Silk hits the floor. Scars come out of hiding. Jack Colder traces every cut Dr. Harlan Whitaker ever sold as an "upgrade," and for one long, quiet hour the room belongs to them, not the men who priced her face. It's real, not curated. That's the problem.
When Jack wakes, Vivian's side of the bed is hotel-smooth. On the nightstand: a syringe, a peeled-label vial of anesthetic, and a note-Next patient is you. On the balcony, Whitaker smokes and talks about "patterns" and "catalogs," already pitching Jack's bones as the next premium mask. Downstairs, the cameras have conveniently "failed," the concierge has a fresh bruise, and a council fixer keeps calling about a gallery called Crowne.
Inside a velvet ring box is a flash drive. Behind a family photo is a keycard with a single raised letter. Outside, the city starts lining up its players: a crooked-tie detective who still believes paper matters, a gallery tech who's finally had enough, Vivian with marker-dots on her skin and Consent is control on her lips, and a curator known only as A.M. who thinks he can schedule contrition at 2:00 a.m.
Scar Tissue is a sharp, intimate chapter in The Surgeon's Cut-a noir about who owns the frame, who signs the consent, and what happens when the exhibit decides it's done being property.
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