Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures. Vincent Lam

Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures - Vincent  Lam


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fluorescent-bathed, whitewashed-concrete daylight of the basement, as the inverted parts of bodies were given belated and temporary glimpses of light.

      Sri proposed that they name their cadaver Murphy. A dignified but comfortable name, he argued. Ming refused to use any name. Chen took neither side, suggested that each do as they please. Sri referred to “Murphy’s aorta, Murphy’s kidneys.” Ming made a point of saying “the cadaver’s aorta, the cadaver’s kidneys.”

      Beneath the shield of diaphragm, the liver and spleen were wet and heavy. There was a stickiness to the smell where the formalin had seeped into hepato-cytes and gelled the lobes of the liver into a single pungent mass.

      One day the bowel tore. A line of shit squirted onto Ming’s coat. It smelled like formalin, an acidic sweetness, and another smell. She wiped it off, leaving a mark, finished tracing the mesenteric circulation, and laughed when she threw the coat into the garbage. “I wanted a new coat anyhow,” she said. The cuffs of her fresh coat were again too long, and soaked up fluids until she rolled them back. It became easier to dissect, as over the days the cadaver became more fragmented and the pieces more separated from one another. There was less to pry apart—it was more detail work now.

      They unwrapped one arm from the wrist upward. The hand was wrapped separately. Ming held up the arm, holding the hand as if in a victory grasp. Along the flat back of the forearm was a lightning bolt tattoo—once straight lines, now soft arcs. Each branch of the lightning bolt underlined a word: one Golden, the other Flash. Chen rolled back the moist, yellow gauze. Above the elbow was a ring of small figures: crosses? No, airplanes. In addition to the thumbprint-sized fuselage and wings were the remnants of little propellers, now faded into age spots and the creases of oldness. Above the airplanes in official type was tattooed RCAF—17th Squadron. Above this was a Spitfire with an open shark’s jaw. The tail of the Spitfire was ajar due to a thick scar across the fuselage that had been sewn shut dirty, long ago. The ring of airplanes stood wing to wing on the front of the arm above the elbow, and then there was a gap on the inside of the arm.

      “Go, killer,” said Ming triumphantly. Then, when they looked at her, “All those planes. He must have shot them down. You’ll have to call him Lieutenant Murphy.”

      “A pilot?” said Chen.

      “There’s some planes missing,” said Ming. “He didn’t get enough to go all the way around.”

      Sri touched the tattooed arm. “I guess the war ended.”

      “It’s good they started the tattoos from the outside,” said Ming.

      Chen bunched up the gauze and snipped it. He continued to unroll, revealing a rich and delicate crucifix within a heart, large over the hump of shoulder. In gothic letters under the crucifix: The Lord Keeps Me—Mark 16. The gauze was off the arm. Ming opened the manual.

      “Okay, so down here, and then across.” She pointed with the blunt edge of the blade.

      “Mark. From the Bible, right?” said Sri.

      “It’s one of the four books in the second half,” said Chen.

      “What is that part?”

      “Um … I don’t know. The overview is simple: Jesus died on the cross to save us, rose from the dead after three days. As for Mark 16 …”

      “It must mean something,” said Sri.

      “I’ll look it up for you,” said Chen.

      “Why don’t we cut around it?” Sri’s small finger traced one arm of the cross. The cross expanded to curve across each side of the arm with its faded blue wrought ironwork.

      “The manual shows,” Ming said, “to cut here.”

      “It is a shame,” said Chen, “to cut this apart.” The manual’s illustration advised an incision directly over the tattooed arm.

      “We can easily cut around.” Sri spun his scalpel in the fingers of one hand, which he often did until someone reminded him, or he remembered, that it was not a pen.

      “What are you going to do,” said Ming, “save this?”

      “It’s bad luck,” said Sri. “Cut around here.” He traced the ornate heart with the handle of his scalpel.

      “It’s a nice cross,” agreed Chen.

      “You guys.” Ming didn’t look up. She traced the incision lines on the arm. “It’s not going to work. Don’t you want to see the bicipital groove?”

      “You should respect a man’s symbols,” said Sri. “My mother told me that. Look at his arm. These are his symbols.”

      “Don’t your people burn the corpses anyhow?” said Ming, grabbing the tattooed arm.

      “He’s not my people.”

      “Let’s get on with it.”

      “But that’s not the point,” said Sri.

      “So what’s the point? You afraid of lightning bolts?”

      “I’m not afraid of you.” He twirled the scalpel nervously, met Ming’s stare.

      “Why don’t you cut around,” said Chen, breaking their locked eyes. “Then dissect the subcutaneous layer? It’ll be the same.”

      Dr. Harrison was an origami man. In his room of eight tables, they first learned how to make paper boats.

      “Let me show you how to tuck in the corners so that it’ll be tight and waterproof,” he said. Each day in the lab, after dissection, came the origami.

      “All right, my friends, I hope you’ve learned well and are ready to set your knowledge free.” Each day, every student had to select a page from the lab manual, cut it out carefully at the spiral binding, and fold it into that day’s paper figure. After the boats came paper frogs. Then the paper balls you needed to blow into. They were advised to choose a clean page. They learned that it was easy to make swans after knowing how to make a boat, if you had the trick.

      “If you want to take more than one page out of your manual, you may do so,” Dr. Harrison said. “Of course, I may test you on that page. Only anatomy manual origami is allowed.” It was understood that you should make notes before removing a page. You had to take out at least one page.

      The swans were hung over the cadavers with twine, and if you forgot something you could look up and see whether it was printed on the wing of a twirling swan.

      Halfway through the semester, the days were ending earlier. The sky turned blood to black in the late afternoon. Sri and Chen came in from a dinner break—veggie dogs. Ming didn’t take breaks, instead munched granola bars in the museum section of the basement. They had to stay late because it was the evening before the anatomy midterm. Most of the class was still in the basement, and Sri and Chen found Ming rummaging through the bags of body parts, searching. She explained the situation to them, frustrated but not apologetic.

      “What do you mean you lost the right side of the head?” Chen asked quietly.

      “No, I didn’t exactly lose it. It’s simply not where I left it,” said Ming.

      “You put it in the head bag?” asked Sri.

      “Anyway, we’ve got the left side. We can look at someone else’s right.”

      “The exam’s tomorrow,” said Chen. The right and left halves of the head had been dissected differently, and the parts needed from the right had been removed from the left.

      “Just think for a second. Are you sure you left it here?” asked Sri, fingering the bag that contained the left half of the head.

      “I’m


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