
techniques, and some others, were acceptable. They treated already existing conditions. That was all
right. It was the prospect of intervention at the start, the possibility of deciding what kind of people to
produce, that was frightening. None of these discoveries had been pushed any further in the past twenty
years. No new discoveries had been made. Experimentation with humans and in some countries fetuses
had been banned.
Many biologists had argued against the restrictions in vain. Others, who had already decided not to
pursue certain experiments on their own, remained silent. Governments, Paul knew, had been meticulous
in supporting the restrictions. As long as one country did not experiment, others would not feel pressured
to do the same. No government wanted to risk losing the hard-won gains of the past several years, not
when the world had achieved an uneasy peace and a more even distribution of wealth. No government
wanted society vastly altered. Everyone, it seemed, wanted more time at least to consider the issues.
The moratorium, however, had done more than simply halt experimentation. It had deprived the world of
thousands of talented biologists. Funds for research dried up. Talented scientists who wanted to push
beyond the present boundaries of human knowledge went into other fields where restrictions were either
less severe or nonexistent. Almost the only biologists left were medical technicians and physicians, who
used the allowed techniques, teachers, who often lost their most promising students to other disciplines,
and laboratory workers.
And Paul could only guess at how many millions of unfortunate or diseased individuals existed whose
suffering might have been prevented had research been allowed.
But with the beginning of the new year and the new millenium, the moratorium would expire, at least
temporarily. Hidey had been preparing for this for quite a while. If Paul would cooperate, Hidey would
make his move.
Hidey Takamura was familiar with embryology as well as genetics and specialized in cloning. He had
cloned several types of animals, allowed under the moratorium, helping in the restoration of a few
endangered species.
But Hidey wanted to clone a human being. The moratorium was running out. He had to move fast, in
case the ban was reimposed. He needed a donor of genetic material.
Paul considered Hidey's motives. There was no doubt that his old friend meant what he had said, that he
must find out if he could accomplish the task and what the results would be. It was a matter of advancing
scientific knowledge. Yet Paul knew Hidey also wanted to be first, to become a scientific immortal.
"Why me?" Paul had asked when the project had first been suggested to him. "There are plenty of people
who would be more valuable, who have more to offer than I do."
"That's one reason right there," Hidey said. "Because you ask that question. I don't want an egomaniac,
and I'm afraid that's what many gifted people are. You're a brilliant and compassionate man. You're
aware of your faults as well as your gifts. I've known you for more than thirty years and I've seen how
you act in different situations. You are also, unlike others, capable in many fields. Your popular texts on
biology and chemistry are better than anything I've seen, even ones written by specialists. You have a
natural talent for music which you don't have time to explore fully. I've even seen those poems you hide
from almost everyone else. People like you are limited only by the fact that they have one lifetime.
Imagine what five or six Paul Swensons could do."
"I think you're wrong there," Paul replied. "If you have a group of Paul Swensons, I don't see why they
wouldn't do what I've done. The fact that they're exactly alike might also affect them badly. They might
have my temperament, and you know how moody and depressed I can get."