How I became the Most Intelligent Person on Earth
19 August 2035
My name is Rose Frank. I am twenty-seven, but what does age matter, after I invented the Immortality Pill? Yes, I was the one who invented the Immortality Pill, not that odious narcissistic rodent Watson Crick. So what if he had a perfect IQ score of 162 on the Mensa test? I still won in the end.
***
20 July 2030
"Frank! I told you to do the paperwork last week. When did you schedule my meeting with Dr. Gnikwah?" Crick shouts from his office down the hallway.
I sigh, pulling my gaze from the poster of the real James Watson and Francis Crick, the scientists who discovered DNA, hanging on my wall. I guess I got half of my wish, working for someone whose name is close enough to my idols. But you'd expect that I get proper work, what with an undergraduate education in Cambridge and two PhDs from Harvard and MIT. Too bad it isn't good for Dr. I'm-so-smart Crick. Crick only ever associates with people around his intelligence level. I'm out of his league. So I get the dirtiest, most boring work - the paperwork, ordering the chemicals - you name it, I do it. I don't have a labcoat with my name. Heck, I can't even access the lab unless Crick or one of his cronies allows me in to wash the test tubes and apparatus.
"FRANK! DID YOU OR DID YOU NOT SCHEDULE MY MEETING WITH DR. GNIKWAH?"
"Yes, sir, your meeting is at 3 in the afternoon today. Dr. Gnikwah is in the Marina Trench today. He wants everyone in your lab to take the Special Trench Elevator down to find him." I cross my fingers and pray silently that Crick doesn't ask any questions. If all goes well I'll be in the lab in no time.
Crick absorbs this information without question. Dr. Gnikwah has always been quite eccentric. He has labs all over the world, including the Marina Trench, but because I never scheduled a meeting with him I'm not sure if he would be there at 3 p.m..
"Frank!" I jump, scattering my plans for later all over my desk. Crick pops his head into the storage room, otherwise known as my office. He throws a bag of clothing at my feet and turns to walk away. I heave a silent sigh of relief, gathering up my papers and tucking them into an inconspicuous drawer.
"Make sure that's ironed by noon." This would be the last time.
By 11.30 a.m. Crick and co. are ready to leave. I hand them their freshly ironed blazers and walk into my office with a spring in my step.
At noon they board his private jet to the Pacific Ocean. I pick up a silicon mold of Crick's thumbprint and stride towards his lab. It's time.
----
The boiler at the side of the lab hums merrily as I distil the yellow liquid into a round-bottomed flask. Detaching the flask from the distillation column, I take a deep breath. The heavenly aroma of the Essence of Immortality wafts into my nose. I grin. It's working.
The next step is to crystallise the Essence of Immortality. This takes another hour. I glance at the clock. It's 2 p.m. now, so I take a short lunch and restroom break.
At 3 p.m. I hurry into the lab and look at the golden yellow crystals which I left to dry on the bench. Now Crick would have realised my deceit; now he would be rushing back. I fumble for the melting point determination instrument and test the purity of the crystals. Perfect. I smile as I grind some of the crystals into fine powder and pack them into a capsule. I'm sure I won't have to work in that musty storage room anymore.
When 4 p.m. rolls around I'm clearing up the work space, capping the bottles of Longevity Potion and Telomerase Activator and placing them into the cupboard. In a Ziploc bag by the side are large golden Immortality Pills. My invention.
5 p.m.. I pace anxiously around the lab. Suddenly the lab door bangs open and Crick's standing in the doorway. "Frank!" He booms, his face contorted in fury and disbelief.
I walk towards him, both hands up in an attempt to calm him down. "Crick, I can explain," I say placatingly, "I got you out of the lab so that I could prove my worth. I have a wonderful idea. Here's the Immortality Pills I made in your absence. We still need to conduct some clinical trials --"
"Immortality pills?" I nod.
"My colleagues and I will take it from here. Now, out!" I'm shoved roughly towards the door.
"But, sir --"
"What do you know? You haven't won any Nobel Prize -- you're not like us," someone else in the corner sneers.
I return angrily, "Yes, because I've never been given the chance to actually do something," but I'm speaking to the door.
***
20 January 2035
Everyone's celebrating today. Watson Crick and his colleagues have just won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the Immortality Pill that I created. I still try to smile anyway, because my idea was at least recognised by the international scientific community, even if it wasn't labelled as mine. But, you know what, this is all for humanity, right? Who came out with the idea doesn't really matter; how the idea is made use of does. At least I try to tell myself that.
Crick asks me to take a picture of the victorious scientists, who are high-fiving each other for their ingenuity and intelligence.
"Hey, Frank, why are you still here?" Someone shouts.
"Yeah, that's right, why are you still here? Five years with us, and not one achievement under your belt! We only accept the very best here!" Another scientist yells at me from across the room.
Suddenly the air is filled with shouts and flying peanuts. I exit the room silently, my hands bunched into fists by my side. I'm still smiling but the monster in me has its head reared, its fangs poised to kill.
***
30 March 2035
I gaze admiringly at the Species Gun I've created, turning the sleek pistol over in my hand. I've been staying up till the wee hours of the morning day after day for the past two months just for this. Obviously, I couldn't go into the lab while Crick and co. were still there. So I had to sneak in when I was sure that everyone else had gone to sleep to work on my newest invention. Which is now ready to test on its first victim.
I aim the gun at a black lab mouse in a cage by the corner and flip the switch to "Hamster".
"Frank!" Someone shouts from behind me. I spin around so that the barrel of the pistol is facing him.
It's Crick, staring at me with narrowed eyes. "What are you doing here?"
I ignore his question. "I didn't want to do this so fast, Crick, but I guess you'll just have to be my first victim."
"What are you--"
I pull the trigger and a yellow ray shoots Crick in the chest. The light wraps around him so that he's practically glowing. Crick's terrified now, his mouth open in a silent plea for help. I smile. "Goodbye, Crick. I hope you enjoy your new life as a less intelligent form."
And then the light vanishes and the lab is dark again. A squeak emerges from the floor. It's worked. "Hello," I say, scooping up Crick and placing him in a new cage.
***
19 August 2035
Over the past few months I've hunted down every single brilliant mind out there whose IQ is higher than mine. I still do. I've invented other tracking machines along the way so that every time a new smart baby is born, I'm always there to add a new animal to my collection. Sometimes it's cats, other times dogs. Or tortoises. Or mice. But I mostly prefer hamsters.
No one knows about my inventions -- to others out there I'm just a crazy animal lover. Oh, I don't need recognition. It just feels good to wake up every morning knowing that you're the Most Intelligent Person on Earth, doesn't it?