learned that human life was expendable. Melanie had sat there in shocked silenceâthe silence of guilt, mortification and paranoia (what if someone should see her there in the crowd?)âwhile Dr. Toni Brinsley-Schneider, the Stanford bioethicist, had informed them that humans, like pigs, chickens and guppies, were replaceable. In the doctorâs view, the infirm, the mentally impaired, criminals, premature infants and the like were non-persons, whose burden society could no longer be expected to support, especially in light of our breeding success. âWeâre hardly an endangered species,â she said with a grim laugh. âDid you know, all of you good and earnest people sitting here tonight, that weâve just reached the population threshold of six billion?â She was cocked back from the lectern in a combative pose, her penurious little silver-rimmed reading glasses flinging fragments of light out into the audience. âDo any of you really want more condominiums, more shantytowns and favelas, more cars on the freeway, more group homes for the physically handicapped right around the corner from you? On your street? Next door?â She leveled her flashing gaze on them. âWell, do you?â
People shifted in their seats, a muted moist surge of sound that was like the timid lapping of waves on a distant shore. No one respondedâthis was a polite crowd, a liberal crowd dedicated to free expression, a university crowd, and besides, the question had been posed for effect only. Theyâd have their chance to draw blood during the Q&A.
Sean sat at attention beside Melanie, his face shining and smug. He was midway through the Ph.D. program in literary theory, and the theoreticians had hardened his heart: Dr. Brinsley-Schneider was merely confirming what he already knew. Melanie took his hand, but it wasnât a warm hand, a hand expressive of comfort and loveâit was more like something dug frozen from the earth. She hadnât yet told him what sheâd learned at two thirty-three that afternoon, special knowledge, a secret as magical and expansive as a loaf of bread rising in a pan. Another sort of doctor had brought her the news, a doctor very different from the pinched and angry-looking middle-aged woman at the podium, a young dark-haired sylph of a woman, almost a girl, with a wide beatific face and congratulatory eyes, dressed all in white like a figure out of a dream.
They walked to the car in silence, the mist off the ocean redrawing the silhouettes of the trees, the streetlights softly glowing. Sean wanted a burgerâand maybe a beerâso they stopped off at a local bar and grill the students hadnât discovered yet and she watched him eat and drink while the television over the bar replayed images of atrocities in the Balkans, the routine bombing of Iraq and the itinerary of the railroad killer. In between commercials for trucks that were apparently capable of scaling cliffs and fording rivers, they showed the killerâs face, a mug shot of a slightly built Latino with an interrupted mustache and two dead eyes buried like artifacts in his head. âYou see that?â Sean said, nodding at the screen, the half-eaten burger clenched in one hand, the beer in the other. âThatâs what Brinsley-Schneider and these people are talking about. You think this guy worries much about the sanctity of human life?â
Can we afford compassion?
Melanie could hear the lecturerâs droning thin voice in the back of her head, and she saw the dour pale muffin of a face frozen in the spotlight when somebody in back shouted
Nazi!
âI donât know why we have to go to these lectures, anyway,â she said. âLast yearâs series was so much moreâdo I want to say âupliftingâ here? Remember the woman whoâd written that book about beekeeping? And the old professorâwhat was his name?âwho talked about Yeats and Maud
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