The fire crackled in the fireplace, her wine had warmed to room temperature, bringing out a different bouquet, and her blankets looked comfortable. She sank into them. Franke's voice droned on in the kitchen, and she ordered House to play Bach to cover him.

But her favorite Brandenburg Concerto couldn't wipe Franke's voice from her mind. Studying Millennium Babies. Brooke closed her eyes. She wondered what her mother would think of that.

Three days later, Brooke was in her office, trying to assemble her lecture for her new survey class. This one was on the two world wars. The University of Wisconsin still believed that a teacher should stand in front of students, even for the large lecture courses, instead of delivering canned lectures that could be downloaded. Most professors saw surveys as too much wasted work, but she actually enjoyed the courses. She liked standing before a large room delivering a lecture.

But now she was getting past the introductory remarks and into the areas she wasn't that familiar with. She didn't believe in regurgitating the textbooks, so she was boning up on World War I. She had forgotten that its causes were so complex; its results so far reaching, especially in Europe. Sometimes she just found herself reading, lost in the past.

Her office was small and narrow, with barely enough room for her desk. Because she was new, she was assigned to Bascom Hall at the top of Bascom Hill, a building that had been around for most of the university's history. The Hall's historic walls didn't accommodate new technology, so the university made certain she had a fancy desk with a built-in screen. The problem with that was that when she did extensive research, as she was doing now, she had to look down. She often downloaded information to her palmtop or worked at home. Working in her office, in the thin light provided by the ancient fluorescents and the dirty meshed window, gave her a headache.

But she was nearly done. Tomorrow, she would take the students from the horrors of trench warfare to the first steps toward US involvement. The bulk of the lecture, though, would focus on isolationism—a potent force in both world wars.

A knock on her door brought her to the twenty-first century. She rubbed the bridge of her nose impatiently. She wasn't holding office hours. She hated it when students failed to read the signs.

“Yes?” she asked.

“Professor Cross?”

“Yes?”

“May I have a moment of your time?”

The voice was male and didn't sound terribly young, but many of her students were older.

“A moment,” she said, using her desktop to unlock the door. “I'm not having office hours.”

The knob turned and a man came inside. He wasn't very tall, and he was thin—a runner's build. It wasn't until he turned toward her, though, that she let out a groan.

“Professor Franke.”

He held up a hand. “I'm sorry to disturb you—”

“You should be,” she said. “I purposely didn't answer your message.”

“I figured. Please. Just give me a few moments.”

She shook her head. “I'm not interested in being the subject of any study. I don't have time.”

“Is it the time? Or is it the fact that the study has to do with Millennium Babies?” His look was sharp.

“Both.”

“I can promise you that you'll be well compensated. And if you'll just listen to me for a moment, you might reconsider—”

“Professor Franke,” she said, “I'm not interested.”

“But you're a key to the study.”

“Why?” she asked. “Because of my mother's lawsuits?”

“Yes,” he said.

She felt the air leave her body. She had to remind herself to breathe. The feeling was familiar. It had always been familiar. Whenever anyone talked about Millennium Babies, she had this feeling in her stomach.

Millennium Babies. No one had expected the craze, but it had become apparent by March of 1999. Prospective parents were timing the conception of their children as part of a race to see if their child could be the first born in 2000—the New Millennium, as the pundits of the day inaccurately called it. There was a more-or-less informal international contest, but in the United States, the competition was quite heavy. There were other races in every developed country, and in every city. And in most of those places, the winning parent got a lot of money, and a lot of products, and some, those with the cutest babies, or the pushiest parents, got endorsements as well.

“Oh, goodie,” Brooke said, filling her voice with all the sarcasm she could muster. “My mother was upset that I didn't get exploited enough as a child so you're here to fill the gap.”

His back straightened. “It's not like that.”

“Really? How is it then?” She regretted the words the moment she spoke them. She was giving Franke the opening he wanted.

“We've chosen our candidates with care,” he said. “We are not taking babies born randomly on January 1 of 2000. We're taking children whose birth was planned, whose parents made public statements about the birth, and whose parents hoped to get a piece of the pie.”

“Wonderful,” she said. “You're studying children with dysfunctional families.”

“Are we?” he asked.

“Well, if you study me, you are,” she said and stood. “Now, I'd like it if you'd leave.”

“You haven't let me finish.”

“Why should I?”

“Because this study might help you, Professor Cross."'

“I'm doing fine without your help.”

“But you never talk about your Millennium Baby status.”

“And how often do you discuss the day you were born, Professor?”

“My birthday is rather unremarkable,” he said. “Unlike yours.”

She crossed her arms. “Get out.”

“Remember that I study human potential,” he said. “And you all have the same beginnings. All of you come from parents who had the same goal—parents who were driven to achieve something unusual.”

“Parents who were greedy,” she said.

“Some of them,” he said. “And some of them planned to have children anyway, and thought it might be fun to try to join the contest.”

“I don't see how our beginnings are relevant.”

He smiled, and she cursed under her breath. As long as she talked to him, as long as she asked thinly veiled questions, he had her and they both knew it.

“In the past forty years, studies of identical twins raised apart have shown that at least 50 percent of a person's disposition is apparent at birth. Which means that no matter how you're raised, if you were a happy baby, you have a greater than 50 percent chance of being a happy adult. The remaining factors are probably environmental. Are you familiar with DNA mapping?”

“You're not answering my question,” she said.

“I'm trying to,” he said. “Listen to me for a few moments, and then kick me out of your office.”

She wouldn't get rid of him otherwise. She slowly sat in her chair.

“Are you familiar with DNA mapping?” he repeated.

“A little,” she said.

“Good.” He leaned back in his chair and templed his fingers. “We haven't located a happiness gene or an unhappiness gene. We're not sure what it is about the physical make-up that makes these things work. But we do know that it has something to do with serotonin levels.”

“Get to the part about Millennium Babies,” she said.

He smiled. “I am. My last book was partly based on the happiness/unhappiness model, but I believe that's too simplistic. Human beings are complex creatures. And as I grow older, I see a lot of lost potential. Some of us were raised to fail, and some were raised to succeed. Some of those raised to succeed have failed, and some who were raised to fail have succeeded. So clearly it isn't all environment.”

“Unless some were reacting against their environment,” she said, hearing the sullenness in her tone, a sullenness she hadn't used since she'd last spoken to her mother five years before.

“That's one option,” he said, sounding brighter. He must have taken her statement for interest. “But one of the things I learned while working on human potential is that drive is like happiness. Some children are born driven. They walk sooner than others. They learn faster. They adapt faster. They achieve more, from the moment they take their first breath.”