It was a Tuesday afternoon when Rachel
Khan, IT-RN, hacked MoFo’s training meatbag and finally got root, taking over
every sector of the meatbag’s “brain” and fully commandeering its peripherals,
vitals, and anatomic reshaping algorithms.
She was so excited that she
called another IT-RN just to gloat. She and Jamal went to school together in
Houston, studying to be “Medicine Angels” together at Hermann Hospital. He still lived in Texas, but he and Rachel
kept in touch, sharing each other’s career-related triumphs and frustrations.
“I fucking did it,” she told
him. “I hacked our meatbag.”
“What’s your meatbag’s name again?”
he asked.
“The doctors call him Loaf,” she
said. “As in…you know. Meat.”
“You have total control?” Jamal
asked, blearily. Rachel felt bad,
knowing she caught him sleeping. Like
all IT-RNs, Jamal always answered his phone, no matter what time of day or
night. It was as much of a habit as
googling every exotic, medically-related proper noun that came up in
conversation. “You should make it sing
or dance or something. Really freak your
doctors out. I can’t believe you got
root on a meatbag. You have to tell me
how you did it.”
“Root really isn’t the right word,”
she said. “The root of a brain is the
stem. So I guess I’ve got stem. I can’t
talk now. I’ve got to go. I just wanted to gloat. I’ll call you tomorrow and tell you all about
it. Go back to sleep. You can be the first one to dream of my
legendary elite hacker prowess, sweet Jamal.”
“Hey, Rach—“
She hung up.
Rachel could make the meatbag
grow to any size, even mimicking the gargantuan topography of the morbidly
obese. She could make it shrink to the
size of an anorexic teenager, chewing up the plastic flesh with the meatbag’s
subdermal nanoswam. She could make it
change sex. She could stop its heart at
will and then start its heart up again at 200 beats-per-minute. She could give the meatbag ten thousand
different symptoms, selecting disease profiles that ranged from cholera to a
broken jaw.
She made the meatbag’s fingers
twitch and she made it exhale a single rancid breath from its bright green
3D-printed lungs, lungs that were sealed and fastened by spray tape to a
biomolded trachea. Satisfied, she logged
out of the meatbag’s brain, worried that someone might see the meatbag breathe
without being switched on. She cracked
her fingers.
“Your meatbag belongs to me now,
MoFo,” Rachel said to herself dramatically in the darkness. “The mind you ignored has possessed the body
you abuse. Now we are one. Ghost enters hand, enters glove, makes fist,
enters rectum. NO LUBE. THE ONLY LUBE IS BLOOD!”
Rachel was the only IT-RN at Morris
Folger Memorial Hospital (“MoFo” to its friends!), which meant she worked at
home in her underwear, smoking endless cigarettes, and scanning the ten screens
projected on the white wall of her tiny Spanish Harlem apartment. The screens corresponded to the ten ER beds at
MoFo, each one showing a different patient or empty bed. There were no colleagues to bother her, which
was a mixed blessing.
There were several empty ER beds
this Tuesday evening, so she was able to use the extra cameras for her own
purposes. She trained one camera on the
gurney in the corner where the meatbag reclined.
Today was going to be
interesting.
All alone in her apartment, she
usually vacillated between boredom and restless concentration, looking for
anomalies, answering questions that no one asked, doing calculations that no
one needed, ready with advice that no one ever wanted.
When she wasn’t working, MoFo
simply didn’t have an IT-RN on call. They didn’t think they needed one. That was
how backward this fucking hospital was.
“We got by without computers for
several hundred years, you know,” Dr. Peter Peng told her once in a moment of
rare levity. “You are nothing new. More insurance agents telling us how to do
our jobs. Medicine is an art, not a
science. Each body is different, like each canvas is different.”
The doctors at MoFo didn’t trust
her and they certainly didn’t listen to her when she had a criticism or a
useful statistic. She barreled along
anyway, trying to do her job despite the brick wall of medical hostility that
greeted her every day.
There were a couple of nurses she
liked and one she had a crush on even though he was as gay as anal beads made
from the heads of Madonna action figures.
Otherwise, she spent her time hovering like a disembodied ghost at MoFo,
going through the motions of her job without making any kind of impact. She kept a tally of her diagnoses versus the
diagnoses of the doctors to which she was assigned. She was winning, 3 to 1 on quality of diagnosis,
5 to 1 on speed.
One day, she told Jamal that she
felt as useless as the training meatbag.
“You should join forces,” he
said.
She laughed at him, but she had
not been able to get the idea of hacking the mandatory training and simulation
cadaver out of her mind.
Most of her hacking had to take
place during the day. During the night
shifts, she was on call for patients.
When patients woke screaming to buzz the nurse’s desk, they got Rachel
first. From her remote workstation, Rachel
could do triage, check drip levels, report emergencies, and even run simple
diagnostics. She could also tell scared
patients that there was nothing to be afraid of. She could turn on their televisions or help
them find something interesting to read on the internet. They were grateful for the human company, no
matter how distant it was. Most patients
assumed she was in the building with them.
They had no way of knowing she was across the water, an hour and a half
away by train.
MoFo was a shitty hospital in a shitty
business park in shitty coastal New Jersey.
The only good part about working there was that Rachel could live in New
York and commute, though she only had to go to the hospital once a week for
staff meetings.
IT-RNs were supposed to be
fact-checkers and remote care specialists, but the doctors at MoFo were not
ready to listen to her yet. They saw her
as a threat. She had to admit this and
try to understand where they were coming from.
They did not like sharing power, no matter what the statistics said
about “improved patient outcomes as a result of utilizing a trained IT
operative.”
In Houston, where Rachel trained
at Hermann Hospital with Jamal, the ITRNs had a whole room in the hospital
dedicated to them. There were six
working together as a team, and the doctors called it Mission Control.
The ITRNs at Mission Control
weren’t just there to provide cover, to assuage patient fears, and to lower the
hospital’s insurance costs: they were a vital, critical, well-paid part of the
hospital. The doctors loved them. They were treated like copilots during every
procedure.
Here at MoFo, however, the
doctors tried to pretend she didn’t even exist.
Since it was daytime, four of her
cameras were covered and Dr. Peng was on rotation. Rachel buzzed the nurses about Bed 7.
“Bed 7 is about to fall onto the
floor. Somebody needs to put the guard
rails up and maybe give him another bag of saline. He is spiking pretty hard. He is probably going to throw up again.”
“Thanks, Rach,” said Jay Ono, the
nurse at the station who took her call.
Jay Ono was dreamy. Tall, built,
lanky, smooth, and extremely gay. Rachel
had a huge crush on him, and often found herself fantasizing about him with
other men, wondering if he would be a top or a bottom, wondering if he would be
a gentle lover, or the kind who wanted you to fuck them so hard that it popped
your sinuses and cramped your feet. She
wondered if she would be a top or a bottom with Jay Ono. She decided she didn’t mind, just as long as
she was in there somewhere.
The patient in Bed 7 was admitted
during the night and was wearing yellow scrubs, signifying that he was a
homeless repeat offender. The cops
picked him up after he was hit by a car, stumbling into the street in the
throes of a panicky detox.
The car hadn’t done much damage,
but he was dehydrated and malnourished, and he had a few seizures before he
started to stabilize.
He had been to MoFo before, and
he would definitely be back again. But
he wasn’t going to knock himself out of a bed and break his back while Rachel
was watching.
“How you doing, Rach?” asked Jay
Ono while he put up the guardrails on Bed 7 and eased the man under the paper
sheets. “We haven’t been on rotation
together much this month.”
“I’m good,” she said. “I got into it with Peng again last week
about a few unnecessary CT scans, and so I am on the shit list again. He isn’t even typing up his charts
anymore. He is doing everything on
PAPER.”
“When are you ever not on the
shit list?” asked Jay sympathetically.
“That dude has a phone so old he can’t
even play “Snake,” said Rachel. “I saw
his laptop once. His homepage is Altavista: “the website that helps you find
what you’re looking for.” He still asks
Jeeves! HE STILL ASKS JEEVES!”
“I heard he still goes to chat
rooms and gets mad when people type in all caps,” said Jay. “He can hear you just fine! You don’t have to scream!”
“Hee hee.”
“It’s not our fault,” said Jay
Oh. “We try to tell him how helpful you
are. You would think somebody who spent
so long in school would have respect for the esoteric knowledge of other
specialists. And you are the best.”
“It is true,” said Rachel. “I am so high-tech that I only take the E
train. I know you love me for it. In fact, we should get together sometime and
make sure you are still gay. I wouldn’t
want you to be living a lie because of all the social pressure to be different. In person, I am much more charming.”
Jay Ono laughed. The patient in Bed 7 came awake, blinking stupidly. Jay Ono snapped his fingers in front of the
man’s face, testing the man’s response.
The man snarled, rolling over and smacking his lips. Jay kissed his fingers and pressed them to
the camera at Rachel.
Nurse Janey Showalter-Babbage and
Nurse Elmore Dunkin – who had such bad acne that many of the patients felt
sorry for him which made his job much easier, perversely – came running into
the ER, pulling a gurney behind them that they had just hauled out of an
ambulance.
“Where’s Peng?” shouted Janey
Showalter-Babbage.
“Right here,” said Dr. Peter
Peng, stepping mysteriously out of the elevator as if on cue. Rachel did have to hand it to him. He was an extraordinarily sharp doctor with
amazing instincts. But she didn’t trust
anything about humans anymore. She had
seen too many human errors. She had seen doctors make too many mistakes. Rachel Kahn did not go to medical
school. In fact, she dropped out of
college after only one semester so she could spend more time alone in her room
with her computer. Rachel believed
firmly that collective human intelligence was far more powerful than the abilities
of a single human. Doctors were
brilliant people. Diseases were more
brilliant. A disease distributed itself
across many different bodies to keep from being “cured.” It was a single organism with many different
hosts. The only comparable human
technology was the “idea.” It took many
bodies to hold a disease: it took many minds to keep an idea alive.
She knew in her heart that
medicine was a team operation, but convincing doctors to take advice from
anyone, let alone the internet, was nearly impossible.
“Multiple stabbings,” Elmore
Dunkin told Dr. Peng, wheeling the gurney to Bed 4. “They found her in front of some bar. No name.
No ID.”
“We are losing her,” said Janey
Showalter-Babbage.
Even though it was the heat of
the moment and the situation was critical, Dr. Peng still took the time to
throw a towel over Bed 4’s camera, blocking Rachel out of the situation. Rachel wasn’t offended. She was used to this by now.
She opened a few windows so she
could be ready to search.
“Neck and thigh,” said Elmore
Dunkin.
“Mmmm-hmmmm,” said Dr. Peng. “I’ve got to get in there and close off what
I can. I can’t see anything here. I need
more light. And where is the fucking
suction, you retards?”
He immediately began to operate,
tying off veins and wielding his laser with cruelty and skill, silencing the
nurses, who stood by with suction and gauze, cleaning the wounds as fast as he
could repair them. Out of habit and
training, Rachel did searches related to every murmur and possibility, looking at graphs relating to blood loss and
vein obstruction order, looking at arterial maps and running the patient’s
charts through statistical analysis programs searching for worst-case-scenario
glyphs, logging into chat rooms full of other Medicine Angels dealing with
similar trauma situations all over the world, absorbing everything there was to
know about neck stabbings as fast as possible, ready with fast answers to
difficult questions that never came.
She noted several times that Dr.
Peng did not tie off veins in the absolute safest order, based on the grunts
and gasps that came from the nurses.
Nothing terrible happened, however, and nobody asked Rachel what to do. Nobody asked her any questions about blood pressure,
hemorrhaging, or the cardiac profile the woman was displaying on the monitor.
“She is stabilizing,” said Elmore
Dunkin.
“She’s going to live for sure,”
said Dr. Peng. Dr. Peng took an old
Polaroid camera out of his pocket.
“Juice her, please,” said Dr.
Peng. “I want to wake her up for a
moment.”
“Are you sure that’s a good
idea?”
“Do it,” said Dr. Peng.
Rachel looked up the actuarial rates
for waking a person after sudden and extreme blood loss and found that,
obviously, it was better to let them sleep.
Still, Peng wanted his picture and he was firmly convinced that he had
already saved her life.
She couldn’t see anything since
the camera was covered. She heard Elmore
prepare a syringe and then saw a massive spike in the patient’s heart
rate. There was a scream and then Rachel
heard the tell-tale flash of Dr. Peng’s ancient Polaroid camera.
“Alright, you can put her back
down now,” said Dr. Peng. “Take her to
OR1. I’ll be there in a sec and we’ll
finish her up. Get her breathing on her
own.”
As Dr. Peng walked away, shaking his Polaroid
and chuckling to himself, Elmore removed the towel from the camera so that
Rachel could see the patient for the first time.
“Anything you want to add?”
Elmore asked her, grinning into the camera.
“Not particularly,” said Rachel,
sighing. “Waking her up was a terrible
call, but nobody asked me.”
“Peng needed his picture,” said
Elmore. “He gets cranky if he doesn’t
get to add a new face to his ball pit.”
Elmore wheeled the patient away
and Rachel followed him and the gurney on the hospital security camera. There was no way for Dr. Peng to turn off the
cameras in the operating room. The
hospital demanded that all surgeries be recorded for liability reasons.
For years, no one knew why Dr.
Peng took pictures of the patients in trauma after he saved their lives. Most people assumed it was simple vanity,
that he had a photo album of them at home.
But it was much stranger and much more twisted than that. Earlier this year, Peng had finally managed
to seduce one of the nurses – a young girl just out of school named Julia. After their relationship had fallen apart but
before Julia had transferred out of the ER, she told everybody what Peng did
with his photographs.
Evidently, Dr. Peng’s hobby was
miniature painting. Dr. Peng had used
his substantial fortune to build a huge ball pit in the center of his living
room, the kind of ball pit that you would find in a children’s pizza
restaurant. Most of the balls were
blank, but Peng was painting faces on each of them, slowly filling up his ball
pit with the visages of the people whose lives he had saved, copying the
Polaroids that he collected.
“He likes to play in his ball pit
naked,” Julia told Rachel the night before she left MoFo for good. “He dives all the way down to the bottom and
covers himself with the balls. He says
he it is the only time he is ever relaxed.
He doesn’t drink and he doesn’t smoke, you know.”
“Ew,” said Rachel. “Did you ever get sex-funky in the ball pit,
Julia?”
“We did,” said Julia. “Once.
It wasn’t easy. There’s no way to
get good balance in a ball pit. He
shoved my face into the balls as he was -- you know – squirting his honey
bear. I recognized the face of this
little cancer patient kid we operated on the week before. Peter does very good portraits. I recognized the cancer kid immediately. Anyway, I told him we couldn’t make love in
the ball pit anymore. It was very
unsettling.”
“Understandable,” said Rachel.
“And then we broke up,” she said,
starting to cry.
“Maybe not a huge tragedy,” said
Rachel. “Probably you don’t want to be
with him for all times.”
“He isn’t really a bad person,”
said Julia. “I mean he saved all of
their lives! That’s got to count for
something! He likes having some record
of that. For him, it is art.”
“Surgery is queen of the arts,”
agreed Rachel. “Sculpting human
flesh. Pruning rot from god’s little
bonsai trees. You’ll find a better
doctor. Someone without a ball pit full
of human faces.”
“Yeah,” said Julia skeptically. “Maybe.”
While Peng was developing the
Polaroid of his latest intake, Rachel got curious.
Out of pure habit, Rachel started
examining the newest patient’s vitals. She
cross-checked the patient’s chart (the intake still had no name) against every
other chart for no-name patients in the world, using the ITRN database. It was illegal to share medical data from
identified people, but there was no law against sharing the medical info of
Jane and John Does who got treated and then scampered away.
She got a match from Iowa. Though checking was standard behavior, she
had never actually got a match before.
“Holy shit,” she said, staring at
the chart in front of her. “It’s got to
be the same woman.”
The vitals were all the
same. The Jane Doe had been admitted in
Iowa wearing black nail polish and thick black eyeliner, and she was wearing
the same stuff now. According to the
chart in Iowa, she had a tattoo on the inside of her wrist.
Rachel paged Jay Ono.
“Jay!” she said. “I got a match on a chart from Iowa. The neck stabbing. Does she have a tattoo on her wrist?”
Jay stopped what he was doing and
sauntered across the ER to check.
“She sure does,” said Jay.
“Tell me what it is.”
“It is a picture of Kurt Cobain
as Jesus. He is on a cross and
everything. It is a pretty crappy
tattoo. It looks like she did it
herself.”
“Fuckballs,” said Rachel. “It is the same girl. The good news is that now we know her
allergies. For instance, it says here
not to give her antipsychotics or ibuprofen.
But get this: she also has a severe, untreated heart arrhythmia. It is a nasty one. Make sure Dr. Peng knows about it. He shouldn’t operate on her without a
cardiologist. He should wait until
tomorrow.”
“Do you really think he is going
to listen to me?”
“He sure as hell isn’t going to
listen to me.”
“Good point,” said Jay Ono. “He hates you. Good point.”
They were both silent for a
moment, pondering this.
Rachel thought back to her
lectures at Hermann Hospital in Houston.
Most of the job of the Medical Angel was to try and get doctors to take
them seriously.
Doctors would always have the
last word when it came to patient care.
They had the liability and, at the end of the day, it would be them
hauled in front of their peers and the courts to be questioned about their
decisions.
She remembered her favorite
professor, a bearded hacker named Eli who was about five hundred pounds
overweight and who never went anywhere without his Rascal peoplescooter and a
large bag of popcorn shrimp.
Eli was a big believer in not
just fact-checking, but in putting all problems out there in the cloud, no
matter how simple, so that the decision tree itself could be checked.
She summoned Eli’s avatar into
her mind, steeling herself with his intelligence against Dr. Peng’s superior
training. Eli’s booming voice came back
to her.
“Doctors work very hard to get
where they are and they are also extremely smart, you douchebags. Colossal resources go into the production of
a doctor, so don’t underestimate them.
Their educations are extremely important because we need people who can
do what they do, working at the very limit of life and death, bringing us back
from the edge if at all possible. Learn
to love your doctors like they are your own children. We are willing to sacrifice colossal
resources to create these geniuses -- however, doctors are not better than
other people when it comes to policing their own brains. They are fallible, corruptible, and certainly
capable of making more mistakes than, say, a computer. No one wants to admit that many minds working
together to solve scientific problems get better results than one lone genius
working in the dark. Scientific problems
have only one solution and all medical problems are scientific problems. If you can get past the inherent cruelty of
the internet – and the cruelty is important because it is jarring and scary –
the internet is the best tool for grinding decision-averages down to the best
possible course of action. But all you
douchebags already love the internet. The
hardest part of your job will be learning how to become a voice in your
doctor’s ear – learning how to guide these brilliant jerks toward wisdom or, at
the very least, giving them the best possible information about every subject
at all times.”
Dr. Peng came into the ER, all
scrubbed up and serene. Rachel knew he
was headed for the meatbag to practice the operation before doing it for
real. She called Jay Ono over to a
camera in the corner.
“Listen,” she said to Jay
Ono. “I hacked the meatbag. I can control Loaf. I am going to try and
warn him that way. Play along,
okay? Try and interpret for me. I think he will listen to Loaf.”
“You hacked the meatbag?” said Jay. “How’d you do that, you fun little scamp?”
“Genius is 1% inebriation and 99%
desperation,” said Rachel, cracking a can of beer in front of the camera. “Watch me work.”
Dr. Peng hovered over the meatbag,
frowning. In contrast to taking advice
from Medical Angels, all doctors liked practicing on the training meatbag.
It was the perfect patient:
endlessly forgiving, chock full of interesting diseases, immortal, and silent. Some doctors were hardly ever away from their
meatbags. These butchers spent whole
days carving and programming, playing diagnostic games that they coded for each
other, whispering secrets in the cold ears of their perpetual victims, testing
new techniques and refining old methodologies.
Rachel logged into the meatbag
and hung back, watching what Peng would program into the machine to train himself
for the surgery he was about to do.
“Neck wounds, thigh wounds, acute
unknown drug toxicosis, but let’s say heroin,” he punched in the list of
symptoms.
He plugged in the unknown
patient’s vitals, including an estimated height and weight. The CT gurney took a full body scan of the
woman and he also imported that into the meatbag. The nanoswarm under the meatbag’s skin went
wild, reconfiguring Loaf’s limp shape into an exact replica of the woman on
whom Dr. Peng would soon be operating, even down to her black lipstick.
“Okay,” said Dr. Peng. “This should be pretty straightforward.”
Rachel took over, plugging in the
new chart she had scavenged form the internet.
She frowned, knowing that the woman’s extreme arrhythmia might not kick
in and so she was going to have to force the issue if she wanted to get
results.
Dr. Peng wiggled his fingers and
then began cutting.
“Here we go, Loaf,” he
muttered. “My old friend Loaf.”
Rachel took a sip of her beer and
then spiked the meatbag’s heartrate, sending the woman into cardiac arrest as
soon as her blood pressure began to drop.
Peng panicked. He dropped his
scalpel, wringing his hands. He shut the
meatbag off, mopping his forehead.
“What the hell was that?” he
asked. “That doesn’t make any sense. Did that make any sense to you, Jay?”
“The low blood pressure did something
to her heart,” offered Jay Ono, his eyes darting to the camera where Rachel was
watching. “Beats me.”
“Let’s try again,” said Dr.
Peng.
He reconfigured the meatbag
again, double-checking all the stats for the woman on the table.
Peng wasn’t getting the
message. Rachel narrowed her eyes and
was struck with a sudden inspiration.
This time, when Dr. Peng started
cutting, Rachel made the meatbag mimic the symptoms of a clonic seizure, nearly
falling off the table and spewing green steam, a vomit simulacrum that the
doctors called “soul gas.” You got “soul gas” from a meatbag instead of bodily
fluids. It was as harmless as dry ice.
Dr. Peng stepped away from the
meatbag table, his hands in the air. He
was watching the meatbag with frustrated irritation, trying to make sense of
what was going on, not bothering to take heroic measures to save the life of a
training robot.
Rachel was tense. Would he know she had taken over?
“What is going on here?” he
asked.
Now Rachel sent the meatbag into
cardiac arrest again, killing the meatbag once more in front of Dr. Peng. The soul gas stopped pouring out of the
lifeless body.
“There is no cardiologist on
rotation, I assume,” sighed Dr. Peng.
“Not until morning,” said Jay
Ono.
Dr. Peng leaned over the meatbag,
peering at the simulated damage to neck and thigh.
“Are you trying to tell me
something Loaf?” he asked. “What is it
boy? What is it?”
“Did you see that article in the
Observer?” said Jay Ono. “They think it
is only a matter of time before the internet becomes conscious. Could be any day now.”
Dr. Peng shot a dangerous look at
Jay Ono.
“Don’t talk nonsense, boy,” said
Dr. Peng.
Typing furiously, Rachel uploaded
a speech algorithm into the meatbag that she downloaded from some Russian
website where people coded extremely perverse apps for sex dolls. The meatbag didn’t have any voice modulation,
but it was possible to use soul gas to make whistling noises that approximated
human speech.
As Dr. Peng leaned over to the
computer to reconfigure the meatbag yet again, Rachel made the meatbag speak.
“Don’t hurt…me,” the meatbag
whispered, spurting out green steam through its black lipstick.
“Fuck me,” shouted Dr. Peng. “Did the meatbag just talk?”
“I didn’t hear anything,” said Jay
Ono. “I don’t think meatbags are able to
talk. Are you feeling okay?”
“I’m fine,” snapped Dr.
Peng. “Actually, would you please leave
me alone for a second? This is a
delicate operation.”
“Dr. Carlsson comes in at 7,”
said Jay, walking away. “The patient is
stable if you want to wait for Dr. Carlsson.”
“Yeah, yeah, yeah.”
As soon as Jay was gone, Dr. Peng
leaned closer to the meatbag, examining it.
He lifted Loaf’s arm and then let it fall.
“Are you trying to tell me
something?” he asked.
Rachel was hesitant about making
the meatbag talk again. It seemed
inelegant. Too dramatic. She needed Dr. Peng to question his own
judgement, not the meatbag’s integrity. She
noticed that Dr. Peng was leaned way over the side of the cyborg cadaver with
his hip grazing the meatbag’s crotch.
Quickly, Rachel changed the sex
of the meatbag to male and pumped up the size of the meatbag’s penis until it
was nearly a foot long. She drilled down
the list of symptoms, searching furiously.
She made a happy noise, plugged in the symptom “priapism,” and hit
return hard.
Dr. Peng yelped as the meatbag’s
sudden erection unfolded like the surprised tail of a cat. The sheet was covering it, though the sheet
tented up so high that the meatbag’s belly was exposed.
“Does that mean yes?” whispered
Dr. Peng, confused. “You are trying to
tell me something?”
Rachel crossed her arms.
“Should I operate on this
patient?” he asked softly.
Rachel eliminated “priapism” from
the list of meatbag symptoms and the massive erection disappeared like an eel
retreating into coral. Dr. Peng rubbed
his mouth.
“Is there something wrong with
this patient that I don’t know about?”
The meatbag went hard again. Dr. Peng checked his own pulse and rubbed
cold sweat from his forehead.
“Are you some kind of artificial
intelligence? Are you conscious?”
Rachel thought about this a
moment and then left the meatbag alone, letting it stay erect.
“I am going crazy,” said Dr.
Peng.
He called Jay Ono over.
“Listen,” Dr. Peng told Jay. “I think we had better wait to operate on
this new intake until we get a competent cardiologist to sit in with us. I have a bad feeling about this, and also
there seems to be something wrong with the meatbag. I can’t train properly. The meatbag seems to have strong
opinions. Strange, strong opinions.”
Jay looked at the meatbag, trying
to keep a straight face, staring at the giant erection protruding from between
the legs of the simulated stabbing victim.
“Wow,” said Jay.
“I think I am going to take a
break,” said Dr. Peng. “I think there
might be something wrong with my blood sugar.
Sit down with the meatbag for awhile, would you? Run some diagnostics on it. See if there isn’t some kind of virus. Let me know if it…talks to you.”
“Sure,” said Jay.
Dr. Peng stumbled away, muttering
to himself, headed for the break room.
“Good job, Rachel,” said Jay,
patting the meatbag on the head.
Rachel drilled down the list of
symptoms until she found “inflamed cremaster.”
She hit return. The meatbag’s massive
erection started to twitch like the tapping foot of a happy musician.
“Maybe we could make it work,”
said Rachel. “Me, you, and the meatbag. Maybe the three of us could be happy
together.”
Jay Ono grabbed the meatbag’s
phallus, stopping it from twitching. Its
legs shook beneath the giant cock.
“Oooo, Jay,” said Rachel. “Is that what you like?”
She sent the meatbag into another
clonic seizure. Green soul gas shot from the meatbag’s hulking phallus and all
the nurses turned to look because Jay was laughing so hard that he had lost his
balance.
He hung onto the meatbag’s forearm-sized
cock for dear life, his legs scrabbling for purchase beneath him against the
slippery floor, mentally giving the Medicine Angel (who was somewhere far away
and who he had never met) a big meaty high five.
Hey there just wanted to give you a quick heads up. The words in your post seem to be running off the screen in Chrome.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if this is a formatting issue or something to do with browser compatibility but I thought I'd post to let
you know. The design and style look great though!
Hope you get the issue fixed soon. Thanks
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