As Cathy finally drifted off to sleep, Sam Markham-at home in his study with his feet on his desk-felt not the slightest bit sleepy when the clock in the bookcase ticked past 3:00 A.M. He would be flying back to Rhode Island in a few hours, and would have plenty of time to once again look over the material from Thursday’s briefing in the FBI plane that would transport him from Quantico to Providence. But something was bothering him; something wasn’t right; something needed to be addressed now.
In his lap was the report on the Plastination process from Dr. Morris-much of which had been taken from the Body Worlds/Institute for Plastination Web sites. And after carefully reviewing the entire printout, Markham had to agree with Gunther von Hagens, the inventor of Plastination, who said in his introduction that, like most successful inventions, Plastination is simple in theory.
Simple.
That was the word that kept bothering Markham.
Simple.
Yes, with the right equipment, it seemed to Markham that-at least on the surface-the Plastination process would be “simple” enough for
Weeks.
And simple in theory, yes. But even if The Michelangelo Killer
Yes. It was
“But who
Markham sifted through the printout again, unable to find the names of donors anywhere.
Having been around many dead bodies himself, Sam Markham understood the need for objectivity in the world of medicine and anatomical study as much as he did the need for it in his line of work-understood all too well the need for detachment when looking at a murder victim in order to get his job done. So, yes, Markham could on one hand see the practicality of the industry-the need to treat the donated bodies simply as material. However, it was also clear to Markham that, with regard to the Body World exhibits themselves-exhibits in which its skinless subjects were posed sipping coffee, throwing karate kicks, even riding horses-the creators were subconsciously sending a message to the public that they should see the figures not only as “frozen in life,” but at the same time were asking them to look at just the body itself, completely divorced from the real life that had once activated it.
No, we should never ask who these people really were.
Markham thought of The Michelangelo Killer-of the kind of mind, the kind of spirit it would take to create the horror that was his
Tommy Campbell and Michael Wenick were just material for his exhibition, he said to himself. Just as the epoxy compound and the wood and the iron and everything else was. Just one component of his art, of his message, of his quest to wake us from our slumber.
Material.
Markham flipped to the page in Slumbering in the Stone that he had dog-eared a couple of hours earlier-to the quote from Michelangelo which he had underlined in red: “The more the marble wastes, the more the statue grows.”