Authors: Gord Rollo
Tags: #Suspense, #Horror, #Fiction, #Occult & Supernatural, #Thrillers, #Organ donors
tesque, but for the most part I found them fascinating,
almost like I had somehow walked into one of the sci¬
ence fiction movies I'd enjoyed so much as a kid.
The highlights for me included getting to see the leg
that had miraculously survived for one hundred and
nineteen record days and when I got to shake the hand
of a severed woman's arm. I took hold of the hand as
one of the medical lab assistants punched in a command
on a nearby computer terminal. Almost instantly, the
hand clenched comfortably around m i n e , scaring the
shit out of me, and causing everyone else to laugh at my
reaction/Freaky, man!
After checking out the three spacious and efficientlooking operating theaters, we headed up to tour the
_ third floor. This floor was set up more like a posh hotel
than a hospital ward, with thick luxurious carpet on the
floor and beautiful paintings h a n g i n g on the walls.
This was where the staff lived and also where our bed¬
rooms were going to be for as long as our stay here
lasted. I was anxious to explore my room but Dr. Mar¬
shall gestured for us to stop at room 301 near the end of
the first hallway. He turned, and, when he talked to us,
his voice was barely above a whisper.
"This is Andrew's room. Your rooms are around the
corner at the far end of the building. You'll see your
names on the doors. There really isn't much else to see.
The fourth floor is j u s t for storage and empty space for
future expansion, but before you go get settled in, I
thought you might like to meet my son."
"Of course," I said. Everyone agreed it would be nice
to meet the guy we were here to help.
"Great. I'll j u s t check in on him first and see if he's
up for a visit. He's a little apprehensive about taking
your arms and legs. He thinks you'll all hate him for it.
Maybe you can set his mind at ease. It's the last t h i n g
he needs to be worried about right now. Just stay here a
minute and keep the noise down. I'll be right back."
The surgeon disappeared quietly into room 301 and
we waited patiently in the hall for five minutes. We
were starting to get restless when Dr. Marshall opened
the door and rejoined us.
"I'm afraid this isn't a good time for this. Andrew is
sleeping comfortably and I don't want to wake him. He's
on a lot of medication that tends to keep him pretty
drowsy. I don't want him moving around too much be¬
fore the operation. The nurse tells me that lately he's
been sleeping during the day, and up watching televi¬
sion most of the night.
"Fm going to take you in to have a quick peek but
you have to stay quiet. I want you to meet him more
formally, of course, but that will have to wait for an¬
other day. I'm sure you'll have lots of chances to talk to
each other over the next few months. Come on in."
We paraded into the room as quietly as possible and
gathered just inside the door. Andrew's room was huge,
his hospital bed easily thirty feet away from us, situated
beside a large three-paned picture window so he could
see the fields outside. Andrew was only a small lump
under the sparkling white bed sheets. He was bandaged
up worse than an Egyptian mummy, so much so that
I'd have never been able to guess there was a man on
the bed if I hadn't been told. An oxygen mask covered
his face, obscuring our view of his only exposed skin. It
was a sad, sobering sight, and at that m o m e n t I was glad
he was asleep because I wouldn't have been able to think
of a single thing to say to him.
The rest of the room was taken up with various mon¬
itoring equipment, medical supplies, and a mainframe
computer system. Thousands of tiny wires trailed from
the computer station over to Andrew's bed, where they
split in four directions to connect into the bandaged ar¬
eas where his arms and legs should have been. We only
stayed for a m i n u t e , but it was long enough for us to
realize this poor man needed our help badly.
"Pretty unsettling, isn't it?" Dr. Marshall grimaced,
once we were all back in the hall. "Maybe now you can
fully realize why I've been so driven to help him. He's
my only son. I hope he won't have to live his life in that
room much longer.
"I took you in there because I wanted you to see how
I've prepared his body to accept your donated limbs.
You noticed the fiber-optic connections? The same prin¬
ciple we talked about to keep your limbs alive once they
are surgically removed is applied to
his
body for the r e attachment procedure. I removed his deformed stumps
and have attached the fiber-optic network to all the
healthy nerve endings we could find. D u r i n g surgery,
I'll be hooking up these healthy nerves to y o u r healthy
nerves, and there should be a minimal amount of func¬
tion loss from your body to his. Essentially, given time
to heal of course, he should be able to get up and walk
away almost as if your donated limbs had been his own
right from birth."
We thanked Dr. Marshall for the tour and each ram¬
bled down the hall to find our rooms. We agreed to
meet back downstairs for supper at 7:00
P.M.
sharp. Ater the lunch we'd been treated t o , I for one didn't plan
on being late.
My room was number 332, halfway down the corri¬
dor. It was a lavish suite, which even surpassed the
splendor of the Four Seasons, where Blue J and I had
spent the night earlier this week. It was only half the
size of Andrew's room but seeing as I was used to sleep¬
ing in a Dumpster, this room far exceeded anything
that I'd ever need. I sprawled on the bed, flipped on the
boob tube, and watched a little mindless television for a
while, j u s t trying to mellow out from all the excite¬
ment. W i t h all the information swirling around in my
head, I didn't think I'd be able to relax, but within m i n
utes my eyelids were drooping. I didn't even try fight¬
ing it, drifting off for an afternoon nap.
W h e n I woke up it was already 6:11
P.M.,
which sur¬
prised me but still left me more than enough time to
have a nice hot bath before heading downstairs to the
dining hall. I was the last guest to show. There were
also twelve men and women I hadn't met yet, probably
staff, but they were eating at another table on the far
side of the room. Dr. Marshall and Drake both ate
with us.
Supper was wonderful. We had seafood chowder,
then our choice of pasta primavera with boneless chicken
strips or pork chops with applesauce. Being a pig, I had
both. I also drank the better part of a bottle of expen¬
sive red wine. Nobody seemed to care. Eat, drink, and
be merry, I guess.
After the meal, Dr. Marshall raised his glass to make
a toast.
"To my new friends," he said. "Together, we make
history."
There was some laughter and a cheer from everyone
at the table; then Dr. Marshall said something else that
made us cheer even louder.
"We only have one more thing to do today. We have
to sign a contract with each other. Anyone interested in
getting rich? Yeah? Well, let's go make each of you mil¬
lionaires. How does that sound?"
Pretty damn good tome.
I followed Drake and his boss out of the dining hall
and back to the glass-domed atrium.
An older secretary with a wrinkled brow and her hair
tied up in a tight bun passed out our contract forms, in
triplicate, and we signed them after giving them the old
once-over. Everything looked fine to me and, by this
time, I suppose that I trusted the doctor.
Once the papers were collected and the secretary
shuffled away with them, Drake had us sit with him
one at a time in front of a fax machine. On the p h o n e ,
he was talking to a representative of the First National
Bank down in the Cayman Islands. Grand Cayman was
a popular choice for anyone wishing to wire-deposit
large amounts of cash into an offshore bank account.
Their strict laws of nondisclosure made it virtually
impossible for anyone—like say, the United States In
ternal Revenue Service—to stick their noses into the
accounts and start asking questions. Dr. Marshall had
previously set up these accounts and Drake was passing
on the final information to activate them in our names.
The fax machine started spewing out confirmation that
I was now the holder of a bank account with an im¬
pressive balance of $2,000,000.00 in cold hard cash.
I held the document with shaking hands, reading it
over four times to make sure it really had as many
zeroes as I thought it did. I couldn't believe it. Yester¬
day I was a penniless, street loser—today, a multimil¬
lionaire.
After the last of us received our confirmation pa¬
pers, we went back to the dining hall and had one hell
of a party. Dr. Marshall and Drake left the four of us
to it and soon we were sloshed out of our minds and
whooping up a storm. If there's one t h i n g homeless
people can do best, it's party like there's no tomorrow,
especially if someone else is picking up the tab for the
booze.
W h e n I left the party, the others were still hard at it
and Red Beard had started to sing. Terribly, I might
add. That's when I knew I'd had enough. It must have
been around eleven o'clock when I stumbled upstairs to
call it a night. It was a good thing they'd put my name
on the door because damned if I could remember my
room number. Anyway, I made it into bed, flicked off
the light, and happily basked for a few minutes in the
alcohol-induced glow. .
"I'm a millionaire!" I rejoiced. "A goddamned mil¬
lionaire. I can't bloody believe it.
Yaahooooo!"
I laughed and laughed and could hardly get control
of myself. This was one of the best nights of my entire
life.
Unbe-fucking-lievable!
I curled into the wonderfully soft pillow and easily
floated off to dreamland like a baby cuddled to its
mother's bosom. I hadn't felt that comfortable and to¬
tally contented with life in a very long time.
)
C H A P T E R E L E V E N
Comfortable and contented or not, I only managed to
sleep until 4:07
A . M .
I had to piss like a racehorse, and
when I returned to bed I tried my best to get some
more shuteye. Wasn't going to happen. I felt like crap
from all the booze I'd guzzled and my head was throb¬
bing like someone was beating on a bass drum stuck
between my ears. W h e t h e r I liked it or not, I was wide¬
awake. Rather than lie around suffering, staring at the
ceiling, I decided I might as well get dressed and go
find myself a cup of coffee.
Fifteen minutes later, I was digging t h r o u g h the
kitchen cupboards searching for some Java. I'd easily
found the coffeemaker sitting out on the gleaming
stainless steel countertop, but I couldn't locate any cof¬
fee to put in k. On my second search, I found a j a r of
Nescafe instant, and boiled some water in a pot on the
stove to make do. A big mug of double-strength with
cream, and I was feeling more or less h u m a n again.
I wondered what time Red Beard and the others had
finally called it quits. It was a safe bet their heads would
be feeling a lot worse than mine, whenever they even¬
tually crawled out of the sack. My guess, and believe
me I'm speaking from experience, was the other donor
boys wouldn't surface until lunchtime.
So where did that leave me? W h a t was I supposed to
do? It wasn't even five o'clock yet, and I was probably
the only person in the entire medical center up and at
it. Then again, maybe not. I was remembering how Dr.
Marshall had informed us that his son slept most of the
day, but was usually awake watching television through¬
out the night. Maybe this would be a good time to pop
upstairs and introduce myself. Couldn't hurt. If An¬
drew was awake, I'm sure he'd appreciate the company.
If he was asleep, I'd j u s t tiptoe back out without bother¬
ing him.
Up the stairs I went, taking them two at a time. I was
surprised to realize how excited I was to m e e t Andrew.
Part of it was simple curiosity, wondering what it must
be like to lie in that hospital bed all the time, but mostly
I wanted to set this poor man's mind at ease about re¬
ceiving our donated limbs. Yes, I wanted the money, but
I felt a real need to explain to Andrew that I believed in
his brilliant father and I was honestly thrilled to be able
to help him. He'd probably think I was full of shit, but I
could at least try.
As I entered the third-floor hallway, I caught a
glimpse of a tall man heading around the corner ahead
of m e , walking away from the front of Andrew's room.
One of Andrews doctors?