"You wouldn't know if something is missing," he said.
"Of course he would," snapped Karen. "When you get older, you're painfully aware of things that are slipping away. Senses that are dulling, memories that can no longer be easily called up. You absolutely know when something you had before is missing."
"She's right," I said. "I am
39
Two of me.
It was damned confusing, but I found myself thinking of him as Jacob, and me as Jake. It was one of those little mental tricks that we need more of as we get older.
He was
I found that I, Jake, couldn't take my eyes off the videophone screen, and its image of Jacob, my shed skin. Until a few weeks ago, we'd been the same person, and…
And prior to that, I hadn't existed at all. He, Jacob, was the one who'd
"I'm going to come over there," I said to the videophone.
"Over where?" replied Jacob.
"To the moonbus. To see you."
"No," Jacob said. "Don't do that. Stay where you are."
"Why?" I replied. "Because it's easier to deny my personhood, and my rights, when I'm just a bunch of pixels on a tiny display screen?"
"I'm not an idiot," Jacob said, "so don't treat me like one. I've got the situation contained. You coming out here will destabilize it."
"I really don't think you have a choice," I said.
"Sure I do. I don't have to open the airlock."
"All right," I said, conceding the point, "you can keep me out. But, come on, if you're only going to talk to me by phone, I might as well have never left Earth."
There was a pause, then Jacob said: "All right. Cards on the table, broski. You're here because I want you to agree to
I was taken aback, but I'm sure nothing in my artificial physiology betrayed that. I said, as calmly as I could, "You know I can't do that."
"Hear me out," Jacob said, raising a hand. "I'm not asking for anything awful. Look, how long are you going to live?"
"I don't know," I said. "A long time."
"A
"Unless something bad happens, yes."
"And how long have I got left?"
"I don't know," I said.
"Sure you do," said Jacob. "I no longer suffer from Katerinsky's syndrome, so I've likely got as much time left as any male born in Canada in 2001 — another fifty years, if I'm lucky. That's
"And — and what about me?"
"You stay here, at this wonderful resort of High Eden." He looked at me, searching for my reaction. "Spend fifty years having a holiday — Christ, let's be honest, that's what we do most of the time anyway, right? It's like the Vegas strip here, like the best cruise ship ever." He paused. "Look, I saw some of the trial coverage. I know it's not going well. Do you want to spend the next
I stared at him, at my … my
"Please," said the other me, an imploring note in his voice. "It's not that much to ask, is it? You
I looked at Karen. She looked at me. I doubted either of us could read the other's expression. I turned back to the screen, thinking.
My mother would be happy; she'd never agree to upload herself, of course, not with her belief in souls, but this way she'd have her son back for the remainder of his life.
And my father — well, I wasn't visiting him at all now. Jacob could go back to seeing him, dealing with all the mixed emotions, all the heartbreak, all the guilt. And by the time I returned to Earth, decades hence, my dad would be gone, too. Plus, if flesh-and-blood Jacob returned to Earth, Clamhead would be happy. Even, maybe, Rebecca would be happy.