Standard warning and disclaimer: All characters are fictional. If
you see yourself, buy a new mirror. Contains subjects some people
may find offensive. If you are one of them, why are you reading
this? Protect your kids. If you are worried about them reading
this sort of material, please censor free speech and use a safe
surfing program such as net nanny. Or better yet, teach them
early and lovingly to understand and accept different lifestyles.
Before they learn from bad experiences.
All constructive comments are welcome. Please e-mail to me:
[email protected] or
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Finally, this is a piece of adult fiction. If you are underage,
or if you find it offensive, please go elsewhere. Quickly.
Escapee
By Samantha Michelle
Copyright 2001
I watched as the hills slid past the windows of the bus. For the
past two days I'd been running away from my family, myself, my
life. By now Mom should have discovered I'd cleaned out the
family ATM account, and her stash of emergency cash. Not that she
didn't have plenty of money left. But she would know I had enough
to run far and fast. And away from her.
I smiled grimly. A few days ago, I learned by accident the reason
why I was physically so much like a girl, so very different from
the other boys at school. I'd started to run away with just the
clothes on my back. But Rusty, my only real friend, and sort-of
girlfriend, convinced me to take a couple of days and prepare. I
glanced at her as she slept in the seat next to me. She wouldn't
let me go alone. And the further we traveled, the more I
understood why. Running away is lonely. I guess she knew. She was
living with her third or fourth foster family. She had
steadfastly refused to say why she was separated from her
parents, but whatever the reason, it was too painful for her to
face. Even with me.
I pulled Rusty close to me, and snuggled her. Soon I was asleep
from the stress, her warmth, and the soothing vibrations of the
bus as it traveled through the afternoon sun.
I woke to Rusty gently shaking my shoulder. "Alexi, it's time we
got ready." Awareness came flooding back, and as I held her I
trembled.
"Rusty, I'm scared." She hugged me back.
"We've been though this, Alexi, and it was your only choice,
other than going to the police and winding up in State custody.
I've been there, and it's awful. Besides, we've come too far to
turn back now." She straightened, stretched, and pulled her day-
pack from under the seat. "We need to touch up our faces before
we arrive."
We spent the next few minutes removing smeared makeup, changing
from racoons to a pair of fairly plain teenage girls. The bus
slowed, and pulled off the interstate onto a small rural highway.
As the large bus carefully negotiated the narrow winding road, we
watched the old New England farms and houses slowly passed by. It
almost seemed as if time here moved more slowly than in the city.
It was a good feeling.
"Rusty, what if my parents manage to find me? I can't go back,
knowing what they've done..."
"They won't find you if you don't want to be found. Especially
not here. We left them a trail of red herrings that would make
Sherlock Holmes proud."
She was right. If they were looking at all, they were following a
path towards California. I wondered briefly if they would shed a
tear when the troopers there found a set of torn clothes
somewhere in Arizona, with my ID in one of the pockets. Courtesy
of a friend of a friend of Rusty's.
The bus entered a small village, and soon five teenage girls were
watching as our baggage was unloaded. Rusty and I were traveling
light. Our big expedition packs contained everything we had.
Shortly after the Greyhound pulled away, a dusty old school bus
pulled up. The logo on the side read "Amondson's Christian
Retreat". Rusty had the brilliant idea, at least I hoped it was
brilliant, of staying at a religious retreat for young women for
a couple of weeks. Her argument was that it was cheap, very safe,
and the absolute last place anyone would think to look for either
of us. And this retreat featured two-person rooms with their own
bathrooms.
A large, smiling older woman climbed out of the bus. "I'm Amanda
Amondson. It looks like everyone made the trip fine, but I need
to make sure." She called out names. The first three were our
fellow travelers. "Ruthiana Sylvia Dorhingle". Rusty cringed.
"Please call me Rusty, Ma'am." The other girls giggled. Rusty got
her nickname from her voice, which squeaked whenever she tried to
speak loudly, and her name. Thus the sound of a rusty door hinge.
The woman nodded. "Alexis Johanna Moore". I meekly raised my
hand. "Good, now everyone load your baggage in the bus, as we
want to get to the retreat before supper."
Load-up was quick, even though one girl had enough baggage to
take up four seats. Soon we were bouncing down a dirt road, and I
was wincing as my breasts bounced in tune with the bus.
"Told you that a bra was a good idea." Rusty was smiling. She was
a full C, and wore plain, really supportive cotton bras.
I wound up holding my chest and feeling foolish. I hated bras.
They were just one more reminder of how female my body had
become. I loved breasts, on girls. I could not understand whey
she liked mine on me. I was supposed to be a boy. Looking down at
my travel skirt and pink tennis shoes, I started to cry.
"Don't you dare run your makeup." She hugged me.
I just shook my head and hugged back. Twenty minutes later, and a
lot higher up in the hills, we came into view of the retreat. It
looked impressive. A large wood and stone chapel, mostly
surrounded by long, narrow buildings resembling bunkhouses. There
was smoke coming from a chimney of a large building facing the
chapel.
"Leave everything on the bus, and head inside when we stop. You
can put your bags away after dinner." The woman could easily be
heard, despite the rattley old bus.
Once inside, we saw at least fifty more girls our age, and
several adult women, already seated. And the aroma made my
stomach grumble. It had been a long time since our last real
meal. We were seated, and out of courtesy and to maintain our
image, joined in the blessing of the food. Some really did come
from the heart.
"Be thankful for this bounty, for your good health, and for the
friends that are with you today."
Despite all that had been done to me by my parents, I was -- I
guess -- healthy, and I had my best and only friend sitting next
to me, holding my hand. We ate silently, enjoying the food, and
realizing how tired we really were. I felt old and worn deep
inside.
After dinner we all pitched in to clean up, and Rusty wound up on
dishes while I swept and mopped floors. We dragged ourselves out
to the bus, collected our packs, and followed instructions on
getting settled in. Their recommendation that we go to bed early
was unneeded. Their warning about not having the heat turned on
till morning was. We collected all the blankets on one bunk, and
after little more than snuggling against each other, we were
sound asleep.
The cheerful pounding on our door "wake up, it's six in the
morning!" barely got our attention. We were still two time zones
west of here. But we managed to shower, and make it to the main
hall in time for a breakfast of pancakes and sausage. Rusty
handed me my pills, and I stiffened.
"Alexi, you know you've got to continue, at least at a reduced
dose, till we figure out if they can change you back."
I nodded, and took the hated pills. Mom and Dad had always told
me they were special vitamins, to help me grow up healthy. They
were special, all right. And I did grow up healthy. If looking
like a girl was healthy.
After breakfast clean up, we got a briefing on the rules, and as
a group went berry picking. Burp! I was unaware of how different
wild raspberries were from those oversize plastic things that you
get in a grocery store. Even if the real ones came with more than
the occasional creepy-crawly. By noon we all had full buckets,
and full stomachs. Rusty and I still managed to eat a hot dog
apiece. We spent the afternoon doing crafty stuff, like braiding
thongs and beading belts. And paying the price for eating too
many raspberries. After dinner were the evening services, which
were not the fire-and- brimstone preaching we expected. There was
a lot of love thy neighbor and forgiveness. I wondered if I would
ever forgive my parents.
By the weekend we were too tired and sore to worry about minor
things, like being chased by my parents or the police. Rusty was
right, we needed the escape from the real world. Saturday morning
we were told that the group was to get a special treat. Sophia
Manyfeathers, a noted local Native American artist, would be
present most of the day to teach us how to make traditional bark,
grass, and reed baskets. A few girls groaned, but Rusty and I
smiled at each other.
We had tried American Indian basket-weaving as a topic for
freshman honors history, and won the school prize for best
original presentation. By late afternoon we were her star pupils,
most of the others having dropped out from frustration and sore
fingers. I was startled to see the old woman, Sophia, staring
intently at me.
"You are more than you seem, young one." I missed a weave and
tried to get behind Rusty, who was carefully watching her. "Do
not be afraid, your secret is safe with me." We looked around; we
were the only ones present.
"But how..?" I asked and she smiled.
"I have been called many things, including a wise woman. You have
an aura of fear about you. Few young men choose the path you are
taking, for it is one of great peril, and rewards."
"I, I never chose this," I waved at my body, "it was forced on
me, and..."
"And yet you carry yourself with dignity. We have many choices in
our lives. We may take one of many paths, many times. Thus,
within the weave of the world, we determine our destinies." She
held up a small grass basket "This is my pattern. Yours are
different." She looked at our baskets, and her face grew pensive.
"Your lives are interwoven; visualize the patterns of your
baskets together."
We tried. And I saw what she meant. Overlaid, they made a
coherent, flowing pattern. When I overlaid mine and Sophia's,
there was visual turmoil or a cacophony.
She reached in one of her baskets, and handed us a card. "If your
paths cross this area in the future, and I'm alive to greet you,
I will welcome you to my home. Should your stories be joyful,
they should be woven into a basket for all to marvel."
Another girl came over, and we silently went back to weaving. I
felt strange, wondering how the old woman could read who I was,
and where I was going. Faith comes in many forms, I guessed. And
it must be that those who watch over us do so not to mock, but to
marvel.
After dinner we went back to our room, showered silently, and
curled up together to ponder Sophia's words, and our future. We
really attended Sunday services, in body and spirit. Not that we
believed as they did, but that we believed in something.
We spent our last week at the retreat pointedly not discussing
what we would do next. We played with the other girls, and with
Rusty's help I slowly and steadily became more feminine in my
movements. That Friday, it was with real tears we parted from the
others, and were driven back the village to catch our "return"
bus. When the shuttle from the retreat departed, we hugged our
new-found friends, and carrying our packs, quietly hiked away.
By evening we were exhausted, but had found a wooded area that
looked like a good place to camp for the night. On our way out of
town, we had purchased supplies, so dinner was simple and
nutritious. Our small, camouflaged tent blended in well, and we
closed up early. The woods were quiet except for an owl and the
sounds of the wind. Sleep came easily. We traveled another day in
the sun, and camped in the rocks along an abandoned powerline
trail.
The next morning was gray and cool, and I pulled out my radio to
listen for a weather report. It was not encouraging. From the map
that Rusty carried, we were a very long day's journey from the
nearest State campground. The weather was supposed to become
awful by tomorrow with powerful thunderstorms and high winds
expected. Here in the mountains it would be really nasty, and
possibly very dangerous. We ate lightly, and quickly packed our
gear and headed north towards the campground. There we could seek
shelter in one of the pavilions if things got really bad.
We never made it to the campground. By early afternoon we were
just over halfway to our destination when the skies turned a
dark, greenish-gray. Rusty pulled my radio out of my pack for me,
and I searched for a weather report as we hiked. It was bad.
There was a severe storm warning for our area, beginning in less
than half an hour. We quit worrying about reaching the
campground, and started looking for shelter. But the road we were
following traversed a high ridge, and there was no shelter to be
found. The map showed a crossroads about three miles ahead, and
it looked like there might be something there. So we hurried.
When the wind started blowing us around, despite our heavy packs,
it looked like we were in for trouble.
Then the rain started. Heavy, cold, wind-blown rain. We pulled
out our rain gear, and tried to continue. Then it started to
hail. In desperation we wedged ourselves against an embankment,
and used our packs as shields. When lightning started to strike
nearby, we pulled against each other, awaiting the worst.
Suddenly our packs were yanked off us, and a huge man in a yellow
rain jacket shouted at us to follow him. He literally tossed our
packs, and then each of us, into the sleeper cab of his truck,
and slammed the door, sealing us in. We felt another door slam,
and the truck jumped and roared as it began accelerating. Rusty
was scared so badly she was shaking and sobbing. So we held each
other as the truck made it's way through the storm. The only
window in the sleeper was in the door, and we could feel the
truck sway as it was battered by the wind.
"Alexi, are we being kidnapped, or..." Her eyes were wide with
fright.
"I don't think so. But whoever grabbed us is not stopping. And we
can't get out at this speed."
She nodded.
"So lets relax and dry out. And hope the person is kind and
friendly, because we don't have a chance against him."
That made her shiver and grab me. The sleeper was warm and dry,
so we shed our rain gear, and huddled together as we prepared to
face the unknown. We woke as the truck slowed, and bounced as it
turned onto a muddy side road. A mile or so further, it stopped,
and as we tried to open the door, it was pushed shut and we heard
a metallic click. A quick check told us we were prisoners. The
door was locked from the outside.
We watched in terror out the tiny window as the truck backed its
load up to a building, and soon felt the trailer being
disconnected. Without comment or explanation, the truck, with us
as the remaining cargo, pulled out and headed back to the
highway. Many miles later the truck again turned off, and headed
up and back into the mountains. The road was rough, and got worse
as we went deeper into the woods. Soon we wound our way down a
side-road, and through what sounded like running water to a
clearing, where the truck stopped, and the engine was turned off.
We heard someone get out, and then there was a metallic sound at
the door. When it opened, we were faced by the huge man, and
asked, though it sounded like an order, "grab your stuff and run
for the cabin door."
It looked more like a log stockade. But we were too scared to
argue, so carrying our packs and rain-gear, we ran through the
rain and onto the covered porch. He followed, and as he opened
the door he hollered, "Nancy, I brought you some company."
We were herded inside. The place was well furnished, but there
were no lights on. "Put your stuff over by the window, and make
yourselves comfortable." We moved our packs as he lit a pair of
kerosene lamps. "Don't have electricity unless we turn on the
generator. Name's Jonathan." He peeled off his rain gear.
We clung to each other. He looked like a small mountain, rough
and furry. Stories of teenage hitchhikers being kidnapped and
raped or murdered were flashing through my mind.
"Daddy, why are you scaring our guests?" A soft, quiet girl's
voice came from behind us. We spun around, and found ourselves
facing a young woman, about our age, sitting in a wheelchair.
She stared at us. "Daddy, no, not again." There was fear in her
eyes.
"They were caught in the storm, and it has been so long since
you've had anyone your age to..."
"Nooo...!" She wailed, spun her chair around, and disappeared
into another room, crying.
He dashed in after her. "Nancy, please, I'm only trying to help
you."
"Ouch" We heard something hitting the floor. He dashed back out,
followed by a large book. I wanted to laugh, but the look on his
face was more sad than hurt.
He sagged into a chair, covered his face, and started to cry.
Rusty and I stared at each other. Nothing was making sense. Why
would someone kidnap us so his daughter, if that was what she
was, would have someone around? Was she being held prisoner?
And then it came to me. She was a prisoner in her wheelchair.
Just like I was a prisoner in my body. And her father cared so
much he was willing to do anything to help her.
"Rusty, go talk to her. She needs someone right now." "But what
about him? Aren't you afraid he'll..."
I shook my head. "No."
Rusty went. I carefully approached the crying man. "You don't
mean to hurt us, do you?"
He looked at me, and shook his head. "I saw you two needing help,
and I thought of my daughter, and couldn't leave you to the
storm, and I couldn't let you go until I found out if Nancy might
be a able to have some company her age for a little while, and
now she's more unhappy and I'm sorry, and..." He put his head
back in his hands.
I don't know why, but I climbed on his lap and hugged him. He
almost pushed me off, then broke down completely. He was hugging
me to him and bawling on my shoulder when the girl's voice could
be heard above his sobs.
"Daddy, please don't cry. I love you."
We both looked across the room. Rusty was pushing the wheelchair-
bound young woman over to us. I pried myself away, and Rusty
lifted the girl's slight body out of the chair, and onto his lap.
As they held each other, Rusty went and got a blanket and covered
her. We watched as they let a lot of pent-up emotions free.
Rusty held me close. "I think you were right. He wouldn't hurt
anyone. Except himself."
There was a brilliant flash of light and a tremendous boom, and
Rusty almost jumped out of her clothes. The man, Jonathan, put
his daughter back in her wheelchair, and covered her with the
blanket. Then he went to the door and looked outside, he forced
the door back closed against the wind and driving rain.
He faced Rusty and me. "I will take you wherever you want
tomorrow. It's not safe to travel in this storm. If it will make
you feel better, I will sleep outside in my truck." He shook his
head, and held his daughter's hand. "I am sorry for what I have
done. Please, don't hold it against me. It's just that Nancy is
so alone, and I've tried to be a good father and companion to her
since the accident, but it's so... hard..." He started to cry
again.
I pulled Rusty against me. "Please, it's okay. We don't have
anywhere we need to be, and this is a lot better than our little
tent." I paused, and continued in a small voice "But is there a
bathroom I can use?"
They both laughed, and Nancy told me to follow her. She could
really move fast in her chair.
Shortly I felt much better, and was replaced immediately by
Rusty, who was jumping up and down. When everyone was back in the
main room, Nancy asked if we were hungry.
"Don't worry about us, you don't need to..."
"I may be crippled, but I'm not helpless." She snapped at me,
then looked frightened.
"I'm sorry, it's just..."
"No, don't be sorry. I'm the one who should apologize."
I looked at my body "If anyone should understand that, it should
be me." I slowly sank to the floor, and Rusty came over to hold
me. The fears came back, and I started to shake.
Jonathan was watching us quietly, and Nancy wheeled herself over
to me. "Hey, I'm not worth crying over."
That made me feel worse. "I mean. You're pretty, and everything
works, and..." I jumped up, pulling away from Rusty, and yanking
the door open ran out into the storm.
I didn't want to be pretty, and what I wanted to work no longer
worked right. While she had a father that loved her, and except
for Rusty, no one cared if I lived or died. I could hear rushing
water. The road headed down into a valley. Maybe, I thought, this
was the time to quit hurting. I started running down the muddy
road, oblivious to Rusty's screaming for me to stop.
I could see a brown, foaming torrent cutting a path across the
road. I picked up speed. No more fighting. I was an abomination
that should not be. Something hit me from behind, and I skidded
face-down through the goo. As I tried to spit out mud and leaves,
I was tossed over Jonathan's shoulder, and hauled back to the
cabin. Instead of taking me inside, he shoved me under the runoff
from the roof, and stripped my mud-soaked clothes off, rinsing me
as he went. I was cold and my mind was screaming and I wasn't
able to stop him from removing my panties. He froze, and I
figured I was about to die. Instead he silently finished rinsing
me, and tossed me in the door, telling Rusty to keep me there
until he was cleaned off.
When I looked up, Rusty was staring at me in shock, and Nancy was
staring wide-eyed at my crotch. I collapsed to the floor, and was
surprised when Nancy rolled over to me and dropped her blanket
over my bare body. I was rolled up in the blanket, crying, and
being held by Rusty when Jonathan came back in. He said something
to Nancy, who whispered something to Rusty. I watched as they
both headed through a doorway.
Jonathan pulled up a chair, and looked carefully at me. "You just
tried to kill yourself. Why?"
"I'm a freak. My parents did this to me and now I'm not a boy,
and I don't want to be a girl."
He looked at me strangely, and called his daughter and Rusty back
into the room.
I stared at them, and hung my head. "Okay. I'll tell you the
whole ugly story. Then you give me a good reason why I shouldn't
kill myself."
Nancy and Rusty looked scared. Nancy's father looked sadly at me,
and nodded.
"When I was young, Mom and Dad were always having terrible
fights, and then one day Dad suddenly stopped fighting and began
doing everything she asked. I asked him what had happened, and he
said to do as Mom said, and everything would be fine. But he
looked awful. Soon Mom had me start taking some pills she said
would keep me from growing up like my dad. And she started to
correct my behavior whenever I didn't act like what she claimed
was proper. Then she made me quit sports and grow my hair. Dad
avoided me, and Mom kept saying he was a wimp and a poor excuse
for a man. But she had me doing laundry and dishes and sewing and
things I thought were usually done by girls.
"About a year later I started to feel funny, and my nipples
started to get tender and grow. So mom made me wear soft, frilly
girls' tank tops under my shirts, and sent a letter to the school
excusing me from gym. When I started to grow breasts, and my
bottom and hips got wider, she said I had a hormone problem, and
that it would fix itself in a few years. Then she started making
me wear girl's shirts and jeans, and threw away my jockey shorts
and bought me panties. All the kids at school made fun of me, but
she told me to quit complaining and laughed as she told me to act
like a man.
"That was awful, because I looked and sounded like a girl and as
I grew bigger on top she made me wear a bra. Then six months ago
she started to do things to my face, like plucking my eyebrows
and setting my hair, which made me look even more like a girl.
And getting my ears pierced and making me wear earrings. The kids
at school all said I was gay. I just wanted to die, but Mom kept
saying she would soon make sure everything was fixed so I would
not have any more problems.
About three weeks ago I was feeling ill late at night, and went
to ask Mom for something for my stomach, when I heard her and Dad
arguing in their bedroom. So I listened at their door. Dad was
begging Mom to stop what she was doing to me. She told him it was
his choice, for cheating with his secretary, getting her
pregnant, and stealing money to support her. She called him a
worm, and said that soon enough the changes to me would be
permanent, and that she would then be sure that his little girly-
boy son would never be able to treat a woman the way he had."
I spit the last part out bitterly.
"That was when I knew that the changes were her doing, and that
ever since Dad quit fighting her, she had been doing her best to
make a freak out of me. I went back to my room, and decided to
run away the next day. But when I called Rusty, my only friend,
she said to stick around for a couple of days, and collect money
and supplies, and that she would come with me to make sure I
would be okay. I was feeling so alone and depressed I agreed." I
looked hard at Nancy and her father. "So with Rusty's help I
bought us traveling clothes and stuff, and disappeared. We spent
the last two weeks at a girls' religious retreat. We were heading
for the coast to try and find a place where we could stay until I
can find out if I can ever go back to be a boy again, when we got
caught in the storm.
"I'm a freak. I think like a boy, and I like girls. But I look
and act and even sound like a girl. And the parts that make me a
boy don't work right, which means I can't ever be a man and you
ask why I want to die?" I pulled Rusty tighter against me. "I
have no reason to live, no future, no family. Except for Rusty,
no one cares if I live or die. And despite her pleading, I won't
let her be saddled with someone as pitiful as me."
Rusty started to cry again. I held her tightly. And wished I had
reached the torrent, to be washed away from my pain.
Rusty and I felt ourselves lifted and hugged by Jonathan. When he
set us down, he asked if I would agree to not do anything to hurt
myself while at his house.
"Nancy and I have seen enough pain in our lives. You are welcome
to stay here until the road is repaired, but please, don't do
anything to cause her more pain."
I looked at Nancy, and she hung her head and nodded. Now I was
stymied. I didn't want to keep living, and I didn't want to hurt
anyone.
"Please, Alexi, it's so lonely up here, and having you two around
for a few days, despite Daddy's methods," she glared at her
father, "really would mean a lot to me." Rusty was giving me a
pleading look.
I nodded. "Okay, you win."
I had to unwrap Rusty, and was surprised to see Nancy had tears
in her eyes.
"So what's for dinner?" Rusty swatted me, and Nancy asked her to
help in the kitchen.. Jonathan pulled me aside. "Want to learn
how to stoke a fire?" Soon I was checked out on splitting
kindling and filling a big, strange looking stone stove that made
up a part of one wall. "One load of wood and it will keep the
cabin warm for hours in the coldest weather."
Once it was fired up, he told me it would be an hour before we
would begin to feel the heat. Just before we were supposed to
have dinner, he fired up the generator, and we had lights.
"We run the generator for at least four hours every day. That
keeps the batteries charged and the freezers cold. And lets Nancy
use the big television."
Dinner was some sort of spicy chicken casserole, and several
types of vegetables. We drank tea, and ate quietly. I helped
Jonathan with the dishes. After dinner Jonathan put on his rain
gear, and told us he had to check the homestead and road for
damage from the storm. So Nancy, Rusty and I sat around, and
Nancy told us her story.
"Two years ago Dad and Mom owned their own trucking company, and
we lived in a big house in Montpelier. This was our vacation
place. I rode shotgun with Mom or Dad when they made long-hauls
during the summer." She paused, and sat quietly for a moment. "It
was that July they got a request for an emergency run to the
Midwest with a load of hardwood for a custom furniture maker. Mom
took the run, and I tagged along. We were just outside of
Cincinnati when a gust of wind caught the trailer beside us, and
the driver lost control. Mom had a choice of running over several
cars full of people, or riding out the crash. There was no choice
in her mind. She knew our load was heavy, and sacrificed our
truck to deflect the out-of-control rig away from the cars."
There were tears in her eyes. "When everything stopped moving,
Mom was dead, and I was pinned under the remains of our load. By
the time I was finally freed, I couldn't feel my feet. The
doctors did what they could, but said the impact damaged my
spine." She sat as tall as she could in her wheelchair. "Dad was
devastated by Mom's death and my injuries. So he let the company
die, and when they foreclosed on our remaining rigs and house, we
moved up here, where he's been helping me learn to deal with
being crippled, and starting to rebuild our lives. He owns the
rig he drives, and maybe, someday, we will be able to afford for
me to go off to college. As it stands now, I go to high school by
correspondence, and they send a special bus out once a week
during school to bring me to the town so I can meet with my
teachers. So in a way I can understand how you can feel trapped
in your body."
She tapped one of her shriveled legs, "and yet I would trade you
in a moment to be able to walk again." Nancy started to cry, and
Rusty held her. I didn't know what to do. Something Sophia
Manyfeathers had said. I was traveling a path of many perils and
rewards. Was the storm a peril and Nancy a reward? I had much
thinking to do.
We were all sitting quietly when Jonathan returned, looking
weary.
"I'm afraid I may have been hasty in saying I would drive you two
to town tomorrow." We stared at him. "The storm washed out the
beaver ponds upstream, and the creek's cut a gorge across the
road big enough to park a bus in. When it gets light in the
morning I'll check the damage and radio the county, but it could
be a couple of weeks before they can make repairs."
Rusty and I stared at each other. That would put us at the start
of school, and make travel difficult and dangerous.
"Um, is there a way we could like, maybe, find a way to hike
out?" He looked at Rusty. "Even I wouldn't try hiking out till
the weather's been clear for days. Upstream it's rocky and
overgrown, and down further is a killer swamp and bog. I'd
venture at least a week. But you are welcome to stay. We've got
plenty of food and fuel, and you two can stay in the living room,
or in Nancy's room if she doesn't mind the company." Nancy was
smiling at us. "Either way, it's getting late and time to shut
off the generator."
"Please, stay with me." Nancy sounded wishful.
"But I'm a boy..." I looked at myself, and stared to curl up
inside.
"And I'm lonely. Besides, your girlfriend will keep you out of
trouble." She realized what she said was wrong when I started to
sob. Jonathan quietly got up and left.
Rusty looked angrily at her. "He can't get into trouble, even if
he wants to. Don't you understand? It's like someone saying to
you don't get up and run off." I clung to Rusty and Nancy started
to cry.
"Enough!" Both girls looked at me. "Nancy didn't know, and she
didn't deserve to be hurt." Rusty made apologetic motions, and
Nancy nodded. "And I'm tired and cranky and can we all just get
some sleep?"
We all wound up in Nancy's bed with me in the middle. When I
snuggled against Nancy, she started to cry. I pulled back, and
she grabbed me.
"Please, it's been so long since anyone held me at night..." We
re-arranged. Rusty and I made her into a snuggle sandwich. Nancy
cried herself asleep -- not from pain, but from happiness.
The next morning Nancy woke us so she could get out of bed to use
the bathroom. When she returned, saying, "the weather is worse
than yesterday," we decided sleep was more important than
breakfast. It was nearly noon when we all managed to make it into
the kitchen, where we found Jonathan reading a book. I was
dressed in a skirt and tank top, just like Rusty.
Jonathan looked at the smile on Nancy's face and gave her a hug
and kiss. "That's the best smile I've seen in a long time." Nancy
blushed, and nodded. "So does anyone want breakfast?" We ate like
teenage piranhas. As we were munching, Jonathan relayed that he
had radioed the county, and ours was one of many washed-out
roads. "They could not give me an estimate until it stops
raining, but they have several damaged bridges and said we are
pretty far down the priority list. Once the weather clears they
will helicopter in supplies if we run low, but other than that
it's just a matter of waiting."
When he started again to apologize, Rusty stopped him. "We could
be dead of exposure out on that ridge, and you didn't mean anyone
any harm. So quit apologizing, okay? Besides, no one is going to
be looking for us here." I nodded, and Nancy giggled. "So what
chores can we do to help earn our keep?"
It turned out that the rain had washed out a large part of their
garden, leaving lots of vegetables to be frozen, canned, or
wasted. For the next two days Rusty and I alternated with each
other helping Nancy with preparation, and helping Jonathan
picking, pulling and digging. In the evenings we listened to the
radio and spent a lot of quiet time snuggling and thinking. Nancy
was a hug-a-holic. And Rusty was not shy about snuggling to
another girl, or upset for me to snuggle Nancy alone. I began to
wonder how Nancy was going to cope when Rusty and I left. Every
day she seemed more alive and mobile.
On the fourth day we cleaned up the yard and helped Jonathan
collect downed trees for firewood. It was late in the afternoon,
and we were enjoying some fresh-baked bread when we heard a
helicopter. When we looked out and saw it belonged to the state
police, Rusty and I were terrified, but Jonathan simply told us
to stay in Nancy's bedroom unless he called for us. We heard the
'copter touch down in front of the cabin, and the engine shut
down.
I clung to Rusty, afraid they had come to take us away. We almost
lost it when Nancy rolled in and told us to come out and meet
their visitors. We held each other, and in the living room came
face to face with a pair of uniformed troopers.
"Alexi, Rusty, meet my brother Jeremy, and his partner Steve." We
carefully shook hands with the two smiling men in uniform. "They
brought us a bunch of fresh groceries courtesy of the State." He
pointed to three large boxes by the kitchen.
Jonathan looked at me. "Alexi, I want to tell Jeremy and Steve
about you two. They can be trusted, and may have some ideas on
what can be done to help you. If nothing else, they might be
willing to give you a lift out of here."
I started to shake, and Rusty grabbed me as I curled up into a
ball on the floor. Nancy rolled over to us, and slid out of her
chair to join in the hug. When I looked at her, she nodded. I
managed to get out, "okay, but only if they promise to forget us
if we ask."
The two looked concerned, but nodded.
I unwound, and with Rusty's help put Nancy on the couch. They
both held me while Jonathan recited almost verbatim my story,
including my dash for the creek. Steve cringed when he heard what
my parents had done to me.
"And you're really a boy, despite the..." Steve made hourglass
motions. I nodded. Jeremy didn't seem to have any ideas, but was
able to tell us all about the laws regarding runaways and
unaccompanied children for the state. When Steve suddenly
exclaimed "got it!" we stared at him.
"Jeremy, remember that crazy call we got just after we got out of
the academy? The one about a busload of kids having been
kidnapped and who were being hauled in chains to somewhere in the
mountains?" It was like a flash went off. "If anyone would know
how to help these two..." We all looked at them like they were
nuts. Jeremy took the lead.
"It turned out that there is, and has been for many years, a
strange high school dedicated to helping boys become girls,
located in the western part of the state. The "kidnapped" kids
were new students, some of whom were restrained for various
reasons, all legal and everything." He looked thoughtful. "The
idea has always given me the creeps, but..."
He looked at Rusty and me. "I can run some checks tomorrow,
without raising any flags, to see if either of you are listed as
missing or wanted. But it's time we got going. We'll give
Jonathan a call on his cell phone tomorrow afternoon if we learn
anything."
We all received hugs from Jeremy, and soon watched as Steve
piloted the chopper up and away from the clearing.
There was fresh milk, and fruit, and a bunch of canned stuff that
was immediately consigned to their pantry. We didn't talk much. I
was scared and afraid, and Rusty seemed almost defiant. Nancy
looked sad, and I realized she was anticipating our departure.
Rusty and I told Nancy we needed some space to talk, and curled
up in a corner of the living room together.
"Alexi, if what the troopers said is true, there may be someone
who can help you find out if you can return to being Alex."
"Why would they? If it's a school for boys who want to be girls,
they won't want to help me. And what if the troopers were lying,
and they are calling our parents right now to arrange for our
return?"
"Then we claim that you were abused, and force them to get you a
medical evaluation. I'll get stuck in a foster home again, but
I'm used to that." She sounded worse than her words.
"Maybe I should just go back to the creek and..."
"And break your promise, and hurt Nancy?" I looked at her and
sighed deeply. She was right. I didn't want to cause anyone else
harm. I held her close and we fell asleep on the floor.
I woke up in Nancy's bed, sandwiched between Nancy and Rusty. I
figured Jonathan must have picked us both up when we were asleep
and put us in bed. It was so strange to be treated by an adult as
something more than an irritant or burden -- regardless of how I
looked. It was a quiet morning. Nancy was depressed, and for some
reason Rusty seemed angry at the world. Jonathan seemed pensive,
and spent a lot of time talking quietly with Nancy.
In mid-afternoon Jonathan received a call on his cellular
telephone, and headed outside to talk. I held tightly to Rusty,
and was not surprised when Nancy joined us.
"Dad thinks that Uncle Jeremy is your best bet to find something
before school starts. Trust him, please?"
We finally nodded while she seemed really upset. "Nancy, you're
afraid of what will happen when we leave. Aren't you?" Trust
Rusty to be to the point. Nancy covered her face, and nodded.
"You don't want to be alone any more." Nancy grabbed Rusty and
pulled her against her chair.
"I've been so lonely, and you and Alexi have been so wonderful
and don't care if I'm crippled, and..." She broke down crying. I
joined in the hug, and wondered if my problems were really as bad
as they seemed. That was how Jonathan found us when he came
inside. We separated and looked at him through tear-sticky eyes.
"Hey, the news isn't all bad." He went and got enough tissues and
damp washcloths to go around. "Jeremy contacted that strange
school, a place called the Janbury Academy, and they are
apparently very willing to see what can be done to help Alexi.
The bad news is that Rusty is listed as a runaway on the
computer, even though Alexi isn't. So the moment she shows her
face in public and someone recognizes or identifies her, she will
be apprehended and shipped back.
I watched as Rusty seemed to deflate and sobbed on my shoulder.
"Does she have to go back?"
"Jeremy told me that once she is officially "found", their hands
are usually tied by federal law." Rusty was shaking and I was
suddenly afraid she would do something to herself rather than go
back. "Before she, or anyone, gives up hope, Steve, in a very
unofficial capacity, told me he had an idea."
We all looked up at Jonathan. "He wouldn't give me any details
over the phone, but said they would be out in the next few days
to discuss his idea, and bring us more groceries. The bad news is
that the road won't be fixed for at least two more weeks. The
state has offered to fly us out and put us up in a shelter, but I
told them we were fine here. So whatever happens, no one is going
anywhere for a while, except by helicopter."
Nancy broke out in smiles. Rusty and I just stared at each other.
Here we were safe, but not making any progress. And school would
start long before we could settle somewhere. I felt like my life
was stuck in call waiting, and someone had disconnected the
phone. Jonathan was not going to let any of us mope, and we wound
up outside helping him repair the runoff damage to the long
driveway as Nancy watched and gave us encouragement.
The next Wednesday came, and it was early afternoon when we again
heard the sound of a helicopter coming in for a landing. Rusty
and I hid in Nancy's room, and were terrified when Jonathan,
accompanied by Steve and Jeremy, escorted two strangers in to
meet us. Jeremy made the introductions.
"Rusty, Alexi, Nancy, Meet Dr. Willis, from the Janbury Academy,
and Sharon Taylor, from the State Division of Child Protection."
Rusty screamed and tried to dash out of the room, but Steve
easily caught her and carried her back inside.
"You promised and..."
"Rusty, I'm not here to take you away." Rusty and I looked at the
woman. "Officially I am here to check on this anonymously," she
coughed and looked at Steve, "he voiced concern about Nancy's
health, which provided a convenient cover story for my visit.
Steve asked me to come and talk to both of you to see if there is
anything the State can do to help either of you both. Officially
or unofficially." Steve put Rusty down and she clung to me.
The man identified as Dr. Willis spoke up. "I am here because
Jeremy called Janbury about your situation, and aside from being
the head psychologist at Janbury Academy, I have a personal
interest in children with gender identity issues. Especially in
cases where children have been forced into a conflicting gender
role." He looked at me. "Alexi, or Alex, whichever you prefer, I
would like to take you back to Janbury with me as my guest for
several weeks. There I can arrange for you to receive a complete
physical and psychological examination, and you can meet and talk
with other boys who are in the process of learning to be young
women."
"They said everyone there wants to be a girl. I don't. I want to
be a boy again."
"We have several students who have medical conditions that are
causing them to develop as girls against their wishes, or who
lost their male organs to accident or disease and are exploring
the idea of becoming girls rather than just being neutral." We
all stared at him.
"When the examinations and evaluation are finished, I will return
you to Jonathan, and if you wish, any official record of your
visit will conveniently disappear."
"But what about Rusty..."
The woman took over. "She would not fit in at Janbury even as a
visitor. They are adamant about no genetic girls allowed and her
documentation would be difficult to handle there. However, my
office has an unofficial hands-off policy concerning self-
supporting runaways that are neither criminals nor dangers to
themselves or others. With Steve's help I looked up your record,
which, aside from running away repeatedly, is clean." She looked
hard at Rusty. "My first inclination was to simply leave you
alone, per my agreement with Steve. But Jeremy made a suggestion,
so I made an off-record call to my counterparts back in your
state."
Rusty managed a "Nooo..." and slid to the floor sobbing. "You
promised and..."
"And hear me out. You have no advocates back in the Midwest,
especially in their overloaded child protection system. When I
suggested that we could enrol you in a program here, they were
more than willing to fax us a release turning you over to this
state's responsibility. And, I should add, this state's financial
responsibility as well. So as of this morning, you are officially
under the jurisdiction of my office." Rusty looked startled and
scared.
"Are you going to take me away?"
"That depends on Jonathan. Since, according to the police, you
have no criminal record, there is no reason to consider you a
danger to yourself or others. Like most states, we have few
placements for older children. But we do have the discretion of
placing a needy child over the age of fourteen with a friend's
family if that family is willing to accept the child." We could
hear Nancy gasp. The woman faced Jonathan. "We provide a stipend
of a little over five hundred dollars a month to cover a child's
food and necessities, and we pay for medical care for the child.
This would allow Rusty to remain with Nancy, if the three of you
agree."
Nancy rolled over my foot on her way to Rusty. "Please, stay with
me..." Her voice was almost desperate. Rusty looked at me, and I
nodded. It was a wet threesome that agreed that Rusty was to
stay. I was surprised when Dr. Willis asked me if it bothered me
that Rusty had found a place for herself.
"She is my best friend. She deserves to have a family. I just
wish I had one that cared for me." He gave me a hug.
"Ready to come with me? I still promise to return you to Jonathan
when we're finished." Rusty was listening, and came over to me.
"Alexi, I..." I nodded.
"Let's go before I change my mind."
I was wedged tightly between Mrs. Taylor and Dr. Willis in the
back of the helicopter as we flew over the mountains. When we
landed at the state police barracks in Montpelier, I was afraid
I'd been tricked, but Dr. Willis said he didn't want a police
helicopter to scare the others at Janbury, so we were driving
back. Jeremy, Steve, and Mrs. Taylor all gave me hugs, and wished
me well. It was a long drive, and the strain took it's toll. Dr.
Willis woke me when we were parked.
"Alexi, we're here." I sat up and looked around. It looked like a
school. Only girls were visible. "Yes, every student you see is
or was a boy."
"But they look like real girls!" I paused as a very male looking
girl passed by the car. "Well, most of them, anyway." He
chuckled.
"You will be staying in the same dormitory as the other students
here, and attending classes with them, just like a regular
student. Classes begin next week, so you will have a chance to
get to know many of the other students before school starts." He
looked at me. "You are already more feminine than many of the
students here, whether you like it or not. Regardless of the
outcome of your physical, I recommend making the most of your
time here." He escorted me to a room on the second floor of a
dormitory. There I met the girl who was to be my roommate.
"Hi Dr. W!" A tall, leggy redhead with beautiful eyes came over
and gave him a kiss. "And who is your pretty companion?" She
extended a large, well-manicured hand to me.
"Tammy, Meet Alexi. Alexi, meet Tammy. Tammy is a third-year
student here, and is one of the students who has always wanted to
be a girl." He turned to Tammy. "Alexi is a runaway who was
forcibly feminized by her mother, and is trying to find our
whether she can ever return to being a boy." I was surprised at
the look of pity that crossed Tammy's face. "So please help her
in any way you can. She will be attending school here for at
least several weeks, so she will need the standard new student
orientation." He looked at his watch. "And she should get ready
for dinner, as we have had a long day." With that he gave me a
hug, and left.
Tammy and I stared at each other. "So you don't want to be a
girl?"
I shook my head.
She looked carefully at my chest. "They're real, right?"
I nodded.
"Half the girls here will be green with envy. Mine finally
started growing last year." She stuck out her chest. I was
bigger.
"Dr. Willis said you always wanted to be a girl."
She smiled. "Ever since I was little, I felt like I was born in
the wrong body. I always liked to play with dolls and dress in
pretty outfits. My father thought I was a sissy, and gave me
hell, and Mom just thought I was weird. I guess I was lucky. The
psychologist they sent me to understood that my situation was not
something you treat and change, so he managed to get my parents
to let me be a girl part-time as I grew up. When they finally
realized I was, inside, their daughter, not their son, they sent
me here to help me learn to be a girl." She got up and looked at
me. "When I'm old enough, I want to have the surgery to make me a
complete girl. But for now I'm content to take my hormones and
learn the skills other girls learn at home.
"Anyway, you need to get ready for dinner. Do you have anything
other than shorts and tank-tops?"
I nodded and pulled a miniskirt out of my backpack.
She shook her head. "Tell you what, take a shower and I'll see if
I can find you something appropriate. Dinners here are sort of
formal"
I found myself handed a razor, shaving gel, shampoo and a towel,
and was propelled into the large bathroom our room shared with
another couple of students. There was lots of hot water, and I
luxuriated for a while before attending to business. When I came
out, wrapped in a towel, I found Tammy and another girl waiting
for me. I blushed, and tried to hide.
"Hey, didn't mean to scare you. This is Felicity, who's going to
help me find you some clothes." I looked at the new girl. She was
almost exactly my size and build. And she was holding a tape
measure. "So drop the towel and let's get started." When I
hesitated, Felicity spoke up.
"Hey, like we're all girls here." She attempted a vamp, and I
realized that here, how I was built didn't matter. So I dropped
the towel. I was checked over from top to bottom. "Good God,
girl, I wish I had a figure like that." I blushed.
"But you're..." She pulled off her blouse and bra.
"Lots of padding, darn it. But mine are still growing, so there's
a chance. But I'm still jealous. Now hold still, 'cause I need to
get the measurements right." I stood still while she measured.
She looked at my crotch, and I cringed. "I don't think you need a
gaff. Do you get much bigger when...?"
"Not really." I looked at my feet. "I'm not even sure if it still
works."
"Alexi's mother turned her into a girl, and she doesn't want to
be like us, but she isn't sure if she can be a boy again either."
Felicity stared at me. "Dr. W. brought her here to see if
anything can be done. So he asked me to do my best to help her
fit in while they run some tests and things."
"God, I'm sorry, like, a lot of us wish our families would have
done what your mother did, but..." She looked unhappy. "Maybe I
should just forget about..."
"No." They stared at me. I was thinking again about what Sophia
Manyfeathers had said. I chose to travel and fit in as a girl.
What had she said? 'That I carried myself with dignity?' "A wise
person told me that I had chosen a perilous path, and that I
traveled it with my head high. So if I have to look and act like
a girl, I'm going to do it right."
That got me hugs, and a tear or two from Tammy.
"Well, then let's get started." Felicity smiled. "I'll be back in
a couple of minutes. Put on a pair of panties. No more sports
bras for you."
She rushed out of the room, and I heard Tammy chuckle. "Well,
while you are waiting, I'm going to get dressed."
I watched as she stripped and put on what almost looked like an
evening gown that set off her long legs. She had to tuck her male
parts into a funny elastic garment.
When she saw my questioning look, she shrugged. "It's called a
gaff, and it keeps everything out of the way."
When she added a pair of towering heels and brushed out her hair,
there was no evidence she was, or had ever been, anything other
than a tall, strikingly attractive girl. I was complimenting her
on her appearance when Felicity returned. She had changed into a
long dress and heels, and looked really nice.
"This can't be worn with a bra, and I'm not big enough to make it
look decent." She held up a soft, deep-blue velvet dress with a
daring neckline. "On you it should be awesome." She handed me the
dress, a garter belt and stockings, and a pair of heels. "Hope
the shoes fit. I got them from Amy, who says they are last-year's
fashion, and you can keep them if they work."
Once I was in the stockings, they helped me with the dress. It
had a built-in corset. Soon I was standing very straight as they
laced the dress on. Then came the shoes. I was suddenly glad for
Mom's making me practice in heels, as they were at least four
inches tall. Finally, the girls did my hair and added makeup and
lipstick. They looked me over, and with strange expressions led
me into the hall to a set of large mirrors.
I stared at myself. Mom had always dressed me up to look
ridiculous, like a boy in girl's clothes. Rusty had dressed me so
I could pass as a girl in pubic. But now I was dressed as a young
woman, and I suddenly felt different inside. My breasts swelled
against the dress as I breathed deeply. My hair framed my face
and swung softly against my bare skin. It was as though I was
suddenly in tune with my body after fighting the way I looked for
so long.
They caught me as my knees buckled, and managed to get me to a
chair. "Alexi, what's wrong?" Tammy's voice was tinged with fear.
"Am I awake? What's happening?" I waved at myself. "This suddenly
feels so, so RIGHT!" I started to shake, and they held me till I
stopped quivering.
"Do you need us to go and get Dr. Willis?"
"I'm just so confused. I'm not supposed to like wearing girl's
clothes, but these are so different, It's like my body belongs in
them and that's wrong, because I'm a boy, but they're so pretty
and..."
"And we are going to miss dinner if we don't get moving. Feel up
to some food?"
I looked at Tammy, and nodded.
"And you really do look good in that outfit."
I was walking on air as we headed for the cafeteria. I found
myself strutting, my body swaying as I adapted my walk to the
corset and tall heels. I no longer felt like a freak, and reveled
in the freedom I was experiencing.
Dinner was a blur. The meal was excellent, but could have been
ham sandwiches for all it mattered. All of my mother's lessons in
manners and etiquette suddenly found an outlet. Felicity was
staring at me as I carefully finished my dessert, blotting by
lips on a napkin.
"You said you don't want to be a girl, but you are as feminine as
anyone here."
"My mother made me act like a girl, and I hated it. Yet, dressed
like this, it all seems to fit. I'm confused as hell, but for the
first time in years I don't feel like a freak, and I don't want
to break the spell." I looked at her, feeling the old fears well
up inside "Please, don't ask me to explain. I don't understand."
She and Tammy hugged me and I felt warm and happy inside. When we
got back to our room, it took them several tries before I would
agree to taking off the dress. I was so afraid the feelings would
go away with the beautiful velvet. But when Felicity loaned me a
silky nightgown, the feelings returned, and I curled up in my bed
and ignored my misgivings as I let my mind wander to thoughts of
Rusty, the two of us, dressed alike, living together as wife and
wife.
I was still dreaming when the insistent pressure inside told me
it was time to get up. Tammy was sitting up in bed watching me.
"That must have been some dream, you were smiling and kissing the
pillow."
I turned red to my toes. And dashed madly for the bathroom. When
I came out, Tammy was getting dressed in a short skirt and tank
top.
"We only do formal for dinner and certain classes. And on
weekends comfort is the way to go."
"Am I crazy?"
She sat on her bed and looked at me. "Why?"
"Because all of a sudden I don't feel it's wrong to look and act
like a girl."
"It's not wrong."
"I'm not a girl and I don't want to be a girl," I replied.
"There's a difference between being a girl, and looking and
acting like one. Some of us, like me, need to be girls. Down to
nursing babies and wedding gowns and having husbands. Others just
need to be feminine, but like being boys, and want wives and
families." I stared at her. "Don't you see, there is no one right
or wrong for everyone."
"But what about Felicity, doesn't she want to be a girl?"
"Hell no. She loves being soft and feminine and pretty but even
suggest she get her male parts cut off and she turns green. Me, I
wish mine would fall off today. Now while you are totally
confused, let's go get some breakfast before they close." She had
to propel me out the door.
I spent the day, which was warm and humid, getting a tour of the
facilities and grounds, and a thorough briefing on the schools
rules and regulations. One thing was obvious; I was in better
physical condition than most of the others. It was also obvious
that the students varied from so absolutely feminine that I
almost refused to believe they were really boys, to those who
looked like I usually felt - a boy in a skirt. But all seemed to
be trying to be who - or was it what -- they needed to be.
Which brought up the question: Who and what did I need to be? So
I chased Tammy off and found myself a quiet spot on a stone bench
where I could sit in the shade and think. For so long I'd been
fighting what I was, I had lost sight of what I wanted. I wanted
to be a boy, but now it seemed that being a boy had a whole lot
of different meanings. What was a boy or a girl, anyway?
A set of chromosomes? No, that defined male and female.
Reproductive organs? Same. Appearance? Simply a shell. How one
looks at life? Maybe. What was it Sophia said? I was taking a
different path through life.
Did my mother's forcing me to look and act like a girl change who
I was? I stared at the open field in front of me. Mom had changed
my shell, but I was still the same person inside. Tammy was
trapped in a boy's shell, and was fighting to make her shell
match the girl inside. Felicity wanted to have a girl's shell,
but was really a boy inside. I was getting a headache.
I was wearing the shell of a girl, and carrying the soul of a boy
inside. Mom couldn't make a girl out of me, because she had no
control over who I was, just what I looked like. Rusty didn't
care what shell I wore. Neither did Nancy. So what was the
problem? All at once I felt like a complete idiot. Nancy didn't
change when she lost her ability to walk. Her appearance, and how
she saw herself, did.
I got up and headed off to find Tammy. I finally found her at the
swimming pool. So I headed back to the room. Rusty had insisted
on buying me a bathing suit, even though I had told her I would
never wear anything that feminine. I dug it out of my pack and
squeezed myself into it. Aside from some strange tan lines, I
looked pretty good. A quick check for stray hairs said I needed a
trim. I giggled when I realized I was worried about my bikini
line. A few minutes with a razor, and I grabbed a towel and
headed for the pool.
Tammy almost inhaled water when I wiggled up to her. "Um, I
thought you said..."
"I need to ask you some questions. Want to sit in the shade?" She
nodded, and we found an empty bench.
"Am I a boy or girl?" Tammy stared at me with a shocked
expression. "Not biologically. Am I a boy or girl? Be honest,
it's important."
She sat there thinking, and looked troubled. "Alexi, no one is
entirely a boy or girl inside. At least that's what they've
taught me here, and I think it's correct. How we think, feel, and
react to the world, and how we fit in determines if we're more
boy or more girl. I've known you for a little more than a day.
Usually I can tell pretty quick, but you don't fit either pattern
real well. I think you could be either."
"Do I have to choose?" She looked at me.
"That part is something we are born with. Just like our bodies.
And it's easier to change how we look than who we are." Tammy
shivered, despite the warm day. "You are feeling like there is no
place for you, right?"
I nodded.
"A lot of kids like me have killed themselves because they never
accept who they are inside. I was lucky. I am who I am, and I
like who I am. There is nothing wrong or diseased about it." She
held tightly to my hand.
"If you got up in the morning, and it was pitch black in the
room, would you know who you were?" I nodded. "Then, are you a
boy or a girl?"
"I don't even think about it. I'm me."
"Then what's the problem?" All sorts of little lights went on,
and I felt like I'd won the idiot of the month award.
"But what if they say I can't go back to being a boy?"
"What's a boy?" I was beginning to like the taste of my own feet.
"I mean what if I can't go back to looking like a boy?"
"Is it really important?" I thought about the velvet dress, and
the jeans and shirts most girls wore. Now I had my feet in it up
to my ankles.
"What if I..., I can't have kids?" It burned as it came out. That
was the real question. Not how I looked, but if I could fill the
role of a biological father.
Tammy pulled me to my feet. "We need to get you to Dr. Willis." I
pulled her back to the bench.
"I'm not going to hurt myself." I looked at her.
"You can't get pregnant, so how do you handle it?" She grabbed me
and started to cry. Soon we were surrounded by other girls
wanting to help. Tammy finally got it together and chased them
off, saying we were okay.
"Let's go get ready for dinner, and I'll try and explain." We
headed for the room, hand-in-hand.
On Tuesday I went to the clinic for a complete physical. By the
time they were finished I had been poked, stuck, mortally
embarrassed, and examined in places I had always considered off-
limits. Tammy met me as I walked bow-legged out of the clinic. "I
see they gave you their special treatment."
"Oww..."
"Don't worry, in a day or two everything will have shrunk back to
normal size."
I tried to wither her with my look, but when I concentrated I had
to pucker or have an accident. "No one warned me about the
television camera!"
"Would you have shown up if they had?" I was too sore to take a
swat at her. "So go take a long hot shower, then change for
dinner." Food was not what I wanted. But the shower helped, and
Tammy borrowed a loose jumper and some extra-soft panties for me.
And a sanitary pad!
"Um, like I'm not a real girl?"
"Keeps things clean if you leak." I turned a bit green. And added
the pad to my undies.
Dinner was quiet, and I didn't feel like eating much. I got a lot
of sympathetic looks, and more than a couple of girls suggested I
go to bed early. I didn't need their suggestion. I was asleep by
seven.
The rest of the week was an introduction to femininity, school
style. We had four hours of intense regular subjects, which I
found were enjoyable. The lac