Her shaking fingers brush against something that feels tight and swollen: her chin. It worked! The hand carries on up her face; there are lips, taut cheeks, a smooth forehead and hair. Long, matted, sticky hair, still full of nutrients.
‘Try not to move about too much,’ he says as she peels her eyes open.
The light stings: makes her head swim, makes her stomach lurch. Stephen stands beside the operating slab, close enough for her to reach out and squeeze the life out of him.
She wants to ask for a mirror, but all that comes out is a hissing grunt.
‘Don’t try to speak. Your new vocal chords need time to settle in.’
It takes an almost Herculean effort to pull herself upright. Something’s not right. Burning pins and needles race up and down her body. She shouldn’t be feeling like this.
‘Having problems?’ He’s gloating…the bastard has done something to her!
She tries to grab him by the throat, but he dodges easily. Grinning. Her arm flails out, throwing her off balance. She tips off the edge of the operating table and crashes to the floor-pain rips through her entire head. New nerve endings screaming and burning.
‘Not so fucking big now, are you?’ He spits at her: a thick globule of white, frothy sputum that splashes on her face like jism.
Stephen takes two steps back-getting a bit of a run up-and then his boot smashes into her stomach. More pain. ‘WHERE’S MY WIFE?’
She drags herself onto her hands and knees, but Stephen kicks her again and sends her sprawling.
‘Feeling a bit under the weather? That’s what happens when you mix your narcotics.’
A tiny moan escapes her brand-new lips.
‘How about it, Doctor? Want me to hurt you some more?’ He aims a kick at her ribs and she can only bounce with it. ‘Where is she? GIVE ME BACK MY WIFE, YOU BITCH!’
Oh God…everything hurts.
She lies there, on the floor, gazing up at the theatre lights, trying not to cry. This wasn’t meant to happen: he was beaten, he belonged to her.
Stephen grabs her shoulders and drags her across the polished marblette, back towards the operating table. All she can do is wave a feeble hand in his direction. With a grunt he hefts her off the ground and throws her down on the stainless steel surface. She didn’t know he could be so strong. So masterful.
‘You have a lovely face you know,’ he says as he drags her all the way up the table. ‘You were right: I am a genius. Oh, it’s a little swollen just now, but that’ll all settle down in a day or two.’ He wheels the surgeon’s wand back into place, then grabs a mirror and shows her just how beautiful she is. ‘Such a pretty face. Be a shame to ruin all my hard work, don’t you think?’ The wand screeches as he fingers the hair-trigger, slicing a corner off the test block, sending it clattering to the floor.
‘You told me you had nothing to lose. Well now you do.’ He holds the wand’s cold tip up against the swollen end of her chin. ‘How would you like to go back to the way you were?’
‘Drrrrrnt…’ It is barely a word, but she forces it out through her aching throat.
‘Was that a plea for help? Was it?’
She nods her head, hot tears running down her cheeks.
‘Plllllssssssssssssss drrrrrnt…’
He drops the wand to the tabletop, where it skitters and clanks on the cold metal surface. ‘Tell me where my wife is!’
‘Cnnnnnnnnnt tllllllllk.’
He grabs her datapad and presses it hard against her face. Nerves creak and burn.
‘You can’t talk, but you can type, you fucking bitch! Tell me where she is, or so help me I’ll peel your head apart!’
Her hands fumble with the smooth ceramic rectangle and it slips, bounces off the edge of the operating table and falls to the floor.
‘Stupid, clumsy bitch!’ He slaps her. It’s like a knife’s being driven through her face. Skinpaint and skinglue shift beneath the surface of her cheek, threatening to tear the muscle loose. It’s not been attached long enough for the fibres to bind themselves to the bone.
She curls up agony as he stoops to pick up the dropped datapad. She has worked so hard! This isn’t how it’s meant to happen!
Something cold and hard rolls against her forehead and she reaches up, snatching it with both hands.
‘Right, you cow.’ He grabs her by the shoulder, wrenching her over onto her back. ‘Type!’
The wand screeches in her hands and Doctor Stephen Bexley screams. ‘Jesushhh, oh fucking Jesushhh!’ He’s on the floor on his hands and knees, clutching at his left cheek-there’s a big hole in his face that goes all the way through to his tongue.
Carefully she swings her legs out over the edge of the slab and lurches to her feet. Her head pounds and her ribs ache and for a moment she comes close to fainting…but she doesn’t. Instead she yanks the test block out of the wand’s holder and batters Doctor Bexley over the back of the head.
She feels a lot better now. The operating theatre’s bio-scrubber is plugged into her arm, pulling the blood out and purifying it, before pumping it back in again. Naughty old Stephen’s chemicals are being flushed clean away.
He lies on the operating table, strapped in nice and tight, his eyes as wide as dinner plates. He’s scared and so he should be.
She pats him on the cheek-the one without the golf-ball-sized hole in it-and pulls her new face into a smile. It’s hard work. She hasn’t done it before.
‘Yvvvvvv bnnnnnn nnnnnte…’ She has to admit: she doesn’t sound good.
But she’s still doing better than Stephen. The only sound he can make is a strangled sob from the smooth-edged hole in his cheek. If she peers into it she can see his tongue, ringed in a circle of cut-through teeth.
Poor lamb. And his day’s about to get even worse.
She pulls out the datapad and types the words for him.
‘YOU HAVE BEEN NAUGHTY,’ says the cold, artificial voice.
He doesn’t reply, but then he can’t: his lips are stuck together with skinglue.
‘WE HAD A DEAL, STEPHEN. AND YOU TRIED TO TAKE MY FACE AWAY.‘
Tears roll down the sides of his face like tiny waterfalls. The wound in his cheek must be causing him some discomfort. She could give him a couple of blockers, make it easier for him, but she doesn’t want to.
‘I TOLD YOU WHAT WOULD HAPPEN TO YOUR WIFE IF YOU DISOBEYED ME.‘
He bucks and writhes against his restraints. It doesn’t help. She checks the clock on the theatre walclass="underline" nearly half past six in the morning. People will be here soon, cleaning and polishing and preparing for the first operation of the day. But she really wants to make Stephen’s last few minutes special.
‘I WAS GOING TO LET HER DIE. BUT NOW I HAVE TO MAKE AN EXAMPLE OF HER.‘
He screws his eyes shut. Bangs his head off the stainless steel tabletop. Cries.
‘SHE WILL TAKE DAYS TO DIE BECAUSE OF YOU. LONG, PAINFUL DAYS. PERHAPS I WILL SEND HER HEAD TO YOUR CHILDREN AS A KEEPSAKE.‘
She pauses and makes a noise that could almost be mistaken for laughter. It is rough and it hurts, but it feels so good! She leans in so close that her eyelashes sparkle with his tears.
‘WOULD YOU LIKE THAT, STEPHEN?‘
The sobbing is louder than ever, his grimace opening up the smooth edges of the wound, making it bleed.
‘MUMMY’S HEAD IN A BOX.‘
But he’s stopped listening; he’s lost in his world of despair. He’s just sentenced his wife and her unborn child to death, and that’s something he’ll have to live with for the rest of his life. Dr Westfield glances back to the clock again. Which will last exactly eighteen minutes, give or take thirty seconds. She wants to be out of here in plenty of time to avoid the rush and prying eyes.