The Stranger in the Mirror
Sarah woke up to a world of glass and light. The "Great Sleep" had been a dreamless void, a single heartbeat that spanned a century. As the cryo-pod hissed open, she felt the cold air of 2126 hit her skin like a physical blow.
"Welcome back, Sarah," a voice said.
She turned to see Mark. He was standing there, dressed in a suit of shimmering, liquid fabric. He looked exactly as he had the day she went under—the same sharp jawline, the same mischievous glint in his eyes. He had chosen "Extension," the path of the immortal.
For the first few weeks, it felt like a miracle. Mark showed her the new New York, a city of floating gardens and silent trains. He told her about the centuries he had spent learning, traveling, and evolving. He spoke of the "Great Transition," where humanity had moved beyond the need for sleep and hunger.
But as the honeymoon period faded, Sarah began to feel a growing sense of alienation.
Mark was not the man she had loved. The Mark she knew had been impulsive, passionate, and prone to bouts of melancholic poetry. This Mark was... optimized. He spoke in perfectly structured sentences. His emotions were calibrated, his reactions predictable. He didn't laugh; he "expressed amusement." He didn't love; he "maintained a high-value emotional bond."
She realized that the Extension process didn't just stop aging; it pruned the "inefficiencies" of the human psyche. To live for centuries, one had to shed the volatility of passion, the chaos of grief, and the fragility of doubt.
"I miss you," she told him one evening, as they watched the artificial sunset from their balcony.
"I am right here, Sarah," he replied, his voice smooth and devoid of texture. "I am the most complete version of myself that has ever existed."
"That's the problem," she whispered. "The version I loved was the incomplete one."
She began to haunt the city, seeking out other "Extended" beings. She found a society of beautiful, immortal strangers who lived in a state of permanent, polite boredom. They had forgotten how to cry, how to scream, and how to truly desire. They were like sculptures of themselves—perfect, polished, and utterly dead.
One day, she found a hidden archive of Mark's old journals, written in the first few decades of his immortality. She read about his struggle to hold onto his humanity, his desperate attempts to remember the smell of rain and the feeling of a broken heart. She saw the exact moment he had given up, the moment he had decided that the pain of being human was not worth the cost of eternity.
She looked at the man standing beside her—this optimized, eternal stranger—and she felt a grief more profound than any she had known in the old world.
Sarah returned to the clinic. She didn't ask for more time; she asked for the "Reversion." She wanted to age. She wanted her skin to wrinkle, her memory to fade, and her heart to eventually stop.
"Why would you choose to die?" Mark asked, his expression one of genuine, calibrated confusion.
"Because," Sarah replied, kissing his cold, perfect cheek, "I would rather have one year of being human than a thousand years of being a mirror."
*** OTMES_v2_CODE: [V-07]-[PERSPECTIVE-SHIFT]-[N2:0.8, M1:7.0, theta:135]
Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:
OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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