"It's just one cut," said the sharp lady doctor before language melted off her clipboard and the operating lamps grew huge and spilled their bright innards into my eyes.
I lay on the cold tiled floor of the museum. One monstrous cut -- the white shark suspended above in a last hungry lunge yawns, belly open. Around me what a wide-eyed fisherman pulled out: old tires, whale-oil lamps, Damien Hirst, bones upon bones. Damien sits on a tire, bored as hell. See the jagged edges, he says, they pulled him into our cold afterlife and cut while he suffocated, explosive oxygen flooding his lungs from the wrong direction.
Later, the doctors showed me what had for so long kicked and screamed to be out. Liver-colored, swollen, wrapped in catgut, it was not as expected. Others had promised ground seaglass, poppyseed freckles, huge lungs like fibrous balloons for flying or spouting poetry nonstop in day-long stretches. Where were my eyes? It was supposed to have my eyes.