A Flaw in the Blood

A Flaw in the Blood by Stephanie Barron Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: A Flaw in the Blood by Stephanie Barron Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephanie Barron
Tags: Fiction, Mystery & Detective, Traditional British, Traditional
stopped in his mouth when he saw the girl.
    She was not a pretty thing, being too thin and already gapping in her teeth. Her faded blond hair was a mass of tangles, her face grey and drenched with sweat. But there was in her slight frame and fragile wrists, in the delicacy of her fingers as they plucked at the rags that covered her, all the possibility of a different life—one of expression and feeling, a world glimpsed but never grasped. The sight of her shamed Fitzgerald. As he bent to lift her in his arms, to carry her to that scrubbed old table where Georgie would slice into her flesh, he thought of all the other men, breaking the twig of her body in half. How many? For how many years?
    Her mother, who was called Button Nance, swore beneath her breath in a continuous stream of vituperation half-realised, half-heard, a diatribe against the world and God and doctors of every description, against men in general and men who paid and men who didn't, men who demanded little girls instead of women like herself who could stand the nonsense; against little girls, too, and Lizzie in particular—more fool her for not bearing the brat and then pitching it in the Thames—and finally, against Fitzgerald for causing her daughter to cry out in pain as he lifted her. Nancy drank deep from a pitcher of gin, and though it was only noon by the time they laid Lizzie before the fire, her mother was dead drunk.
    He had never seen Georgiana administer the chloroform that John Snow made famous.
    It was a ticklish business, and in the hands of Snow's imitators, occasionally a fatal one. Impossible to predict how a weakened frame might react to the drug-induced night—whether the constitution, already brought low by illness or accident, might not be extinguished altogether. There were stories indignantly circulated of patients dead at the extraction of a tooth, because chloroform was used; of labouring women whose ease of delivery was swiftly followed by the grave. But John Snow, to Fitzgerald's knowledge, had never lost a patient. And the possibility of enduring surgery without pain had made his discovery wildly popular, so that for the first time patients went under the knife without terror. Chloroform had revolutionized the practice of medicine in the past decade; all of Europe was ready to take its risk.
    “Patients die because their doctors, terrified of waking them with the knife, continue to drug them long after they are unconscious,” Georgiana said placidly as she placed a drop of chloroform on a square of linen and held it to Lizzie's nose. “Then the heart rate is depressed and the lungs collapse. Sheer stupidity on the surgeon's part—but so many of them are untrained, and besieged with requests for anaesthesia. It's no wonder they kill with kindness.”
    The girl reached out and grasped Georgie's hand. “Don't cut me,” she pleaded. “The last one cut me and I've not been right since—men don't like a girl what's cut.”
    “Hush,” Georgiana said, smoothing the rough hair. “You shall feel a world of difference soon.”
    The steady application of drops to handkerchief continued; Lizzie's eyelids fluttered, her breath fell slowly into the oblivion of sleep.
    *    *    *
    The surgery required almost an hour. Fitzgerald stayed at Georgiana's side and did as he was instructed, though he'd never been one to love the smell of blood. In Lizzie's case the rich animal scent was overpowered by the stronger one of decay: Her body stank as he remembered the wounds of soldiers stinking, with the foetid pus of inflammation. Georgiana's face was grave as she opened the girl and removed the perforated uterus, which lay like the liver of a butchered cow on the scrubbed table.
    “A knitting needle, I think,” she murmured as she carefully sewed her incisions closed with catgut. “The abortionist's oldest trick. The man should be hanged.”
    Fitzgerald stepped to the room's sole window and opened it a crack, greedily breathing in

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