In the operating room, leaning over his patient’s partially amputated leg and holding a file-like knife, Nedret slashes at some bloody muscle. He needs to cut it so that it fits under the skin flap that will cover the patient’s stump. The patient lows softly, like a cow. Then Nedret prepares to shorten the leg bone. He attaches two scissors-like hemostat clamps to the top edge of the skin flap and hands one of them to Ilijaz to hold steady. With his left hand, Nedret grips the protruding leg bone, the tibia, with a tool that looks like a giant pair of pliers. His right hand lifts azhaga, a p-shaped saw. As he saws, the patient moans and bucks, and Ilijaz and the others holding him rock back and forth.
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