Harold's in love. There's no hiding
it. You can see it in his eyes, in the heat distribution on his skin, in the
twists and whorls of his brain's magnetic field.
Mary knows he exists, all right. When she looks
his way, she doesn't look through him - not quite. She notices him with a mild
frown. She notices him like a splinter in her thumb, or a crease in her lab
coat. She notices him like a faint odour; nothing utterly repulsive, but nothing
too pleasant either.
Poor Harold was once
a promising neurochemist. He discovered a brand new neurotransmitter-antagonist
which could make rats lethargic and depressed. However, while proving that
injections of this substance, during or immediately after feeding, could produce
an aversive association strong enough to make the creatures starve themselves to
death, he accidentally jabbed himself with the needle, and soon found he was no
longer able even to contemplate experiments with rats. So these days, he
works on The Vat.
Harold is in charge of
spermatogenesis. In truth, he doesn't have a lot to do. The computer monitors
the temperature, the pH, the concentrations of nutrients, growth factors, and
waste products. Four hundred square metres of glass plate are coated with a
gelatinous matrix in which spermatogonia, the stem cells, are embedded. When
these cells divide, some of their daughter cells are more of the same, the
others are primary spermatocytes. Each primary spermatocyte gives rise by
meiosis to two secondary spermatocytes, each of which in turn divides into two
spermatids. Under the influence of Sertoli cells, also embedded in the matrix,
spermatids mature and shed cytoplasm to become spermatozoa.
Harold has seen all of these stages hundreds of
times under the microscope, in samples taken for quality control. He ought to
find the whole business utterly mundane. Sometimes, though - transfixed for a
moment by the image on the screen - he says in dreamy tones of sudden
recognition (to no one in particular, often to no one at all), "Yes! This is it.
This is life." Staring at these specks of unthinking biochemical
machinery, he grows dizzy with wonder, then numb with awe.
Then he gets on with the job.
Some nights, Harold wakes in the early hours and
goes out to walk the empty streets. Why? It's the hottest summer on
record, and he can't get back to sleep. Why? Unrequited love, of course.
Why? Studies of the sequence of neurological events which occur when a
subject makes a self-motivated choice between hitting a button and not hitting a
button have revealed that the conscious decision-making process starts
milliseconds after other parts of the brain are already committed to
action. "Will" isn't the cause of anything, it's an afterthought for the sake of
peace of mind. Since reading this, Harold has stopped making an effort to force
his intentions to conform to his behaviour; there doesn't seem much point now in
maintaining the illusion. He just walks.
Even the stillest, quietest night comes alive for Harold. He sees gas molecules
spinning through the air, and photons pouring down from the stars, the way some
insane medieval monk might have imagined angels and demons battling it out
behind every corner and beneath every cobblestone. And the frenzy isn't confined
to his surroundings; the real bedlam is inside him. He pictures it all, vividly,
in garish, comic-book, computer-graphic colours: DNA being transcribed, proteins
being synthesised, carbohydrates being burnt in flameless enzymatic fires.
Everybody's made up of molecules, and plenty of people know it, but nobody
feels it like Harold.
Above all,
he dizzily marvels at the fact that the molecules in his brain have managed,
collectively, to understand themselves: his neurotransmitters are part of a
system that knows what a neurotransmitter is. He can sketch the
structures of the central nervous system's one hundred most important
substances; he's synthesised half of them with his own hands. He's even viewed
real-time images of his brain metabolising radioactively-labelled glucose,
revealing which regions were most active as he watched himself thinking about
watching himself think.
Harold doesn't
know quite what to make of this molecular self-knowledge. He can't decide if
consciousness is miraculous or meaningless; he hovers between mystical ecstasy
and the purest nihilism. Sometimes he feels like a robot, raised by human
parents, who's just discovered the awful truth: poring over his own circuit
diagrams, horrified but enthralled; scanning a print-out of his own software,
following the flow of control from subroutine to subroutine; understanding, at
last, the ultimate shallowness of the deepest reasons for everything he's ever
done, everything he's ever felt - and dissociating into a mist of a quadrillion
purposeless, microscopic causes and effects.
This mood always passes, though, eventually.
Mary is responsible for oogenesis. Primary oocytes undergo meiotic
division to yield four cells, but only one of the four is a mature ovum; the
others are tiny cells known as polar bodies, and the second division is only
completed if fertilisation takes place. In a massive cultured substitute for the
ovarian cortex, millions of ova mature and burst from their follicles daily - no
parsimonious one a month here. The Vat has no time, and no need, to ponderously
mimic the stages of the human menstrual cycle; as in any good assembly line,
everything is happening at once.
Harold knows exactly where Mary lives, although of course he's never been
inside, and when he walks by at two in the morning, the narrow terrace house is
always black and silent. He hurries past, terrified that she might be awake, and
might glance out at the sound of his guilty footsteps.
He knows he ought to forget her. Sometimes he
swears that he will. He sees women on the street every day whom he finds a
thousand times more attractive. Total strangers treat him with far greater
kindness and respect. He knows his mere presence annoys her - and her presence
evokes in him more shame and confusion than tenderness, or even lust.
His love is ridiculous. His love is a farce. Yet
the persistence of his obsession doesn't surprise him at all. Evolution, he
reasons, has not had time to trim human consciousness down to the most
productive, most essential elements. His brain is capable of many arbitrary,
even self-defeating, modes; perhaps that is the price to pay for its
flexibility, perhaps there is no easy sequence of mutations which could remove
such disadvantages without sacrificing much more.
As for his own wish to be rid of this miserable,
pointless love, Harold knows that this has no more power to change his feelings
than it does to change the weather on Jupiter or the electron's charge-to-mass
ratio; it's merely another aspect of the state of his brain. Whatever admirable
progress evolution has made towards lining up intentions with behaviour to
pander to the vanities of the conscious mind, has - in Harold's case, at least -
been wasted. The neurological facts refuse to stay decently theoretical; the
irony is that this shattering of the illusion of will, although entirely
reasonable, is not by any means necessary; after all, the human brain is under
no deep biochemical edict to be reasonable. The epiphenomenon of logical
thought simply happens to have been more resilient, in this case, than the
epiphenomenon of will; in a million other people, as familiar with the facts as
Harold, the battle happens to have gone the other way.
Harold wonders, with a mixture of unease and
fascination, if his reason is strong enough to move on from this conquest to the
ultimate triumph of undermining itself.
When Mary's ova meet Harold's sperm, a high proportion are fertilised. Most
of the sperm go to waste, but not nearly as many as are lost in vivo. The
rates of polyspermy, and fertilisation by defective sperm, are consequently
higher, but such abnormalities don't really matter, in The Vat. The resulting zygotes drift, slowly, along a vast
conduit. They undergo cleavage, redistributing their cytoplasm amongst more and
more cells. Between four and six days after fertilisation, blastocysts form:
hollow balls of cells, with a cluster at one end which is destined to become the
embryo. Other cells will, in time, give rise to the protective foetal membranes.
Cultured slabs of uterine endometrium -
hormonally stimulated into a swollen, receptive state, and replete with
artificial blood circulated by electric pumps - are introduced into the conduit
at the point where the blastocysts are ready to implant. Within days of
implantation, chorionic villi - the links between the placental and "maternal"
blood supply - will form, guaranteeing essential nutrition for the haemotropic
development to come.
Tonight, after
passing Mary's dark house - on the far side of the street, as always - Harold
stops and turns back. Why? Because certain of his motor neurons fire in
the necessary sequence. Why? Because sufficient excitatory signals are
received at their dendrites. Why? Because of the neural topology of
Harold's brain, the product of his genome, and his life history, and the way the
quantum dice have fallen.
A
rubbish-strewn alley leads to a back window, very slightly ajar. Harold can fit
only his fingernails into the crack, and clawing the window open causes him a
lot of pain, but this doesn't deter him at all.
The window leads into a damp, warm bathroom,
between a toilet and a dripping shower. He fears that the sound of the dripping
will betray him; it rings so loudly in his head that he believes Mary might be
wakened, not by the sound itself, but by his amplified perception of it. He
tightens the hot water tap with all his strength, and then the cold, but there's
a leaky washer, and no amount of force is going to change that.
He tip-toes into the kitchen, opens the drawers
and searches them methodically. It's not until he has the carving knife in his
hand that he reflects on his likely use for it. Part of him is shocked, but part
of him is delighted; it's one thing to muse and fret like a tenth-rate
philosopher, but here at last is a test for his ideas that goes beyond
inconsequential speculation.
A proportion of the embryos are simply liquefied; the cell walls, and indeed
all intracellular structures, are ultrasonically disrupted. The broth of
chemicals this produces is then fed into a sophisticated purification system,
based mainly on electrophoresis and affinity chromatography, and many valuable
substances are extracted. The remaining
embryos are broken into individual cells. In theory, perhaps, almost anything
can be achieved with engineered bacteria, or some modified tumour cell line, but
in practice there are still many properties of healthy human tissue that can't
be faked. Persuading E. coli to churn out hormones like insulin or
dopamine is simple enough; turning it into a perfectly functional equivalent of
an islet cell or a dopaminergic neuron - an integral part of a complicated
regulatory system - is something else entirely. It's simply not economical,
trying to make all that human DNA work in a foreign environment, when the real
thing is available for a fraction of the cost.
Harold passes the refrigerated storerooms every
morning as he arrives for work, and every evening as he departs. It's a relaxed,
cheerful place; the storemen always seem to be whistling, or playing a radio
loudly. Vans come and go at all hours, picking up the large, but light,
containers of insulating foam in which the small, precious vials are packed.
When Harold sees a crateful of the end product of his work being loaded into a
van, when he sees the driver sign for the consignment, slam his door, and drive
away, he says to himself aloud, nodding, "Yes! This is it. This is life."
Harold stands by Mary's bed. She's lying
on her side, turned away from him. He breathes slowly - through his mouth,
hoping that this is the quietest way - and thinks about the trillions of cells
of her body. If he stabbed her in the heart, only the tiniest fraction of them
would be killed directly by the blade - just a few million cells in her skin,
her soft tissue, her heart muscles. The death of her neurons would be almost
coincidental, more a product of this organism's poor design than anything else.
A slime mould would easily survive similar treatment.
He stands for a while, waiting to see what he will
do. Part of him - a small, vestigial subsystem with no interest whatsoever in
brain physiology, the philosophy of consciousness, or even obsessive love -
pleads fervently to be allowed to put down the knife and flee, but Harold pays
it about as much attention as the soundtrack of a child's cartoon overheard
playing on a neighbour's TV. He stands, and he waits.
Harold doesn't mourn for the brief lives he helps
create; he knows they die long before the most primitive thoughts or feelings
have a chance to arise, and he can't believe there's a machine up in heaven,
churning out a white-robed feather-winged soul for each of these tiny clusters
of cells.
Rather, he rejoices. Because
The Vat says something about human life - human life of every age - that had to
be said, and although today he is alone in heeding this message, he knows that
in time the insights he's gained will be the common heritage of all humanity.
Harold retraces his steps. He returns the
knife to its place in the kitchen. He leaves by the bathroom window, and closes
it behind him.
He wanted to kill her, he
muses, more than he'd ever wanted anything before. He wanted, very badly, to be
free. But something in his genome, or something in his past, declared that it
wasn't to be. Or perhaps the quantum dice simply happened to fall in her favour.
This time.
He walks home slowly, his face
uplifted to the photons flooding down from the stars, and he counts them one by
one.