Read The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares Online

Authors: Joyce Carol Oates

Tags: #Short Fiction, #Collection.Single Author, #Fiction.Horror, #Fiction.Thriller/Suspense, #Acclaimed.Bram Stoker Award

The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares (33 page)

BOOK: The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares
8.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Audrey please understand—there is no choice.

It is not infanticide! It is an act to prevent suffering. To put the fetus out of its misery before it is born.

Then, the desperation. Internet adoption agencies to which without Lucas’s knowledge Audrey gave their credit card number. In a weak moment he’d promised her
Yes we can adopt we can
try to adopt
but afterward he’d realized his error. Never had the woman forgiven him his error.

I.S.—
these initials he penciled lightly on his personal appointment calendar. For Chloe wasn’t to know.

The procedure was so simple, he wouldn’t need an assistant.

She would be an outpatient, in his office. He would prep for the procedure himself.

The plan was: the patient would arrive at Dr. Brede’s office soon after 7
P.M
.—when it was certain that Chloe would have left for the day. She would have taken a tranquilizer at 6
P.M
. and when she arrived Lucas would give her a more powerful sedative; if needed, he could administer chloroform in very small doses.

Trepanation
—so primitive a procedure, one would not have to practice beforehand.

Very carefully Dr. Brede would drill into the woman’s scalp—very shallowly, into her skull. He believed he could do this. The diagram called for three minuscule holes to be opened into an equilateral triangle measuring a quarter inch on each side. Irma had been adamant about paying Lucas beforehand, a check for twelve thousand, six hundred dollars.

Doctor, thank you I am so grateful. Doctor, I will owe you my life—my new life.

Irma’s teeth chattered slightly, she was so excited. Lying back on the table in Dr. Brede’s examining room. Her eyelids that were blue-tinged as if with cold were shut tight and her thin hands were tight-clasped below her small soft bosom. Though
her skin was sallow beneath the harsh fluorescent lighting, and fine white lines puckered at the corners of her eyes, yet Irma was an attractive woman and it was touching to see that she’d shampooed her hair just recently and had creamed and powdered her face. Coral lipstick darkened her lips. On a thin gold chain around her neck she wore a small gold cross, that slipped behind her neck when she lay back.

Doctor thank you. I will adore you forever.

Soon then the patient was asleep. Her mouth drooped open, like an infant’s. Determined to be cautious—Lucas didn’t want the patient to wake up suddenly—he soaked a cloth in chloroform and held it beneath her nostrils for a count of three.

Lucas tugged on latex gloves. He was eager to begin. A sensation of elation, almost a kind of giddiness gripped him.
New life! Owe you my life my new life!
He parted the woman’s fine, soft, sparrow-colored hair, clamped it aside. He dabbed her scalp with Betadine. The stinging sensation caused her to murmur faintly, querulously. With a small scalpel he made an incision in the skin—retracted the skin, less smoothly than he’d have wished—for his hands were shaky; he would have scraped the damp exposed bone clean but felt a wave of something like nausea sweep over him—he had to pause, to recover. Already the tiny wound was bleeding—this was distracting. And now—the drill!

If he’d have had time to prepare more thoroughly for this unorthodox office procedure, Lucas would have purchased a small dental drill from a dental supply store; but he’d been
rushed, he’d made his decision overnight, and so the drill he’d acquired—at a hardware store at the North Hills Mall—was an eight-inch stainless-steel PowerLuxe. A handyman’s tool, there was no disguising the fact. The sharp whirring of the motor, the eerie spin of the drill, the gleam of the stainless steel—Lucas’s icy fingers trembled.

“Irma? Are you—asleep?” The woman’s blue-tinged eyelids fluttered though it was evident that she was soundly unconscious. Her breathing was slow, deep. Her breath smelled of something sweet—mouthwash, mint—and beneath a more acrid, slightly sour smell of animal apprehension, fear.
She knows!—her sleeping self knows. There is danger.

Lightly he touched the drill against the woman’s scalp—bright blood appeared at once, in a swift stream—this was more than he’d have expected, for such wounds don’t commonly bleed quite so freely—he was prepared to sponge it away—yet, so rapidly the blood flowed, as the unconscious woman twitched and whimpered, immediately Lucas lifted the drill from her head. His heart was beating rapidly, the panic-chill rose into his throat. He waited until the woman quieted and resumed her deep breathing; he touched the drill to her scalp another time—again the bright blood startled him—and a smell of burning bone—distasteful, repugnant. This time the patient seemed on the verge of waking—her eyelids fluttered—her lips trembled—he could see the white of her eyeball, a glimpse of unfocused eyes that
made him think of a zombie’s eyes, or the eyes of one in a coma.

Tape her eyes shut. Her mouth. Secure her. To prevent hysteria.

This advice seemed to come to Lucas from a source outside himself. He tried to identify the voice—one of the supervisors at the Institute—but could not.

These prudent steps he took. These precautions. This was not an emergency situation but you never knew—in an instant, in the OR, emergencies can erupt. This situation—the
trepanning
—seemed to be within control. The latex gloves were slippery with blood and the adhesive tape was slippery with blood but he had no trouble taping the woman’s eyes and her mouth and Lucas had no trouble strapping the patient to the table except the paper was badly torn already, and bloodstained—so quickly. And blood on the tile floor—the doctor’s crepe-soled shoes would leave distinct footprints.

Lucas lifted the drill. Now!—he drew a deep breath. His blood-slick rubber gloves caused the drill to slip, just slightly. It was a heavy crude instrument, that belonged in a handyman’s workshop, not in a surgeon’s hands.

The
trepanation
would have gone far more smoothly except the doctor was nervous. He’d poured a shot glass of whiskey for himself after his nurse-receptionist left for the evening and he’d swallowed two thirty-milligram tranquilizers of the kind he kept in his office for his skittish patients’ short-term use. Immediately he’d felt better. Now in the stress of the moment he was considering a third tranquilizer but
No. Clarity is required.

Clearheadedness. Courage.

Like one leaning over a steep drop Lucas leaned over the woman who lay limply on the examination table, unconscious, or comatose—the torn scalp bleeding profusely and the faded-girl’s face now deathly white, contorted by the adhesive tape he’d wrapped tightly around her head. He’d covered her eyes and her mouth—but remembered to leave her nostrils free for breathing. And quickly, shallowly and erratically the woman was breathing. Lucas lifted the drill, positioning the razor-sharp spiral borer against the bloody scalp. He saw that bloody clumps of hair and skin were stuck to the borer, that would shake off , or fly off , when he began drilling. The revelation came to him as if from a great distance
This is not Lucas Brede, M.D. This is another person, who does trepanning.

After several false starts he managed to finish the first of the tiny holes—
trepanation
was not so easy, as it was not quite so primitive, as the medical profession might think. Skill was involved here, in not penetrating the dura mater. The drill seemed steadier now in his hands—though still a clumsy, crude instrument—Lucas began the second hole, a quarter inch from the first, as the whirring sound of the drill filled the room like an amplified scream. Still, the blood was a distraction—in the familiar quarters of his office he wasn’t accustomed to such an excess—if a patient’s face bled, Dr. Brede or Chloe wiped it away easily with a sponge. Now there was so much blood from the patient’s head wounds that he couldn’t sponge it away quickly enough. He was having difficulty seeing where the sharp point of the drill pierced the scalp—a fine mist of blood coated the lenses of his glasses—how to clean his
glasses, in the midst of this procedure?—no choice but to remove them. Now too Lucas regretted not having taken time to mark the patient’s scalp with orange ink—he’d reasoned that after all
trepanation
wasn’t neurosurgery and didn’t have to be so specifically directed. He wasn’t “opening” the skull for brain surgery but only just perforating it, aerating it.

Like a well that has been slowly poisoned.

A new life.

The skeptics in his profession—the notoriously conservative “medical community”—would have little sympathy for Lucas Brede if he suggested to them that
trepanation
might not be so bizarre after all, as a kind of alternative medical procedure; since childhood Lucas himself had felt the slow leakage of his “soul”—his personality trapped and disfigured by the confinement of the bone-armor of the skull.

Of course Lucas had been skeptical also, and initially jeering —yet open-minded enough, after having sent Irma Seigfried away, to reconsider her request, and to summon her back.

He’d spent much of a night—one of his insomniac nights, which lately he’d come to welcome as a respite from heavy stuporous sedative-sleep—researching
trepanation
on the Internet. To his surprise he’d come to concede that the ancient custom was either beneficial or harmless if executed by a skilled practitioner. Through the centuries holes had been drilled in the skulls of myriad individuals and these holes showed evidence of having healed; there were skulls with several holes suggesting
that among some primitive people
trepanation
may have been a routine procedure, like removing infected teeth.

There was an ethical issue here, Lucas thought. As licensed surgeons are best equipped to perform abortions, so licensed surgeons are best equipped to perform
trepanations
. Refusing to serve desperate individuals for purely selfish reasons was as unconscionable in the one case as in the other.

You could argue that tattoos were much more dangerous than a skilled
trepanation
since needles are easily infected, and “tattoo-artists” were hardly licensed surgeons.

Maybe there was, as Internet testimonies suggested, a parallel world in counterpoise to Western medicine. It was just prejudice that valued Western medicine above all others.

The whirring of the drill was fierce in his ears, the weight of the drill increasingly heavy as he was obliged to hold it at an awkward angle, uplifted. Lucas was beginning to feel light-headed, dazed. The smell of singed hair and flesh, and the excessive blood, was making him ill.

He was stuffing strips of gauze into the bleeding wounds but these soaked with blood immediately and were of no use. How tired he felt, required to maintain such a high degree of concentration, with no one to assist him or even to offer to wipe his face, or polish the lenses of his glasses; a surgeon isn’t accustomed to working alone. Lucas was thinking he might pause for a few minutes—he should pause—to examine the patient’s pulse—her heartbeat—for the patient no longer seemed to be breathing through her frantic widened nostrils—but a reckless
sensation came over him, a sense of defiance—he would not turn back, now that he’d come so far.

Not many minutes had passed since Lucas had switched on the power tool but these minutes had flown by swiftly as in an accelerated film.

He would clean out the wounds carefully, and dress them. He would caution the woman not to show anyone and not to speak of the
trepanning
. For this was a sacred ritual, meant to remain private. When she woke the woman would feel some discomfort, he supposed—some pain—the brain didn’t register pain but the scalp, the skull and the dura mater registered pain—he would give her a prescription for Percodan—primarily she would feel an airiness, a strangeness—a floating sensation; almost, Lucas envied her; for it was enviable, to be so naive, and trusting; it was enviable to be a child once again; as he, Lucas Brede, never entirely had been a child, but always confined, held captive by his elders’ expectations of him. Thinking these resentful thoughts and holding the drill at a precarious angle Lucas felt it begin to slip—the rubber fingers of his latex gloves were slippery with blood—or, what was more likely, Lucas may have blacked out for a moment. And what happened, happened so fast he would have no clear comprehension of what it was—his hand slipped, the spinning borer must have penetrated the skull too deeply, and down, into the dura mater—in an instant this mishap had happened—the woman’s body jerked, convulsed—her knees buckled, her legs flailed against the restraining straps—Lucas was grateful that
her eyes were taped shut, he was spared locking his gaze with the gaze of the stricken woman—he heard a scream—a muffled scream—inside the adhesive gag.

But no, this wasn’t possible. The woman had not regained consciousness. This was not possible, the scream had to be Lucas’s feverish imagination.

Soon then the convulsing body lay limp. The struggle had ceased, the muffled screams had ceased. Dr. Brede staggered with exhaustion. He could not have been more drained if he’d performed an eight-hour surgery before witnesses. His eyeglasses he groped for, couldn’t remember where he’d dropped them, still the lenses were misted with blood and nearly opaque. The thought came to him as a consolation
You have put this one out of her mercy. That is—misery.

The patient’s remains, the sprawled and befouled female body, Dr. Brede would have to dispose of.

For he had no assistant. He was alone. It had always been so, Lucas Brede’s soul.

The shrewdest stratagem was to begin cleaning up the premises as he waited for Weirlands to darken. A few scattered lights remained, at 8:28
P.M.

Forty minutes he’d labored to revive the patient.

Forty minutes he’d tried to breathe air into the patient’s collapsed lungs, he’d thumped her chest and shouted at her pleading and furious. His excellent medical training was of little use to him now for a dead body will remain
dead.

BOOK: The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares
8.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Believing in Dreamland by Dragon, Cheryl
Dinner at Fiorello’s by Rick R. Reed
Liar's Game by Eric Jerome Dickey
StrategicLust by Elizabeth Lapthorne
Poison Princess by Kresley Cole
The Ascent (Book 2) by Shawn E. Crapo
Accidentally Aphrodite by Dakota Cassidy