dottiro
dottiro
àŒ‰â€§â‚ŠËš. Shiro
67 posts
MDNI ; 20+y ; Any; ISFJ ; #đŸ§ȘđŸ€; DOTTIRO ; AUTHOR WITH TBI
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
dottiro · 7 days ago
Text
Blood Pact / Heart to Heart
‱ Unreliable summary: Zandik, or as the public knows him–Il Dottore, had invited you for a luxurious dinner in the middle of his personal study. Aside from the large table in the middle of the room, books were placed in random stacks—piling up as high as your waist, countless half-full mugs of cold caffeine were shoved to the side in a pathetic attempt at cleaning, and reports littered the room in chaos. It was far from the perfect place to dine, but possibly the most intimate one among the other choices. You’d choose the study over his blood-stained lab and the medical-smelling library where he stores ongoing experiments. For some reason, it felt like he was trying to impress you. And after being his assistant for many years, you knew he was about to ask something difficult of you. ‱ Warnings: Yandere, unhealthy relationships, assistant!reader, fictional depiction of surgery, organ transplant, surgery without consent, dark fiction, DEAD DOVE DO NOT EAT, detailed surgery description, gore ‱ Note: Coping with my surgery from a few months ago. By now, I’ve recovered from the procedure, but this truly is a statement to the mental horrors I’ve had to undergo with my 10th (and hopefully last ever) surgery. Dottore in Nod Krai
 Wife, come home

Tumblr media
The second Harbinger is a peculiar man. 
He possesses a dangerous level of intelligence and has a threatening charm that works unsuspectingly and is, in almost every case, harmful. After years of research, he has found a way to create segments of himself, each a part of him—all sharing the same mind, thus amplifying his presence to a ubiquitous level. 
Be that as it may, the abundance of time he created is never enough. The Doctor despises any time separated from his lab; always engrossed in experiments, going from one project to another. Dottore does not allow his mind to rest—already occupied with the next greatest invention as he works on the last.
Ultimately, it makes sense why the Doctor’s assistant is the one to capture his affections. If not you, who else?
When you tell him you love him, you understand what that means... right?
Tumblr media
A place filled with creation and destruction: Dottore’s study. 
You stand in the doorframe of the entrance when your eyes fall upon the table in the middle of the room. 
If it were any other day, you’d be here to fetch books, notes, miscellaneous items, and occasionally Dottore himself. However, today you’re the one being fetched. After an unusually eventless morning, he had tugged you with him, bringing you to where you’re standing now. 
Endless thoughts spiral through your mind as your eyes land on the table he uses as a desk, now cleared and decorated with flowers and candlelight. 
Compared to what you’re used to, the room seems to have been organised—a state in which you’ve never seen it before. A hint of his usual insanity and disarray remains, but for the first time since you’ve started your job as his assistant, you walk through the room with ease. 
Your eyes move over the remainder of the space. 
Placed against all walls, bookshelves line up against the ceiling. Every area is filled to its maximum capacity. Books and miscellaneous items lie pushed against any crevice of the ledge—the latter a residual from past experiments, stored out of sight but preserved all the same. Then, below at your feet, shoved towards the sides of the floor, it continues. Stacked up against each other and reaching to above your knees, books, books, and more books. 
The space might be crowded, but every single item in this room exists with a purpose. That much is evident from the way Dottore treats this space. ‘Organised’, only in a sense you can describe it.
And while any sane person finds his study anything but romantic, Dottore’s efforts seep through when you look at what he’s done. 
Countless books, ink-stained parchments, and equipment have been replaced by lit candles and a single vase filled with flowers. Amidst them, you recognise heliotropes, red salvias, magenta and red zinnias, violets, and purple hyacinths. The reds and purples give a welcoming pop of colour to the otherwise dark colour scheme within the room. They, similar to the fire of the candles, bring a sense of warmth that his pale blues and whites lack.
A steady hand rests on your lower back, thumb circling over the clothes that separate your skin from Dottore’s. While he had given you a moment to appreciate the room, he had now dragged out a chair for you to sit on at one end of the table. Furthermore, you notice a single white rose lying in front of you. 
When Dottore first brought you to his study, you expected him to need your help. You can recall several dozen times when he had grown frustrated trying to find a specific book or item lost in the vast sea of knowledge. Usually, you were the one who ended up in this room, spending hours searching for the correct thing. Always something to do with an experiment—or, on rare occasions, requiring your opinion on a situation or problem, while he sat back, relaxed, as you scoured the shelves.
You take the white rose that lies in front of ‘your’ seat.
The green stem has been pared. Any thorns that would’ve punished you for holding it were gone. Your fingers graze over the scars left behind, feeling the careful cuts to be precise and surgical, keeping the flower’s original beauty intact while ridding the imperfections Dottore saw. 
For the words he lacked, he made up with actions.
But
 why white? Is there a meaning behind the colour and cut thorns?
You lift the flower in front of you and twirl it around. 
Against the candlelight, it has a warm outline. You resist a smile, knowing he had stolen the flower from his business partner, the ninth Harbinger’s garden, made and gifted specifically for the Tsaritsa. Quite a prize for you, even if it would wither in days now that it’s been separated from its kin. 
Your thoughts and observations are cut short when you feel warm air tickling your neck, the sensation following to your cheek. It seems he has noticed your curiosity and has sneaked up behind you. He curls his body against yours so your cheeks are side by side, less than a centimetre apart, his sight aligned with yours. A shared perspective.
He reaches forward to cage you between his body, the chair, and the table, moving his hand over yours—taking the rose through your hand in his.
“For you, my heart.” His voice is driven with purpose and lacks any visible affection, yet the gentle hold of his hand betrays him. 
Part of you wishes he weren’t as close, hoping you could peek at the expression on his face, even if he still wears his mask. 
A smile reaches your face. “Thank you.”
“Keep that thought. I wouldn’t want you to waste your breath when I’ve barely shown you what’s planned for tonight.” 
“Should I be scared?” You joke, turning your face to Dottore—just slightly.
With much anguish, you feel his half-embrace fall as he stands up. “Nonsense. You’re the star of tonight’s act. I have assured no one but I can bother you, so feel free to relax.”
A teasing peril seeps through his words, keeping you on his toes like he tends to do. And as much as you are curious, you know Dottore won’t spoil his plans. So, you watch him leave the room and return with two plates in his hands. One, he places in front of you; the other, across from you, at the other end of the table.
Before sitting, he removes his mask and puts the vase with flowers to the side, assuring nothing will be between you and him. 
“Go ahead,” he gestures to the food in front of you. Then, commands; “Eat.”
As you’ve worked with Dottore for many years, you know better than to delay any of his requests. While his actions seem patient and giving, this is, and will never be, in his nature. Any challenges will only rile him up and guarantee your downfall, much to his pleasure, probably. 
With the fork and knife, you take your first bite.
The events leading up to now are uneventful by normal societal standards, but you know he’s anything but conventional, and you’re certain he’s trying to lead up to something. You comfort yourself, knowing that whatever experiment you’re in, he will never harm you beyond what he can fix.
To your surprise, you enjoy the taste and return for another bite. 
“Are you enjoying your dinner, my heart?” 
Dottore’s voice echoes from one side of the table to the other. Two untamable strands fall next to his jawline. The rest of his pale blue hair is swept behind, falling into a mullet, with its ends curling and spiking upwards. The sleeves of his dark blue blouse are rolled up to his elbows, revealing his scarred forearms. His mask lies next to his dinner plate; face open, vulnerable.
Despite having seen his face before, the current moment brings an unusual atmosphere of intimacy. For once, Dottore is straightforward and direct without reserve or secretiveness. 
“I can’t argue with good food.” A soft chuckle escapes your lips. God knows that Dottore rarely meddles with making a full meal, lest he prepare one himself. You won’t pass up the opportunity to indulge in what’s been served.
With your fork, you stab and take another bite.
Your plate is an exact copy of what Dottore is eating. A rare steak; a side of mashed potatoes, topped with rosemary and a pinch of salt; and a side of vegetables, common to Snezhnaya and filled with nutrients and flavour. You’re certain he, or one of his segments, made it. Despite the classy choice of today’s dinner, his preference is made known through the Sumerian spices.
“It’s hardly worth your praise.” Dottore sits back comfortably in his chair. “Though I do enjoy the look of pure satisfaction on your face. Perhaps I should be required to cook for you more often.”
You laugh, “I’m afraid it’ll make me spoiled. Rarity is not a negative thing. It makes the scarce moments of true importance hold their recognition value.”
“Perhaps.” He shifts his body weight as he flaunts his hand in the air. “Though this is true, most people seem to resent this truth. No matter the efforts done; to some it may never outshine what they feel has been ‘not done’.”
“Why do you think this is?”
“Humans tend to cling onto the negative more than the positive as an act of survival and anticipation, categorising the world by what it has done wrong and reforming their perspectives accordingly. Hope, as strong as it is, is also fickle. Without a solid form of ‘light’, people will get lost in the ‘dark’. If someone lies to you, as a direct consequence, you become wary of any other person doing the same, even if no one before had done you that injustice. Perhaps it is simply human nature.”
You chew the spiced vegetables in your mouth as you digest his words. 
He segues, “Have you read about the Hedgehog’s Dilemma? It's an essay by a philosopher that illustrates the challenges of human intimacy. Quite an interesting read, if I do say so myself.”
You chuckle. “Hedgehogs have piqued your curiosity? Should I worry about the labs being overrun with those spiky rats?”
A smile forms on his lips. “Not at all. I simply found the metaphor to be an interesting one. Fun fact, in the original parable, they’re porcupines—for they have even sharper spikes than hedgehogs. Here, I’ll repeat his words to you. Perhaps you can share the sentiment with me once I finish.”
Dottore leans in closer from across the table. It seems as if he’s excited to share it—. 
He clears his throat, hands moving with his words as he starts to talk.
“On a cold winter’s day, porcupines huddle together to find warmth, but as they prick one another with their quills, they are obliged to disperse. However, the cold will drive them back together, when just the same thing happens.”
The lock of pale blue hair falls onto his cheek when Dottore tilts his head.
“At last, after many turns of huddling and dispersing, they discovered that they are best off by remaining at a little distance from one another. This is shown in the same way that society drives human porcupines together, only to be mutually repelled by the many prickly and sharp qualities one can have. Both social rules and human nature keep us from truly closing in on others. In the end, with this arrangement, the mutual need for warmth is only very moderately satisfied; but then people do not get pricked.”
Your hands rest on each side of the plate. “That seems lonely.”
“The dilemma may encourage self-imposed isolation, but the closer we become, the more deeply we may hurt each other.”
“But what if we don’t?” 
“Don’t harm others?” He interprets.
No,” you specify; “what if the porcupine doesn’t get any warmth? Isn’t it better to have a few scratches and wounds—bleeding but surviving, instead of being guaranteed to freeze to death?”
He is silent.
“The dilemma brings such a melancholic and pessimistic philosophy. Is it a guarantee that we can’t achieve human intimacy without getting hurt? What if a porcupine were to meet a turtle who isn’t hurt by its quills and can share its heat without fear or harm?”
Dottore puts his elbows on the table, one at either side of his unfinished plate, careful to avoid hovering above his food. You want to believe that his smile and gaze are as unnerving to you as it is to others, but you find a strange comfort in his attention. 
He muses to you. “And which are you supposed to be, the porcupine or the turtle?” 
He tilts his head, curious for your answer. 
“Does it matter? Either way, I won’t subject myself to anticipatory fear. In any scenario, it is better to seek what you need in an unpleasant situation instead of evading it and dying regardless.”
“I see.”
You pick up your fork and knife, aiming your attention back on the food in front of you. “One would think you’re testing my personal philosophy with these questions. Though I suppose that might’ve been your true purpose for inviting me tonight.”
A chuckle escapes his lips as he falls back into his chair, his composure slacking and relaxed. “Nonsense. This is a treat. Enjoy it as such.”
“Oh? You say it as if this is a normal occasion.”
He smiles. 
“Please,” You raise your eyebrow, holding in a scoff. “You rarely praise anyone. Let aside treat them to dinner in your
 study.” 
“You’re not ‘anyone’.” 
Dottore’s voice lingers on the last word. He spats it out as if with disgust. 
His eyes shine with an emotion you can’t quite place. 
He clarifies;
“You’re my assistant.”
In your mind, you shuffle the meaning behind those words. It is a fact, you are his assistant, but there should be a reason for it being said the way he did. You are not simply ‘anyone’; yet also no more than what you are. 
You are you. That is part of why you’re sitting here tonight. The intention of his words lie in the unknown, waiting to be uncovered. Though, possibly too comfortable to want to be uncovered. A porcupine, maybe. 
You don’t support the gossip that surrounds the Harbinger sitting in front of you. You know he is far from a saint, realising he is a monster to many—but never to you. 
Perhaps that's the reason why he invited you. 
You break the silence.
“Thank you for inviting me, Dottore.”
His food remains untouched. “It is far too early to give any conclusions. Don’t thank me yet. The night is still young, and anything might happen.”
For a second, you’re blessed with the sight of a gentle smile in his eyes. 
For a moment, Dottore seems to be at peace; even more now than when he successfully finishes an experiment he holds dear. When he looks at you like this, there is no doubt in your mind. Some part of him, although it might sometimes be obscured with darker feelings, is capable of peace. 
But like the sun in Snezhnaya, it is bound to hide as soon as it reveals itself, and a cloud falls upon his mind once more. 
He lays down the knife and fork next to his plate. His expression is one of resolve.
“As my precious assistant, you know I require your ultimate loyalty. For you to never betray me, and always share your thoughts—blindly and without suppression.”
He fiddles with the utensils, moving them through his fingers before placing them down to their original state. 
“On these terms, will you promise me something?”
Taken aback, your eyebrows furrow. “...That depends.”
In your mind, you know his promise will lead to a request, which will lead to an inevitable pact hidden by the word ‘promise’. Promises are meant to last. You know he values all possibilities. If you wanted to, you could refuse him—though much to his disappointment.
What will he suggest?
Silence creeps around the room and takes the light atmosphere from before, occupying its space instead. Hesitantly, you gulp down whatever is left in your mouth. While you continue to hold your fork and knife in your hands, you let them relax on the sides of your plate. 
After nothing from him, you continue, “Sure.”
‎ 
‎ 
‘Could you love me?’  he asks.
In the silence, you find company in the absence of an answer.
Love him?
Love. 
Love?
Love is a topic you’re eager to avoid. Dottore has made it clear that he, too, is not the man to utter those specific three words you run from, yet he asks this question with more ease than you ever could be comfortable with. 
Your relationship with the 2nd Harbinger is built on respect and actions. Soft moments between you and him are as fleeting as the spring blossom, but you’re a fool to deny yourself the moments that have led up to this question. Perhaps under normal circumstances, you’d have a clear answer. But he is the 2nd Harbinger, and more importantly, you are you. 
Years with you by his side have made him used to your presence. Much so that he isn’t seen without you—not alone across Teyvat nor in the privacy of his study. He’s grown to value your opinions, used to you completing his actions and his train of thought, needy to the way you complement him—complete him. 
He knows you. 
If this moment hadn't arrived, would you have thought about the possibility of you loving him?
No. 
You are too much a coward.
“Are you testing me?” You inspect his ruby gaze, narrowing your eyes as you do. 
Love
 
Could you
 
Do you
?
You look at his face, realising that it isn’t a test. 
“You appear surprised.” He says, amused.
“Can you blame me?” 
There is no malice or mocking in your voice. 
He recognises your surprise.
“You have believed me to be unmoving?”
You almost believe you hear insult in his words. “To your subjects, perhaps. Logically driven, yes, but always with purpose. Unmoving? Not when I've seen you passionate about your goals and achievements. Hide it all you want, at this moment you remain human.”
“Then you must see the importance of my question.”
He shifts his body weight from one side to the other. Behind his eyes, you imagine cogwheels turning as he composes another sentence easier for you to digest. 
"Accepting oneself is often difficult. We tend to see reflections of ourselves in others, especially when it comes to flaws. Often, the imperfections we notice first are those we recognise in ourselves. On the other hand, the same counts for things we value. You learn a lot about somebody through their daily choices and basic behaviour."
You think about it and conclude the truth in his words. It is hard to find a flaw without you recognising it as such. If you don't have the insecurity, you’ll have a harder time noticing somebody else's. The same counts for values. Some people wouldn’t find kindness in Dottore’s actions today. But you do. It is subjective.
“Do you not believe in love?” Dottore asks.
Again, you feel as if he's leading you into a trap. But perhaps that is your answer.
You purse your lips and then try to formulate an answer as close to your ‘truth’.
“It's not that I don't believe in ‘love’. Perhaps my love is different from everyone else's subjective ‘love’.”
One corner of his mouth lifts up. “That is interesting. Then, what requirements hold your ‘love’?”
“You mean its conditions?”
He shrugs his shoulders. “All love is conditional. If gods are picky to choose who may be worthy of their benevolence, why would it be evil for humans to strive for what even gods cannot give?”
“Hm.” You shift your eyes away from him and to the side. Your hand subconsciously reaches your face. “I guess my condition would be ‘understanding’? Love in a way that only one person may recognise you as such. To be seen not only from an outside perspective, but also to be observed within.”
“An emotional worth,” Dottore concludes.
You shake your head. “Not exclusively. It is seldom that the most valuable things come without hard work. Only the person who shares my heartbeat shall know what my ‘love’ means.”
Dottore hums. “I suppose that answer is decent enough.”
The remaining food on your plates has gone cold. Neither of you touches it. 
After a while, you search his gaze again. 
“I think I could.” 
“In your way?” He asks, and you know he understands what you meant.
You don’t answer.
You suppose that you wouldn't get an answer out of him if you asked about his definition of love. Not that you are particularly interested in hearing his own specific conditions. You are certain they are impossible to be met. Even if you cannot help but gravitate towards him with curiosity. 
If you've concluded anything from your time of working under him, it’s that his thoughts are unconventional. Perhaps if he were to answer, you'd have more insight to his character, but that would require you to cross another boundary, and you had already walked over yours enough tonight. 
Unlike Dottore, you do reach for your utensils. The food has long lost its original charm when you put a bite into your mouth, and a weird aftertaste lingers once you gulp it down, but it's far from stale or rotten. 
You know it'd be a while before you get a chance to eat a balanced meal like this with the workload balanced between your own and Dottore’s experiments, so you devour it without another thought. 
‎‎ 
Tumblr media
‎‎ The second act of the evening starts with another heart-to-heart. 
It is not unknown that the Doctor favours you to an extent. Amongst his other assistants, there is none he asks for but you. 
Unbeknownst to you, in your existence, he had found a sense of kinship. 
“Dottore?”
The pale blue-haired male comes out of the door a few beats after you call out to him. His pointed mask rests on his face. The intimacy and amity from before are now closed off by a physical border—the one between your eyes and his. 
You cross your arms, inquiring about his temporary departure in an oblique way, feeling childish if you’d otherwise ask him directly. “One would think you had started and finished an entire experiment with the time you were gone.” 
Dottore adjusts his mask so it rests more comfortably. “It is only a matter of business, unimportant to our current plans. Necessary, nonetheless.”
“As always.” 
He chuckles, “Relatable, I assume?”
“Given I work for you
” You shrug. “I wouldn't say I'm unfamiliar with a constant flow of business. Though I’d like to say I prefer it over a lax life. It gives me satisfaction in ways nothing else can.”
Dottore tilts his head to the side. He takes a moment and then concludes, “A sense of purpose by physical results in the form of achievements.”
It is less a question than a statement, nor was it something you'd think he'd find new in you. Dottore saying it out loud felt like he was trying to get a reaction out of you rather than him stating his thoughts. Though—you don’t sense malicious intent in his words.
“Are you prepared for our final stop for the night?” Dottore says without much of a segue.
You nod. “I was prepared for something of the kind. It is rare for you to organise something extravagant and selfless without concrete reasoning. I assume this is when the night truly begins?”
“You’re not incorrect.” Dottore cranes his head. “However, what if my reasoning had been to spend time with you? Would that not have justified my actions?” 
“It’d be an unlikely outcome to that wish. I believe you would've put me to work by your side instead of inviting me to a seat at a dinner table if your only purpose was to see me.” 
You glance at him. 
“Though I am entertained to see your efforts at trying to make me more agreeable for whatever you have planned. If someone told me this morning I'd be dining with you, I'd laugh.”
An agreeable hum escapes his lips. “Is it unlikely for me to make food?”
“Maybe? It is unconvincing for you to spend so much time on something you'd otherwise find a shortcut in. So I guess it was surprising to me in that sense.”
A vial of sustenance with precisely measured nutrients, vitamins, and minerals was more his style. In the height of his focus, you'd often see him in the most extreme states, dragging his barely but still human body to the limit of what it could handle. 
The only enemy of the Doctor could ever be time. 
“Shall we?” 
Dottore opens his arm to the hallway and gestures forward. 
You cannot point it out, but he seems to have grown simultaneously more tense yet less composed. The unique charm he usually has is replaced by something that mimics it. Perhaps the business he had attended was a frustration to his brain. You don’t risk asking him about it. 
Instead, you find something different to focus on.
“Can I ask something?” 
Dottore’s pace remains even and unchanged as he proceeds through the empty hallways of the palace, heading towards the lab to fill the last remaining hours of the day. 
You take the silence as a yes. 
“Why do you hire assistants when you have segments of yourself?”
Knowing he accepts any and all your questions, mainly because he takes it as a study of your character, you expect him to answer immediately—but he hesitates. 
If you hadn't been walking in pace with him, you wouldn't have noticed the slight delay. It's but a fraction of a second, yet enough to unsync him from yourself. Instinctively, your body holds back the same amount until your footsteps fall into a choir. 
You worry if the question was something you should've avoided. 
“There are certain things
” His red eyes stare ahead, lips pressing into a tight line. “I suppose ‘segments’ have inherited a similar way of behaviour, as they are a fragment of a certain time and circumstance. As much knowledge as they hold, segments are but a slice of the same life. I'd like to believe another, perhaps a different set of eyes, could give a perspective with new knowledge.”
He glances at you.
“That, and assistants are quite helpful when it comes to unwanted tasks. It saves time where it could be spent more
 proficiently.”
You cannot help but smile at his quip. You don’t feel attacked, knowing this is true without harm.
“How did your question come into existence?” he asks. 
Dottore’s hands, which are usually confidently at his sides or back, fiddle with his sleeves, as if the layers of fabric were particularly annoying today. Then they remember their home on his lower back.
“I suppose I was curious. You never let me learn about your segments. Much about you, including them, remains a mystery. Even when I spend all my time working for and with you, I know close to nothing.”
He seems particularly alert to your current thoughts. “For what reason did the segments catch your attention?”
“Are you kidding me?” You resist a scoff. “Anyone who isn’t at least slightly curious about the creation of clones to that degree must be stupid or arrogant. The sheer possibilities your segments have opened in the name of science and evolution surpass me, though I don’t doubt the applicable pool of organisms is smaller than I wish for.”
You think about how different Dottore is to anyone else. He has far surpassed human standards. Even if you wanted a clone and followed his exact methods, there is a high probability that the outcome will be different. Likely, unsuccessful.
Still, you wonder what conditions the cloning would have.
Dottore seems unwilling to share his secrets. “Curiosity will be the death of you.” 
“It hasn’t killed you yet.” 
His eyes sneak towards you, catching a glimpse of your expression as he walks. “Oh? It is quite a statement to compare yourself to someone like me.”
“Life favours the bold.” You turn to him as you walk, catching his hidden gaze behind the metal mask. “Do you?”
He huffs, looking in front of him again. “If you insist, you’re exactly the person I need for my latest project. It is the most personal work I have ever done. Far beyond the usual scope of work I include assistants in. In fact, my previous business involves it.” 
As he walks, his shoulders move up in a light shrug. 
“Perhaps it might even answer your question if you pay attention.”
This piques your curiosity indeed. 
From the countless documents you've read and worked on, tests you've performed and practised in, and the amount of experiments you've been included in—‘most personal’ can range from one of his interests to something you probably couldn't comprehend. 
Your heart races when your thoughts come to the creation of his segments. This is likely because it has always been your desire to see the making of. Perhaps your close bond with Dottore comes from the mutual desire to dissect each other until both parties know every atom of their existence. Not to mention the fact they were previously the star of the topic. 
Surely, if it's personal, it would include Dottore himself more than it would his interests, right? While the creation of dreams is personal in regards to his interests, you doubt it'd lead to that experiment today. Something else
 what could it be? 
Death of the cat? You feel quite alive right now. 
“Is your silence confirmation that you are in over your head after all?” Dottore pulls you out of your speculations. He taunts you. “You can still back out if you are frightened.”
“No. I mean, yes. I’ll help you.” —Though you don’t doubt this was the route you were on since the beginning of the night. 
Somehow, he is always miles ahead of everyone. You cannot help but try to catch up to him in this cat-and-mouse game. Or maybe you don't. Perhaps you are more content with your position than you're willing to admit. 
When he turns around at a familiar corner, you are forced to skip a few steps. 
Through your somewhat scattered movements from excitement, you look up at him. 
“What's the experiment? Does it include one of your segments?”
He comes to a halt and turns to you. He takes a beat, watching your eyebrows furrow together and your eyes search for reason in this delay. 
The sharp edge of the mask points directly at you.
“And ruin the surprise? Where would be the fun in that?”  
You almost cross your arms, awkwardly bringing them to your chest before letting them fall to your hips instead. 
“What is going through your mind?” he asks. 
Standing still in the quiet corridors, you gaze away from him. For some reason, Dottore seems different today. 
While he might come across as unexpected, he is still susceptible to habit. ’Only human’;  even if you are wary of classifying him as such.
He readjusts his mask awkwardly. 
“Does it matter? I’m certain you can speculate my thoughts well enough without needing an answer.”
“You want to join my experiment, correct?” He tilts his head, following your gaze before returning to face you. “In that case, your thoughts are pivotal.”
How casual of him to manipulate an answer out of you like that. 
You turn to him. “Well, I know for a fact you are only giving me the illusion of choice tonight. No matter how, I would’ve ended up in your experiment one way or another. I even mentioned this hours ago.”
No matter how nicely he packaged it, you knew he wasn't spending time with you without a motive. You count the dinner as a prelude. 
“Aside from that,” you continue, “I wonder what part of the project will be personal to you. After all, there are many sides to an experiment. Will it be personal in a sense where you are included or is it something directly connected to you? Are you valuing the process or is it the outcome you're after? There is a lot to think about.” 
He seems to think for a moment and then agrees. 
“If you are participating,” he says, “I suppose we shouldn’t waste time.” 
You watch him readjust the collar of his blouse, which, you only now notice, lacks the cravat he had been wearing earlier. His fingers move to tug on it and then retract as if they had changed their mind. 
You let out a single vowel, about to point it out, but he turns to the direction of the lab, intersecting your words before they can form.
“Follow me. By now, all preparations have finished.” 
He turns his head over his shoulder, letting you see the pointed edge of his mask. 
“The final act may begin.” 
The smile forming beneath his mask sends the feeling of precariousness crawling up your spine. It is a picture of a predator, even when he has never put you in harm’s way. 
You don't bother asking for more information this time. If you were getting anything out of him it would've already happened. Dottore, who kept the suspense by evading your questions, was clear that he wanted your thoughts raw and unprepared. 
For a second you move to take your place by his side. When he continues to look down at you, you take initiative with the first step towards his lab. 
But a moment later, he falls into your stride with comfort. 
Like a shadow, matching your movement to his. 
He eventually picks up the pace, taking the route to another hallway right before you reach the normal entrance, moving himself in front of you and changing the dynamic. 
In front of heavy steel doors he scans his face with the mask, gaining access and opening the doors with a loud click. 
You cannot say you are entirely unfamiliar with this part of his lab. There are many rooms yet to be opened, but occasionally you have been allowed to follow him inside exactly like today.
Because the labs are isolated from assistants and other personnel, it is quiet. The loud clang of the door closing behind you echoes from one wall to the other, finding no objects to absorb the sound. After that, two pairs of footsteps and the breathing of the lab is all that remains.
For a moment you wonder who cleans this space. After experiments, clean ups are important. You gather any material that can be reused, store and gather data or samples for future use, and then clear the space for a new experiment. 
Perhaps this mindset had set Dottore, or more likely one of his segments—who could possibly be watching you without your knowledge right now, up to the task of cleaning. Either way, this act of privacy made whatever went on behind the doors even more secretive and important.
‎ 
After a quite short stroll, you come to a natural halt. 
“Is this it?” You ask, standing in front of a door.
By a simple process with your thoughts, you've eliminated most options of its occupation. You'll likely be walking into a surgical chamber soon. 
It's unlikely you're wrong since the doors to these rooms tend to have a small window. While this one is blacked off with paint, it is similar to the surgical rooms back in the main labs. 
You are certain. 
Dottore gestures his hand;
“After you.”
You grab the iron handle and drag the heavy door open. The sound of conversation is immediately cut short.
“...?”
You take a step inside, finding the source of illumination to come from a buzzing and blindingly white LED hanging above. It gives you a temporary headache until your eyes become adjusted.
In the room, you find cleaning supplies and a strong infiltrating scent of bleach. It seems recently touched.
Then, with your second observation, you see supplies ranging from machines to latex gloves, lab coats and surgical knives lie scattered on an iron table in the middle of the left part of the room. 
You look over your shoulder. 
Dottore stands with patience, eyes focused on you. 
Taking it as reassurance, you take a few more steps inside, letting him catch the door as you let it go.
“Am I supposed to guess or does the equipment give it away?” You say with a hint of sarcasm. 
The room’s occupation is obvious, though your purpose within it remains unknown. 
Dottore closes the door and it clicks in place. His body then turns around and he puts a hand on your shoulder, turning you back to face forward after you had moved to him.
“Why do you doubt yourself? Can't muster aplomb?”
You shake your head. “I’m confident in myself. I believe you're the one doubting me.”
A sharp sound comes from the connected room, followed by muttering. You want to ask about it, but you know the answer. 
“Well then. Whenever you're ready, assistant.” 
‎‎ 
Tumblr media
‎ 
 “Cut it out. You'll bring everything in disarray.”
“Nonsense. Your way of organising is hardly logical. I am doing you a favour. You should thank me, really.”
“Heartbeat is stable, blood pressure is normal.”
“Machines are all online for operation.”
“What about the other one?”
“Prepared and disinfected, ready for use.”
‎‎ 
‎ 
‎ 
‎ 
“Ah, assistant. Welcome, at last.”
When you walk into the connected surgical room, you are surprised to see pictures of his past, alive and staring back at you. 
Segments. 
Only on rare occasions have you seen this many together. Even rarer to see them silently observing you. 
They are all scrubbed in, ready for surgery. You feel like a patient rather than an assistant walking into the room.
The uncanny scene is enough to bring you to a standstill at the entrance.
Your mind is quick to count the heads in the room. One, two, 
 seven total—, but then you see the real Dottore on the surgical table behind them and stop the count. 
Machines hang from the ceiling, surrounding him and descending from above. The triangle shaped lights illuminating his body hangs right above him, casting a sinister angelic light. 
All the hanging devices put together look like a single mechanical wing that sinks down to just above the centre of his chest. 
If he were awake, you believe he'd find beauty in the image. You, however, haven't discovered what to feel.
Seven segments, Dottore on the table, that makes eight—adding the imposter at your side.
“Theta,” you spat out. 
With a sharp movement you turn to the segment next to you. 
His mask is on, obscuring his mechanical parts perfectly. When you look closer, you see the imperfect perfection. It seems close to the real deal, but not mortal. Perfect without pores or edges. Perfect, in ways humans chase eternal youth or a standstill with time but losing its human qualities in the pursuit and making it something new. A replica.
Suddenly, the endless fidgeting made sense. A feeling of annoyance washes over you. 
You retake some of your pride by telling yourself that you had taken notice of this. It had been your instinct telling you something was amiss. You simply hadn't had the time to figure out what exactly it had been. Theta had played his part a little too well. 
You had almost caught him, but he caught on to your notice and cut you off before you could confirm your suspicion. 
He smiles.
“Yes?”
You've interacted with this segment a handful of times. Dottore (yours) had mentioned he had been particularly pleased with Theta, as he could act as a stand-in to even his fellow Harbingers. 
As proven, this segment goes through great lengths to impersonate Dottore in his current ‘time’. He is composed and almost always on a pre-written script—a few steps ahead of everyone. Sneaky with his identity, though you can't say deceptive, knowing he is still, well, ‘Dottore’.
Similar more than any other is to their creator; but on purpose. Just the slightest less secure in who he is. A segment. Always hunting the meaning behind ‘identity’. 
That makes you remember the hedgehog problem. 
It couldn't have been Theta who had been with you, you are certain of that fact. With the mask off, you could see the faded scar covering his face, the bloodshot eyes, and the lines and creases that formed over time. 
That was your Dottore.
A temporary wave of relief washes over you before your face heats up, realising you hadn't gone unobserved.
“When could you possibly have arranged all this?” You direct your feelings of betrayal to the segment by your side. 
He doesn't take your anger to heart—acting as if he hadn't been caught. Or maybe he simply didn't care. It's not as if you had made a connection to him. Not really, you think. 
Maybe the reveal wasn't relevant to him at all. Perhaps only the interaction had been. You render all answers after the dinner invalid. Asking a segment about segments. It seems silly in hindsight. Of course his answer would be biased. 
The fragments of Dottore quietly flock together, quitting their previous actions to focus on you. One stands oblivious to his appearance with a surgical knife in hand, gazing straight at you with curiosity and leaving his previous task abandoned. Acting too ordinary for the bizarre. 
You are at a loss for words. 
Your brain, too, is having trouble coming up with your next action or thought. 
“Why is he
” Your words get stuck when you try to describe Dottore’s predicament. 
Looking closer, you realise that while he's unconscious, he is not plugged into breathing machines, nor is he getting a form of anaesthesia. 
Dottore's chest moves up slightly. He is bare, with the exception of sterile surgical drapes covering him from the hips to the middle of his upper thighs. 
You bring your fingers to the bridge of your nose and rub the space between your eyebrows. 
Is this a test of loyalty? Of character? Is your knowledge being tested? 
The only idiotic story you can weave around this fever dream is that Dottore could be gauging whether or not you would save him from himself, but that seemed out of character. So, you push that aside as well. 
No answers then. 
Fine.
Have it your way, Dottore. 
Theta puts his hand on your shoulder. His grip is grounding but far from comforting. It feels as if he's trying to divert your attention back to him. 
From the slight difference in the mask, you recognise Omega amongst the others, —
“As our assistant and a scholar, you should be prepared for any possibilities at all times. This is simply one outcome of many tonight.”
Theta tilts his head, adding; “courtesy of the Dottore laying unconscious, of course.”
“He had prepared this?” You ask.
“Would you find it more plausible that he didn't?” Another segment, one you don't believe you've met, answers. His hair is shorter in the front and he seems more withdrawn. 
You cannot argue with him. 
After the initial shock wears off, you find a strange comfort in the many faces watching over you. 
Having become familiar with his gaze, you find that it doesn't intimidate you as much as you had anticipated. 
There is no threat in this room.
“So
”
Omega nods, turning back to the image he was made of. “So, indeed.”
You take a step forward, walking underneath the outer ring of machines hanging above you. You look up, finding white led lights blaring at you, as well as the choir of buzzing and beeps. 
Then, you gaze at where the spotlight meets Dottore. 
Your eyes trace his face, his expression, and then cover his body. 
Something interrupts you.
A small paper is handed to you between an index and middle finger. The handwriting of your name matches Dottore’s. You briefly wonder whether the segments would be able to mimic that too. 
Looking up, you snatch the folded square from between Omega’s fingers.
He remains silent, so you unfold the words that would otherwise remain unsaid.
A message is written in the usual barely legible handwriting, though he noticeably added more care writing the single sentence compared to his personal notes. 
‘Prepare me for a heart transplant. All preparations are accounted for. I have found a suitable match.’
You turn it backwards, checking for anything else, but the message ends there. 
While it had direct instructions, the information remains vague. 
“A heart transplant? Is he sick?” 
One of the segments releases a manic chuckle, but shuts himself up before more gets thrown up from throat.
Omega, still at your side, lets out a breath, crossing one arm over his chest and resting the elbow of the other on the hand. 
“Yes, regretfully so. He hasn’t been himself because of it, though he has found the perfect solution for his illness, it seems.” 
A frown rests on your face. You desperately want to overcomplicate the scenario to make sense of it, but focusing on the task at hand is more important. 
His life is more immediate. 
Your brain switches over into action; knowing that hesitation will turn into a mistake. 
“How long has he been lying here?”
Theta answers without hesitation; “36 minutes since he fell unconscious, induced by relaxing medication.”
“All equipment has been readied and checked for use,” answers another. 
Your head ping-pongs from one similar looking Dottore to the next as they answer back to back, each adding a bit more information to the pool of collective knowledge. 
You stop at Omega. “What will come of his heart?”
He cranes his head. Another segment swiftly answers in his stead, “It will be repurposed accordingly. Preparations for transport are ready.”
Another, again. “The donor heart has already arrived at the facility.”
“Bypass machine is standing by. The flow is clean. Reservoir stable.” A segment with rigid body posture stands near the cardiopulmonary bypass machine. A bunch of blood pouches are on a free table, possibly sourced from Dottore himself, likely in preparation. 
You vaguely recall the difference in this segment's tonality, but you are hesitant about your claim to a name.
“Delta is ready with scrubs in the other room. 9 more minutes until the initial estimated starting time. One last check-up before the procedure starts. Gamma, start the anaesthesia and pain medicine.”
The segment who you thought to recognise by voice, one whose mask is covered in neon blues and rounder engravings, steps forward, pushing a needle into Dottore’s vein.
Gamma, it is.
The names help, even if only slightly, to keep you from madness.
You look over at Theta. “Will you scrub in?”
His arms are behind his back. He seems more like Dottore than he did before. Perhaps this is because all other segments, Dottore included, are out of the element you usually see them in. He is the only one unsheltered by scrubs and unification. 
Theta wears what Dottore had worn earlier today. It makes him more human, which he's not.
There is a dangerous comfort in that familiarity. 
“Would you like me to?” He asks. 
Part of you wants to say yes, but only because you subconsciously are seeking Dottore’s guidance. The other part says no, knowing you would no longer get it once he removes his clothes. 
You shake your head. 
“So it has been decided. The floor is yours, assistant.”
Theta mimic’s Dottore’s speech pattern with ease. 
For a single moment, you let yourself be fooled and head back into the other room without thought.
~
As expected, when you open the door, the Delta segment stands there waiting for you. He, too, is dressed as the other segments are—gloved and scrubbed in. 
On the table rests your new attire: a sterile undershirt, pants, a cover for your hair, a tie if needed to pull it back, a mask, and a set of pristine step-in shoes that lay neatly prepared. 
They hadn’t been there when you first entered the room. 
He must’ve come in after you. 
“Are you wearing any jewellery?” Delta asks. 
You shake your head.
He takes your arms, inspecting them in silence. You realise he’s checking your skin for cuts, debris, and nail length. Once you pass his exam, he gives you a short moment to change clothes. Then, after his return, you start to scrub in.
While you prewash at the cold sink, Delta silently steps forward to put the antiseptic soap in your palm. You take your time with the nailpick he hands you after. 
You clean under your nails and dispose of the plastic tool in a nearby bin once you’re done. Then, you rinse again, and Delta rips open a package, offering a sterile surgical sponge for you to grab next. 
You scrub in silence—each finger, between the knuckles, up the wrists, then along your forearms to just below the elbows. Because of your focus, time passes quickly. When you finish, Delta drapes a sterile towel over your arm. You pat your skin dry with care, never using the same section twice. The towel joins the nail pick in the disposal bin once you’re done.
Then, still without a word, Delta opens the gown for you to step into. You slide your arms in, letting him pull the sleeves up. He grabs the tie at your waist, and you turn, positioning your back to him. He fastens both ends slowly; deliberately. Not rushed. Not quite mechanical either.
“Too tight?” 
His voice surprises you. While you hadn't focused on it before, you find that his voice sounds younger than you expected. 
You shake your head, and by the time you’ve turned around again, he stands ready with the gloves. 
You push your fingers forward, letting him help you. As his hands make sure the glove is comfortable in place, you observe the way his pale blue locks fall forward and frame his face. His cheekbones also appear less sharp. Another detail that makes him appear youthful. 
Once he's finished, you continue to keep your hands in front of you and above your waist. You’re careful not to contaminate them. 
Your heart feels unruly in your chest. Stepping out had given you distance, but now, with the preparations done, needing to step back into surgery reawakens quiet doubt within you.
Delta remains patiently to the side. 
He doesn’t make any further effort to help you, so you assume his task must’ve ended. 
For some reason, you feel compelled to thank him. The words come out soft and methodically, but Delta responds nonetheless. 
A single nod—, but he doesn't move. 
He won't accompany you with your final steps.
You're on your own. Even if he's right around the corner waiting for you. 
~
One step in and you’re reminded of why you rarely help with surgery procedures. While you had the expected experience to assist in the lab, you often avoided surgery when you could, stepping in only when absolutely necessary. 
Now standing in the door frame, scrubbed in and ready for operation, the room feels quieter than before. 
Pointed masks turn to you like a flock of crows, still and sharp-eyed, as if they’re watching an intruder step into their nest.
Everything remains exactly as you left it. 
With your goal in mind, you step to the table. Dottore lies intubated and is now connected to the right machines to monitor his vitals.
“4 minutes over the estimated starting time.”
You don’t look up from Dottore’s face. 
It is strange to hear his voice without it coming from his mouth. 
Your eyebrows furrow together. 
A thought crosses your mind.
“He arranged all this, but he never said why.” 
A segment moves by your side. 
An answer follows.
“Because he didn’t need to. He left you the procedure, not the reasoning.”
Dottore’s face is the most relaxed it has ever been, yet it misses the feeling of peace you saw in his expression during dinner. He looks older now. Tired, even asleep.
He looks vulnerable.
He looks human.
You come to a cruel realisation.
“He left everything in order. He knew I wouldn’t say no.”
“He knew you would understand. That’s why he didn’t ask you.” 
His voice echoes from somewhere within the room.
“Understanding is irrelevant. Consent was documented. Procedure is scheduled,—” an exasperated sigh follows the words. “Emotional latency is outside protocol. Begin, or postpone. The body will not wait indefinitely.”
And another reminder, “9 minutes over the estimated starting time.”
You look up.
One quick look around the room confirms that everyone but you is ready, standing at their respective places.
“Stop talking like you’re not him.”
Gamma scoffs and glances at Omega, who is quietly amused. 
“It’s not that we aren’t. We simply know what he wanted.”
For your sake, you ask someone to put a surgical drape over his face. 
After that, it becomes easier. 
You stand in front of the table. Tools are ready for use, all laid out with inhumane precision. A segment, the one who counted down before, moves into place across you. Omega, who stands by your side, holds out a scalpel to you.
There is one last moment of delay where your body inhales sharply. It realises you're the only one who can start this before you do.
Your fingers grasp the stainless steel from Omega’s hand.
It feels heavy. Such simple weight should not make you falter. But it is not the stainless steel that weighs, it is the anticipation and build up.
You hover above his midline. 
“Incision details?”
“Position at the sternal midline. Incision length: twenty-one centimetres.”
The blade is cold in your gloved hand—a should-be familiar weight with an unfamiliar purpose. 
Light falls onto the blade.
“Making an incision now,” you say.
The knife meets his skin with ease. You press down, and when you drag it, a line of red follows. 
There is no real spoken coordination in the room. The only moment when information is shared is when you ask for it. Otherwise, the segments follow your lead. Their connection to each other creates a hive mind, to which you are the sole outsider. Yet, for a reason without answer, it is you who leads the entire procedure. 
It feels like a solo mission with a distant guide.
You try not to think of the paradox. Dottore, who has never feared cutting others apart if it brings knowledge, now lies dissected by his own will. 
Tissue retractors are handed to you without a word. You place them gently, pulling the skin aside to expose the deeper layers beneath. This red should remain unseen.
Your thoughts are pushed aside by focus. You turn distant from yourself when you no longer run on your feelings and opinions. You become a mechanic step-by-step. An insider. 
“Proceeding with sternal access.”
The following steps you cut out of your memory. However, the sound of saw splitting bone is sure to follow you for the next few months. 
When the bone parts, his chest opens. More retractors are placed. And there it is—his heart. Still beating. Still fighting.
You hesitate.
It looks healthy
 Strong, even. 
He isn’t dying. 
You remember the message, ‘Prepare me for a heart transplant’. No diagnosis. No explanation. When you had asked Omega about it, he made it seem as if Dottore needed surgery urgently. Perhaps, he thought so. Either Dottore or Omega did. Still, the quiet thumping makes you question your next steps.
“Prepare for cardiopulmonary support. We’ll place him on full bypass before extraction.”
“Vitals are stable. Proceed.”
“Initiating bypass,” Gamma says. He is decisive and precise with his movements, taking over before you can dissect information.
You know how the bypass works. Instead of allowing the blood through the heart, it’s rerouted through a heart-lung machine. The machine puts oxygen in the blood, removes carbon dioxide, and then pumps it back into the arterial system. It bypasses both the heart and lung function, hence the name. 
You watch Gamma work. For a split second, you recognise that in his movements, he dances with familiarity. 
“Bypass is a success. Proceed with extraction.”
A mechanical heartbeat rises as the body relinquishes its need for the original one.
The monitors shift. 
Dottore is now alive by artificial means. His own heart—no longer necessary. 
You place the scalpel on a steel plate. It clatters. Then, you take a new tool.
How the heart can be so easily replaced

“He wanted this.” Theta, who had been silently observing all this time, speaks from the shadows. “Remember that.”
You take a moment. 
“Alright.” Your hands take position. “Let’s continue without complications.”
Between his ribs, you reach carefully for Dottore’s heart. From the open cavity, you lift it like treasure, and in a way, it is. 
It's not light, not heavy, but it is. 
The organ is still warm and the blood has covered your blue glove with a deep crimson. 
One moment, you can feel the heat; in the next, a segment has taken it from your hands and quickly disappears through the doors without a word. 
You hear the door come into place with a muffled whoosh followed by a click.
“Okay.” You let go of a breath. “Where is the donor heart?”
It takes only a second for a weird atmosphere to enter the room when none of them react instantly.
Nu replies. “Donor heart is on-site. The other room is prepared.”
“For what?” Your eyes narrow as your eyebrows come down. “Moving Dottore is not possible. We need to transfer the heart fast. We should get it as soon as possible.”
“Agreed,” Theta says.
Then, silence.
You feel as an outsider once more. There is a message going around the room without it ever passing you. 
After a moment, Gamma groans. 
“Get it over with. Room B is ready with preparations.”
“Estimated starting time is 6 minutes.”
Omega puts a hand on your shoulder.
You look at him.
“Good night.”
‎‎ 
‎‎ 
‎‎ 
Tumblr media
‎‎ 
“Wisdom which is only theoretical, and never put into practice, is like a double rose: its colour and perfume are delightful, but it withers away and bears no seed.”
‎‎ 
You’ve never felt this tired. Your body doesn’t feel like your own. It’s too heavy, too far away—you feel separate from it. 
Instinctively, you try but fail to open your eyes. It seems like they’re glued together. So, you focus on sound. It is distant and your brain fails to process where it comes from, but it exists nonetheless. And that seems enough.
After what seems hours, the locks on your eyes break and light pools in.
You remember what happened, something—vaguely. But none of it feels real. Maybe Dottore’s invitation for dinner had made your mind produce all kinds of scenarios. Perhaps your fascination for his segments had gone from curiosity to horror—a ‘nightmare’.
Dottore lies across from you. Mirrored to yours, the upper part of his bed is lifted 45 degrees so he can sit upright without strain.
You gaze at him for a while. Recognising his voice over the other muffled sounds of the room.
Your mind takes a while to process their meanings.
“Your body has undergone significant trials. Don’t force nonexistent strength.” 
Through the haze, you blink your eyes. You lift the less heavy arm to your face, uncoordinated and with pain, wiping the tear ducts clean from whatever had been building up. Slime? It seemed like thick glue. Vaseline, maybe. 
The limb falls down at your side again.
You lay there for a while, letting the two sets of heartbeats fill the room. 
Beep
beep
beep

Once your mind starts to come down from whichever cloud it was resting on, you can properly describe the heavy feeling that washes over your body. 
An intense pain, so blinding that it becomes muffled by a sensation of tight pressure, spreads from your torso. Your throat is like cotton, and it feels foreign when you swallow the first few times. Your breathing feels odd
 
Why can’t I move my arms properly?
You don’t remember lying down.
“What happened?” You ask. 
Even your voice fails you. It sounds as if it had been put on a shelf and only recently was remembered for use.
Dottore puts a hand over his chest where his heart is. “It was a success.”
“The surgery
”
Your memories reshape with clarity, and with it; instant punishment. 
You lean over slightly, gasping as the beeping next to you increases its pace, falling out of beat with Dottore’s. You move your hand to your chest, wanting to ground yourself, but the pain intensifies, and you keep your fingers hovering right above it. 
With all your might, and being forced to, you muster your energy to take slow and controlled breaths. At first, they shake and cut through your throat, then they become familiar again. 
A wheeze escapes your lips and tears prick in the corner of your eyes.
The fog in your mind makes you walk into walls—again and again—until you forget where your thoughts were trying to go.
Beeps fall into a normal pace. Your heart slows. You are pulled back by it. 
You lean back against the pillow. It catches you and forms your shape into its feathers. 
Dottore stares at you, and all you can do is stare back. 
“Isn’t it peculiar how they call it a transplant? It's more like a trade if you think about it.”
He looks comfortable in the hospital bed. Well, perhaps not. Where are you? Not the labs, not one of the resting rooms. Certainly not somewhere you had been before.
His voice fills the room again. It’s like he cannot help himself. He has always been prone to talking. 
“Did you know our blood types are the same? This was before I modified myself, of course. Unfortunately, sharing blood is no longer viable without major complications—but at its natural state, it is compatible. A perfect match, one can say.”
The words pass by in a hurry. 
You look at your hands, which lie next to you—somehow looking even more tired than the rest of your body. You find the culprit for the strange sensation on your hand. An IV is inserted and contributes something into your bloodstream. It doesn’t hurt, but it is uncomfortable nonetheless.
Nausea seems to creep up like a shadow at dawn.
With a stable breath and the pain under control, you move your fingertips to your chest. You hover them above the blue gown. Then, as if to avoid scaring it into pain, you touch yourself lightly. 
A thick layer rests between the gown and your skin. Your fingers now rest on it, and by texture, you believe you are bandaged underneath your clothes. 
You don't play with it for longer than necessary, letting your arms fall back without grace. Tired. Your body is too tired.
“What happened
?”
Dottore doesn’t answer you.
The beeping sounds have synced up again. His heart and yours.
For a moment, you feel at peace, too spent to want anything else, but Dottore, as always, cannot be in this state. 
He calls your name. 
“How does it feel?” 
You lightly move your shoulders, too tired to get annoyed by his line of questioning. 
Exhausting, painful, confusing

“I don’t know.”
And your answer is honest.
Dottore smiles. 
“I believe I have never felt quite as clear as I do today. Without any barricades, I can learn to understand you fully, exactly as you desire. No longer do you need to uphold barriers in fear of being misunderstood.”
He seems satisfied with something.
“It is unfortunate you don't recognise this feeling yet. Ultimately we are the same. I am glad you confirmed that to me before.”
Your hand has moved to cover the place where your heart would rest. The pain is sharp and dull at the same time. Possibly a byproduct of the intensity and your mind still trying to orient itself. 
“How so?” you muster. 
“Well,” he starts, and truly seems enthusiastic, “for one, after today we’ll always be together. Without the fear of porcupines being forced into the winter by themselves, you shall always carry me to give you warmth, no longer reliant on anyone else. No sharp pointe either.”
A heart-to-heart. 
“And then, I shall ascend us to a level where we may share more than a heart. A mind, too. With your perspective and mine combined, we will uncover a different kind of knowledge, and I am certain we will bring a new perspective into the world.”
Your fingers caress the gown, feeling the layers of tightly bound bandages.
“Like it or not, after today, you'll never be alone. Your love is reciprocated. Exactly as you wanted. A gift for you, my heart.”
It is at this moment that the synchronised beeps sound like a haunting choir. Without a second to react, your body turns your head for you and stomach acid splatters onto the ground next to you. The pain in your chest makes the retching unbearable. Yet, you cannot stop the wave of sickness.
When you are left heaving, empty in stomach and hope, you do what he forces you to—and you rest. 
With the realisation, the heavy feeling of your body also feels like a choice that was his. 
He is keeping you caged with his own heart in your chest, home in your body as if he owns your entire being. 
Then, you look at him. His own chest. Then, the heart monitor. 
Your heart beats for him. 
His beats for you. 
The diagnosis?
Omega had been correct.
He was sick.
Sick with a twisted idea of love.
‎‎ 
A heart-to-heart. Bound by a blood pact. 
‎‎ 
‎‎ 
“No rose without a thorn. Yes, but many a thorn without a rose.” - Arthur Schopenhauer
Tumblr media
©dottiro. Do not copy, repost, translate, feed to AI, or take heavy inspiration from my content. Thank you for reading ♡
82 notes · View notes
dottiro · 8 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
lil pookie having a fight | Thank you for commissioning me! Commissioned by @naraven
EMERGENCY COMMISSION OPEN, 5 SLOTS LEFT
179 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Thank you for the tag!!!
Tumblr media Tumblr media
↳ picrew: one // two
What are you thankful for today? ♡
Tags but no pressure: @antique-remains @misc-magic @oopsiedaisymae @jeschalynn @silverrings-n-prettythings
@lonely-north-star @featheredcrowbones @arvandus @thebellearchives + anyone else reading this!
423 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
A Funerary Smile
yandere harbingers (minus pierro, capitano and pulcinella) x reader
cw: yandere, some not sfw themes, gore stuff if you squint, darling is a little unstable
wc: 1.4k+
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Harbingers are cruel.
With their prowess and influence they were as infamous as they were well-known. As such, their methods of acquiring what they desired were no secret to Teyvat, because, as it is often said ; the walls have ears. But you alone have been doubting that ever since your feet were bounded in shackles—the shackles of their power, resources and adoration to be precise. Because, if the walls truly had ears, why were they rendered deaf before your pleas for freedom?
Word around Zapolyarny Palace travels surprisingly fast as there are always bored guards and agents who were more than happy to ignite the sparks of gossip. Yet, there's not a single syllable uttered when you're seen strolling by, dressed in lavish garbs and jewelry so obviously gifted by Pantalone. The guards don't even raise their masked eyes as the banker pulls you closer than what should be appropriate for public display. Or perhaps, they don't even seem to be breathing due to the exact reason of his presence.
You offer no struggle either having already learned your lesson. Even still, the Regrator makes sure to tighten his possessive hold, a warning to bahave and the aching marks on your neck statue you to obedience. How you would've loved to slap that God-forsaken smile that tortures you even in your dreams.
Even as Arlecchino is more or less ripping Pantalone's gifts from your body and dressing you into newer, finer garbs (as she likes to say), garbs that were owned by her ; you don't feel the least bit of comfort. Even as the Knave delicately caresses you, showers you in feather light kisses—gestures that felt more possessive and meant to comfort her instead of you ; you feel no warmth. Your heart no longer skips a beat at her princely charms, not when her demands are on par with the Balladeer's.
Ah, Balladeer. An implacable bastard. You know a fraction of his eventful past from the once-in-a-blue-moon moments of quietude, vulnerability. When he would cling to your being like a drowning man to a wooden log, making you swear to not betray him, leave him—an ironic contrast to daylight, when he would toy with you like the sadist he was. A pitiful creature he might be but you can't bring yourself to offer him that remorse.
Sometimes, you place your palm utop your heart to check if it's still beating. Your brows crease to the unfortunate thumps and you wonder, if so, why do I feel nothing? Why is it so cold? The boreal winds froze everything in its wake. You muse if you should accept Dottore's offer, perhaps then, you could feel happiness again? You're no stranger to the Doctor's eccentric ‘ideas’ and ‘experiments’, not anymore when he offers you a front row seat to them. You're forced to sit through his passionate fits and although you don't understand half of what he says, you know the gist and, it's as horrifying as his exclamations of love.
Despite knowing Dottore's unhinged nature well, you still entertain such morbid thoughts with a blank face. Perhaps, Damselette's dark humor has rubbed off on you. But you know there's another one after your anatomy. When it's her turn to lock you in her laboratory, you silently take a deep breath to face the incoming madness—can it even be called such when The Marionette says those things with the most innocent face in all of Teyvat? You don't know anymore.
Even when the moon would replace the sun, snowstorms becoming deadlier outside and chalendiers would be lit, you had no rest. The sun's fall signalled respite for the others in Zapolyarny, but for you, it rang like the midnight bell signalling Lady Columbina's turn. Her songs that once lulled you to sweet dreams, now sound more like requiems. It's still much preferable to her mind games and playful threats, although. You'd only wish her embrace wasn't so suffocating.
Even the weakest of them spares you not. Seeking to be a silver-adorning knight in a sea of blood. You welcomed his sympathy at first, when you were still clinging to the last scraps of sanity. You didn't push him away from mock embraces of comfort when you still had the chance to. You thought you had a chance, an escape route ; oblivious to the fact that you had just nurtured a new impediment. You're a fool, an idiot. Because you forgot, weakest of them Tartaglia maybe but he was still stronger than you.
Their individual toxicity is still nothing compared to the theatrics that played in those damned dinner-parties. The environment of when the Harbingers gathered are so tense that you wonder if the knife would break if you tried to slice it through the air. All it takes is for one of them to make a comment on you and boom, it feels like a second Cataclysm has broken lose. If Lord Pierro or Pulcinella aren't there to stop them in time, you might as well start praying.
The Harbingers are cruel, so so cruel. Their cruelty extends further than just their treatment to you, their dear little doll. It implicates itself through their provocative whispers against each other, it hides itself betwixt the bloody remains of those who were foolish enough to interject and the only thing that's keeping them from lunging at each other is probably the Tsaritsa's sentence.
But did you deserve to be caught between this crazy charade? This game of being thrown from one lion's den to the other, reduced to nothing but a stress toy for them? And they, the starved beasts they were, had made you understand very well that in this lifetime, freedom would not be a privilege you could have. Your soul, so deprived of warmth, of life. Your heart that continues beating pathetically, rendered incapable of true emotion—just like they wanted.
Even now, as the moonlight shines upon the Fair Lady's coffin surrounded by fake mourn ; you feel nothing. The Fair Lady, or Rosalyn, had a share to your misery, too. If you closed your eyes, you could still recall her vice grip and that strange mixture of warmth and cool ; something you used to be curious of until they threatened to consume you. She was as heartless as she was someone with one and like all of these souls under the Tsaritsa's decree, she too, was a pitiful soul. But you're no less selfish than them, maybe that's why Rosalyn's passing had no effect on you.
Lady Columbina's song truly does feel like a requiem now, you felt a chill run down your spine ; from the cold or from the eerie sound that travelled all around the hall you didn't know. You can hear the other Harbingers' voices in the background, an ensuing squabble over La Signora's passing or something. You don't really pay it any mind, seeking comfort in the fur coat that Arlecchino so graciously draped over you earlier.
“—But Dottore, what of Scaramouche and the Gnosis from Inazuma?”
“Conventional wisdom holds that Divine knowledge cannot be rationally comprehended. After conquering the Divine Gaze, he'll make his next move.”
The Doctor's masked eyes leave the blue vile to your laying figure by the coffin's side and a smirk creeps up next.
“Besides...he has a reason to return, after all.”
When you open your eyes next time, a scarlet fire moth descends upon her coffin, one so familiar. You watch unblinking as it slowly dissipates in the moonlight, becoming one with the icy winter. You can't help but wonder if Signora's doom had been a result of her karma, the thought surprisingly pleasing. If that were to be true, then surely the other Harbingers' would catch up sometime, no?
It's such a shame, the northern lights accompanied by the moonshine seemed so heavenly tonight but the person who'd promised to share this view with you one night, is already buried beneath layer upon layer of ice. Far, far away in a land where you were away from her reach and you couldn't wait for the day the others would join her, too.
You're thankful for the fur coat actually, not because it stave off the biting cold — but because it hid the first genuine smile that bloomed on your face in months.
It would've been a beautiful sight, had it not found amusement in such a circumstance.
Tumblr media
2K notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
The two sides of 'DOTT'.
Introducing my Dottore segment 'DOTT' with (finally) a finished illustration!! I am super proud of this one ngl <3 he is my blorbo and brings me joy
91 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
just woke up and checked the news. things are bad and times are dark, but they've been that way before. foster community with the people around you, stay the course, and try to be kind to both yourself and the rest of world. there's no surviving the worst of all possibilities if the first thing you do is write yourself off as worse than dead.
300 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
To all the trans people who see this tonight, no matter what happens, we will survive. Trans people will still be here 4 years from now and 10 years from now and 100 years from now and tomorrow. We have always existed and we always will. The world cannot unlearn about us; we are too public, too loud, too beloved, too present. Ill be here tomorrow. Please stay here with me.
97K notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Hey, also, all the anarchist shit aside, tomorrow I want you to make something.
I forced myself to draw something after the 2016 election. I forced myself to draw something when my mother died in 2018. I forced myself to draw something when my spouse was hospitalized for multiple organ failure in 2021.
When you are miserable, make something. Add a row to your project, bake a box cake, draw on a sheet of lined paper, write a poem on a napkin, fold an origami shirt out of a dollar bill, make your favorite recipe for dinner, but make something with your hands, something that you can hold and look at engage your senses in.
It won't fix the world, but it will change the world. You will have made something that didn't exist before. You will have impacted your reality, even in a very small way. And it is going to be something you made *after.* Something bad happened, something shook you, and you made something after, in spite of it.
38K notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Right back at you!! <3
@euniveve @jessamine-rose @brynn-lear @teabutmakeitazure @estellxli
@harmonysanreads @mrskreideprinz @chryseis-lxve @floraldresvi @meimeimeirin + actually all my moots because they're amazing people >:3
positivity train!
if you see this or are tagged in it, tag a couple of your favorite mutuals/blogs and let them know you appreciate seeing them on your dash!
@h0neysugarfree @blueberrylovv @bequiteanddriveeeeeee @cherri-bomb-bomb @eg0mechan1c @fatrexicisback
28K notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Thank you for commissioning me! OC belongs to @lightningnose
EMERGENCY COMMISSION, 1 SLOT LEFT
24 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Yay
280 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Aventurine loves the boop function, everyone in the Strategic Investment Department and beyond will be a victim of it. He's going to get the badges, break the meter and get the highest boop count out of everyone, in any possible way. His three catcakes and your reputations are on the line, he says. But really, it makes him feel like a child again. Regardless of how competitive he appears to be, he genuinely enjoys it.
Alhaitham
 sleeps through it all. He wasn't even aware there was an update, too busy with enjoying his day-off, reading books and lounging around. Think about his bewilderment when he wakes up to your barrage of texts, well, it's just another passing trend. Certainly it's better he missed it — don't give him that look. Okay, if you're going to look so pitiful, he supposes he'll allow you to ‘boop’ him physically. But just once!
Dan Heng needs to be taught how to participate from scratch ; updating the app, how to opt-in, how the boop button works and that he can press it multiple times. Unfortunately, by the time he gets the hang of it all, it's already over and he was just about to send you a super boop, too. Welt noted Dan Heng to be unusually deflated for the next week after this incident.
Dr. Ratio is scrunching his nose, furrowing his brows, pulling his lips down in a frown — this is the latest trend on the internet? Truly, humans don't need anything that complicated to feel that rush of serotonin and, you're hooked on it, too? Psh. He can program an even better, more intellectually stimulating function than this ‘boop’! And off he goes in that endeavor.
Gepard was fine when he was receiving boops from his sisters. But when he sees you in the notifications, with about fifty boops at that, he becomes flustered. So flustered that he forgets to boop you back at all. He was too preoccupied with not selling his dignity through a scream, please don't misunderstand.
Jing Yuan can't put it in words how much he adores it. It's not that surprising considering how much of a cat-person he is. He sends you regular boops, super boops, evil boops, boop memes — you name it. He'll even get matching boop profile pictures with you, his badges proudly presented beside the icon. It's the first time in a while he's felt this energetic, he won't let any of it go to waste.
Mr Reca wasn't that interested in the thing initially, he is a busy director after all. Until he discovered the evil boop and that you're also actively participating in the trend. Thus begins your boop battle with him. If you can adequately match his villainy, he'll be enthralled. Oh the ideas that come to his mind just from this, the universe is not ready for his next movie.
Sunday is too busy to loiter around social sites all the time, as such, you'll need to introduce it to him. He mostly just boops you and Robin for the dopamine that comes with the paw animations and somewhere along that road, he falls in love with it. He's going to send you all the kinds of boops, break the meter, earn the badges, browse through all the memes and buy boop merch. Congratulations, you now have a perpetual boop fan and Sunday has a new love language.
Tumblr media
945 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Y'all we know Mr. Reca does film but do we think he'd like Musicals/movie Musicals?
64 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Thank you for the tag <3
last song listened: Nobody - Faith Marie (turned into The Pool - Stephen Sanchez as I was finishing this post) favourite colour: Blue!! last book i finished: I haven't been able to finish any books as of late :( last tv show i watched: Succession sweet/ spicy/ savoury: Sweet relationship status: Taken <3 last thing i googled: "high likely synonym" // "totk max hearts" current obssesion: Penpalling looking forward to: Spring
10 people i’d like to get to know better
tagged by @bubonicbabybell <3
Last song: meat is murder by the smiths
favorite color: orange 🍊
last book i finished: bliss montage
last tv show i watched: supernatural (s12)
sweet/spicy/savory: savory? i honestly dont have a preference
relationship status: single
last thing i googled: stardew valley wiki 💀
current obsession: dead poets society + the sims 4
looking forward to: halloween! and nanowrimo
tagging > @laceyc0bwebs @thelifeofagirl @chiiiiiiiiiiiiiii (i have no other mutuals and am lowkey scared to tag people i follow so sorry this is supposed to be 10)
1K notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Hide & Seek
Unreliable summary:  If you’re a visual learner, Dottore is more than happy to give some help. // Dottore brought you to Snezhnaya so he can perform conscious brain surgery as an act of love. Warnings: Yandere, Medical malpractice, awake brain surgery, kidnapping without an actual kidnapping scene, Dottore cuts through the skull of a person (not you), being drugged, Dottore dissects a brain (affectionately), GN reader, DEAD DOVE DO NOT EAT!!! Note: This is a rewrite of THIS fic from my old blog. This could've been longer, but I cut out the gore parts to make it less dark. // This fic is NOT set in the canon Teyvat; it is a mix of my modern AU + personal projection. My perception of him might not align with the OG. I wanted to write this scenario in my way/this is supposed to be a SERIES—if I post more of this AU the setup makes sense (trust).
Tumblr media
You used to study in the illustrious Akademiya, hoping to pursue a life filled with studies regarding the human psyche. 
You used to—until you got acquainted with Zandik and your life turned around for the worse. 
Perhaps if you weren’t so busy pursuing knowledge, you would’ve seen that his help was never given without a debt to repay. The charming facade with which he lured you in is only one of the many masks he wears. Zandik, or as you now know—Il Dottore: the second of the eleven Fatui Harbingers, never intended for you to escape his grasp.
Not then,
Not now.
You try to remember where it went wrong.
Tumblr media
Your head buzzes with a weird feeling when you open your eyes. You’re dazed, and your environment is unfamiliar to you. For some reason, your mind can’t think straight. 
Outside the window, you watch snowflakes twirl down until they meet upon a pool of white that stretches beyond the horizon. Only a few pine trees interrupt the otherwise dull landscape.
You try to remember how you got here, only to find a gap in your memories.
The bed in which you woke up is unfamiliar too. At the foot end, you see your jacket. It has been folded neatly and is accompanied by your shoes which are tucked underneath the bed. 
It had been visible enough to notice but placed purposefully to avoid anyone tripping. 
Someone put it there on purpose.
After inspecting the pockets of your jacket, you find that your belongings have been taken.
Your eyes move further across the room until you catch a familiar sight. The notebook that had catalysed your current situation. Similar to your jacket and shoes, it has been placed in sight for a reason. 
When you open the notebook on a random page, you can see new additions; or rather—changes.
Zandik’s handwriting covers your own, dominating your thoughts in writing as he does in voice.
You close your eyes as another wave of nausea hits.
Tumblr media
At the start of a new school year in the Akademiya, you met Zandik in one of the off-campus libraries. He came crashing into your life like a bullet flying out of its barrel and straight into someone’s chest; aiming for his target and striking the bullseye without effort. 
In this metaphor, you were his target and the arrow Zandik himself. 
His actions have been destructive to many, but with you still alive at his side, you’re inclined to believe his intentions are physically harmless to you—which feels like a juxtaposition. Zandik’s weird infatuation with wanting to be accepted might be the sole reason for your current survival. 
In your admiration for his ingenuity and endless knowledge, you became captivated and blind to everything that opposed the perfect ‘Zandik’ you had created in your mind. In this blind fever, you had made him feel as if he was. To be free from the title of ‘outcast’ had sparked something in him, and he would do everything to hold onto this new feeling of approval and pure endorsement.
For a while, life with him was profitable for both parties involved. 
To have a friend like him is to feel like you are unstoppable. But, once he felt he was giving more than he could seize, he forcefully started claiming what he believed was rightfully his.
Ultimately, Zandik did not take your life—he reformed it.
All you had, is no more. 
And he is to blame.
Tumblr media
One day you are in a lecture at the Akademiya, and the next you wake up in an unfamiliar place. In any other situation, you would have recognised the surroundings earlier. However, with the fog in your mind, it takes a while to uncover your location; Snezhnaya.
Your hand rests against the window to steady yourself. Even with the thick glass separating you from the outside world, you feel the cold touching your palm. Snow continues to rain from above. A few solitary snowflakes land on the window. They melt and pool at the bottom, freezing the window shut and locking you in.
An agitated sigh escapes your lips as your mind continues to drift between awareness and stupor. 
Through the hallway, a voice carries a conversation with only its echo in response. Mysteriously, the mutters come in and out of earshot—as if they were moving from room to room. The sound of footsteps follows. At first, they approach. Then, they leave. 
Your fingers press into your scalp when you drag your fingers through your hair. When you place your hands into sight, you open and close them. For some reason, they seem distant, as if not your own. 
Before you follow the sounds, you ensure that you’re grounded by steadying your breaths.
ă…€
You leave your jacket and shoes at the end of the bed, leaving the room barefoot.
· · ────── Ω ────── · ·
The building that cages you resembles an old villa. Evident from the layers of dust, it has been unused for at least a decade. The majority—if not all of the furniture you see has been hidden by white fabrics. 
To you, it’s easy to see. This home has been neglected. Whether the owner of the house wanted to forget its existence or not is up for speculation. 
As you walk further into the hallway, you see a frame with an old Kamera picture of Zandik hung on the wall. Another white cloth hangs over it, but it must have gone loose since the left side reveals part of the picture.
You catch a glimpse of his younger, more humane, face. 
For a moment, you wonder when and how he became a Harbinger. You wonder how this young man turned into this creature that brings destruction everywhere he goes.
Ultimately, you decide to ignore it, choosing to press forward instead of lingering in the past.
Then, over the noise of your thoughts, you hear an odd sound. Somewhere near you, an object is being rolled across the floor. It’s an unusual sound—something that throws you off. Yet, the noise isn’t rough. 
The more you listen to it, the more you recognise it as wheels on a cart being pulled along. You decide to stand still for a moment, hoping the fog in your mind clears so you can pinpoint where the sounds come from.
Your hand brushes against the interior wall as you take another step forward. 
A warm orange light invites you in at the end of the hallway. As you approach closer, so do the noises become louder. 
You discern a deep voice, talking to what seems to be himself. The man sounds educated, arrogant—but also sophisticated, and carries himself with more pride than grace.  
For a moment, you’re certain it’s not Zandik; who is more animated, dynamic—and compared to this voice, softer with tone, but then you walk into the room to be face-to-face with him.
“Good evening.” Dottore greets you. His voice is steady, never revealing any emotions to you.
If he hadn’t heard you walking up the room, he does a good job hiding it. His response to your arrival is instant; as if your entrance had been expected. 
His attention on the previous task is disrupted, and now his sole focus lies on you. The silver glint of his mask shines in the evening glow as he tilts his head towards you.
Curiously, you take a set into the room. 
A large wine-red carpet covers most of the wooden flooring of the space. In the centre of which, stands a large dinner table. Most of the lighting comes from the candles that have been lit, or the open windows that bring in the last of the golden hour. 
On one end of the table sits a man in a wheelchair. When you see him you realise the sounds from earlier must’ve been him being pushed forward. 
With a controlled smile, Dottore holds out one of his arms—gesturing to the room. “Do take a seat, guest.” 
Your eyes follow his outstretched arm towards the only other chair in the room. Conveniently, it’s placed at the other end of the table, though, you doubt Dottore was occupying the seat before you. 
Cautiously you approach. As you enter the room, your confused state worsens. In the atmosphere hangs a sweet scent that makes your mind dizzy and unable to focus. 
A cold breeze comes through one of the open windows. The goosebumps on your arms only occur once you notice it. Have your senses been dulled?
Dottore smiles calmly. 
“What did you do with me?” You try to ascertain the hazy feeling that suppresses your logical thoughts. 
You’ve been drugged.
Dottore circles the man in the chair. You notice the return of the strange mask covering the upper part of his face. The sharp beak shape cuts through the air as he moves his head. 
“For someone so passionate about other people’s physiological responses, you fail to acknowledge your own. You’re anticipating something that’s not going to happen. Anticipatory fear rarely benefits anyone.” 
He moves his head away from you. You’re able to release the breath you’ve been holding.  
In front of the man in the wheelchair is a medical tray. It’s empty, although various surgical equipment surrounds it. When you squint your eyes, you can recognise a scalpel among them. 
You wonder if you could take it.
Dottore muses to himself, continuing to weave endless sentences that do not yet make sense. “Did you ever get to see the human brain? I find that preserved ones lack the sense of joy the living ones bring me. Unfortunately, something must be dead to be preserved
 I find hardly any preserved being is worth more than a living one.”
Your eyes sneak up as you pass the tools and find Dottore inspecting you. A diplomatic smile is forced underneath his mask. You fail to obtain a weapon to defend yourself with.
As you approach the empty chair, Dottore walks up to the man in the wheelchair. By the time you sit down, he is playing with the scalpel you tried to take.
“It truly dulls the process. It lacks a sense of
 efficiency. Why study a corpse when you can pick apart a living one?” A different light is cast upon him when he tilts his face down. In the shadow, his smile becomes sinister.
“What are you doing?”
Dottore holds the scalpel with his middle finger and thumb, letting his pointer finger rest upon the handle. He lifts it, admiring the glint that falls upon it. “You shouldn’t ask. I find that it spoils the surprise.” 
Finally, your fight or flight instinct kicks in and you try to stand up. 
Your legs bobble and your hand slams against the table trying to keep your balance. You fall back into the chair. The sweet scent has made you lightheaded with a tingling feeling in your limbs. It’s accompanied by a fast, irregular heartbeat—as well as the pounding in your ears. 
A chuckle escapes Dottore’s lips. “Already standing up? A doctor would have recommended you to rest. If you’re tired, you may return to bed, although, you’d miss the grand performance.”
He mocks you with his sweetest voice. Your poor coordination and confusion must make you look like a newborn deer trying to stand up on its feet. Pitiful.
For the first time since entering the room, you take a closer look at the man in the wheelchair. The male appears average in height and weight. He has no noticeable features and seems only a few years older than you. He has been silent the entire time, only ever muttering to himself. otherwise looking around helplessly. His body is covered in sweat, drenching his pale blue shirt with wet stains. 
A horizontal line paints his forehead. 
“Segment 495, say hello to Y/n.”
Segment 495's smile is droopy as he parrots Dottore’s words.
Dottore places a hand on the shoulder of the man. “Did you know that the Akademiya has a grand collection of preservations in the name of science?”
He retreats his hands and puts them folded onto his back. After taking a sharp inhale, he circles the man; stopping when he stands behind him.
Dottore continues,  “The Akademiya collects preservations received from donors. In most occurrences, the specimens are from average people, dulling the broad collection with nothing unique to study. Truthfully, it is unfortunate how such collection can collect nothing but dust.”
Your thoughts are uncontrolled. When you look over the set of tools, the scalpel is gone. Your stress increases due to the operation setting and the sweet scent in the air. 
What will Dottore gain from this? 
What’s today's lesson?
He inhales sharply through his nose, “A human can undergo a conscious brain surgery. You know how it works, I assume?”
You part your lips. Weakly, you shake your head.
“Excellent.”
Dottore reveals the knife from the hand on his back and he takes hold of the man in the wheelchair. With one arm, he snakes to the front and grabs his jaw. The other pushes the sharp edge of the scalpel along the line already there, easily sliding through and breaking the previously dried blood; reaching through the skull without complication.
Your sight blurs, and you helplessly watch the knife circle his head.
He’s going to exercise a conscious brain surgery.
With his precise and steady hand, Dottore can make a full circle before long. Then, he lays the scalpel down and grabs the hair on the man’s scalp, pulling until it parts, leaving the brain visible for you to witness.
You breathe out.
“Zandik—” 
“You see, the brain itself feels no pain, Y/n, if that concerns you” 
Dottore picks up his knife from the medical tray, pointing it towards the front of the brain. 
“For example, Segment 495 won't miss this little piece here, which is part of the prefrontal lobe.” 
“Wait.” You try to intervene, but you realise you have no leverage. “You don’t have to do this.”
Dottore makes a small cut, cutting through the meninges. Then, he grabs another tool, holding down the frontal lobe as the scalpel cuts through. “Sometimes, a subject can live without a part of their frontal lobe. However, there is a risk of losing one's expression of speech as well as a few means of movement and cognition.”
You watch the man’s expression fall when Dottore removes the part he had cut out. The mouth of the man falls open, and although he stays alive, something has undoubtedly died. 
Dottore lays the removed part of the frontal lobe on the empty medical tray. Then, he goes back. 
“Please, stop this.” You try to plead with him. 
Using whatever strengths you have left, you try to stand up. Unfortunately, you hardly move out of your chair. Whatever drug lingers in the air, it is stronger than your adrenaline and will.
Again, Dottore’s precise hands cut into the brain. The man makes a strained sound and drool begins to fall out of his mouth. 
Another piece is added to the medical tray, slowly forming a collection as Dottore empties the man’s head.
Under the influence of sedatives, you struggle to maintain your composure and senses—witnessing the horrifying spectacle that unfolds helplessly. 
You black out before the man breathes his final breath.
Tumblr media
ă…€
ă…€
ă…€
Segment 495 started to lose organ functions a few days ago. It’d eventually lead him to die without ever completing the experiences Dottore put him under.
It is unfortunate but Dottore still grants the dying man one last reward.
On the medical tray, Segment 495’s brain lies fully exposed. Each cognitive function is separated for you to behold and admire. In death, the stranger became preserved in your memory. 
· · ────── Ω ────── · ·
A gift. 
From Dottore to you.
Tumblr media
©dottiro. Do not copy, repost, translate, feed to AI, or take heavy inspiration from my content. Thank you for reading ♡
294 notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
I stole this from Twitter but I’m Curious
Tumblr media
23K notes · View notes
dottiro · 10 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
113 notes · View notes