SFWRITER.COM > Novels > The Downloaded > Chapter 1
The Downloaded
by Robert J. Sawyer
For
Eric Greene
A good and wise ape
CHAPTER 1
Any civilization’s collapse begins the moment its people start
to ask themselves “Does this bring me joy?” rather than “Does
this bring others joy?”
James Kerwin
Interview with Dr. Jürgen Haas
So you’re the ... the person who wants to interview each
of us? I know it’s hot out, but you should be wearing a coat,
don’t you think? A mackinaw? As in deus ex machina? Thank
you, thank you, I’m here well, for the next seven years,
at least. Try the five-hundred-year-old veal, and don’t forget to
tip your robot.
Nothing? Crickets? Talk about a tough room! Anyway, yeah,
sure, I’m glad to be interviewed. But I bet some of the others
will refuse. No, no not any of us, but some of
them. Go ahead, though; fire away.
Oh, don’t bother calling me “Dr. Haas.” “Jürgen” is
fine, thanks. What? Sorry; I’m having trouble understanding your
accent. When did I first realize something was wrong? Let’s see.
It was nighttime. Why? Because I like nighttime. Heck,
sometimes I let the night last for well, for what seemed
like days, if you get my drift.
There was a full moon. In movies, it’s always a full moon,
isn’t it? Used to bug the heck out of me. And if they showed a
dark night sky, it was just some random spattering of stars,
never any recognizable constellations. But I made sure my
sky was correct: Ursa Major in the north, mighty Orion in the
south although I did cheat on the planets, like they used
to in planetariums. Instead of untwinkling points, each showed a
small disc. I could see the cloud bands on Jupiter, the rings
around Saturn, and hints of geography on Mars.
But, yeah, I guess I like the full moon as much as the next
guy, so it usually was full for me. I know the glare should have
banished most of the stars, but in the Jürgenverse the very
heavens bent to my will.
A megalomaniac? Moi? That’d only be true if they were
delusional fantasies. But the moon was indeed full and the
stars were blazing; even the ones right by the lunar disc were
visible, while the Milky Way arched gloriously from horizon to
horizon. And, no, there weren’t any clouds. I’ve looked at clouds
from both sides now a perk of the job, see? and
unless they resemble a dragon or something else cool, I’ve got no
use for them.
So, yeah, a perfect night sky. All it needed were
streamers of northern lights, like in a Yukon tourism ad, and
voilà! there they were: rippling
green and gold sheets. Gorgeous. But it wasn’t freezing; screw
that. It was as warm as an old-time August night in Toronto, but
with none of that damn humidity.
Now, a night like that, you gotta do something special,
right? Like, say, bodysurf over Niagara Falls. As a kid, I once
saw the falls long after sunset, when they lit them up with
different colors. My version was like that, too: foaming sheets
of pink and magenta, green and teal.
I had the Niagara River raging toward the precipice, a wild
torrent, kicking up spray that diffracted the moonlight into
rainbows. On the shores were beds of white trilliums, the goddamn
provincial flower, which I’d seen precisely once in the
wild. But they are beautiful, so what the heck: millions
were as easy as one.
And, sure, body surfing in the dark is insane, but that’s
what made it worth doing. Now, a stunt like that needed an
audience, and so I conjured one up: Letitia, dreadlocks down her
back, long shapely legs quickly closing the distance between us,
a huge, warm smile across her gorgeous face.
Don’t look at me like that. She is gorgeous, and I am
not objectifying her. I’m just telling you how I saw her,
all right? Give me a break.
Sure, it wasn’t the real Letitia. She was off in her own
silo just like I was in mine. I hadn’t seen her in the flesh for
God, had it really been four years? Time flies when you’re
having fun or, I suppose, when your system clock is
running fast.
But, actually, the clock there was running slow. Yes, from
my point of view, just four years had passed in that simulated
reality, so it was now 2063 as far as I was concerned, but five
centuries had slipped by in the outside universe. That
made it sometime in the mid-2500s, meaning we should have been
getting close to our destination.
The last time I’d seen the real Letitia, she’d been thirty-
eight. I was a year older still am, subjectively
but got my astronaut’s wings a year after she did; medical school
takes time.
Anyway, there was no need to wear clothes; nothing could
hurt me, and the temperature was always whatever I found
comfortable. Still, I summoned up a pair of swim trunks in ANSA
blue and gold. For her part, Letitia was wearing well,
that was odd. She was in her astronaut’s jumpsuit. But at least
its light tan color made her visible in the dark.
I looked back to make sure Letitia was paying attention,
then braced myself on the trillium-covered north bank the
Canadian side and bent down in a low crouch, then leapt
up, up, up into the air. At the pinnacle, I swung my arms over my
head, ready to pierce the raging waters as my trajectory started
angling downward. When I hit, the water was warm no need
to suffer, after all! and I remained submerged for a full
minute before rising to the surface, my body sluicing along the
top of the frothing river, barreling (but not in a barrel!)
toward the sheer cataract of Niagara Falls.
Just before I reached the rocky lip, I realized that I could have
even more spectators if I added the Maid of the Mist
sightseeing boat, with its crowd of tourists clad in yellow
slickers, and ta-da! there it was, up ahead
and far below, as I shot over the precipice like I had a booster
rocket up my bum. I must have been flying forward ten meters for
every one I dropped in altitude, and I soon realized that by the
time I hit the Niagara River, Letitia would be far behind.
I’ve got a silly fondness for superhero movies, so I pulled
my right arm back against my body, the way Superman does when
executing a turn, and started arcing back toward her. The air
whipped my hair and flung moisture from my body. I imagine from
Letitia’s point of view I was a silhouette against the night,
backlit by the moon. To rectify that, I made three spotlights on
rotating mounts appear along the south bank and let their beams
converge on me as I continued to swoop down toward her.
Letitia should have been applauding wildly and grinning from
ear to ear, but she was doing neither. Instead, she just stood
there, arms folded across her chest, shaking her head. The system
usually knows what I want to see, but I could always override its
choices through an effort of will and I made an effort then,
telling the Letitia simulation to let out a cheer and then come
running toward where I was about to land.
But nothing happened. She just stood there, looking pissed.
I spread my arms as though they were brakes and came down gently
about three meters from her. As I walked toward her, I noticed
something startling. Her dreadlocks were longer than I’d ever
seen them, but that didn’t bother me; the more the merrier, says
I. But from the top of her head down to the middle of her bottom,
they were interspersed with red beads, like cranberries strung
along twine. Beads I don’t mind, but I hate the color red
yeah, strange for a doctor, I know and there’s no way I’d
have conjured up a vision of her looking like this.
I blinked rapidly three times my usual trick for
correcting glitches but nothing changed. “Jesus, Letitia,”
I said, hearing my own voice for the first time in ages. “That
was pure athletic gold right there. Why the resting bitch face?”
Anger shone through her normally charming Jamaican lilt.
“I’d forgotten what a little boy you can be, Jürgen. Maybe I
should turn to Dr. Chang instead.”
Chang. That bastard. One of the best things about going
into my own silo had been leaving other people behind
certain ones, at least. “Simulation override phi chi psi omega,”
I said. “Reset Letitia.”
But Letitia remained exactly as she had been, standing among
the trilliums, glaring at me. “Conjure up some more clothes,
doofus,” she said. “We need to talk.”
Interview with Captain Letitia Garvey
Yeah, yeah, that’s what Jürgen would say. Me waiting
there for him at the side of the Niagara River with what
did he call it? “a huge, warm smile” on my face. I won’t
say it’s typically male to cast a woman as a passive spectator,
but male astronauts like Jürgen still cling to that macho
so-called “right stuff” the original Mercury Seven had
coursing through their veins. Of course, Jürgen’s veins were
now filled with antifreeze, like mine, but you know what I mean.
Or maybe you don’t. I guess I better explain. For me, it
started with my grandfather on my mother’s side that’s the
Jamaican-born one. In 1989, when he was just twenty-nine, he was
diagnosed with a rare form of non-Hodgkin lymphoma called mantle
cell lymphoma. How rare? Just a few hundred diagnoses a year in
North America. How serious? Incurable; terminal. Doctors said he
had maybe four years to live.
Well, that wasn’t good enough for a man who’d survived a
tour of duty as a United Nations peacekeeper. Nor was it good
enough for someone who still had what he called his “barrel
list,” a bucket being much too small to hold all his plans. We
had that in common, Gramps and me: a drive to do
everything. Neither of us could stand it when something
got in the way of our goals.
I’d never met him, of course, but Grandma and Mama told me
all about him. A black man in what was then the white man’s
world. He had to fight every step of the way and so I’ve
got to keep fighting, too, right? Carry on the family tradition.
They used to say a cure for cancer was twenty years in the
future and they’d been saying that for five decades. But
they were making stumbling progress toward treatments for
mantle cell lymphoma back then. There sure as hell wasn’t going
to be a cure in four years, and maybe not in twenty, but
eventually there was bound to be one. And so my
grandparents decided to have him cryonically frozen when the
cancer finally took his life. This was a man who wasn’t going to
let a little something like stage-four cancer stop him at
least not for good.
Between the life insurance his union job provided and a
policy he’d bought separately, there was three million dollars
just waiting to be collected and, back then, that was
enough to look after his wife plus my momma-to-be and her two
brothers with lots left over for the deep freeze. He signed a
contract with ColdBoot, Incorporated, based in Nevada, the
world’s top-rated cryonics facility.
Ironic, that. Glowing reviews ... of their grounds, their
staff, and their facilities for storing bodies; they had about a
hundred and seventy in deep freeze. But no reviews of their
ability to resuscitate a dead body, because no one had any idea
how to do that. As the joke went, “How many cryonicists does it
take to change a light bulb?” “None they just sit in the
dark and wait for the technology to improve.”
Well, upon Grandpa’s death in 1994, when he was thirty-four,
he was indeed frozen. As he said just before he passed away, he
was always a chill dude anyway.
During the opening decade of the twenty-first century,
treatments for mantle cell lymphoma involving chemotherapy were
developed, but they couldn’t be called cures. Even if you managed
to beat the disease back until there was no trace of it in the
body, mantle cell, caused by a chromosomal translocation, had a
one-hundred-percent recurrence rate. The fucking thing
always came back, and the second time it was almost
impossible to knock down.
But soon, robust treatments were developed, combining chemo
and radiation with an autologous stem-cell transplant. That
technique was the gold standard for a while, and usually gave the
patient nine or ten years of life following initial diagnosis.
And then, in the 2020s, there came something called CAR T-cell
therapy. Finally, oncologists started using the word “cure” in
relation to this cancer, although the noun was still most often
preceded by the adjective “potential.”
My grandma missed her husband but was in no rush to have him
revived, partly because she was afraid of what a man whose body
was still that of an amateur athlete in his thirties would make
of a wife who was now a senior citizen.
But by 2032, CAR T had been replaced by advanced genetic
techniques, providing a total, permanent cure. And so my
grandmother decided it was time. She, my momma and poppa, my
uncles Devon and Leroy, and twelve-year-old me converged on
Nevada and asked ColdBoot to revive him. It was a historic
moment, something Grandpa never could have anticipated when he’d
signed up for this: turned out he was the first person any
cryonics facility anywhere was going to try to bring back to
life. They’d have to rapidly remove the antifreeze that had
replaced his blood to keep his cells from exploding, fill him up
with six liters of O-positive, and then restart his heart.
Grandpa’s body, removed from the steel canister that had
held it for thirty-eight years, was shrouded in rapid-heating
thermal blankets. Wall displays big enough that we could read
them from the upstairs observation gallery showed his vital
signs, or lack thereof: body temperature was 17øC and rising
rapidly, but both his EKG and EEG showed flat lines, as did his
respiration monitor; one on me would have revealed the same thing
as I held my breath.
There were two more digital readouts, each glowing red, one
atop the other. The upper one was labeled “Chronological Age,”
and said “72 years / 3 months / 22 days.” The lower one was
marked “Biological Age,” and said what you’d have found on
Grandpa’s death certificate issued almost four decades earlier:
“34 years / 10 months / 5 days.”
Finally, it was time for the defibrillation. One of the nine
doctors in the room pulled back the blankets, and another applied
the paddles, and
and Grandpa’s chest heaved, and the electrocardiogram
jumped into action, and, moments later, so did the brain-wave
monitor. Just after that, the respiration monitor showed him
taking giant shuddering breaths. We watched his chest rise and
fall.
I glanced at the biological-age readout and saw that “days”
now showed a six, which was doubtless a bit of theater: having
that value arbitrarily set to just before the end of one day so
that his new life would be marked by a changing of the last
digit.
Up in the gallery, we hugged one another and let out excited
whoops. Tears of joy collected in my grandmother’s eye sockets.
Below, those doctors not immediately occupied were giving each
other high-fives or shaking gloved hands.
We waited for Grandpa’s eyes to flutter open ...
And we waited.
And waited.
Finally, my mother couldn’t take it any longer. In the
gallery with us were three ColdBoot executives, and Momma and I
turned to face them. “Well? Why hasn’t he woken up?”
Mr. Nakamura, a tall man with slicked-back hair, tried for a
reassuring smile, but I could tell it was forced. “He’s probably
just like me: no matter how long I’ve slept, when the alarm goes
off, I want five more minutes.”
Momma frowned, but we turned back to look out the angled
windows at the revival room. The celebratory atmosphere had
evaporated and all nine doctors were hustling about. One flicked
his index finger against Grandpa’s forehead as if trying to get a
piece of machinery with a loose connection to work.
After a couple more minutes it proved too much for Nakamura.
He leaned forward and pressed an intercom button mounted on the
window sill. “Heather, what’s going on down there?”
A doctor with skin even darker than mine looked up and,
although the bottom of her face was behind a mask, there was no
mistaking the panic in her eyes. “Everything was nominal,” she
said. “Everything is nominal, but ...”
“Then why isn’t he awake?” demanded Nakamura.
Her shoulders lifted and fell in a shrug that mirrored the
tracing on the respiration monitor. “I don’t know.”
Grandpa didn’t wake up that day ... or the next ... or the
one after that. Finally, Nakamura gathered us all in his office.
“I’m so sorry,” he said, “but Mr. Henderson is in a coma. He’s
completely nonresponsive to external stimuli. Everything is
working fine, except he isn’t conscious.”
“You promised you could revive him!” my grandmother said.
“Well, I didn’t,” said Nakamura, who would have been in
public school back when Grandpa was frozen, “but he has
been revived. He’s come back to life. No one has ever been
resuscitated, and ”
“Fuck that!” said Grandma, the first time I’d ever heard her
use such language. “That isn’t living.”
Nakamura nodded reluctantly. “We’re flying in experts in
neuroscience best in the business. Meanwhile, we should
discuss ...”
“What?” said Grandma. “You want more money? Good Christ!”
Nakamura held out his hands palms up. “No, no, no. Of course
not. It’s just that ... well, he still has mantle cell lymphoma,
and there’s nothing about the gene-resequencing cure that
requires him to be conscious. I suggest we go ahead and eliminate
his cancer so that when he does wake up, he’ll be
healthy.”
But he never did wake up. We moved him into a long-term-care
facility near Grandma’s house in Montego Bay, and she went to
visit him every day until she herself passed away.
There’d been funds set aside to freeze her when her time
came, but, after watching her beloved just lie there year after
year, she chose not to follow in his footsteps. And, really, who
could blame her? In the time since ColdBoot had tried to bring
Grandpa fully back to life, they’d also tried to revive seven
others as cures were found for the things that had killed
them ... and not one had regained consciousness.
ColdBoot’s competitors also tried reviving “corpsicles,” as
the press had taken to calling them, and although in all but one
case, in which the body didn’t resuscitate at all, the once-dead
did regain biological activity, they never woke up.
Simple old age finally caused Grandpa’s revived body, which
it seemed had no ghost to give up, to fail. He passed away in
2056, at the age of ninety-five, after spending the last
quarter-century just lying there, unresponsive, a fate worse than
death.
Eventually, scientists figured out why the cryonics
companies couldn’t wake up any of their patients. ColdBoot and
their ilk had assumed both the body and the mind could be frozen
then thawed out as good as new. But while they were refining
their techniques for dodging the grim reaper, other companies
confirmed what some had suspected since way back in the 1980s.
Although the autonomic parts of the central nervous system run
purely along classical physics lines, consciousness the
self-reflective inner life is a product of
quantum-mechanical interactions, and it was subject to the usual
bane of quantum effects: decoherence. After a few days, the
quantum state would collapse, destroying the consciousness that
had once existed, and nothing anyone had ever tried managed to
regenerate it. All those frozen people might as well have spent
far less money on burial plots: they were gone, gone, gone.
Interview with Roscoe Koudoulian
More questions? Christ, I thought I was through with all
that. At least you aren’t a hostile D.A. who just wants to lock
people up. Or maybe you are? Seriously, why should I
believe you when you say you’re not judging us? Everybody
judges. That’s human nature and, well, I guess that’s
your nature, too, right?
No response? Fine; be that way. Aren’t you at least going to
ask me what I was in for, though? Isn’t that what everybody wants
to know when they hear you’re an ex-con?
Well, I’ll tell you. I killed a man. Weasely little asshole
tormenting me on social media. Hiding behind a pseudonym.
Jerkface thought I’d never figure out who he really was. But it
was child’s play. I just waited for one of his comments to have a
distinctive way of saying something, and eventually on Facebook,
he said I was a disgrace to Homo sapiens but he
spelled the sapiens part so wrong even the automatic
speller had no idea what he was trying to say. None of that “I
before E except after C” bullshit; he didn’t even have an “I” in
it. No, he wrote S-A-Y-P-E-U-N-S. So I popped over to TownSquare
and put that spelling in the search box to see if anyone there
had used it, and Jesus fuck if my jaw didn’t drop.
There he was, and with no pseudonym: Mitch Aldershot, the
main bully of my childhood, who’d lived the next block over back
in West Lafayette. Guy had tracked me down as an adult and
decided he wanted to continue to get his jollies by making my
life miserable again, I guess. But, like all bullies, he was a
coward, hiding behind a phony name. I’d block him, but he’d come
back under another name, and then another and another.
Anyhow, now that I finally knew who he was, finding where he
lived was easy. He wasn’t in Indiana anymore, and neither was I.
He’d parked his asswipe self in Boston and I was in Buffalo, but
it wasn’t long before my business took me to Beantown.
I rented a car at the airport a completely
self-driving one and rode along, watching the news. I
don’t remember the exact date, but it was a Saturday afternoon in
May or June of ’57. You could pin it down, I guess, from the news
stories I saw. There was something about that coup in Florida, I
think, and the results of the privacy referendum from the Mars
colony.
Anyway, the car did a perfect job of parking on the street
outside Aldershot’s house. My plan, such as it was, had been to
march up and push his doorbell. I honestly didn’t know if he’d
open up for me; he’d be able to see who it was through his
doorcam. But when I arrived, he’d apparently just finished mowing
his lawn and was returning the mower to his garage, the door to
which was up. I almost admired him for a second, doing that chore
himself instead of having a robot do it.
I followed him in, the sound of the mower’s wheels on the
garage floor masking my approach. I hit the button on the wall
that I guessed operated the door, and sure enough the hinged
panels started coming down.
Mitch swung around, startled. “What the hell?” he said. And
then he saw who was in there with him. “Koudoulian?” he
spluttered. He knew what I looked like; he’d seen all my online
photos me and my two border collies, me and my daughter on
those weekends I had custody of her, me coaching her baseball
team.
“Aldershot,” I replied, just to make sure he understood that
I also knew who he was. Time had certainly turned the tables: I
was a good five inches taller than him now and outweighed him by
thirty pounds, all of it muscle.
We looked at each other, terror on his face and, I imagine,
fury and determination on mine. Off to my left was a doorway that
I guessed led into the house. I quickly moved to put myself
between him and it.
“What what do you want?” stammered Aldershot.
The sweetest thing, I thought. A dish best served
cold, I thought. A settling of scores, I thought. But
what I said was, “To knock you on your fucking ass.”
He raised his hands in a “Be cool, man,” gesture, and
started backing away, abandoning the lawnmower. I was glad his
car wasn’t there. We now had an arena bigger than a boxing ring;
plenty of room to give him the epic shit-kicking he deserved.
“Look, um, Roscoe,” he said. “I never ”
“Never what? Never meant to make my life a living hell?
Starting when I was four, for God’s sake! Beating the crap out of
me day in and day out, for what? Because I sometimes wore a
Star Trek T-shirt? Because I had a lazy eye? Because I’m
left-handed?” I took a step toward him and then another. “I used
to wonder what would make someone turn out like you. Some of the
other kids said your father beat you. Everyone knew he was a
drunk, so maybe he did. But that’s only an excuse if it’s
any kind of excuse at all when you’re a kid
yourself. But you tracked me down again, thirty years later. Why,
damn it?”
He stayed silent as he shuffled slowly backward toward the
rear wall of the garage, which was partially covered by the
electric charging station and a Masonite pegboard holding
gardening tools.
“Why?” I demanded again.
“You’re such a wuss, Koudoulian,” he said, pulling his
favorite childhood insult out of the past.
That did it. I lunged. He darted to one side, but I grabbed
his arm, spun him around, and slammed him against the back wall.
“Don’t call me that,” I said, seething. “Don’t you ever dare call
me that again.” I jerked him forward then slammed him back again.
Next, I pulled him toward me and saw that the back of his
head had left a bloody mark where it had hit the wall.
“Why?” I said, my voice a low rumble. “Why come at me
after all these years?”
He turned his head to the left, eyeing the door to the
house, but said nothing.
I smashed him against the wall once more, the Rorschach of
blood growing larger. He brought up his knee to kick me in the
balls just like he always used to do when beating me up. I
twisted to avoid that, and he used the leverage to get away. But
I managed to trip him, and he went face-first onto the garage
floor. Within seconds, I was looming over him and booted him in
the kidneys. “Why?” I demanded once more.
He drew up into a fetal position but just grunted. I kicked
him again. “Why?”
“Because ...” he said between wheezing, wet breaths,
“because when I found you online just curious to see what
had become of you, is all you were posting all kinds of
left-wing bullshit, and ”
“You tormented me over politics?”
“Bleeding hearts like you have been ruining America for
decades. Couldn’t have you polluting the mind of that little girl
of yours.”
What happened next was, as they always say, a blur. I
remember whirling around, taking some steps, and grabbing a pair
of garden shears from the pegboard. By the time I had them,
Aldershot was back on his feet. He ran for the switch that opened
the garage door and slammed his palm against it.
I body-checked him into the door as it started to rumble up
and I swung him around so he was facing me and
Yeah, this is the part I don’t remember clearly, but I guess
the forensics team was right; it probably did happen this
way
I opened the garden shears and drove one of the blades
sideways into the middle of his chest. Then I pulled the blade
out, and he just stood there, supported only by the slowly rising
garage door, his mouth a surprised circle as blood came pouring
out of him.
And then, after what seemed like an eternity, the folding
panels of the door passed the top of his head, and he tumbled
backward and fell onto the driveway ... just as a woman out
walking a poodle passed by on the street. I stood there
dumbfounded while she brought out her phone. She must have called
911, because soon enough I heard screaming sirens approaching.
Interview with Captain Letitia Garvey
So, yes, ColdBoot and its competitors could freeze a body,
but they couldn’t preserve a consciousness. All those decades my
Grandpa spent just lying there, he couldn’t even be dreaming;
everything he had once been was gone for good.
But that didn’t stop me from dreaming about him, and when I
was in my silo, he was often there with me. Sure, it was a
simulacrum, and maybe it really didn’t resemble the actual man.
Oh, physically, it looked like him; I’d seen enough photos and
home movies to get those details right. And I suppose he must
have had flaws and foibles like the rest of us, but in my
reality he was perfect. The kind of person I always wanted
to be: strong, resourceful, fearless. In my silo, we went
adventuring together. I got to relive his peacekeeping
experiences, dodging missiles and land mines. And I got to be in
Cape Town with him when he went there in 1990 to march with
Mandela. In real life, cancer was already slowing Grandpa down by
then, and he apparently barely survived a mob attack by a bunch
of whites, but in my version I was there with them him,
Mandela, all the others kicking ass and taking names.
Of course, my grandpa wasn’t the only human being who wanted
to cheat death. They came along too late for him, but other
competing paths toward immortality started to bear fruit, and
eventually the notion of scanning and uploading consciousness
into a computer went from science fiction that is, from a
rational, reasonable extrapolation of what we actually know
to science fact. Straight digital scanning of a mind
accomplished nothing, but using quantum entanglement to produce
an exact duplicate inside a quantum computer did the trick.
Except that most of the first quantum copies produced went
insane. Why? Because there was nothing for them to see or do
inside the quantum computer. They existed but there was no
sensory input, no world in which they lived, no space in which
they could move.
The first solution tried was slowing the clock speed of the
quantum computer to zero; the idea was to store a snapshot of the
mind without it experiencing any passage of time. But the same
thing happened as with frozen brains: they never rebooted any
self-awareness. It turned out that you have to keep consciousness
running and that meant you had to keep it sane, and
that meant building a virtual-reality environment inside
the quantum computer where it could feel and think and interact.
Store the body at sub-zero temperatures; store the mind in a
quantum computer and reunite them at some point in the
future. It was a perfect solution not just for those seeking to
beat death, like my grandpa, but also for astronauts like
Jürgen and me planning to go on a centuries-long
interstellar voyage.
Except, damn it all, something went horribly, horribly
wrong.
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