The Last Mortal

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The operation was called Eternity Extension. On the prescription bottle, in small print, it said "blue tincture." Everyone called it that anyway. The color was irrelevant—the compound was clear as water—but the name had stuck, like a superstition.

I should not have done it. That much I know now. Two hundred years of hindsight is a cruel teacher.

My name is Alexander Voss. In 2045, when I sat in Dr. Finch's office and signed the consent forms, I was a thirty-four-year-old quantitative analyst at a Goldman Sachs spinoff. I made six figures, lived in a studio apartment in Manhattan, and watched my life drain away like water through a cracked cup. Every year felt shorter than the last. That was the first clue.

"Mr. Voss," Dr. Finch said, his voice soft, almost gentle. "At three hundred years, the average human lifespan becomes meaningless. You will outlive your colleagues, your friends, possibly your entire civilization. Are you prepared for that?"

I said yes. I said it because I was thirty-four and thirty-four-year-olds think they have time to figure it out later.

Eleanor—my girlfriend at the time—refused. "Life is tired," she told me that night, sitting on the fire escape of my building, smoking a cigarette she didn't need because she wasn't addicted. "But it's ours. When you do this, Alex, you won't be mine anymore. You won't be human anymore. You'll be something else. Something that watches us die the way we watch mayflies die."

I called her coward. I called her narrow. I called her many things that I still can't bear to repeat, because she had been right about every single one.

The procedure took six hours. I woke up feeling nothing different. Dr. Finch smiled at me through the observation glass and said, "Welcome to forever, Alexander."

The first hundred years were a dream. I watched markets I couldn't have imagined in 2045. I invested in companies that didn't exist when I was born. I met people—countless people—who would have been my great-great-grandchildren if they had been born in my century. I accumulated wealth that no single person should possess. I was twenty when I started this, and I had three hundred years to spend it. What could go wrong?

The first sign came in 2125. I was eighty years into the extension. I attended the Century Gala of the Eternity Alliance—a dinner party for the first generation of extended humans, people like me who had signed up in 2045 or the years immediately after. I was sitting across from Helena Petrova, who had been a ballet dancer in St. Petersburg before her extension. We were discussing—what were we discussing? I couldn't remember. Something about "resonance fields" and "cognitive lattice alignment." The words meant nothing to me. I smiled and nodded and took another sip of wine that tasted like nothing.

After dinner, I asked Helena what we'd been talking about.

She looked at me the way you look at a child who points at the moon and asks if it's a cheese. "Resonance fields," she said slowly. "You know. The way our extended consciousness—"

"No," I said. "I don't know."

Her expression shifted. Not to anger. Not to pity. To something worse: recognition. The recognition of someone encountering an artifact. A relic. A museum piece.

"Oh, Alexander," she said, and reached across the table to touch my hand. Her fingers were cold. "You haven't been updated in forty years."

That was the first time I understood: the extension wasn't static. Every five years, the protocol was refined. Every refinement adjusted the genetic sequence slightly, to accommodate the accumulated wear of centuries. But I hadn't been updated. I hadn't wanted to. I'd always told myself it was principle—that I refused to let them edit me further. In truth, I was afraid. Afraid that each update would erase another piece of who I was.

By 2150, the gap was unbridgeable. The extended humans who had undergone updates spoke a language that was English only in the most superficial sense. Their vocabulary had expanded into abstract concepts I couldn't parse. Their emotional range had shifted—they no longer felt grief the way I understood it. They felt something else: a vast, calm acceptance that I could only describe as inhuman.

By 2175, my own "descendants"—the people who had inherited my professional role, my investments, my apartment (which had become a museum of my era)—looked at me the way one looks at a stuffed bird in a glass case. Beautiful, but dead. A relic of a simpler time.

Last week, my granddaughter—no, not my granddaughter. My successor in the genetic line. She's been updated seventeen times. She looks at me and I see the same expression Helena gave me forty years ago: recognition of something that is almost, but not quite, human.

"I am going to speak to you in simple English," she said yesterday, sitting in the room that used to be my apartment and is now a wing of the Voss Museum. "Do you understand me?"

I nodded. The motion felt mechanical, like a clockwork toy's jerky bow.

"I'm sorry," she said. And she meant it. I could tell she meant it. But her apology was the apology of a living thing looking at something that has outlived its purpose.

Tonight, I stand before my mirror—the same mirror I stood before in 2045, the night before the procedure—and I look at my face. It hasn't aged. The extension prevents aging. But the face is wrong. The features are still human, but the expression—the expression is no longer human. My facial muscles produce movements that I don't intend. They look like the facial expressions of a different species entirely.

I am two hundred and fifty years old. I will outlive my successor. I will outlive the museum that bears my name. I will outlive the language that is slowly, inexorably, forgetting how to name me.

I asked for forever. I got it. And forever is a prison with no walls, because the only bars are time itself.


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

TENSOR ENCODING (OTMES v2):
OTMES-v2-7A3BD4E1-14.8-M0-150.0-7RDF932

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