stewardship of the planet. It was ambitious, I know, but-'
'Longevity's also the biggest problem,' Sam said.
'True,' Ben said. 'When you make old age a disease, you create mind-bending, psychological, political, and social issues.'
'I can see that,' Sam said.
'There's always hope,' Haley said. 'But then there's always wrinkles too.'
Sam and Ben chuckled, despite the difficult truth.
Then Ben paused, giving her a look of Santa-like reassurance. In that moment only the two of them existed in their universe.
'Helen told me why my discovery would captivate so many. And really it's why we are here today being chased by crazy people.'
Haley put her hand on Ben's and waited.
'Well, it's not that profound,' he said. 'It is because we get older faster than we think.'
Ben waited to let that sink in. 'When I was a little boy, ten years old, standing by a big old madrona over by the old lime kiln, on Orcas, I thought about time. I think it was my first virginal experience with the subject. I reasoned that I could only remember back a few years and yet it seemed quite a while that I had been around. To my way of thinking at ten, getting to thirty would be many multiples of my conscious life remembered. And so I concluded that as a practical matter I just didn't have to worry about getting old.
After that time by the lime kiln, there were many such good days; many winters of fireside reading, summers of sun and blue water, many happy years with Helen and you.
I was still surprised. I got older faster than I thought and, so in a way, I felt I needed to make some bargain for more. It is the bane of conscious life that it wants to hear the cry of another grandchild, taste next season's wine, watch the latest meteor shower, listen to one more Messiah. Even such banal things as next year's Super Bowl sound good. But there's no one to bargain with. It was my dream to find a way to make that bargain-not just for me, but for millions. Now I may dump that dream overboard in San Juan Channel because living with the rotting carcass of selfish humanity seems worse, for the moment, than dying. Or maybe I shouldn't be such a pessimist. Maybe a democracy can handle it.'
No one said anything for a long moment.
'So now we have to deal with Glaucus,' Ben said, his eyes clear and purposeful again.
'Other than the flask of Arcs, and what I have stored in my brain, he's the clearest existing path to the Arc regimen.'
'But aren't you going to tell me how the aging formula works?' Haley asked. 'For God's sake, I've earned it. Spit it out!'
Ben smiled as if it really didn't matter how it all worked. 'Well, for God's sake, I might be doing you something of a disservice. But you're a young scientist. I remember what that's like. So a quick explanation. We do five things, or work on five systems, if you will. Mostly it's rooted in protecting your DNA and stimulating cellular regeneration without causing cancer. We first limit a primary source of damage to human DNA by limiting free radicals; we then make the DNA itself less susceptible to damage; we then slow the cellular clock that controls the number of times a cell can divide; we give powerful mitogens, which some people call growth hormones; and we influence cardiovascular health by making lipo protein molecules larger, and bad cholesterol lower and good cholesterol higher.'
'How does it work?' she prodded.
'We know the result of activating the gene, we've been discussing. We're getting the additional uncoupler protein molecule that does indeed limit free radicals by altering the mitochondrial cell wall. With the treatment the mitochondria leak much less unused oxygen. It is the ultimate antioxidant supplement, and it really works.
'This Arc peptide hormone superactivates yet another apparently silent gene in your genome. I say apparently because we don't know what else it might do. This gene we call Arc Two, even though it's not known in Arcs, and we call the hormone that activates it 'Arc stimulator' or 'AS.' AS induces the gene Arc Two to express a protein that creates a sort of shield for your DNA. You could think of it as a toughening agent or genome copy insurance.'
Sam wasn't following the science anymore, but he was interested in the bottom line, which he sensed was coming. Haley, on the other hand, was obviously transported, so he didn't dare interrupt with basic questions.
'In scientific terms,' Ben said, 'AS causes alternative splicing of the Arc Two RNA, giving rise to a molecule that stops meiosis and greatly reduces abnormal recombinations in human DNA. It significantly affects the nuclear chromatin structures into which DNA is packaged, although we haven't finished analyzing how it does that.
So the tightly packed DNA in the reorganized chromatin will not replicate for purposes of sexual reproduction and it pretty much won't allow the abnormal recombinations of DNA that often result in cancer. Cancer is still possible, but unlikely. But here's the good part: recombinations run by the immune system are largely unaffected.'
'You can't make babies, then, once the AS hormone's induced the Arc Two gene?'
Haley said.
'Yes. That's right.'
'Glaucus was your first subject, then, and can't reproduce.'
'Yes. We've given Glaucus the effect of the Arc gene by in vitro gene infusion. That's not the important thing about Glaucus. There's a homologous gene in humans that stimulates cell growth. But it's much more active in octopuses.'
'Don't tell me you used an octopus hormone to stimulate a human gene?'
'Oh no. A combination of other human hormones that we discovered by studying octopuses. They exist in humans in infinitesimal quantities and are related to the common growth hormones already used by physicians. We produce the super-hormone in transgenic bacteria.'
'That's part of what the bacteria were making in the lab,' Haley said.
The motors throbbed on a calm sea. Over the stern, Sam watched as a bald eagle dragged its talons across the water but missed its prey.
'Yes, exactly,' Ben continued. 'Glaucus and his huge size are a good example of a different part of the regimen attributable to the growth hormones. Octopuses in the wild have gotten five hundred pounds in four years and started at the size of a rice grain.
Compare that to people. The hormones we use in the Arc regimen have the advantage they don't lose their effectiveness over time and they are self-limiting. On the regimen you won't develop endless muscle, for example. No cancer, because we altered the chromatin. Big muscles- light workouts.'
'Oh, so you don't lose muscle mass as you age.'
'Bingo,' Ben said. 'Except, actually, you hardly age in any usual sense for a long time.'
'Okay. Then?'
'Another reason we age is because telomeres in each cell of our body get shorter with time.'
'So you're about to tell me you can slow the shortening of telomeres by activating telomerase without getting cancer,' Haley said. 'You can use powerful cell reproduction stimulators without inducing cancer?'
'Exactly.'
Sam saw that they were approaching their destination. He moved to the wheel.
'What's next?'
'Next is pedestrian, but necessary. Even thirty-five-year-olds have arteriosclerosis resulting in damage to the arteries. We learned how to increase the size of lipo protein molecules in your blood and lower bad cholesterol while raising good cholesterol.'
'And that's the end of it?'
'That's it, dear-except for a few thousand details.'
Haley thought a moment. 'We can release Glaucus because he can't reproduce.'
'Bingo,' Ben said.
As they entered Friday Harbor, Sam saw no boats about; they were safe, for the moment.
Now all they had to do was dump an impotent octopus into the Pacific and stop a money-mad, crooked cop from hurting anyone else. The first sounded simple enough.
The second, not so much.