[Original Novel] Pressure 3: Beautiful Corpse, Part 1

in #writing6 years ago


“This is the only way for me, I need you to see that. Where I am going, I will be happy.”

It seemed obvious in retrospect that finding a sewing kit aboard the Belusarius would be difficult. There was very little demand for such a thing at the bottom of the Pacific ocean. Olivia turned a small toolkit over in her hands, and scrutinized the contents. Just what she’d need if she were repairing delicate machinery.

Which in a sense she was, yet none of the tools looked suitable. “Have you got anything for working with fabrics?” The stocky, bearded shopkeeper looked up from his gun magazine. “Do you see a back room anywhere? What you’re lookin’ at is what I got.”

“What about meat, then?” He furrowed his brow. “What, like cutlery? Hey wait a minute, I recognize you! You’re that broad they rescued from the Tartarus! Holy shit, what happened over there?” She went cold. Sensing it was the wrong question, he edged out from behind the register and found her a small collection of utensils.

“Can’t imagine what that was like. My brother piloted the sub that brought you back. Ernie? With the hairy mole on his nose and the shitty jokes? Haha, you gotta know who I mean.” She did vaguely recall, but hadn’t expected a conversation. It was still more than she could manage after recent events.

“Hey, I’m sorry. If you don’t wanna talk about it, I get it. Here, that one’s free.” She looked down at the clear plastic box. “I hate to look a gift horse in the mouth, but I really need very very sharp, small bladed knives. Like a scalpel. Several blades preferably, of different shapes.” He raised a bushy eyebrow. “And you need this for…?” She fell silent, and scolded herself inwardly for not having an excuse on hand. “Cleaning fish” was the best she could do.

“Huh. Where you gettin’ fresh fish? I thought all the edible sealife intake and processing was done on level 20. What are you doing, going out in an exosuit with a rod and tackle?” Olivia remained silent. He shrugged, and rummaged around in a big cardboard box he’d been in the process of unloading when she arrived.

After a moment of digging, he produced a small case of exacto knives, the closest match he could find for what she’d requested. He almost objected when she snatched it from him and ran off, before remembering he’d meant it to be a freebie anyway. “What the fuck happened to her over there?” He mumbled, as her figure hurriedly receded down the corridor.

Running was a mistake. Something quickly went wrong in her knee. It wasn’t outwardly visible but she could feel a sort of clicking, popping sensation as she extended her leg. Checking that the door to her room was locked, Olivia sat on the bed and rolled up her dress.

The most obvious damage was fatigue around the knee and hip joint. Her feet were also in pretty bad shape. She now knew to expect this as they endured a lot of impact stress and friction from her shoes. The skin was, in several places, thin enough to see muscle through it.

The knives were of no use just yet, but she knew she’d need them soon, as the problem with her knee worsened. A sharp knocking at the door panicked her. Reflexively, she threw the dress back over her legs, and quickly examined herself for anything obvious before answering. “Hey, I found it!” Olivia looked baffled. Vivian Hernandez stood before her, holding up a little blue case. “...The sewing kit you wanted? You didn’t already buy one, did you?”

Vivian was one of Olivia’s patients. Following several days of quarantine and questioning, she’d been released to resume her role as the Belusarius resident psychiatric therapist. Vivian was the typical case in a place like this, seasonal affective disorder from the lack of natural sunlight. Olivia also sensed mild neurotic tendencies in Vivian that she initially suspected were the result of months spent in relatively confined quarters, but which she’d since learned were eccentricities unique to the thirty-something Hispanic maintenance technician.

“No. I, uh. They didn’t have anything along those lines. Where’d you get this?” Vivian interpreted that as an implicit invitation, slipped in through the open door and threw herself on the bed. “Please! I know peeps. I guess I can tell you it’s a sub officer I dated since that actually doesn’t narrow it down a lot.”

The joke sailed ineffectually past Olivia who was now studying the small selection of needles the kit came with. “Speakin’ of connections, I got my hands on some top shelf wine. Drop by my room tonight, maybe 7 or 8? You need it, I heard shit got real hairy at the prison. Flooding, life support failure, whole fuckin’ thing on the verge of imploding.”

Again, Olivia stiffened up. Vivian either didn’t recognize this or was undeterred, rambling on and on about the rumors she’d heard concerning the sinking of the Tartarus midwater detention center. It was her least endearing quality, but Olivia felt thankful simply to have made a friend so quickly. She’d left that damp, shadowy husk as completely alone as it was possible to be.

“If that’s what you’re going to talk about if I drop by later…” Vivian brushed it off. “No, no it’s cool. You deal with it however. Do shrinks go to other shrinks or just talk to themselves? Ha! Anyway I got some movies and shit, I figured we’d get hammered and watch whatever looks good.”

She thought of explaining again how improper it was to spend time that way with a patient, but it required her to assert herself in a way she felt too feeble for at the moment. Moreso with every passing day. “I’m not much of a wine person, but we can watch something. I was in the middle of important business when you arrived, please leave me to it.”

Vivian looked skeptical and glanced around, scanning the room for anything resembling important business. Mercifully, rather than challenge the explanation she just flounced out of the room and slammed the door behind her. Olivia locked it and this time resolved to leave it that way.

“When did I even get these?” Olivia angled the mirror for a better view of the long cuts on her hip which hung open, dry flaps of skin tearing like tissue paper as she bent at the waist. The only thread which even came close to matching her skin tone was a pastel pink, titled “peach” on the end of the spool.

She winced as the needle entered her flesh. It was a matter of instinct. There was no pain to speak of, only a dull pinching sensation which just barely registered that she’d been stuck by something. Within a few minutes she’d neatly sewn the gash shut and concealed it with makeup.

In the process she reflected on elements of history that fascinated her as an undergrad. Gilgamesh, the earliest conventional Campbellian epic, had been required reading. It told the story of a king who could not accept the death of his closest friend, and traveled the world in search of some means of resurrecting him. The fantasy of life after death, or some means of cheating it found in every culture.

Every Chinese Dynasty, for example, was replete with con men who made their living convincing the sitting emperor that whatever alchemical concoction only they knew how to make was the secret to immortality. Many times it included mercury and in fact hastened the poor fool’s death. The alchemist was, if he knew what was good for him, nowhere to be found by the time this occurred.

The reality that she was now immortal required a major shift in thinking, ever since the small contingent of marines extracted her from the dripping, crippled wreckage of the Tartarus. There was an initial burst of euphoria. Justifiable, she reassured herself.

Death was after all a primal fear which most healthy people had to find some rationale for rejecting if they were to live their lives in a fulfilling way. Acceptance of human mortality meant constant confrontation with the reality that one day you’d simply be out of time. In a hospital bed, if you’re lucky, surrounded by loved ones and accelerating towards a hard, uncompromising wall of pitch black.

“But not me,” she thought. “I’ll stay like this. Forever.” This giddiness fell apart when she reflected on the price. If she’d never gone to the Tartarus and simply received news that James had been lost when it took on water and sunk to the bottom, she could believe he was in a better place. But that was impossible for her now. The long, pale umbilical trailing from her belly to a patch of shadow in the corner served as an ever present reminder of where James actually was.


Stay Tuned for Part 2!

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Is she actually immortal? Even so her body still seems fragile since just running a little made her knees give out.

Beautiful one, creativity is a positive instinct of human kind

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