Title:
WITHOUT CONSENT
Summary: WITHOUT CONSENT is an edgy medical mystery set in south-western Ontario where a killer
is at work. He is crafty, vicious, revealing medical technique as
he excises the kidneys of women he abducts. Doctor Claire Valincourt,
recently jilted, finds his first victim and assists with the autopsy.
Relationship jaded Detective Rosko desperately searches for a killer who
is on his own search. The hunt for a perfect kidney for the terminally
ill mother he tends.
CHAPTER 1
The scalpel gripped securely between
his fingers sent a delicious thrill up his arm. He laid the blade against her
abdomen. The ease with which the razor-sharp edge sliced through the creamy
white flesh triggered a response that was nearly orgasmic.
The woman’s
inert body jerked violently with the first slice, her face twisting into a
grotesque mask of pain. He pressed on the stainless steel instrument and slid
it across the taunt skin. She twitched several times, settled, then became
still. The drug was working.
He inspected
her naked form–so beautiful, so perfect, so calm. He studied the soft swell of
her breasts. He saw no movement, but the flicker of the feather he’d taped to
her mouth told him she was still breathing. He glanced at the empty
syringe.
Maybe next
time I’ll use less.
He focused on
her abdomen. Cherry bright blood oozed out of the incision. He picked a white
cloth from the nearby table and wiped at the fluid. The fabric became saturated
within seconds. He dropped the cloth, the smack of it hitting the cement floor
ricocheted like a gunshot through the silent space.
Choosing a
large towel, he draped it around the wound. Like long spider legs, blood
scrambled along the towel tracing an intricate pattern on the white material.
His hands trembled. Each beat of his accelerated heart rate hammered through
his head.
He needed to
hurry, he needed to finish before the blood stopped circulating, he needed to
do this right. Sliding his hands into the incision, he felt a thrill as the heat
from her body penetrated his gloves. How long would she stay warm once she’d
taken her last breath?
A pool of
blood filled the wound, obstructing his view. Damn.
He needed to see. He pulled his hand out of the incision and used a dry corner
of the towel to wipe away the fluid. The sight of so much blood sent a frigid
wave sluicing down his vertebrae. He shuddered and reached for another towel.
Within seconds it consumed the liquid gushing from the naked woman’s
abdomen.
He pitched
the saturated towel over the table, grinning as it thudded on the cement floor.
Dark fluid splattered in irregular shapes. He glanced at the family-sized ice
filled cooler sitting a foot away. Droplets of blood showered the outer plastic
and formed unique ink splat patterns. What would a psychologist make of them?
His harsh laugh echoed through the room.
The ice
inside the cooler glittered like a mountain of diamonds–pure and unspoiled.
Expensive, but worth it, the cooler would preserve his treasure for hours. He
could use it for beer later. But he couldn’t think of that now. It was late, he
needed to extract the organ and get it on ice before it spoiled. Then he could
reward himself.
He swabbed
the incision. So much blood. And the smell. He closed his eyes and inhaled
letting the unique metallic odor fill him. His heart was racing so fast he
could feel it pounding against his ribs. Suddenly lightheaded, he leaned into
the table until the dizziness passed.
Hurry up. Get
it out. Focus.
Willing his
fingers to stop trembling, he forced himself to concentrate. He mopped at the
pooling blood then inserted his gloved hand into the incision and probed her
abdomen.
There it is. His fingers closed around the
organ, so soft and slippery and warm. He lifted his hand. Resistance. Pausing,
he let his fingers travel the edges of the kidney. Gentle. You don’t want to damage
it.He palpated the thin cord of vessel restraining the organ and encircled
it with his index finger.
Careful.
Don’t be rough. You might bruise it. You know how important a good kidney is.
You know what happens to the damaged ones. They can kill people, can’t
they?
Sweat
trickled into his eyes and clouded his vision. Using the back of his hand, he
wiped away the beads of perspiration coating his forehead.
A stainless
steel table sheathed in a thin green towel stood beside the bed. On it, aligned
in a neat row, lay several shining silver instruments. With one hand cradling
his prize, he reached over and selected a fine–toothed clamp. He slid it into
the incision and guided it around the organ. Snapping the tiny teeth over the
vessel, he occluded the flow of blood.
He left the
clamp in place and reached for the scalpel. Lifting the kidney a fraction of an
inch at a time, he paused only when he felt tension on the vessel. He
scrutinized the razor-sharp scalpel blade–a finely honed weapon. He had to be
careful. It wouldn’t do to slip and leave a trace of his own blood.
Inserting the
scalpel into the gaping wound, he guided it beneath his hand. He felt the blade
meet an impasse. With a swift slash he sliced through the tenuous strand. Blood
spurted from the incision. Inhaling the scent, his heart skipped several beats
and he became aware of the blood spurting through his own veins.
That was the
artery, now for the vein.
He probed for
the next vessel, clamping and cutting in a similar fashion. The cavity brimmed
with blood and he couldn’t see. But now, it didn’t matter. He had what he
wanted. He lifted his hand. He felt resistance. A thin tenuous cord stretched
out of the wound. Another vein. Grasping the scalpel, he carved through the
connective tissue and the organ came free. For several seconds he nestled the
coveted organ as if holding a newborn robin in the palm of his hand. Its warmth
seeped through his latex gloves. Below his hand, blood surged from the gaping
wound.
He shot a
glance at the woman’s face. Mary Jane, her driver’s license said. How plain.
He’d call her Gabrielle. Yes, she was more beautiful than a Mary Jane. He
smiled at the woman lying unconscious on the stainless steel table–her ashen
cheeks exhausted of their normal rosy coloring, her lips and eyelids tinted a
powder blue not derived by artificial means. Dark shadows ebbed into the
fragile skin below her staring eyes. An irregular grunt of air erupted from
between her lips. He had to hurry.
Should I take
the time to stitch her up? Yes, finish
the job properly.
Laying the
organ on the bed of ice, he turned back to the woman. He ripped open a package
of fine black sutures and deposited it on the sterile green towel. Attaching
the suture to the needle driver, he threaded it through the mottled skin.
He worked
quickly. Gabrielle wouldn’t care what her scar looked like.
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