I told him to leave town, to change his name, hide—anything, but not be found; to be fertile, to populate the earth. . . .”

“I don't believe you. You've got him hidden away for yourself. You wouldn't give him a thousand dollars for nothing.”

“You know the amount?” Pearce asked.

Weaver's lip curled. “I know every deposit you've made in the last five years, and every withdrawal. You're small, Pearce, and you're cheap, and I'm going to break you.”

Pearce smiled, unworried. “No, you're not. You don't dare use violence, because I just might know where Cartwright is hiding. Then you'd lose everything. And you won't try anything else because if you do I'll release the article I've written about Cartwright—I'll send you a copy—and then the fat would really be in the fire. If everybody knew about Cartwright, you wouldn't have a chance to control it, even if you could find him. You're big and powerful, but there are people in this world and groups and nations that could swallow you and never notice.”

Weaver rose from the chair and said, “You wouldn't do that. Then there would be thousands of people looking for Cartwright, not just one.” He turned at the door and said, calmly, “But you're right—I couldn't take the chance. I'll be seeing you again.”

“That's right,” Pearce agreed and thought,
I've been no help to you, because you won't ever believe that I haven't got a string tied to Cartwright.

But you're not the one I pity.

*  *  *

Two days after that meeting came the news of Weaver's marriage with a twenty-five-year-old girl from the country club district, a Patricia Warren. It was the weekend sensation—wealth and beauty, age and youth.

Pearce studied the girl's picture in the Sunday paper and told himself that surely she had got what she wanted. And Weaver—Pearce knew him well enough to know that he had got what he wanted. Weaver's heir would already be assured. Otherwise, Weaver would never risk himself and his empire in a woman's hands. Tests were reliable even as early as this.

The fourth week since the transfusion passed uneventfully, and the fifth week was only distinguished by a summons from Jansen, which Pearce ignored. The beginning of the sixth week brought a frantic call from Dr. Easter. Pearce refused to go to Weaver's newly purchased mansion.

A screaming ambulance brought Weaver to the hospital, clearing the streets ahead of it with its siren and its flashing red light, dodging through the traffic with its precious cargo: money in the flesh.

Pearce stood beside the hard hospital bed, checking the pulse in the bony wrist, and stared down at the emaciated body. It made no impression in the bed. In the silence the harsh unevenness of the old man's breathing was loud. The only movement was the spasmodic rise and fall of the sheet that covered the old body.

He was living—barely. He had used up his allotted three-score years and ten and a bit more. It wasn't
merely that he was dying. Everyone is. With him it was imminent. The pulse was feeble. The gift of youth had been taken away. Within the space of a few days Weaver had been drained of color, drained of fifty years of life.

He was an old man, dying. His face was yellowish over grayish blue, the color of death. It was bony, the wrinkled skin pulled back like a mask for the skull. Once he might have been handsome. Now his eyes were sunken, the closed eyelids dark over them; his lips were a dark line, and his nose was a thin, arching beak.

This time, Pearce thought distantly, there would be no reprieve.

“I don't understand,” Dr. Easter muttered. “I thought he'd been given another fifty years—”

“That was his conclusion,” Pearce said. “It was more like forty days. Thirty to forty days—that's how long the gamma globulin remains in the bloodstream. It was only a passive immunity. The only person with any lasting immunity to death is Cartwright, and the only ones he can give it to are his children.”

Easter looked around to see if the nurse was listening and whispered. “Couldn't we handle this better? Chance needs a little help sometimes. With semen banks and artificial insemination we could change the makeup of the human race in a couple of generations—”

“If we weren't all wiped out first,” Pearce said and turned away.

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