ESTHER M. FRIESNER
SEA-SECTION
JUSTIN HOLDSTOCK FINALLY decided the hell with Doctor's
Orders when he heard one
of the attending obstetricians ask, "What is that in there? A
lobster?"
Head up like a hound about to go on point, Justin did the unthinkable: He
looked.
Not just looked, but looked over the carefully erected barricade of
sterile drapes that
divided his wife Jennifer into the Amazing Talking Head on
one side and No Man's Land on
the other. S.O.P. for Caesarian sections, yes, a
textile admonition to be respected (if not
feared) by all law-abiding
fathers-to-be who didn't want to find themselves either losing
lunch or
garnering an unscheduled nap on the O.R. floor. Marriage counselors were forever
urging couples to open up to one another, but not like this.
But Bluebeard's wife had also
been told not to look, Pandora had been forbidden
to peek, and by the Great Horned Steinem,
Justin Holdstock was no sexist.
Besides, when a member in good standing of the medical
profession is supposed to
be birthing your firstborn and starts making crustacean-related
comments, then
the time for blind obedience is past.
He looked. "That's not a lobster," he
said, remarkably calm for a man who has
just gotten a look at what makes his darling wiley
tick (and tock, and swoosh,
and lub-dub, and the whole symphony of internal plumbing).
"That is a
trilobite."
"A what?" the obstetrician asked. The one holding the still-squirming
segmented
body, that is.
"A trilobite," Justin repeated. "An extinct Paleozoic ancestor of
modern
crustacea. And," he added, "I fail to see why you are fooling around with such
things
when you're supposed to be birthing little Jeremiah." For the Holdstocks
had gone to the
technocave of the ultrasonic Sybil and there received assurance
that all the auguries (and
the fetoid wingle-dangle) pointed at this baby being
a boy.
"Mister Holdstock," said the
obstetrician, standing tall and aiming the
trilobite at the plaintiff's heart. "I do not
make a practice of smuggling
lobsters into the O.R. Not to Caesarean sections, anyway,
although sometimes
when I have to perform a holistic hysterectomy I--" He made an
exasperated noise
and dropped the critter into a waiting stainless steel pan where it
clanked
around in a mournful manner. "The point is, I did not bring that thing in here;
I
found it in there." And his gore-bedewed rubber glove indicated the
still-agape aperture of
la bonne femme Holdstock.
"What?" Now Justin did show the first signs of an impending
swoon. He wheeled
violently from the doctor's dramatic j'accuse pose, planted both hands on
the
side of the operating table beside his wife's head and said, "Jennifer, what did
you
have for dinner last night?"
"Why do you want to know?" Jennie demanded petulantly. She was
still nursing a
grudge over the fact that she had wasted all those weeks going to LaMaze
classes, hearing a bunch of bimbos in Birkenstocks rhapsodize over becoming one
with the
pain, only to wind up spread-eagled on this damn table, slit open like
a tax refund, and
stuck full of more diagnostic equipment than a Porsche getting
a tune-up. Thanks to an
excellent anesthesiologist she was becoming one with a
whole lot of chemicals instead of
her authentic womanhood. Now she'd have to
take up ceramics instead. And to think her baby
sister dropped those ugly brats
of hers one-two-three, after maybe fifteen minutes of
labor, like some refugee
from a Pearl Buck novel!
"Maybe you'd better show him the rest,"
the assisting obstetrician murmured.
"What rest?" Justin was on point again.
"Over here,
sir," said a nurse at the foot of the table.
"No, dammit!" the chief ob-gyn cried, having
as loud a hissy fit as a surgical
mask would allow. "He is not allowed on this side of the
drapes!"
"I demand to see what you're talking about!" Justin discovered that it was
impossible
for him to throw up and holler at the same time and resolved to use
this knowledge. "This
is my son we're talking about here, and if something's the
matter -- "
"What's the matter?"
Jennifer yelled. "Is something the matter?"
"Nothing's the matter, dear," the nurse taking
the head-end of the table cooed
by rote. "You just relax."
"-- I am going to sue!"
And there
was silence in the O.R. for the space of a moment as the dreaded
s-word worked its arcane
sorcery.
"Oh, what the hell," the obstetrician said, shrugging green-gowned shoulders.
"Let
him see."
"Over here, sir," the nurse said, motioning for Justin to join her.
He did so
slowly, cautiously, hoping that what he was about to see would not be
too bloody. There was
just so much you could ask of a man who's only had one cup
of coffee. The nurse was still
beckoning him. She stood before a table well
removed from the Main Event. On it were
arranged several stainless steel pans
similar to the one which had received the trilobite.
Justin looked into the
first of these. Something with tentacles looked back.
"Squid," said
the nurse. "Though damned if I know why it's stuck in that shell."
Something oozed its way
out from under the squid. "Snail," the nurse remarked.
"There's some worms in there too,
somewhere, and there was an ememonee --
nannynemonee -- an anemomonee -- an anem-o-ne," she
articulated in triumph.
"And a starfish," Justin said, voice flatter than a chipmunk trying
to cross the
track at the Indy 500.
The nurse cast a sideways glance into the pan. "So it
is."
"Nurse!" shouted the obstetrician. Something long and flippety-floppety was
doing the
hootchie-kootchie in his gloved hands. The nurse got one of the empty
pans under it just in
time. It twitched and writhed like a fish out of water,
which it was, even if it looked
eely in the extreme.
Next came the clams.
"What is going on here?" Justin bawled, or tried
to. It came out at
whimper-volume and soon dwindled to a piteous mewling.
"Uh," said the
obstetrician, who had his hands full with the appearance of a
fish who looked like he had
robbed a sporting goods store of its entire supply
of ping-pong paddles.
"Sir, what do you
do for a living?" the assistant ob-gyn asked.
"I'm a commodities broker."
"And, um, you get
a lot of exposure to radiation with that? Toxic chemicals?
Known mutagens?"
"Only the Wall
Street Journal. God damn it, why is this happening?"
Making one last valiant try in the
name of Rational Cause, the assistant ob-gyn
ignored the question in favor of inquiring,
"Maybe you lived in New Jersey?"
"No! And we never lived near Three Mile Island, Chernobyl,
Bikini Atoll, or any
movie house running an all-night Godzilla marathon either! Now you
tell me what
this is all about!"
"Jesus Christ, how the fuck many legs does this thing
have?" his harried
colleague sighed from the region of South Jennifer. Something went
*clang!* into
a pan, then scrabble-scrabble-scrabble.
"Don't you know what's causing this?"
Justin asked, his eyes narrow.
"Oh, well .... "The very idea of being caught without a
ready answer held a more
primal terror for any medico worth his sal volatile than even the
threat of a
lawsuit. "It's probably all her fault," the assistant said.
"It is not!"
Jennifer decreed. "Whatever it is, it isn't!"
In vain.
"I told you you should have had that
pregnancy test earlier!" Justin snarled.
Even though the doctor was currently scooping
scorpions out of Jennifer's
abdomen, Justin suddenly felt much better about the whole
situation. Having
someone he could blame for it all worked wonders. "God knows what you ate
or
drank or smoked or snorted during those critical first two weeks!"
"And God knows how you
spent those critical first two years at Yale fucking up
your germ plasm!" Jennifer
countered fiercely. "Better living through chemistry
my ass! Did you think you were made of
mitochondria?"
"Unworthy vessel!"
"Semen third class!"
"I want a full investigation!" Justin
told the room.
"I want a divorce," Jennifer announced from the far side of the drapes.
"Ontogeny
recapitulates phylogeny," said the anesthesiologist, who was by nature
and avocation a
fairly laidback kinda gal.
"Huh?" said Jennifer.
"She means what goes around comes around,"
Justin said smugly. "I told you not
to eat that third cheese straw at the Wilberforce's
cocktail party, but would
you listen? Oh, nooooo. I bet lab tests will prove this is all on
account of
excess calcium."
"That might explain the clams," said the chief obstetrician,
"but not all these
cockroaches. And the grunion."
"Keep going, I think I see a frog," said
the nurse at his elbow.
"Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny," the anesthesiologist repeated
as if it were
her mantra. "The biological development of the individual in this case the
human
fetus -- repeats or summarizes the evolutionary history of that individual.
Which is
why my cousin Eugene has gills; but then again, his mother came from
Philadelphia."
"Yeah,
that's right!" Jennifer cried. "The human embryo goes through different
developmental
stages where it looks like a fish, then an amphibian, then a
reptile-"
"That'd be Cousin
Bruce," the anesthesiologist supplied.
"-- then a bird, and finally a mammal. It climbs the
evolutionary ladder from
lowest life-form to highest. I remember that from ninth grade
biology!"
"So do I!" said the assistant ob-gyn brightly.
"But that's only supposed to happen
in the embryo itself," Justin moaned. "What
is it with this -- this mob scene?"
"Eeeeee-yuck,
I hate snakes," said the chief obstetrician, holding something at
arm's length.
"Wimp," the
nurse sneered, dropping it into a vacant pan.
The assistant shrugged. "Everything's
committees these days." A flight of doves
startled everyone into silence, but the attendant
pediatrician had the presence
of mind to open the O.R. door and release them.
"We're getting
closer, Mrs. Holdstock," the obstetrician said. He tried to keep
it light and cheerful, but
the sound of his teeth grinding was perfectly audible
and even a little crunchy. "I think
I've got hold of a lemur."
"Awwwwwww!" All previous hostilities were forgotten as the
aforementioned
creature was indeed produced, flooding the room with immense waves of
ecologically
correct adorability.
"Keep it away from the snake!" someone shouted.
The sight of the lemur
with its large, intelligent, stereoptic eyes did
something to Justin. Warm fuzzies begat
warm fuzzies and he fled back to his
assigned place on the North Jennifer side of the
drapes. Holding his wife's hand
-- being careful of the IV feed, of course -- he whispered
to her, "Don't worry,
darling, if they're up to lemurs, we'll be seeing little Jeremiah
real soon now.
Everything's gonna be all right."
"But what happened to me?" Jennifer
insisted. "How did it happen? Why?" She
sounded just like some of his clients when the
market went yeek-crash-thooooom.
"Honey, none of that matters," he purred in her ear. "All
that matters now is
--"
"It's a boy!" the obstetrician announced.
"I'll take that," the
pediatrican said, swiftly and smoothly stepping into his
proper role in the ordained scheme
of things.
"We'll clean up," the nurses chirped as all the absent normalcies came clicking
back into place.
"I'll just run some of this stuff down to the cafeteria, what say?" said a
helpful orderly, gathering up the various fauna-filled trays and wheeling them
out of the
O.R. on a gurney. (The lemur was exempt -- in this world you can be
cute or you can be
gumbo, but not both.)
"-- that we get our version of this story to the networks first,"
Justin
concluded.
"I love you, darling," said Jennifer, misty eyed. "And I want Geena Davis
to
play me."
"Uh-oh," said the chief obstetrician. He paused, sew-'er-up tools in hand, and
stared at something that only he was positioned to see.
"Is there some problem we can sue
you for later, Doctor?" Justin asked calmly.
"You want to shake a suture there stitching me
up?" Jennifer suggested. "I'd
like to hold my son."
"Not... just...yet," he replied. His
hands were trembling. He could not look
away. His dreadful fascination was so compelling
that, as happens at the site of
all disasters, he soon drew a crowd. Within seconds
Jennifer found herself all
alone on the boring side of the drapes.
"What is it?" she
clamored. "What's going on?"
"Oh...my...God." The nurse held her fingers to her lips --
actually her rubber
gloves to her mask.
"Possibly," the pediatrician conceded.
"Is that the
head?"
"Are there five fingers on that hand?"
"Is that a hand?"
"Are those wings?"
"Can I keep
the lemur?"
"Is it all right if we name her Julie if she's a girl and Jason if she's not?"
asked Jennifer.
"Better make a third choice," the chief ob-gyn panted, up to his elbows in
history. "Just to be sure."
"Is Darwinism covered by my medical insurance?" asked Justin.
"Ontogeny anticipates phylogeny," said the anesthesiologist.
And somewhere once more it was
Surf's up! as the next wave broke on the shores
of some dim, ancestral sea.