Chinese culture is a strange thing indeed. She found out, the day her
First came tearing, screaming and mewling out from her womb, tiny
unformed fingers clawing at her insides. The doctors and nurses crowded
round, strange and deformed in her pain-fuelled haze, babbling things
that she could not hear. She remembered shuddering, drenched in itching
sweat that turned her light-pink hospital gown into a shade of carmine
red. She let the congratulations wash over her, the excited exclamations
of her husband pulling her from much-needed sleep, needling at her,
drawing her mind long and tired. She took her turn of clutching the
baby, cooing softly at it as quickly as she could, before she passed it
on, swallowing down the rising vomit that clogged her throat, attempting
to right the spinning room through sheer force of will. Then, it was
thrown onto her lap.
Her scream of disgust pierced the sterile operating room, jolting the
sleeping child into its first wails. She looked up, searching for the
source of this outrage, and her eyes met two beady pupils staring at
her, behind a surgical mask. He was a short man, dressed in hospital
blue, his long fingers steepled together at his waist, his eyebrows
suggesting a smile hidden behind the white of the cotton mask. A long
silence dominated the room, broken only by the insistent crying of the
newborn flesh, and the low hum of the air-conditioning. Eyes travelled
back down to the red, pulsing mass of bloody flesh in her lap, and then
back again to the shrivelled doctor standing at the foot of her bed.
-Eat. Is good for you.
-But… Why is it raw?
-Just eat! Is good for you, and the baby.
Ryan just stood there, forced grin frozen on his face. He said
nothing. He wouldn’t. He actually believed in this Chinese nonsense. He
reached out, a claw swimming through the open space between her and him,
and grabbed her hand. He squeezed it, once. Her other hand shook as it
edged towards the battered metal plate, slipped slightly in the pooling
blood, and finally managed to clasp around the oozing organ, picking it
up. It squelched in her grasp. Small showers of blood dripped from it,
slipping from the cracks between her fingers and back into the plate,
merging with the symphony of expectant silence in the operating room.
It smelled disgusting. Loathsome. It smelled of fresh blood, of
rotten flesh, of old torn clothes soaked in vinegar. It smelled like
fresh fish gutted and smashed with a spoon. It took all of her willpower
to not throw up there and then, to keep the vomit hidden deep within
her throat, to gulp it down. Eyes were watching. Waiting. She had to do
it. She had to. For the baby.
Her mouth opened. An inch. Two inches. It edged closer and closer,
she could’ve sworn it pulsed in her hands, once, as it neared her teeth.
The stench invaded her nostrils, piercing inwards like a jagged spear,
and she gagged, lurching forward. The piece of flesh squelched again,
popping from her grasp to splash down on the plate, throwing rivulets of
blood up onto her face, allowing her the sensation of cold liquid
snaking their way down her cheeks. Still, no mercy, nothing but the same
waiting silence.
She picked it up and held it against her face. Her tears of disgust
mingled with the blood coursing down her cheeks. She looked at the lump
of flesh that had forced her to do this, and she found that she hated
it. How strange. And, as she experienced this new emotion, almost
unknowingly, unwittingly, she bit into the placenta.
She had known by now what it was, she’d known all along that she had
to eat it, that it was customary. She had wished it wasn’t, upon finding
out, that she had a say in the matter. Placentophagia, the practice of
eating the placenta, was purported to help stem postpartum depression,
contract the uterus after birth, and give back to her the life source
that she had shelled out. The doctor had said so. She still didn’t want
to. She had thought it would have been disgusting.
It wasn’t. As her teeth pierced the livid, red flesh of the organ,
breaking apart stretched skin and into the pliable flesh beneath, she
instead experienced ecstasy. Her mind broke behind waves of pleasure
flooding into her nerves centres, arcing lightning burst through her
mouth and into her brain as the perfect taste filled her taste buds. She
had found heaven, found it in the organ of her own child, in what was
essentially part of herself. All thoughts of cannibalism faded away
beneath the rising tide of blood choking her throat, and all her disgust
was drowned in the apex of the moment. She was complete, once again.
Hungrily, she wolfed down the rest of the placenta, each bite sending
shudders and shivers down her spine, causing orgasmic delight to wrack
her weak, tired body. By the end, she could barely move, but the smile
that was plastered across her face threatened to tear it in half. She
had never felt better.
The erupting cheer faded into the background. Everything did.
She felt ashamed afterwards, of course, as Ryan joked with her about
how she looked like she really enjoyed the after-labour meal. She hadn’t
dared to tell him that she had. She didn’t tell any of them of the
mind-blowing spikes that had lodged themselves in her chest, that
sparked her fire and drove her insane. She couldn’t. Instead, she just
smiled and nodded, joked back with her husband, throwing small talk
around the room as she tried to erase the memory from her mind, to
forget the pleasure that she had experienced, to drive the hunger away.
But it came back, a few weeks later, tearing at her insides with
pure, maddening desire. She wanted, she fucking needed it, more badly
than she had ever needed anything. She drew into herself, trying to
control her urges, to chain the beast, but it was useless. Ryan thought
she was suffering post-natal depression, had asked kindly about it. What
could she say? Her silence continued.
It went on like this, for days, weeks. She cradled her child
absently, ignoring its cries as she screamed inside, drowning out the
piercing wails with her own desperate pleas for the madness, the hunger
to stop. It went on, until one day she could take it no more.
She found herself alone that day, Ryan must had gone out for drinks
with his buddies. She was alone with the baby, feeding it her precious
milk, enduring the needling pain jabbing her breast as the hungry child
tore into her nipple. Her life-giving fluids spurted out sporadically,
tiny drops flecking the chin of the hungering monster, minute amounts of
blood bitten from tender flesh mingling in with the milk. She stared at
the child, transfixed, as she wondered. What if her hunger… what if?
She had no time to think, the scraping against the back of her head had
started again, the aching of her jaws and the tightness in her chest.
She reached out with her left hand, her right still clutching the baby,
holding it against herself, trapping it with nowhere for it to run. Her
fingers closed about the fleshy, tender leg of her child, pulling it
upwards with agonizing slowness. The baby continued to suck at her, to
drain from her.
She wondered, for a brief moment, if it was a sort of poetic justice,
as her teeth bit into the milky-white skin, her canines puncturing the
epidermis, and flesh found its way into her mouth. The baby began to
scream, pain driving its tiny mind wild, but she wouldn’t let go. She
couldn’t. Her teeth were already halfway in, the lower jaw resting
lightly against the puckered portion of the baby’s meat. She couldn’t do
anything except bite harder and harder, her stained yellow teeth
turning red as blood flooded her throat, filled her mouth. Her eyes
watered, her grip tightened. The wriggling lump of flesh bawled,
thrashing about, but it couldn’t escape her. Finally, her teeth met,
parting aside prepubescent flesh with a squelch in order to hit the
other half with a soft click. She tore her prize free from the baby,
chewing with a furiousness born from desperation. She chewed and chewed,
the blood spurting out of her mouth and onto her chin, dribbling in
frothing bubbles onto her dress. She chewed until she realized… this
wasn’t what she needed. In horror, it dawned upon her what lay in her
mouth, what the bubbling mass of pink that rolled about her tongue
actually was, and she screamed, for the first time, out loud.
She had explained afterwards that a wild stray dog had bit the baby
while she had brought it downstairs to the void deck, and that the blood
on her dress was from her rushing the baby to the hospital. She had
cried, tears streaming down blood-stained cheeks, in Ryan’s arms,
sobbing her heart out in what Ryan thought to be relief, but she knew to
be frustration. She needed something else, something more. She needed
what she had tasted before, what she had grown to hunger for. She needed
the placenta, the prime cut.
She tried looking for it, searching online. It only came back with
animal placentas, pills and dried facsimiles that she found no interest
in, no desire for. She bought slabs of raw meat, hid it from Ryan, from
her baby, who now lay in the cot recovering. Wolfed them down in the
sink. Spat them out into the bin. It was no use. She needed the real
thing.
And that’s why she found herself where she was now, sneaking into the
hospital at 2 in the morning, drifting along the hallways with furtive
glances cast behind her. Turn left. Two turns right. The maternity ward
is just ahead. She made it there without anyone noticing, against all
her wishes, all her hopes, she hadn’t been caught. She imagined what it
would have been like if she had bumped into a nurse, if they had found
her. The relief would have washed over her, the madness and darkness
evaporated beneath the soothing touch of humanity, suffocated by the
constricting knots of the straitjacket. But no, instead, she found
herself at the door, whorls of laminated wood staring back at her as her
fingers rested against the knob. She walked in.
Ryan thought she was having a night out, watching a movie and taking a
break from watching the kid. He was at home, dozing off at the TV,
rocking the cradle once every few minutes. And here she was, holding a
pillow above the face of some woman she didn’t know, pressing it down as
hands clawed at her. The woman’s body, young and lithe except for the
distended belly possessing her spawn, struggled and bucked under her
grip, but she held on, a strength that could come only from insane
hunger pressing down her arms. The monitor rattled on the table,
unplugged cord scattering about the floor, the bed shivered with the
dying woman’s convulsions. Her grip upon the pillow softened as the
woman struggled less and less, until finally, the flailing hands fell
limply against the sides of the bed. The room was silent, except for her
panting, interspersed with mumbled apologies and hungry growls.
Her hand gripped the scalpel, tightly, pilfered from a small room
adjacent. Her knuckles were white, barely visible in the dark room,
trembling as her fingers dug into her palm. She moved closer to the
corpse. Her hand touched upon the protruding belly, feeling about. Thud.
She felt something move, with a jolt. The spawn. The woman’s larvae. It
still lived. She was supposed to feel remorse now, as if one life taken
was fine, but two had crossed an invisible line. She was supposed to
hate herself.
Instead, she raised the scalpel high, cheek-burning smile splitting
her face in two, frame shivering in anticipation. And she plunged it
down, as she prepared to dine once again.
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