Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
bent down to my eye level, leaning in so dose our noses
were actually touching. His breath stank of stale whis¬
key, but from the slightly glassy look in his drunken
eyes, I was sure I had more to worry about from Drake
than j u s t his bad breath. He had the look of a hungry
predator about him, and there was no doubt I was defi¬
nitely easy prey.
"How you feeling, little man? You cold? I should get
you a s w e a t e r . . . oh, sorry. Sweater wouldn't do you
much good, would it? Perhaps a nice warm hat?"
Drake burst out laughing, spraying my face with spit¬
tle. I hated him more than anyone else in the world at
that moment—even Dr. Marshall, who was most re¬
sponsible for what had happened to me. At least the
doctor was driven by his mad obsession to help his only
son. Drake acted the way he did out of sheer vicionsness.
He was a wickedly evil, pretentious bastard and I vowed
to myself that I'd hang on, somehow find the courage
and strength to live long enough to see him die.
"Dr. Marshall wants to talk to you. Said he'd be along
in a few minutes." Drake leaned down to whisper in my
ear, "What should we do while we're waiting?"
He stepped back a few feet, pretending to ponder it
for a moment, and then started to undo his pants.
You wouldn't DARE?
Of course he would. Seconds later, he had his man¬
hood in his hand and was stroking it hard.
"I've had my eye on you right from the start," Drake
said in a lusty growl. "I like 'em feisty like you, Mike.
N o w you be good, or ol' Drake's gonna have to hurt
you real bad. Understand?"
Perfectly.
I opened my m o u t h up as wide as I possibly
could—an open invitation for him.
Drive it home, big
boy, see what it gets you!
God, I hoped he'd be stupid enough to do it. If he
stuck that filthy thing in my mouth, there was n o t h i n g
on earth that would stop me from taking a chomp. He
could threaten me with pain, endless suffering, and even
death, but I didn't give two shits about any of that. If he
stuck it in, he was gonna lose it. Guaranteed!
Do it, Drake. Do it!
Something in my eyes must have given my intentions
away, because I saw him hesitate, think things through,
then decide maybe his present course of action wasn't
exactly the smartest. I swear I saw a flicker of fear race
across his face and when his penis started to soften in
his hand I knew I'd gotten the better of him.
"You're not worth the bother," Drake said, trying to
backpedal and cover his tracks.
He was far too macho to ever admit I'd managed to
scare him. Instead he zipped up his pants and walked
out of the room without saying another word.
He sulked back a few minutes later with Dr. Mar¬
shall, who seemed to be walking around much better
now than I remembered. Made me wonder how long I'd
been floating around in recuperation land this time and
I actually tried to ask, forgetting I couldn't speak. The
doctor saw my lips moving and walked over.
"Save your strength, Mr. Fox," he said. "I've tried to
master reading lips, so I could communicate better
with Andrew, but I j u s t don't seem to have the knack
for it. Besides, I've come to tell you some great news."
I highly doubted that, but what could I do but wait
for him to spill the beans?
"I've gone over all the test data at least twenty times,
Michael. Everything looks exactly as I'd predicted and
hoped. We're ready to go ahead and do the transplant.
Yours that is, not Andrew's. I still need to study the re¬
sults of y o u r transplant into the flesh suit before I com¬
mit to doing Andrew."
This was his good news? That I was headed back for
more surgery? Admittedly, I sure as hell didn't want to
remain in the pitiful helpless condition I was in now, but
the thought of being sewn up inside that hideous patch¬
work body I'd seen clumsily dancing in the second tank
was too much to contemplate rationally. I mean, how
could I possibly exist within a body made up of thirteen
different people? Michael Fox: from street bum to Fran¬
kenstein, in four easy steps. W h a t a nightmare.
I started to panic, helpless to do anything but squirm
around and shout silent obscenities, but I had to do
something. I couldn't j u s t sit idly by and be turned into
a walking freakshow without at least trying to fight.
N o t that it did me any good. As soon as Dr. Marshall
saw me getting agitated and dangerously thrashing
around, he filled yet another of his seemingly endless
large syringes and injected it into one of the tubes
flowing in and out of my neck. I felt the drug's effect
immediately, and was powerless to fight against it. My
eyes were closing before he even withdrew the needle.
"Don't worry, Mr. Fox " I heard Dr. Marshall say
from what seemed like ten miles away. "You won't need
to suffer in this bodiless state much longer. Fll have
you fixed up in no time at all. You'll feel much better
the next time you open your eyes. Like a new man, in
fact. Literally, a ... whole ... n e w . . . man."
PART F O U R
T H E M O N S T E R
C H A P T E R T W E N T Y - S E V E N
For a while I disappeared. Gonzo. I lay perfectly still,
strapped down unnecessarily tight in a bed, in a room,
in a hospital, in a world I had no knowledge existed. I
was far beyond any sort of rational thought, confused
and disoriented for several eternities, as time laughed
and passed me by.
The first thing I remember noticing were the lights.
I've done a lot of strange things in the past, but for
the life of m e , I couldn't figure out when (or why, for
that matter) I'd decided to become an astronaut. Didn't
they have fairly rigid standards about the people ap¬
plying for that type of work? N o t t o be self-depreciating,
but come on—
me?
Surely N A S A could do better than
that. One m o m e n t I was in a cold dark place (the
shuttle's cockpit?) with my eyes closed, then the next
someone pushed the blastoff button and I opened my
eyes to a galaxy of exploding planets, fiery comets,
and shooting stars—an u n e n d i n g supernova of bright
lights and awesome colors that were truly awesome
sights to behold.
Were there really rainbows in outer space?
I was tripping, of course, the blinding light show tak¬
ing place only in my mind, my brain saturated with
enough pain medication, it was probably draining out
of my ears onto the pillow. For m o n t h s I was a full
card-carrying member of Star Command, only touch¬
ing back down to Earth long enough to refuel my meds.
Good thing too, because gravity hurt like hell. I was in
such extreme agony it hurt too much to waste energy
screaming. It felt like my body had been crushed to
pulp in an industrial metal press.
Later—much later—the stone-faced nurses told me
that Fd wake up screaming, "Send me back. Send me
back to the fucking moon." And with one push of a sy
ringe they'd do j u s t that—bless their cold little hearts.
Houston, we have a problem.
No doubt.
C H A P T E R T W E N T Y - E I G H T
Drugs are wonderful things sometimes, having the
power and strength to mask, in fact
alter
reality for an
indefinite period of time. But all things pass—whether
good or bad—and eventually so did my j o u r n e y s to the
stars. I'd be lying through my tightly clenched teeth if I
didn't admit I missed them.
Being a juiced-up astronaut was far better than being
a monster. And there was no doubt in my mind that's
what I'd become—a pieced-together nightmare of thir¬
teen mutilated men. Perhaps I was being overly harsh
with that assessment; after all, having a body again had
to be a step up from the liquid-filled glass tank I'd been
calling h o m e , but no matter how hard I tried to get
my head around this, I couldn't change the way I felt. I
should be dead. No ifs, ands, or buts about it. Every¬
t h i n g about my continued existence was j u s t
wrong.
But damn it, I wasn't dead.
So where did that leave me? Well, in pain, for one
thing. Son of a bitch I was hurting. They hadn't taken
me off all my pain meds, even the nurses weren't
that
cruel. I was still on a shitload of them, but they'd be¬
gun what they said was my tapering-off stage. Appar¬
ently the powers that be wanted me coherent enough
that I could get started on my next phase of torture. It
was called rehab.
"Get the hell up," the nurse said, her tone sharp, con¬
frontational. She was a chubby, sour-faced old dame with
her gray hair cinched up in an ubertight bun. She
looked a bit like the secretary downstairs. Had the
same miserable disposition, anyway. I'd never seen her
before and those were the first words out of her m o u t h
as she walked in my room. No good m o r n i n g , no how
ya feeling today, no nothin'. A real sweetheart, this one
was, I could already tell. W h e r e did Dr. Marshall find
these people?
"I
am
up," I said. "Been awake for an hour already for
Christ's sake, waiting in agony for you to bring me my
meds. Where's my regular nurse?"
She ignored me, of course. They all did. I could rant
and rave, scream, cry, or bark like a dog and none of
them seemed to give a shit. Most of the time I j u s t kept
my m o u t h shut. These weren't my vocal chords I was
speaking with, and my voice still scared the hell out of
me every time I opened my mouth. It wasn't necessarily
a bad voice, nothing freaky like Pee-wee H e r m a n or
overly irritating like Arnold Horshack from that old
70s television sitcom,
Welcome BackKotter,
but it was
higher pitched than the voice I'd gotten used to and it
freaked me out too much when I started thinking about
whose voice I might have.
"I didn't say,
wake
up." The old nurse was bending
over, squinting to read my chart on the clipboard at the
foot of my bed. "I said
get
up! There's a difference. Bet¬
ter clean out your ears and start listening or you and I
are gonna butt heads, you hear?"
"What are you talkin' about?" I asked. "Who the hell
are you?"
"Call me Junie. I'm y o u r resurrectionist."
"Mywha—"
"Your physiotherapist, dumbass, but resurrectionist
somehow seems m o r e appropriate, for most parts of
you anyway."
"Fuck you," I said. Every inch of my body ached and
my head felt like shit. I wasn't in the mood to play word
games and be the brunt of this old bitch's warped sense
of humor. "Give me my meds and get out of my room!"
She stared at me for a long time, stared hard and mean
as a snake. I was pretty sure it had been a long time
since anyone had told her to fuck off, and I could tell
she didn't like it much.
"You're still not listening," she said. "I told you to get
up and I meant it. It's time to start your rehab. You've
lain around long enough. Doc Marshall expects results,
I hope you know. He did his part; time for you to do
yours. On your feet, boy."
N o w I was really pissed off. I'd been torn apart and
sewn back together with discarded spare parts, been
strapped to this ungodly hard bed for who knows how
many bloody months, and my patchwork body hurt me
so bad right now I had to fight hard not to scream. W h o
was this stupid old bat to j u s t walk in here and com¬
mand me to stand up? My resurrectionist—ha! Screw
that.
"I'm not sure what cemetery they dug you up from,
lady, and I really don't care, but someone should've
clued you in to the fact I can't j u s t leap to my feet.
Stand up? Hell, you may as well ask me to float upside
down and dance the j i t t e r b u g on the ceiling. I can
barely move, asshole!"
"Nonsense," Junie said, having none of it. "Stop be¬
ing such a crybaby. This may be the first time you re¬
member seeing m e , but I've been monitoring you for
m o n t h s . W h i l e you were recuperating in a semi-coma,
Dr. Marshall had me hook you up to his fantastic
machines to continually stimulate your new muscles and
stretch out your ligaments and tendons. W h i l e you
slept, y o u r new body parts have been getting to know
each other. We've rigorously worked y o u r arms, legs,
neck, back, h e l l . . . even y o u r fingers and toes. So
don't get all huffy and tell me you can't move. I've
damn well watched you and
know
you can. Have you
even tried? Or have you been too busy feeling sorry
for yourself?"
"Of course, I've tried," I lied. "I can't do it. I get the
shakes and a lot of leg cramps that make me move.