|  It's 
                          Christmas 
                          Eve 2040, and I'm the only bartender 
                          still working that afternoon, and the house is practically 
                          empty. I see this guy 
                          down at the end of the bar, sitting by himself. I bring 
                          him a fresh drink, and wish him greetings of the season. 
                          He looks at me, sort of funny, and says: "Do you 
                          know who I am?"  
  I 
                          admit I don't. 
  "Here, 
                          maybe this will help," he says, and he pulls a 
                          little picture out of his wallet. 
                          An old portrait, 
                          really old, like centuries old. It's a young man in 
                          profile: sharp nose, weak chin, 
                          definite 
                          resemblance 
                          to my friend here. At the bottom, there's a caption: 
                          "W. 
                          A. Mozart."  
 
  Now 
                          it's my turn to look at him funny. Then it hits me like 
                          a brick. 
                          "You're that clone guy," I say. "The 
                          guy in the papers back in the '20s."  
 
  "In 
                          the flesh. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. I have 
                          his brain, his heart, his DNA. 
                          He's my father and my mother and my brother. He's my 
                          identical twin, 
                          except I was born 247 years later."  
 
  So 
                          he starts talking. It takes him a long time to explain, 
                          and I didn't get it all, but I got a lot. 
   In 
                          2001, Congress passed a ban 
                          on cloning humans, but of course mad scientists went 
                          ahead with secret cloning.  
 
  And 
                          then, there was this software billionaire 
                          who was nuts 
                          about Mozart, and was especially nuts about Mozart's 
                          Requiem. 
                          He set 
                          up a secret institute in Switzerland 
                          and hired some top biologists 
                          and told them they'd get $1 million each for every baby 
                          they cloned from Mozart's DNA.  
 
  In 
                          2003, the institute managed to bring four babies to 
                          term. Two died shortly after birth. Two survived. But 
                          then this software billionaire died, and his company 
                          collapsed, 
                          and so did his cloning institute. One baby Mozart was 
                          put up for adoption anonymously. No one knows what happened 
                          to that one. The other baby was adopted 
                          by one of the scientists, who was a big Mozart fan herself.  
 
  "And 
                          that's me," he says.  
 
  His 
                          mother, of course, didn't tell him or anyone else who 
                          he was, but she told the boy how special he was, how 
                          he was a genius, what a great composer 
                          he could be, trying to push her little Mozart toward 
                          music.  
 
  But 
                          the 2010s weren't the 1760s. The boy may have had talent, 
                          but he also had his own priorities, and they didn't 
                          include violin 
                          sonatas. 
                          He liked rock music and he liked it loud, and then as 
                          he got older he liked beer and girls. The harder his 
                          mother pushed him to be a great composer, the less he 
                          wanted to be one. After a while his mother gave up. 
                          By the time he was 20, he had a decent 
                          job working in a frame shop. And that's when the roof 
                          fell in.   Some 
                          reporter 
                          got 
                          wind of the institute and the cloning experiment 
                          and tracked 
                          him down. 
                          But no one could prove he was a clone of Mozart without 
                          digging 
                          up the original, so the media 
                          treated him as a joke. It just crushed him. He tried 
                          running away. He joined a Buddhist 
                          monastery in Japan. One day, while he was there, he 
                          heard the Requiem. Not for the first time, but this 
                          time it was different. 
  "My 
                          God, it was beautiful!" he says. "I felt a 
                          realization explode inside my head. I just felt it somehow: 
                          It rang inside of me. I'd finish it, or die trying." 
                          He knew that if he could finish the Requiem, he'd be 
                          famous for real, a genius instead of a fool. He immersed 
                          himself in Mozart's music. Nights, weekends, all the 
                          time, he drove himself, working on the Requiem. 
  "And? 
                          What happened?" 
  "I 
                          turned 37 four months ago. I've been working on the 
                          Requiem for 15 years. Mozart died when he was 35. I 
                          should have finished the Requiem two years ago." 
  "And 
                          you haven't." 
  He looks at me for a while and 
                          shakes his head, "You don't understand. I have 
                          his genes but not his genius."   And 
                          with that he drops a tip on the bar and is gone. I never 
                          saw him again. If the Requiem was ever finished, I never 
                          heard about it. 
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