January 18, 1990 Page 13 The Gem Just One Little Problem January 6, 1953. Ben Varney sat at his kitchen table mulling over his problem again. Once again, as it had all those other times, it was becoming more and more obvious. Soon it would be noticeable to more than just his wife and children. Soon, it would be time for him to leave again. The questions had already started, questions he was finding increasingly hard to answer with- out revealing that which few peo- ple in his life knew. Fortunately, those people were dead now, peo- ple so trusted that they took that secret to the grave with them without speaking a word of it to any other. “Will you be okay, Honey?”, came the soothing voice from be- hind him. “Sorry, I was just thinking.” “Will you be alright with the kids?” “Sure, Val.” He paused for a moment as their eyes met. She knew there was more, and waited patiently for him to continue. “Val, I’m going to visit the Insti- tute tomorrow. I don’t know how long I’m going to be there, but it could be for quite some time. I want to see if they can help me. Maybe then we can get on with our lives.” She must have known this was coming. He had made several phone calls to the Institute for Genetic Research ever since he had seen that article in the pa- per about them. He had told her he had a physical disorder which could someday jeopardize their marriage, as it had done with his previous wife. : He looked at her now, 38 years old, and he remembered how ev- ery year she had become more> beautiful. Fifteen years they had been together, raising two. chil- dren. She came to him and he held her tight. “You don’t need to do this, we can make it work. What if some- thing happens and ...”, her voice trailed off into tears as she con- sidered the worst. “Don’t worry. Chances are there isn’t anything they can do. I doubt if there is anything any- one can do, but I have to try. Maybe we can learn something from this that’ll help somebody else.” The sobbing subsided, but she still held on tight. He arrived at the front gates to the Institute grounds and pre- vi wee sented the card that had been sent to him when he made his ap- pointment. The guard stepped back into his booth to make a se- curity check as Ben surveyed the surroundings. The Institute was once the Grahamsfield College. Nothing had been changed except the introduction of this and other guard posts at the roads lead- ing in, and the twenty-foot high electric fence that surrounded the grounds. The college never looked overly friendly to him, with its grey—stoned buildings, covered in ivy, but today it appeared even more forbidding with the grey . clouds racing overhead. “Straight ahead, leave the car in the parking garage and go to the third floor. Dr. Parker is waiting for you.” There’s no turning back now, he thought as he strode through the great iron gates that swung closed and locked: automatically after he had passed. I only hope there’s something they can finally do. “A most interesting case. But I’m afraid there’s little we can do without a more detailed analysis. Would you be able to stay here for about two weeks? We have a room all ready for you. All you have to do is sign here and we will begin testing at once.” Ben looked at the paper handed to him by Dr. Parker. He leaned forward in his chair as Dr. Parker reclined in his plush office chair behind his large desk and turned to took out the small win- dow. “Tt simply states that in the event of your death, we have your permission to do with your body as we wish.” Ben tried to read his way through the legal gibberish, then finally gave up — if he had some chance, any chance, it would be worth it. He walked to the the side of the desk and made his sig- nature with a pen he found in a brass holder. “Excellent!” , stated Dr. Parker as he stood and re- trieved the form at the same time. Ben judged him to be about six- foot six. He seemed to look like the typical lab assistant, tall, thin, draped in a white lab coat that sharply contrasted his slick black hair. But, it was his eyes that were most fascinating. Even behind his thick, metal-rimmed glasses, they looked wild. Dr. Parker placed a thin hand on his shoulder and lead him to the door. “The secretary will see that someone takes care of your things. Good-day.” The next thing he knew, he was in the outer office. The recep- tionist, a blond, stocky woman in her early forties. She was on the phone when he looked at her, so he walked to the couch oppo- site her and looked at the maga- zines on the coffee table. He had . only time to glance over the ti- tles when a muscular young man in a white shirt and white pants entered. “You will follow me to your room now,” he said through a heavy German accent. As he left the room, Ben hesitated, but pro- ceeded after his keeper when the secretary motioned with her fin- ger toward the door. During the next two weeks, he endured every form of testing he considered imaginable, and still they had nothing they could, or would, tell him. On the last day of his scheduled testing he was paid a visit by Dr. Parker as he lay exhausted in his bed. “We have one more thing to do, but you must be unconscious for it. There will be no pain, only a slight discomfort when you awaken.” ‘ With that, the German or- derly placed a mask firmly over his face, and the world clouded from view before he had time to think. “Mr. Varney, how good to see you awake,” began the doctor as Ben sat up in his bed with some difficulty. “What’s the up, Doc?” said Ben slowly. He still felt groggy from the operation and was find- ing it hard to concentrate on what the doctor was saying. “It seems you are the prod- uct of a freak genetic mutation. You see, you lack the gene which would otherwise cause your body to age. When you were about 30, which would have been approx- imately 380 years ago according to your report and our tests, you ceased to age physically.” “That’s all fine and wonder- ful, Doc, but is there any way of stopping it? Can I be fixed so I can age and die like normal peo- ple? I know it sounds strange, but I don’t want to keep living the way I am. I’ve lost nineteen wives over the centuries. Do you know how it feeis to watch the woman you love die slowly of old age while you stay young? Do you know what it’s like to have that happen to you again and again, and to know that’s the way it will always be?” “I’m getting so tired of liv- ing. I just want something to race against. I can’t see an end to it all, I don’t have a lifespan to help motivate me bezause I know I will never die. I can’t bear to hurt my family the way I have hurt all my other families over the years.” “You won’t have to Mr. Var- ney,” said the doctor. He sounded more distant now than ever. One thing was certain: he could clearly see a frightening wildness building in the doctor’s eyes. “Because you will never see them or anyone else again.” Panic began to strike Ben, but he was too weak to move. “But my wife, my children, ...” he panted, barely able to cling to consciousness. “She has already identified your dead body. When you were having your ‘operation’, we ac- tually slowed all of your bod- ily functions down until you ap- peared to be dead. Then, we had you wife identify your body after your tragic ‘accident’ which oc- curred while we were experiment- ing with a possible cure. After that, she was only too happy to sign the papers confirming your death, which means, now we own you.” The doctor smiled a sa- tanic smile. continued on page 14 JAMAICA Senior Class & Friends 1990 April 28 — May 7 Airfare Accomodations Activities Last day of exams - 1st day of Senior Week. Toronto, seven days in Jamaica sunshine. PEI - Toronto — Jamaica Meal & Bar Seawind Hotel, Tower Rooms, three star hotel on the beach, 10 minutes outside Montego Bay. This is Jamaica’s hot spot. Great night life! Two swimming pools, “Pri- Two days in Cost vate Clothes Optional Beach”. Public beach, volleyball, four ten- nis courts, sailing, snorkeling, scuba diving, water skiing, wind- surfing, bicycling, paddle boats, glass bottom boats, four bars, three restaurants. Surf, Sun, Sand. $930.00 The trip of a lifetime! What better way to fin- ish off your year. There is no limit to the number of people that can go. However it is necessary to get an approximate number of interested people as flights & accomodations must be booked. This trip is open to anybody who wants to spend 7 glo- rious days and nights in the Carribean. So sign-up today at the poster in the Library Breezeway. If 40 people register, there will be a draw for a Free Trip. Contact Paul Griffith at 892-1451 PPTTrTess see TE NNN aaa