eclectic collection of the latest domes, mock-timber A-frames and more conventional carbon-fibre houses. The high foliage of a thousand evergreens shaded the town, and power was provided by tall masts which pierced the canopy and opened petal-like energy panels to the burning desert sun.
The Oasis Medical Centre occupied extensive grounds in the centre of town, over two dozen polycarbon units linked by a warren of diaphanous passages set in rolling landscaped gardens. Bennett strolled across the avenue and into the hospital. He found reception and was directed down long corridors to the consultancy rooms of Dr Samuels.
The door opened automatically at his approach, forestalling his attempt to knock. He stepped inside.
‘Mr Bennett, I’m glad you could make it. If you’d care to take a seat.’
Samuels, as informal in person as he had appeared on the vis-link that morning, moved from his desk and sat on the window-seat overlooking the rolling greenery. Bennett took the offered swivel seat and turned to face the doctor.
‘Mr Bennett, I appreciate how you must be feeling—’
Bennett heard himself saying: ‘My father’s been ill for over a year now. I’ve had time to consider the inevitable.’
Samuels nodded. ‘I know it’s always a hard decision for loved ones to make. I don’t know how you stand, ethically, on the issue of euthanasia, but if you’d like me to run through the legal side of things . . .’
Bennett shook his head. ‘I followed the state rulings when the bill was passed,’ he said. He paused. ‘I’ve nothing against euthanasia. If it’s really what my father wants . . .’ He hoped he didn’t sound too perfunctory.
Samuels was nodding. ‘Your father is bed-ridden, unable to feed himself, and in occasional pain. We administer the most effective analgesics, but there is only so much we can do to relieve his discomfort. Your father is failing on many fronts; the side-effects of the drugs he is on are becoming as difficult to treat as the primary complaints. In my opinion he is sound of mind. He has stated daily for the past week that he wishes to die, and in my opinion his quality of life is so severely reduced that euthanasia would be a mercy.’
‘Can I talk it over with him?’
‘By all means. I’ll take you to his room immediately.’ Samuels hesitated. ‘Are you aware that your father spends much of his time in VR?’
Bennett nodded. ‘I see him every couple of months.’
Samuels rose from the window-seat and gestured to the door. ‘Please, this way.’
As they passed down a series of corridors, Bennett experiencing a mounting sense of apprehension. Samuels cleared his throat. ‘The actual apparatus of euthanasia is ready to utilise almost immediately,’ he said, ‘should you decide to sign the usual legal forms and waivers.’
Bennett nodded, finding it hard to accept that they were talking about the termination of a life. It was more like a business transaction. ‘How soon? I mean—’
‘That is entirely up to your father. As long as it takes him to compose himself.’
‘And I can be with him?’
‘Of course. Here we are.’ Samuels paused before a white door and turned to Bennett. ‘Lately your father has refused to exit the VR site. He finds it. . . comforting. He will only see visitors in the net.’
Bennett stared at the doctor. ‘And you say he’s of sound mind?’
‘In my opinion, yes, Mr Bennett. His retreat to the VR site is his way of... of coping with his decision to die. As you will see for yourself.’
Bennett stepped into a sunlit room occupied by a narrow bed, banks of medical apparatus, a VR module and a chair.
His father lay on the bed. He had always been tall, somewhat martial, but near death, laid out as if in preparation for his exit, he seemed elongated, whittled down to a wasted minimum of flesh and bone, stripped of dignity. He wore a grey