“Come in, come in!” Mr. Butchie squealed, flapping about
excitedly in his voluminous leather aprons, looking like some unknown variety of
ghastly, black-skinned featherless albatross, flightless, of course, but
somehow all the more dramatically ubiquitous for that. “Oh gosh you're so
horridly late! We'd nearly given you up entirely for lost! Well, almost
entirely. Take a seat, hurry hurry, you see we haven't given it away, not yet,
we've kept your reservation open just in case. Just in case! Sit sit, and we'll
get started right away! Right away! [He claps his pale and pudgy hands
excitedly like a six-year-old girl before a pink-frosted cake with seven
candles.] Hannah! Hannah! Oh gosh where the devil is that girl whenever it is
you need her? Hannah! Chop-chop. Yoo-hoo! Peek-a-boo! [he trills and yodels]
come out come out wherever you are! [He hoots and whistles, good lord he is a
sight to see.] We need prep here right away and double-quick oh dear hurry
hurry hurreeee!”
This is Mr. Butchie in his rarified element; whether it's
late or not, Tuesday or Friday, busy or barren, everything is a crisis. This is
the Mr. Butchie, homicidal make-up artist par excellence, effete aesthetician
to the dead-and-buried; the cold stars and colder starlets of history's
greatest snuff films all bear witness before the frozen eyes of eternity to the
magic artistry of his necropolitan flair.
Mr. Butchie with his own behind-the-scenes face stitched
together piece-meal, the cured skin a glossy, pitted orange-yellow-brown,
kicked round like a pigskin Sunday. The hairpiece of tinsel, the outsized
shades, the silver star-topped magic wand, the trail of sprinkled fairydust—all
trademarks of the man; did we say “man?” Good grief, cross-sexed creepy alien
ghoul would be closer to the mark and still not begin to describe it.
Beauty hurts, it's true and this place is proof positive of
that, outfitted as it is, namely, like an abattoir, all hooks and harnesses and
freezer cases full of trust-us-you-don't-want-to-know. The tools of the craft
are laid out for the practiced hand; the clamps and pincers, the needles and
extractors, the scalpels and hole-punches, the wires in every possible gauge,
all of it silver, sharp, and gleaming. The saws, the drills, the terrible old
swift pliers—each of these Mr. Butchie wields like a maestro, a Michelangelo of
corpses. And where nothing else will do, he digs right in, and uses his webbed
eleven fingers!
All around him the lucky “customers” wait a-decomposing,
each of them, as in that stale old joke, having died to get in. Some hanging
from their cervical vertebrae, others lying on stainless steel autopsy tables
in various stages of contortion and decay; some sitting stiffly upright in
expectant rigor mortis wearing a protective cape; others already split open
down the center and peeled back like husks of silky corn exposing all their
dirty secrets; there is no modesty here; and all of them waiting waiting
waiting with the characteristic patience of the dead for the grace of the
master's febrile touch.
Two of these special clients, one on either side of her, sit
in different stages of dissection. To Neena's left, a disemboweled blonde
awaits further unspeakable ministrations; while on her right, a Bollywood cutie
gazes back in sleepy appreciation of her headless corpse from the shelf beneath
the three-way mirror. In that same mirror, Neena sees herself staring at
herself, wide-eyed, her gaping mouth twisting, her face in a rictus of terror,
like someone staring through a windshield seconds before the inevitable
high-speed head-on crash.
Recognition of her own face only steals upon her slowly and
when it does it arrives with a shock for she is now sans teeth as well as hair;
when had they taken them? What have they done with them? Her dear old chompers.
Are they going to give them back?
Neena hears the whir of a mechanism and then the chair in
which she sits tips back and a girl with a face like a sideways chunk of blue
cheese stands above her holding a small whirring herringbone bone-saw and asks,
“And how are we today, Mrs. Havermeier?”
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