“I’m sure you’re hungry,” Cutler continued. “We’ll find you some dinner in a moment. We’ll do everything we can to keep you comfortable here tonight, and tomorrow we’ll get you acquainted with our setup.”
“What setup?” Prairie demanded.
Cutler raised his eyebrow. “Oh, I think you can guess, Prairie. I understand you are a very resourceful woman. Still, our partnership will require your cooperation and… focus. Please. Take a look at our current subjects.”
He gestured at the beds lining the other side of the room, and Prairie took a closer look. In the dimness, she hadn’t noticed the banks of medical equipment at first, exam lighting and surgical spotlights focused here and there. Two of the three beds were occupied, the motionless figures covered with sheets up to the chin and connected to IV lines, feeding tubes, monitors-all kinds of life-sustaining measures.
Her heart plummeted as she realized what she was looking at: a crop of the dying, waiting to be “saved” by a Healer, given life without life.
The floor grew unsteady under her feet. Prairie knew this scene entirely too well. When she was sixteen, her high school boyfriend had been killed in a car accident-but she hadn’t been strong enough to let him stay dead. Instead she had healed Vincent, healed him after death-the one thing that must never be done. She had turned him into the living dead, and he lingered on in the shadows, his body preserved by science in a setting not unlike this one. No one knew who he was, and no one cared; his body was the subject of endless research by scientists who could not understand how he lived on long after his flesh had withered.
She’d visited him, over and over, the pain fresh every time she stared into his unseeing eyes and touched the cold flesh of the arms that had once held her. For more than a decade, she’d snuck into the nursing home where he existed between life and death, his tissues pumped full of experimental chemicals. She pretended to be someone else. A volunteer. A church lady. Anyone but the girl who’d believed that she and Vincent would be together forever.
“These two came in over the weekend,” Cutler continued, oblivious to her pain. “America’s finest, gave their all for their country, blah blah blah. They haven’t yet been… transitioned. That’s where you come in.”
Prairie couldn’t keep a soft cry from escaping her lips. Transitioned… such a bland word for the most horrific act she could imagine.
“No,” she whispered. “No, I can’t-I won’t-”
“And when you’re done, we’ll send them on down to the lab, which you’ll be happy to know we’ve set up in your old hometown. Great for the local economy and so forth.”
“You’ve… you’ve got people in Gypsum?” Prairie’s mind reeled at the thought. So many Banished concentrated in such a small place. They would be sitting ducks waiting to be picked off by the General, turned into lab rats, made to commit unthinkable acts.
“Oh hell yes. Got a real nice operation in the works. It would be better to fly these fellas straight there, but I guess you know how things work in the sticks. Can’t get a decent bagel, much less a direct flight. So we bring in our… volunteers… by private car. These two will be heading down there next week, once you’re done with them.”
“I’ll never help you.”
“Oh, don’t be hasty!” Cutler exclaimed, his voice taking on a hard edge. “There’s someone here you’ll want to talk to. Sharon, will you help her?”
Only then did Prairie realize that there was one more person in the room. In a far corner a wilted figure leaned in a chair, her face obscured by a bandage that circled her scalp, her arm in a sling. Her other wrist was manacled to the arm of the chair.
The woman working at the computers got up and went to kneel next to the motionless woman, opening the manacles with a small key. When the woman didn’t stir, Sharon took her good arm and guided her up, not without care. The woman stumbled to her feet and seemed to rouse herself from a stupor, then limped toward them with a look of bleak resignation on her bruised face.
Prairie searched her features, then took a step back in shock. “Zytka,” she gasped. “How-”
Cutler chuckled. “Ah, I was hoping you’d be surprised. I suppose you’ve been disappointed that she’s been out of touch. You see, there was a slight… problem with her flight to Poland. Irregularities with her documents, you might say. We were able to step in before the authorities got involved. Nasty business, deportation. Although I suppose they can’t be careful enough these days, can they?”
As the pieces fell into place, Prairie’s throat went dry. She remembered the silent tears that had streamed down Zytka’s cheeks as she’d walked through security at O’Hare, planning to disappear among her countrymen, to build a new life and try to put the nightmare of her old one behind her.
“I realize that you probably thought you’d never see Zytka again,” Cutler continued. “But after that unfortunate accident at the lab, we found ourselves understaffed. Luckily, we were able to persuade her to stay and help us rebuild.”
“Do not do what he says,” Zytka mumbled with effort, lifting a shaking hand to point at the beds lining the wall. Her voice was raw, and Prairie saw ugly purple bruises at her throat.
“What’s wrong with her?” Prairie demanded. “What did you do to her?”
“Oh, I didn’t do anything to her, personally,” Cutler said. “And my colleagues only issued a, er, correction when she broke one of the very few rules we have here.”
“What did she do?”
Cutler laughed, a chilling, soulless sound that echoed around the sterile room. “She decided to leave without telling anyone. She made it out the door-quite impressive really-but she was, er, dissuaded before she made it to the elevator, and as you can see, that was not a very comfortable experience.”
Zytka took two tottering steps, one leg twisting as though it would buckle under her weight, and one of her arms hanging at a strange angle. She worked her jaw and spit at Cutler. It fell short, and Cutler looked at the saliva on the floor at his feet with distaste. “See to this, please.”
He turned his back on the pathetic scene as Sharon gathered paper towels and a spray bottle of disinfectant while Graybull led Zytka gently but firmly back to her seat. Zytka pushed weakly at the man’s hands, but she was no match for him.
“It’s too bad, of course,” Cutler said conversationally to Prairie as he took her arm and guided her toward the closest bed. “If she wasn’t one of your own, you could fix her up far more quickly than we could.”
Fix her up… heal her. So he knew that Healers were of no use to each other, a fact that had perplexed Bryce. It had been one of the things he was most looking forward to studying when he’d found out that Prairie had a niece. Back then, convinced that Bryce loved her and was working to combat disease, Prairie had told him almost everything-how the healing gift ran in Banished families, how Healers only bore girls, how the once-noble Seers had diluted their gift by marrying outside the Banished and become hateful and mean, addicted and lazy and stupid. How glad she was to have left Trashtown, and her childhood tormentors, behind.
Up close Prairie saw that the patient in the bed had nearly half a dozen tubes protruding from his body, including equipment for airway maintenance and cardioversion. He was receiving advanced life support. If the machines were disconnected, he would die within moments.
“I won’t touch him,” she vowed, clenching her hands tightly behind her. “I won’t touch any of them.”
“Oh, don’t worry, we don’t expect you to start work tonight,” Cutler said, chuckling. “You’ve had a long day. You need your rest. I just couldn’t wait to show you how much we’ve accomplished in such a short time. Impressive, no?”