II. A Challenge
Somewhere, on an island not to far from Australia, something…horrific, was taking place. People worked well into the night, the clinging and squeaking of glass tubes and rubber boots could be heard at a frantic fever if you only put your ear to the ground. Soon, it was ready, and the fruits of their labor sat on the single metal table in the laboratory. Sat there, like the top prize at a carnival game, sat there and floated in the glass tube filled with simulated womb juices. And a woman leaned over the jar, peering down into it. A few seconds would pass, and she’d make an attempt to stick a finger in the jar. But she would catch her self, yes, lean down once more, and look into the jar with her dead dead oh so dead eyes.
There was something else dead, this creature- she could see its heart beat, its skin so thin, she could see it breathe, it was so small, and yet- and yet it still looked dead to her. This rotten creature, with its raw skin, floating in this jar. It disgusted her, down to her very unfeeling marrow. What was is it…? What-
Just then one of her laboratory works wrapped his unworthy rubber gloved hands around her precious jar. She lunged at the unsuspecting worker; his precious cargo came very close to slipping and crashing to the floor.
“D-Doctor,” The timid Philbert Navader stammered, trying to look anywhere but her eyes, those cold dead eyes. And speaking of cold and dead, he could feel her hands right through his acid-and-fire proof latex gloves.
“Something’s wrong,” Her lifeless voice raged, it was much too deep to be a female voice, but to feminine to be masculine, “Can’t you see? Something’s wrong!”
“Wh-what?” He could feel those horrible eyes probe his panicking face, looking for life to suck out of him. When he graduated he was a shoeing for a prim job like this, but on his first day, the other assistance said she took one of them at random and experimented on them. He thought then that they were just joking around- you know, to rattle him up a bit. Well he was rattled alright, he was rattled. He saw his life flash before his eyes. Navader was just eating a ham sandwich when Doctor Ticks interrupted his fear.
“What,” She said, her breathless words hissing through her teeth while Philbert’s teeth were chattering. He tried to pull away, screw that biogenetically superior fetus! He wanted out, he wanted to live! But he couldn’t pull back, she was just so insanely strong, so strong- tears were welding up in his eyes as his bowels where loosening, “Makes life?”
“C-arbon,” He started, his knees starting to buckle, “Hydrogen,” That was all he got out, before his legs collapsed underneath him, tears streaming down his face, his hands slipped out from under the Doctor’s. The poor man collapsed at the good Doctor’s feet. She showed no remorse as she stepped over this man.
“Terminate N.vader,” Doctor Tick’s said heartlessly to the laboratory assistant who was manning the nearest control levels, “And take this.”
She slammed the jar on the top ledge; the man controlling the panel jerked his head in the jars direction. Another lab lackey picked it up, and went away with it. The man looked up at the screen, his beady black eyes narrowed.
“Your perception is great, Doctor Ticks,” He started, turning a knob. One of the block bars on the screen, the red one, went up for a few minutes before lowering, “There is something wrong.” The Doctor made a thin noise for him to continue.
“The brain waves are limited to only basic life…parameters,” He continued, adjusting the knobs some more, “At this point, we should be getting something more.”
“Give it time,” She snapped. The elder assistant looked up as the Doctor swayed away, hunching over. Laboratory assistances moved out of her way as she came. Her strange walk stopped as she came to the main panel- the one that had the big red button, you know the one. Her hand disappeared into a hole in the machine, taking out a plastic face mask, and putting it upon her rotting face.
There was quiet, minus the clinking of the laboratory equipment, the squeaking of the rubber, and the revving sounds of the oxygen tank.
“Doctor,” The elder assistant said in the working silence of the room, “I’m not a religious man but…”
Jeanette Ticks would have said ‘But what,’ but was a little busy, so she just rounded her shoulders, and breathed deeper.
“But I….” He wasn’t sure how to form these next words, he stopped twisting the knobs of the machine, “….Do you believe in…Soul, Doctor?”
“Who says that there’s a soul?” Doctor Ticks’ lowered the mask, just for a moment. Her words, in a groan so deep that it sunk into the tiles of the clean laboratory. She placed the mask back on, pondering this.
Again, work silence.
“It’s ready Doctor,” Another lab assistant squeaked, timidly. Afraid that he’d be the next victim to her wrath, “Shall we…?”
“Continue,” She replied, lowering the mask. She let it go, and with a snap it went back to where it belonged underneath the main board. Her assistances worked well, they did, efficient. They moved like shadows in the background of her mind.
“Where does one get a soul?” She said to the oldest shadow not even bothering turning around.
This question caught her oldest assistance off guard; he looked flustered at his boss for a moment.
“You-you don’t,” He stammered, knowing full well that this answer would not please her. She staggered his way, like she just came up out of the grave. He gripped his level adjusting knobs for security. It took her a while to get there, but when she did, she grabbed him by his lab coat, yanking him towards her.
“Then I’ll create a soul then!” Doctor Ticks roared in his face. The aged man looked into her cold dead eyes, trying to push fear out of his mind. She’s just an animal- treat her like a beast, she can smell fear-
“But,” The man said breathlessly, “Doctor…you can’t do that.”
“Watch me,” She said, turning her back on the poor lab assistant, her lab coat swirling like an angry snow tornado.
The oldest lab assistant breathed a silent breath of relief, having years in practice in it. The sooner this was over, the better. He heard the Doctor storm out of the room, slamming the door to her office behind her.