After costing him many years of his life on
research and almost all of his fortune, Darren had finally realised that
immortality itself was not possible. The basic fact when you boiled it down was
that the body wore away as time passed, so therefore, the best you could hope
for after 300 years was to be a blob of muscle, mucus and membranes that once
upon a time was labelled as your body. Each test, each theoretical model he ran
ended up with the same, jelly like state.
He
felt a little let down to have spent so much of his life trying to find the
answer that actually switching off and having what others would have called a
normal life was impossible to him, and, even though he’d tried, the scientist
in him always came back to the basics again.
If
only he could slow down time, he reasoned, then a hundred years could be
stretched to maybe a thousand or more, therefore the body would survive longer.
It wasn’t quite immortality, but it was close, and after so many years, he was
happy with close.
That
being said, he’d started to study the passage of time, not only how certain
people seemed to get more done in a day than others, how those certain people
felt the day lasted longer than the normal 24 hours, but also those that the
day blinked passed after what felt like five minutes.
His
theory was that time must be a certain size, and some people would absorb time
faster than others and he’d taken blood from those who claimed time went faster
for then, and those whose life dragged on and from the blood he’d found a
chemical, a single chemical bond that those whose days passed more slowly
possessed that the others did not, a simple anti-time mixture.
The
chemical had not been easy to replicate though, but the last of his inheritance
and the sale of his estate had finally brought him to this point, this point in
time when he would be able to slow time around him. If all went well, he’d be a
step close to immortality, the very elixir from the fountain of youth itself.
The
Perspex container he’d designed would allow him to work in the gas, thus giving
him more hours in the day and therefore more days in the year. Jubilantly he
stepped inside and closed and sealed the door behind him, and with a final
smile of satisfaction he sat down with a copy of War and Peace and took a note
of the time on the clock outside the container.
If everything
went well, he would be able to read the total book in the next few hours, or
minutes even. Pressing the button on his console, he flooded the chamber with
the chemical and relaxed back as he breathed it in.
As the toxic gas
filled his lungs he realised his error, but by then it was too late to stop it
taking effect. The irony was that he’d aimed to become immortal, that the gas
would keep him alive longer, but, as he started to spasm and his mouth to
froth, the next minute actually did last him the rest of his life, so it wasn’t
a total failure.
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