
PseudoPod 892: The Body Remembers
Show Notes
From the author: “The idea for this story came from thinking about how even when we heal from physical trauma and no visible scars remain, we can still be haunted by the suffering we endured. This led to the idea of a future in which a new technology can repair even the worst injuries, something that sounds like it would be a good thing, but for the soldiers who signed up to test this tech, the drawbacks quickly become all-too-evident.”
The Body Remembers
By P.A. Cornell
It takes a moment before it hits me that the screaming’s coming from my own mouth. Funny how the mind works. I catch myself debating whether to continue or just shut up. My leg—where it used to be anyway—is nothing but mangled shreds that remind me of pulled pork and I opt for silence. I grit my teeth against the pain and watch the leg reform from those shreds of bloody meat for a moment before I have to look away from the unnatural sight of it. There’s no escaping the metallic scent of blood though. The only thing that can compete with it is the acrid tang of my own sweat. Most people don’t notice sweat smells different when it comes from fear. Stronger. More acidic. Trust me, I’ve been at this long enough to know.
Too damn long, actually, but my tour’s coming to an end. Two more weeks. That’s all I’ve gotta last and I can go home, back to normal life—or to whatever semblance of normal those of us who’ve walked through hell can get. (Continue Reading…)