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She knew damn well what it was.

This wasn’t her first delivery.

“You’re planning to do it here? In the house? You can’t be.”

“Of course we are.” She laughed. “What did you think, we’re bringing you to the hospital? You’d have the cops on us in seconds.”

“No I wouldn’t.”

Kath patted her shoulder. “Don’t shit a shitter, Sara. Now come on back downstairs. Don’t worry about that stuff.”

“I wouldn’t say anything. I swear!”

“Right. Come on or I’m telling Stephen.”

She was losing her mind. She had to be. This couldn’t be happening.

“Wait. All right. Wait. These things here. What are they?”

“Clamps.”

They were huge.

“And this?”

“A spreader.”

“My god. What for?”

She shrugged. “We might have to… you know, a cesarean section. You use them to hold back the organs… stomach, whatever. The spreader’s for the ribs.”

“Jesus christ, Kath!”

“You got to be prepared, right? You might have complications.”

“I’m not going to have any complications!”

Kath headed for the stairs. Sara reached out and grabbed her arm. Something she had never dared to do before. But she couldn’t let it go at this.

“Listen. Listen to me. Who told you to get all this? A doctor?”

“No doctor.”

“You’re not even going to get me a doctor? The Organization can’t spare a doctor!”

“We don’t need a doctor. I’m a nurse, remember? Look, we’ve got everything here. Anesthetics, whatever. Anything you’re going to need. Don’t get all upset about it for chrissake. Midwives deliver babies all the time.”

“Midwives don’t perform surgery, Kath!”

“Well, neither will we. Not unless we have to.”

She looked away, up to the high naked wooden beams of the ceiling.

And in that moment Sara simply didn’t believe her.

She felt herself flush and the contents of her stomach rise.

My god, she thought. I’ve been such a fool. Such a terrible fool. I never saw it.

I never saw it coming.

There weren’t even any stirrups. They’d never even considered normal delivery.

This was what they were planning — had been all along. She was their little experiment. The baby would be the fruit of that experiment.

But Sara was as expendable as one of these throw-away syringes here. In fact she had to be expendable. They couldn’t keep her captive here forever for god’s sake, not even the Organization could isolate her that much. Sooner or later somebody would come around to visit. Sooner or later somebody from the outside was going to know.

Certainty washed over her. Washed her clean.

They were going to kill her.

The birthing was how.

The Organization be damned. It was time to see what she could do about that.

She was well into her seventh month.

It was time to see right now.

* * *

Should have locked the damn door, she thought. Fucking stupid not to. It was sloppy.

Stephen would be pissed. But it was Stephen’s fault too.

There was nothing to do but try to repair the damages.

They sat at the dining room table over some hot herbal tea. Grandma’s Tummy Mint. Celestial Seasonings. She supposed it was meant to be nice and reassuring. It wasn’t. Outside the window the day was gray and still and dark. In a couple of weeks kids would be out trick-or-treating. She wondered if any of them would bother to come out this way.

It was Saturday. Around four. Stephen was still working in the garage. She could hear the whine of his circular saw.

She sat and listened and drank her tea and petted the cat curled up in what passed for her lap nowadays.

“Look,” Kath was saying. “In the old days they only used cesarean when the mother was dying. Now the whole thing is to save the mother and the baby. What you do is, you make an incision through the skin and the wall of the abdomen. Most of the time there isn’t even much of a scar. Then you open up the wall of the uterus. The incision can be transverse vertical or low vertical, transverse usually because there’s less bleeding and it heals better. Then you deliver the baby and we suture you up again and that’s that. I mean this is all just in case. Only if there’s a problem. But it’s really very simple. You don’t have to worry, I know what I’m doing. I’ve assisted on hundreds of these.”

And on how many murders? she thought.

And she realized now that she was listening to a very good and convincing liar. There was only that single slip in the attic. Otherwise Kath was practically flawless. Which called into question again all these tales all these months about the Organization.

She decided she was going to proceed as though there were none.

Another weight lifted. It was astonishing. Just like that.

The Organization was suddenly… gone. Frozen out of her. Trapped in the glacier of her resolve.

She was going to live.

Where in the world did I find this calm? she thought.

She was suddenly calm as the cat was.

She decided it was in the knowing that she’d found it. In the certainty. What had trapped her up to now was lack of certainty. Not knowing on a daily — even momentary — basis what they would or wouldn’t do to her. These people if you could even dignify them with the word people had played on that uncertainty like a harp. Headbox or no headbox? Beating or no beating? Upstairs in the light or downstairs in the dark? They’d kept her off balance for months now.

Was this balance? Yes it was.

Balance was knowing and knowing was calm.

Take them one by one, she thought. And no time like the present.

Do I have it in me? Yes I do.

As certainly as I have this little girl inside me.

Greg’s little girl and mine.

It was the first she’d thought of him for ages. That was balance too.

“Kath? Do you think I could have a little more tea?”

She shrugged. “Sure. You know where it is.”

She lifted the cat gently off her lap and put her down on the floor thinking yes I do, I know where everything is, you bitch and walked past Kath to the kitchen and ran water from the sink into the mug and put the mug into the microwave and turned it on and then opened the bottom cabinet door and took out the twelve-inch stainless steel frying pan they hardly ever used, the pan looking new as they day they’d bought it, new as the stainless steel cart upstairs and gripped it in both her hands and walked over to Kath who was hunched over her mug, who had the mug to her lips sipping Tummy Mint tea and brought the pan down as hard as she could on the crown of her head, the pan ringing like a bell, the sound true and pure and brave, Kath’s face driven down into the ceramic mug and the mug to the table, the mug shattering between table, teeth, flesh and bone and flooding the surface with a liquid the color of autumn leaves.

Not a sound out of Kath as she brought the pan up and hit her again, the pan musical once more against the side of her head which suddenly sprouted glistening drops of red forming a rough half-circle across her forehead at the hairline.

She examined the base of the pan. The base was flecked with blood and a stray brown hair or two. Despite the rapid heartbeat she felt steady and powerful.

“You dead yet? Should I hit you again?”