I take you back to the night over a year ago when a pack of wolves rushed at me from a forest of data on my computer screen. I shot up, knocking over my chair, my immediate response being one of shock and fear. But I would soon recognise the event to have been a timely intervention from my unconscious, a warning to heed of wolves circling.
I had recently returned from visiting several sites in my capacity as Chief Investigator for a clinical trial, and been absorbed in reviewing data on the efficacy of the drug concerned, a nootropic with the potential to transform users into the most complete individuals cognitively: supremely perceptive, alert and flexible.
I was both exhausted and exhilarated that night. While part of me longed to abandon all thought and effort and simply sink into a deep sleep, I would have pried my eyes open with matchsticks, if necessary, captivated as I was by the trial results, which included numerous participant reports of feeling intensely powerful.
Morning came with the rumbling sound of a refuse truck and the crashing of bins, the last thing I was aware of before slumping to sleep at my desk. I had a dream that the trial data was a symphonic score, and I was conducting an orchestra, creating music that was the most rousing and triumphant ever, when harsh, dissonant trills took over, and I awoke to the din of my phone disrupting the coda in my dream. The Principal Investigator at one of the research sites was calling, concerned that a newspaper was planning to publish a report alleging multiple incidents of serious rage reactions in the drug trial. We agreed that she would investigate the source of this story, and I would ask our media lawyer to caution the newspaper editor.
A thrum of trepidation clung to me as I turned on the radio, and someone said,
‘You better be ready. They are coming for you. You either fight or you die, that’s the truth.’
I opened a file I worked on during the night. A series of doodles and incoherent phrases was all I could find. My computer had been hacked!
*
In a hotel lobby, a growing crowd was jostling a group of us into a tight cluster. It was the day of the Society for Cognitive Enhancement conference, where I was to present a paper on New-generation Nootropics and Human Evolution. One of my colleagues was performing a frantic attempt to loosen his shirt-collar, while Blake, his lanky frame augmented as he grasped his raised head in his hands, stared at the ceiling; until he looked down his nose at me and spoke. Unscrambling the cacophony of voices, I decoded his utterance, a question about whether I was ready to ‘spill the beans.’
As my friend, Blake was privy to aspects of the drug trial that no one else was, outside the study. We had also discussed self-experimenting with the nootropic, which we referred to as ‘Bean,’ from the string of symbols, namely B34N, in the sponsor protocol code. Yet there he was, challenging me to publicly acknowledge that information about adverse drug reactions involving violence was being suppressed.
An announcement over the P.A. invited attendees to take their seats in the auditorium, and I and other speakers were directed to the green room to relax and prepare; but I found myself pacing the floor of that small room, to the consternation of others there. Then, when I finally stood at the lectern to deliver my speech, Blake in the audience motioned towards me as he leant into his neighbour, his mouth concealed behind his hand, spitting spite, poisoning other Society members against me, provoking a snigger that rippled like a metachronal wave through the conference hall.
‘It was Blake all along!’ my inner voice reverberated as I hurtled to my residence from the train station that day; and I chewed, swallowed, regurgitated, and re-chewed indications of hostility towards me. I told myself this was in order to evaluate and counter the threats I was facing, but I became stranded in a labyrinth of dark thoughts that laid bare my own failings, and my mood plunged. I switched on the radio and cranked up the volume to blank my mind. Someone said,
‘He who would live must fight. He who doesn't wish to fight has no right to exist in this world, where permanent struggle is the law of life and only the powerful survive.’
There and then, I removed a bottle of Bean from the drugs cabinet, and in a parody of self-experimentation and an attempt to fix my mind, took a swig of the bitter-sweet potion.
What happened next I’ve described in my book Unleash the Power Within, a testament to how the drug liberated me from a fearful state of mind to one of extraordinary lucidity and creativity, enabling me to come into my strength and make a deep impact on the world.
*
Blake phoned, and we met that evening. The ease with which he made-believe everything was hunky-dory between us was impressive*
‘Swarms of vermin are invading our homeland, spreading misery, crime, poverty, disease and destruction, and we don’t do anything about it. It’s like a death wish for our country.’
I switched off the radio, installed Blake at my desk with a hardcopy of the trial results, tailored to reflect his needs and preferences; removed a key from the door of the drugs cabinet; dropped it in a box with a digital lock inside the desk drawer. Then I left to walk the city backstreets and feel its hidden pulse; and I stopped in an alley once to watch a game. It was as if I was in the cubiculum of an amphitheatre overflowing with a baying crowd as a cat stalked a mouse among the bins, leapt on it, repeatedly released it to seize it again, and tossed it in the air.
Blake was still at the desk when I returned, so absorbed in his task that he didn't hear me call his name. I prepared a lamb heart and liver casserole, which we enjoyed with a bottle of Syrah; and we discussed the report. Then, after we agreed that Blake would take his dose of Bean the following morning, we withdrew to the sitting room, and I brought out the port, most of which I alone would drink.
We reminisced about the time we first met over thirty years ago when we bonded over our shared interest in the application of nanotechnology in drug delivery. Perfidious Blake did most of the talking, and he soon slipped into a relentless exposition of his virtues while I wondered how the night would end; whether he would seek out what was mine when he supposed that wine had veiled my mind. Then I rose up from my chair and unmasked him for the fake and traitor he was by deploying a weight of inferential evidence he couldn't refute. Whereupon, I declared that it was payback time, and he would never lay his hands on Bean, and collapsed to the floor in a drunken heap - my final move in the test I was setting out for him.
*
I can see you now, my erstwhile friend, if I half close my eyes. You’ve moved out of your chair and are towering above me. You watch me intently, exhale a plaintive sigh. Next, laboriously, you lift me under the arms, drag me backwards to my bedroom, shove me on my bed, and leave.
I was up at dawn. I proceeded to the kitchen and put the kettle on, then went to open the study door. The drugs cabinet was wide open, and there you were, outstretched beneath the desk. Next to you on the wooden floor was a bottle on its side, and a patch of oil from its open throat.
Do you wonder how easy it was for Blake to get hold of the key to the drugs cabinet that night? He wouldn't have known that the Bean potion he drank contained a lethal concentration of active ingredients and wasn't intended for administration in its current form.
Several months have passed since then. So-called violence-related adverse events linked to Bean are increasingly seen as unexpected benefits, and instances of direct and strong self-expression.
A number of participants in the drug trial have joined me to launch a new political movement. We aim to bring about a radical restructuring of society through a programme of national renewal, with individual empowerment at its core.
Regimes come and go in a semblance of change. Power elites replace one another in never-ending circulation. Such has been the way of the world. But real change is finally coming. The old structures are about to tumble.
It’s been a protracted and arduous journey, but I’m nearing my destination. I’m the leader people have long waited for, and when I take the reins of power, my first act, on day one, will be to make Bean freely available to all who follow me.
About the author:
Moossa Casseem is a short story and poetry writer. He has been published in Bath Flash Fiction Award Anthology and The Other Side of Hope: journeys in refugee and immigrant literature.