*Author's Note*
Literotica Edition 2021/11/22
This is an extremely explicit erotic novella written by FrigOfFury. You should not read it if you are not of legal age to read graphic depictions of sex.
Erotic content: Breast expansion, body swap, bimbofication, F/F, futanari, some lactation and pregnancy, public sex
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----Brain Transplant----
-Desperate Measures-
Vat People
In the States, Congress called it the Human Dignity Act, and similar laws around the world had their own names, but most people called them all "vat-person acts" or something similar. I supported them, of course. I didn't think brainless human bodies grown in nutrient vats were people, but I also had a sort of nebulous idea that it set a bad precedent to let corporations to manufacture and sell human bodies. It was a bit academic to me because they were far more expensive than I could afford, and the body I'd been born with wasn't severely disabled or terminally ill.
Even when I got cancer, I still didn't change my mind, because there were plenty of excellent treatments, and they were over 90% effective. But events reminded me that "over 90%" is not "100%", making me fall back to more radical measures, such as lab-grown organs to replace those that would have to be removed because they were riddled with inoperable tumors and I was in the unlucky 6% for whom none of the approved gene-based treatments could target the particular mutations of my cancer.
Almost 2/3rds of those who have to resort to modern replacement organs grown from their own stem cells survive and become cancer free. I was one of those for whom the cancer infiltrated their spinal column before the lab-grown organs were ready. The doctors gave me a few weeks to live, and perhaps days until the tingles I was feeling graduated into ever-growing paralysis.
Then I started rethinking my stance on vat-grown whole bodies, fast. I hadn't had to pay for so much of my first rounds of treatment, but lab-grown organs weren't yet standard-of-care, so I had exhausted much of my savings paying for it. One bright spot, if you could call it that, was that my confirmed terminal diagnosis meant I was allowed to take my life insurance to pay for end of life care.
Maybe, if vat-people had never been invented, I would have just accepted my fate, but they had, and I didn't. I withdrew all the money my policy would allow and added it to the remnants of my life savings, and I got on a one-way flight to Honduras.
Now, growing vat people wasn't any more legal in Honduras than anywhere else, but my hasty research showed that it had the most affordable and competitive black market in the Americas. I knew it was incredibly risky, but it was my last option. I was going to get my brain transplanted into a vat person or die trying.
Luck
After my string of bad luck, I finally had some good luck. Well, it looked like bad luck at first, but as I rapidly learned more about the vat person trade, I learned that just showing up for a last-second transplant usually didn't work.
Ideally, of course, one had a vat body grown from their own genome: that was what the legal corporations had done, and if what I was doing was ever re-legalized, it might allow me to resume my original identity without going to prison. But of course that took far longer than just vat-growing organs. First the body would have to be grown from a blastocyst all the way to puberty - an accelerated process that would nevertheless complete approximately ten months after I was dead - and then complex motions would need to be imprinted on the body's rudimentary nervous system so that I wouldn't have to relearn to walk, talk, hold a spoon, and everything else. When legitimate companies had done this, they imaged the behaviors of the original person to allow those same movements to be trained into the new lower nervous system as it continued growing toward adulthood. Obviously there was no time for that, either.
Accordingly, my only hope was for a body that had already been grown and trained, but then not used by its intended recipient for some reason. Further, it had to have a certain level of genetic similarity to the brain being transplanted. Before the whole technology was banned, people who needed bodies more different than their natal ones got around this limitation through a course of gene therapy to close the gap between their brain's somatic genetics and that of their new bodies, but that took months. Without it, I needed a body with broadly Northern European ancestry like mine. I was just as screwed as ever unless someone had ordered and paid for a body just like that and then not "taken delivery" so to speak.
The other portion of my seeming bad luck is that there had recently been a major crack-down on the vat-person trade and the near-reputable sourcing services were all shut down or laying low. I hired a young lad who claimed to know where there were still some bodies to be had, but I didn't half believe him. Once again, though, it was trust him or accept death, so trust him I did. At least my money would go to a poor Honduran kid than some hospice owner.
I though I was going to die in the dingy warehouse where he took me late in my second night in Honduras. My hand was already going numb, though, so I was mostly hoping that my death didn't involve being raped first. That's why when I saw a strung out man wearing a blood-spattered apron like a butcher, I was flooded with relief.
"Francisco," I addressed the boy in a low tone before going in any further.
"Is okay," he said, thinking I must be frightened by the gore, "He is very great doctor."
I didn't want to take the time to try to correct him, so I just handed him a bundle of cash. "Thank you. I'll give you more if I live."
He looked a little surprised, but stowed the cash deftly. "It is nothing. Everything will be good." He gave me a wink and turned to explain things to the 'doctor' in rapid Spanish. It sounded like a negotiation.
"You pay crypto?" Francisco asked me on the doctor's behalf.
I had thought about using cryptocurrency but when I tried to read up on how make sure I didn't get fleeced, I got uneasy at how much I didn't know about exchanges and ledgers and all that, so I'd reverted to what I knew. "Uh, I have some cash
"How much cash you have?"
"$8000, but I have another $24000 in the bank I can wire here," I promised, hoping that this would be acceptable.
My anxiety grew as I listened to a bit more back-and-forth, then Francisco asked, "Are you sure? That you can get the money. It would be better to die then not get the money."
"What do you mean?" I asked, slightly reassured that I hadn't been turned down, but very uneasy at this allusion to dire consequences.
"These bodies belonged to la mara... some bad people. They not here now because the policia got them, but they... escape?" He shrugged to show this wasn't the right word and continued on as best he could. "They come back, ask the doctor about the bodies. You don't pay the doctor, they think the doctor sell and keep the money. He have to give you to la mara or he die bad. Very bad."
He didn't have to tell me that it would be very bad for me to be given to "la mara" in lieu of payment, but I had only been lying a little bit about the wire transfer. I actually had a bank check made out to cash because I was worried I wouldn't be able to arrange a wire transfer in time, but since anyone could cash it, I didn't want to reveal its existence. "As long as I still have my things, I'll be able to get the money to the doctor," I assured Francisco, and through him, the man who was about to cut off my head.
Waking
There were intensely unpleasant moments in the transplant operation, but almost no actual pain. The worst part was the period of time I spent as a literal brain in a jar, being kept semi-conscious by a fluid cocktail being pumped through my cerebrovascular system in lieu of blood. I can't say much about it because I don't remember the experience directly, only my lingering impression afterward that it had been the most awful experience of my life, like a nightmare forgotten except for the fear.
It also wasn't great to find myself mostly unable to move for a long period. On the other hand, I did retain enough wits to know that the breathing I could feel but not control meant I was still alive: a very promising sign.
I got control of my eyes first, though there was a delay before I could open an eyelid enough to do more than enjoy the sensation of having any motor control whatsoever. This allowed me to view my headless (former) body, sitting on a metal table that had been uncomfortable for the twenty or so seconds I could remember laying on it. Beyond it the doctor stood smoking a cigarette and messaging someone on his phone.