Joya9tv.com-the Skin I Live In -2011- English B... «WORKING • FIX»
Vicente woke up as Vera. At first, Vicente/Vera fought, screamed, tried to tear off the skin. But the skin was part of him now—nerves bonded to synthetic tissue. Any attempt to remove it caused agony. Over years, the hormones, the isolation, and Robert’s psychological manipulation began to blur Vicente’s identity. He/she started to move like a woman, think like a woman. But deep inside, the memory of being Vicente—of a mother who loved him, of a life before—remained alive, buried under layers of artificial flesh.
She embraces him, weeping. He cannot speak. He can only hold her.
As Robert bleeds on the floor, Vera whispers: “My name is Vicente. I was a waiter in a restaurant. My mother is waiting for me.” Joya9tv.Com-The Skin I Live In -2011- English B...
Robert is developing a revolutionary synthetic skin—transparent, unbreakable, and immune to burns or infection. He calls it "Gal." Vera is his living, breathing prototype. He has surgically covered her entire body with this new skin. To him, she is a masterpiece. To her, he is a monster. Six years earlier, Robert was a respected surgeon with a beautiful wife, Gal, and a young daughter, Norma. At a wedding, Gal was horribly burned in a car accident. Robert saved her life but could not restore her face. When Gal saw her disfigured reflection, she threw herself out a window.
Norma witnessed her mother’s suicide and suffered severe trauma. She grew up fragile, terrified of the world. At a party, a young man named Vicente—dressed in a tiger costume—flirted with Norma. In her fragile state, she misinterpreted his advances and had a breakdown, screaming that he had assaulted her. Vicente ran away, but Robert saw his face. Vicente woke up as Vera
She drives to a small town. She walks into a fabric store. An old woman behind the counter looks up. It is Vicente’s mother. The mother stares at this beautiful young woman in strange clothes, not recognizing her. Vicente opens his mouth, but no words come. His voice is gone—Robert had altered his vocal cords.
Years later, Robert kidnapped Vicente. He told no one. He didn’t kill the boy. Instead, he drugged him and took him to the mansion. There, under anesthesia, Robert performed the first of many surgeries. He reshaped Vicente’s face, his body, his sex. He gave him female anatomy, a vulva, breasts—and finally, he covered him with the indestructible Gal skin. Any attempt to remove it caused agony
Robert grew to love Vera. Not as a specimen, but as a replacement for his lost wife. He began to believe that Vera was a new person, separate from Vicente. He even started to desire her.