A Healer's
Hands
This is
what it must be like to die.
A sudden
sense of freedom, undeserved. I can feel myself drifting gently through the
air, an ethereal figure made of light and sparkling lines of force, unbound by
the confines of gravity. From this new vantage point, I gaze down upon the
decaying, comatose object that once served as my body.
The
monitors surrounding the bio-bed show no significant change in its condition.
About two meters to my right, the young Ocampan nurse, Kes, observes the readings
and comes to the same conclusion. I take a step backward, moving out of her
way as she turns toward a nearby workstation. She ought to be able to walk straight
through what I have become, this fleshless and bloodless apparition, no more
real than a ghost from the ancient myths; but the parameters of the holographic
program provide a harsh, unwelcome solidity.
She glances
in my direction, if it can be so described: toward a holographic representation
of a being that has not existed in living memory, a Vidiian woman untouched by
the Phage. For just a second I cannot meet her gaze, and I look down at my
hands. No, surely not my hands. Smooth and clear, these hands were never
sliced from a captive's corpse and transplanted to serve the needs of a diseased
body, in a process by now almost as routine as a change of clothing. These
hands never aided in bringing death and destruction to any species unfortunate
enough to find itself in the path of a Vidiian harvesting ship.
No doubt
Voyager's Doctor intended only kindness when he transferred my consciousness
into this mocking mirror of an impossible existence, but he could not have been
more cruel if he had tried.
I look up
into Kes' face again. Her small, perfect white teeth have begun absently
worrying her lower lip as she deliberates over what, if anything, to say. I
realize that I must be a monster to her, the hideous embodiment of her
childhood nightmares. Does it count for anything, I wonder, that I was once a
child myself.
"When
I was small, I thought that body parts came from factories," I tell Kes,
who blinks nervously in response. "Then my parents explained it to me, at
about the same time they told me where meat came from. Do your people eat
meat, Kes?"
Her teeth
finally release her lower lip, revealing the deep grooves they have made. She
blinks once more, standing with her back against the edge of the workstation,
and declares, "No."
"It's
fairly common among sentient humanoid species. Meat-eating, that is. Usually
there's not much guilt about slaughtering the animals, not much thought given
to the morality of it. After all, the meat is needed, and the animals die
quickly, without suffering."
I can hear
the sound of my words as they echo from the surrounding walls, but the voice itself
is unrecognizable. A computer-generated approximation, I know, of the speech
that would have come naturally from a throat unaffected by the Phage. Not one
detail has been overlooked in creating the hellish perfection of my altered
image.
"Vidiians
once were known as a race of great healers, a compassionate and civilized
people. Our world government devoted a vast amount of resources to medical
research and treatment, with the goal of ending all disease forever. Many of
the research projects involved animal experiments. Scientists created a
genetically engineered variety of a docile herd animal to serve as a ready
source of transplantable organs. No one knew that the organs contained a
virus, normally harmless to the host animal, which would remain dormant in
transplant recipients for many years before developing into an incurable,
highly contagious disease. The Phage devastated our population within months.
Our physicians, in desperation, managed to keep some of the victims alive by
transplanting more of the animal organs to replace diseased and failing organs;
but after a while, there were no more animals left, and our government decided
that there could be only one way to prevent the extinction of our
species."
Kes twists
her small, pale hands in front of her, looks as if she might be about to speak,
but says nothing. I know that I cannot give her a reassuring touch on her
shoulder; she would probably flinch away, even from this photonic illusion of a
hand, as if it were the claws of a demon. Instead, I turn away and begin to
pace the floor, wondering why I have even tried to explain what so obviously
can never be justified.
"When
I first decided to become a doctor, I hoped that I would be the one to find the
cure." The words sound hopelessly naļve in what should be my ears, but
are instead holographic facsimiles thereof. The fact that I do not now exist
as a whole person seems brutally appropriate. I stare down with loathing at
the almost-dead figure on the bio-bed, wondering why the wretched lump of
decaying meat doesn't just hurry up and finish the damned job.
"There
were no research positions available. Maintaining a steady supply of organs
had become the government's overriding priority, so I received orders to serve
aboard a harvesting ship. I was assigned to work in sickbay, not with one of
the harvesting teams, so I never actually saw their faces. The captives, that
is. Sometimes my duties included analyzing blood factors of harvested organs;
it was quiet, routine, abstract work, and I had no reason to think about where
the organs came from."
The
comatose form on the bio-bed sighs faintly as if in sympathy, and one gnarled
finger twitches in a very slight movement. I find myself wondering how Kes
would react to its touch. She would shrink away in horror, almost certainly,
or perhaps in visceral disgust. I move away from the ghoulish creature that I
once was, and I resume my pacing. In some distant and dispassionate corner of
my mind, I observe that my footsteps sound almost normal.
"We
attacked a Kazon ship and took heavy losses before overcoming its crew. I was
directed to assist the harvesting teams by processing the body of an Ocampan
slave who had been aboard the Kazon ship. The harvesters had already used a
transporter to remove her lungs, which is a fairly common method of ensuring a
quick death while keeping the organs intact . . ."
"I
know that," Kes interrupts suddenly, her voice high and strained. As she
stares at me, I wonder if she is beginning to think that it might be prudent to
terminate my holographic program. Once again I find that I cannot meet her
gaze.
"She
looked very much like you, Kes. Wide, innocent eyes. Young. But it clearly
hadn't been a painless death." I close my simulated eyelids and find myself
in an unforgiving darkness that does nothing to block out the memories, so
carefully preserved in the circuits of Voyager's computer. "Such a look
of terror -- it was like nothing I had ever seen or imagined. But I couldn't
look into her eyes for very long. After all, I had to remove them while they
were still transplantable."
In the long
silence that follows, my mind catalogues small sounds that impinge upon its
self-imposed darkness: an electronic humming, the soft chime of a monitoring
device beginning another cycle, and the slow breaths of the dying Vidiian on
the bio-bed. Surely Kes will understand now that Voyager's rescue attempt was
ill-advised and that the only rational choice is to allow nature to take its
course.
Instead,
she speaks again, in a calmer, quieter voice that has somehow acquired an
unexpected note of empathy.
"You
were a conscript. There was nothing else you could have done."
To some
extent her words are true, I know, but Kes -- whether intentionally or not --
has overlooked the one choice that remained to me: the choice to die. Vidiian
law seeks to prevent suicides by imposing heavy penalties and social stigma
upon the family members of a suicide, but the act still occurs, almost always
disguised as an accidental death. Most of our medical examiners have neither
the time nor the resources to conduct a thorough investigation of every fatal
accident.
When I
received permission to take a brief leave to attend a medical conference, soon
after the incident with the Ocampan captive, I did not find it difficult to
damage my small ship in such a way that the craft, when found, would appear to
have been disabled by an unfortunate accident. Without my usual medications to
slow the progress of the Phage, death would come quickly. Knowing myself for a
coward, I made sure to bring enough narcotics to ensure the painless death that
the captive had not been granted.
But I had
not taken into account the strength of the Vidiian survival instinct. Somehow,
in my final delirium, acting completely without any rational consciousness, I
managed to reconnect the damaged communications circuits and to send the
distress call that Voyager answered.
I do not
intend to make such a mistake twice.
The slow,
labored breathing of the dying woman on the bio-bed finally begins to falter,
and an insistent beeping commences. Opening my eyes once again, I see Kes
examining a monitor in concern, her pretty young face now marred by a slightly
furrowed brow. She will not have to worry about this patient for much longer.
In a moment she will alert the Doctor, that well-meaning fool who absurdly
imagines himself to be in love with me, and his heroic efforts to save the
object of his preposterous infatuation will begin. The Doctor will probably never
know why his treatments failed, and if the Vidiian government ever acquires
Voyager's records of this incident, my death will appear to have been entirely
natural.
I take a
step backward, out of Kes' field of vision, and a brief smile touches my
holographic lips.
*****
The music
of Sandrine's nightclub still seems to echo faintly from the holodeck walls as
the program shuts down. Welcoming the silence and emptiness, I walk out into
the corridor, alone. I would not have expected to be left alone after having
been placed under a suicide watch for the past several days, but Voyager seems
to be much more lax in this regard than any Vidiian ship would have been. The
Doctor, after discovering that I had sabotaged my treatment, was actually
gullible enough to believe that I did it because I loved him too much to let
him see me in this ugly, diseased form. Clearly he knows nothing at all about
Vidiian women; our circumstances have not allowed us to indulge in the luxury
of being vain about our appearance for many generations.
I reach an
intersection and turn to the right, finding another long, empty corridor. Just
before I left the holodeck, I told the Doctor that I was going to make my last
farewells to Voyager's crew before my return home. I suppose this will be a
last farewell of sorts. I plan to walk into the nearest airlock, bypass the
safety sensors, and vent the air into space. Not the most pleasant death, but
at least this will be much quicker than the Phage; and it seems unlikely that
the Vidiian survival instinct will be able to do much for a body floating in
the vacuum of space.
As I
approach another intersection, Kes abruptly turns the corner and falls into
step beside me, lengthening her stride just a little to match my pace. She is
carrying a box of data storage chips: a pretext, I strongly suspect, for a
nonexistent errand.
"The
Doctor has taken me off the suicide watch," I remind Kes, allowing my tone
to sharpen with an irritation that must seem only natural. "I would
prefer to be left alone for now."
Kes
maintains her stride, not slowing at all as she scrutinizes my face. "I
don't think that would be a good idea."
I start to
open my mouth to argue, but something in Kes' expression leads me to the
realization that any such attempt will be futile.
"You're
telepathic, aren't you?"
"I
wouldn't put it quite that way, although my people do have certain rudimentary
mental powers." Kes slows to a halt and stands in the middle of the
corridor, watching me intently. Something in her gaze compels me to stop
beside her, and all at once I can't even remember why I decided to walk this
way.
"About
three hundred years ago," Kes informs me, "humans learned how to grow
replacement organs in laboratories, using cell samples from patients' own
bodies. The process is described in detail in Voyager's medical database. I
took the liberty of downloading the data to give to you. It's not a cure for
the Phage -- but perhaps, several years from now, when your children believe
that replacement organs come from factories, it really will be true."
She holds
out the box toward me.
"I'm a
conscript on a harvesting ship. It's not likely that I would be allowed to
transfer to a research facility." I stare down at Kes' healthy young
hands, so different in every way from my twisted, diseased claws. My few days
as a hologram seem a distant memory by now. Again I imagine Kes' likely
reaction if I were to touch her, the extent of her disgust when she
contemplates the fact that I do not know where these hands came from, and the
thought of how their previous owner must have died.
Undeterred,
Kes places the box into my right hand. "Maybe you can set up a small
laboratory in your ship's sickbay," she suggests. Her fingers brush mine
softly. I can smell her perfume, a light floral scent. She is alien to me.
"I
don't even know where my hands came from," I confess, as my ghoul-fingers
curl around the smooth handle of the box.
Kes
embraces me in a gentle hug, surrounding me for the moment with all of her
warmth and softness and youth and health and sweetness and beauty -- and just
maybe, maybe, the faintest breath of hope.
"What
really matters," she tells me, "is what you do with them."