SLIDER'S PET
By Valerie Hope
"Long ago, cats were worshipped as gods. Cats have never
forgotten this."
Anonymous
Bret Reed was not a rich man. He wasn't particularly poor, either -
which meant that the current Republican administration in the White
House had, in their benevolence, decided to place the tax burden of the
entire country right on his white, male, aged 18-35 and single
shoulders. He slaved away, day in and day out, to bring home some
little bit to feed his habit - DVD movies - and to offset the credit
card bills which he'd accumulated while he worked his way through
college. But on the first and fifteenth, when the checks came from
GeoTech, the software company where he worked, the government's bite
made it all that much harder for Bret to lever himself out of debt and
start to enjoy anything resembling success.
It wasn't like he was frivolous or anything. A modest apartment and a
modest car, unlike the lavish bachelor pads and the sports cars that
some of his colleagues owned. He kept his expenses low - only allowing
himself two new movies on DVD every month - and didn't spend inordinate
amounts on groceries or anything else. He kept to himself and didn't
spend money on going out or partying, even though he paid the price
with his social life. But his father - a blue-collar auto worker - had
always told him that with a college degree he could write his own
ticket.
His old man had been mistaken. A very nice diploma hung on the wall,
and all it had gotten him was more debt.
Some American dream.
Bret managed to get home through the thick Friday afternoon traffic in
decent time, clawing his way through the throngs of overdressed people
trying to get downtown so they could blow huge wads of cash on watered-
down well drinks and overpriced Mexican food, make nuisances of
themselves in public and then go home to sleep it off in time to go
back out again on Saturday night.
Bret's evening was a little more sedate in scope. A frozen pizza for
the oven, a cold Dr. Pepper and his new copy of "Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon" which had been waiting in his mailbox from last week's
order.
He kicked his shoes into the closet and changed from his khakis and
button-down shirt into a pair of ratted-out cutoffs and a t-shirt. He
took the pizza out of the oven after scanning the news for a few
minutes, then popped in his new prize while Slider, the grey-and-white
stray tabby cat who'd adopted him a few years back, curled up in his
lap for a little bit of quality ear-scratching.
The movie had been really good, but the stress of the past week -
GeoTech had done a product release and the developers had put in a lot
of very late nights - soon had him dozing, dreaming of a place where he
didn't have to worry about paying his bills, someplace where he might
have the money to go out and drink downtown and pay too much for a
plate of substandard enchiladas, maybe even meet a - gasp - girl and
experience the dizzying world of love, attachment, sex, frustration and
gratitude that relationships birthed.
He hadn't been involved with anyone since college two years ago, and
although that part of him was well on its way to atrophy, it certainly
did maintain a presence in his thoughts and desires.
He awoke suddenly with the very nasty feeling like ants were crawling
on his neck. It was a well-known sensation. Slider had fallen asleep on
his chest again, and because the stray cat had lived through several
years of street fights and malnourishment he'd lost several of his
front teeth, which meant that whenever he slept or purred he couldn't
help but drool. It was a little disgusting, but in the way that a
baby's dirty diaper was disgusting. You didn't like the thought of
cleaning it up, but something about the act made you love the actor
just that much more.
Slider was Bret's best friend and confidante, the patient listener to
all his hopes and desires. Slider never judged, never overreacted or
took anything the wrong way.
Bret sighed and scratched the cat's soft head, eliciting a deep-
throated purr and more drooling. The yellow, wise eyes opened to
luminous slits and regarded him with that mixture of predator and
companion that only cats had.
"Hop up, pal. I have to change this shirt you just ruined," Bret said
fondly, giving the cat's broad backside a gentle shove. Slider stood,
slowly, stretching out (with a painful digging of claws into Bret's
chest, just to remind the human who was the boss of the outfit). Slider
hopped down to the floor, winding around Bret's feet a few times as the
man slowly stood up and walked heavily into the apartment's cramped
bedroom.
"Hmm. Ten o'clock. The night is still young. What do you want to do
now, Slide? Dinner and cocktails at the Ritz, maybe, or we could poke
our heads in at the party on Bitsy and Chad's yacht. I wasn't going to
go, but Cindy Crawford and Claudia Schiffer just begged me to come."
The cat looked at him curiously, almost amused.
"Oh, I know. There's that little shindig at the Spielberg's. I don't
know if I still fit into the Armani, but everyone who's anyone is going
to be there. We haven't seen dear Pamela since she got the implants
removed."
He stripped off his sodden shirt and pulled another, equally
disreputable t-shirt from the pile next to his bookshelf. "Or how about
this, we can collapse on the bed and read old comic books until we fall
asleep."
Looking down at the depleted pile of ready clothing in the stack, he
rubbed the back of his neck and muttered, "Looks like laundry day
tomorrow."
He sighed and selected an old "Thor" comic from the pile he'd rescued
from his mother's attempts to convert his old room into a sewing room.
Flopping heavily on the secondhand double bed, he opened the comic and
felt the familiar tug as the images and story drew him backwards,
towards his youth again. Just before he surrendered to the irresistible
draw, he felt Slider jump onto the bed near his pillow and curl up for
another uneventful night. Bret stroked the cat's soft fur and soon had
the familiar purr going again.
"You got it made, little man," he said faintly, rubbing Slider's
favorite spot behind his grizzled ears and making the yellow eyes close
in delight. "Couldn't have happened to a nicer cat, even though you're
nothing but a fur-bearing appetite."
Bret sighed, looking out the window at the parking lot of his little
apartment complex.
"Too bad nobody feels the same way about me," he said wistfully.
"Y'know what I mean, Slide? I just wish... hell, I don't know. I just
wish it could be different somehow. I wish I could figure out a way to
be happy with what I have and quit feeling sorry for myself for all the
stuff I don't. Like the party crowd at college. Just fun and no worry.
That's the kind of life I'd like to have."
He smiled and rolled back over, returning his attention to his comic
book and his purring companion. "But then, that just wouldn't be me,
would it?"
The cat only looked at him with the half-amused, half-knowing look of a
superior being.
* * *
The sun through the slats of the cheap blinds was very warm on Bret's
legs, stirring him from a deep and dreamless sleep of exhaustion and
stress. His eyes parted slowly, letting the light in by increments
which didn't assault his eyes, running a tongue against sleep-coated
teeth.
The lights seemed a little brighter somehow this morning, the colors
just a little bit too saturated and overdone. Bret fought the urge to
roll back into a protective cocoon of covers and just ignore the
daylight, but something inside him - perhaps that damnable work ethic
his parents had instilled - made him sit blearily, swinging his legs
onto the floor. He rubbed gritty eyes and tried to remember to return
the romance novel he'd fallen asleep reading to the bookshelf. He'd
read them all so many times, he didn't even bother to mark his place.
He knew most of them off by heart anyway.
Pulling on a pair of really cute white lace-up shorts which were
sitting on top of the clothes hamper and a blousy pink t-shirt, he
gathered up the laundry into the beaten white basket, added the fabric
softener and detergent and gathered up some quarters from the
mayonnaise jar beside the telephone for the coin-ops.
He was almost down the stairs when it hit him. Romance novel? Fabric
softener? Clothes hamper? Pink t-shirt? He didn't own any of those
things and never had! A little panicked, he looked down at the laundry
basket he was carrying. Nothing particularly out of the ordinary, just
the usual assortment of tops, jeans, shorts, blouses, skirts, panties
and bras. The cute little red satin bustier he'd picked up in the mall
a few weeks ago.
The basket almost slipped out of suddenly numb fingers. Dear God, he
thought. What the hell is going on here? Running back up the stairs,
breathing hard, Bret decided against leaving the apartment (thank God
he hadn't been seen yet in the little lace-up shorts and the pink tee)
until he was sure he knew what the hell was going on.
He dropped the basket beside the door unceremoniously and ran into the
bathroom. Shoving aside the jewelry box and the little white tackle-box
full of makeup, he splashed cold water on his face and stared into the
mirror. The same careworn, plain face stared back at him that always
did, in need of a few more hours' sleep and a shave. The little scar
under his left eye from a fight he'd had in the eighth grade, the
crooked tooth in the bottom row, the limp tangle of fine brown hair
that nearly hung into the eyes.
With a horrified gasp he looked down at the countertop at the makeup
and jewelry. None of this was his. It couldn't be. Somehow he'd woken
up in someone else's apartment, a girl's apartment. Maybe he'd eaten
something, or somebody had put something in a drink he'd had. Maybe he
was sick - that was it. Delirious. It was a fever dream or something.
He'd passed out and some kind woman had carried him up the stairs to
sleep it off in her apartment.
But how did that explain Slider, who was turning around in a tight
circle as a prelude to laying down in the center of the pile which
heaped out of the laundry basket by the door? And the rather extensive
collection of DVDs which was on the little shelf next to the television
- his television. But the rest of the apartment had undergone a total
transformation.
His kitchen was far from the typical shambles he'd grown so used to
seeing. Instead of the mismatched, thrift-store dishes he'd used since
college, now all of his stoneware was a matched, subdued pattern,
sitting neatly in a wooden drying rack. All of the silverware was a
nice, matched pattern instead of the unadorned silver he'd filched from
his dorm cafeteria over the years. Colorful potholders and tea towels
hung from the oven handle and the refrigerator. A dry-erase board with
some phone numbers - one for a girl named Monica and another for a girl
named Kaylee - and a short grocery list were written in a rounded,
bubbly hand with pink marker.
He opened the fridge and found a load of fresh vegetables and
Tupperwared leftovers and a twelve-pack of diet soda. The freezer was
bereft of his customary Red Baron pizzas and the ever-present Night
Hawk frozen dinners, replaced by frozen vegetables and a whole lot of
Lean Cuisine entr?es, and a half-empty bottle of Stolichnaya lemon
vodka freezing in the door with a loaf of wheat bread.
Apparenthe woman whose fridge this belonged to was a stickler for
emptying ice trays, as well - the bucket was full and all the trays
stacked neatly and freezing beside it. Bret never refilled the ice
trays until the last cube was gone.
The front room had undergone a similar transformation. Instead of his
nondescript blue couch with the beach towel thrown across the back and
the battered and worn brown recliner he'd rescued from the room of a
graduating senior at college, now he had a nice - but not too nice -
matching sofa and love seat in blue-and-tan stripes with several
tasseled throw-pillows and a thick fleece afghan on the back, and a
polished wooden rocking chair, similarly heaped with pillows.
The movie posters were still on the walls, but instead of his vintage
"Enter the Dragon" and "Braveheart" in the frames he now had a restored
"Breakfast at Tiffany's" and "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes."
The door to the bedroom was a huge repro of Marilyn Monroe standing
over the heating vent on the sidewalk, her dress blowing up all around
her, from "Seven Year Itch." There was even the new addition of a nice
burled walnut coffee table, across which were strewn several
candleholders and latest issues of Elle, Vogue, Cosmopolitan and
Glamour.
The tiny little dining area, which had formerly been Bret's "home
office" (read: place to play video games) was now occupied by a little
table and two chairs with a basket full of flowers in the center. Bills
and sundry junk were stacked on one end and a leather attach? case and
one of the red-and-white plastic Macintosh PowerBook computers were
nearby.
Bret made a beeline for the mail. It was all addressed to Bret Reed in
apartment 1212. Checking outside the door, he found the matching
number.
It was his apartment, no matter that everything in it was completely
wrong.
He walked back into the bedroom. The double bed was the same, but the
plain light blue sheets and quilt were gone, replaced with pink satin
sheets and an enormous pink and white embroidered duvet. There was even
a pink ruffle along the bottom and about ten times as many pillows as
necessary, also in pink satin. There was even a little stuffed teddy
bear near the white wrought-iron headboard, neither of which had been
present when Bret went to bed.
The nightstand held his old digital clock and his glasses, as always,
but now had a white wrought-iron lamp with a frilly shade and several
tubes of moisturizer. The shelf underneath contained some more women's
magazines (which were far from his usual collection of Penthouse which
had kept him company during several lonely nights), another teddy bear
(this one hugging a huge stuffed red satin heart) and a shoebox
containing pictures of last summer's company picnic on the beach - all
people he knew and recognized - a few snapshots of people he'd never
seen before at some kind of party and a thick white plastic vibrator
that made Bret blush bright red to find.
It was like sneaking into his sister's room - he felt like he shouldn't
be here, even thought it was his apartment.
The mirrored sliding door of the closet revealed a little walk-in
positively stuffed with clothes and shoes. It seemed to be loosely
organized between working clothes - several nicely tailored-looking
business suits with short skirts, silk blouses, skirts, sweaters and
scarves. The next section appeared to be 'club clothes' - all tiny,
stretchy and revealing in bright colors and sequins and patterns. The
rest seemed to be formal wear - was that an old prom dress in there? -
and winter clothes.
The floor was a solid carpet of shoes, in every conceivable shape and
size, from flats and sneakers to a pair of black patent platform shoes
that Bret had thought only strippers could walk in. The top of the
closet contained a quilt and a comforter, a few boxes of Trivial
Pursuit, several hats, a stack of bulky sweaters (which wouldn't be of
much use in the middle of June, as it was), and a few more assorted
boxes.
The rest of the room contained a little dressing table with several
jewelry boxes on it, a little expanding rack on the wall which held
sunbonnets, ladies' hats and a few very small baseball caps. A huge
Patrick Nagel print was framed on the wall, and there were several more
snapshots of people he didn't recognize taped up around the mirror on
the vanity. The table's only drawer contained a huge array of
barrettes, hair clips and 'scrunchies' in every color, shape and style
Bret had ever seen.
The bookshelf beside the doorway was filled with fantasy and romance
novels, and some strange titles which Bret couldn't figure out the
reason for being there - Understanding Communication, the Manager's
Bible, Forming the Perfect Brand, Getting the Message Out and Driving
Sales through Exposure. Sounded like middle-management crap to Bret.
Next thing he knew he'd be finding a copy of What Color is Your
Parachute? or something equally as horrible.
He hoped that his well-worn copies of all the programming textbooks
from college turned up somewhere. Finding his clothes and furniture all
changed was one thing, but he needed those books to help him make a
living.
The bathroom was utterly unrecognizable. Huge plush towels - also in
pink - hung from all the racks and over the shower curtain (which was
transparent plastic which huge pink flowers all over it in appliqu?) -
a radical departure from his ordinary one big beach towel that he used
to dry everything.
The countertop was an explosion of cosmetics and lotions - with a few
more jewelry boxes thrown in for good measure. There was a little
basket of potpourri on the back of the toilet, which was the only
horizontal space not covered with some kind of skin- or hair-care
product. The little cabinet contained more towels, extra rolls of
toilet paper and an enormous economy pack of pantyliners and tampons.
Bret blushed scarlet once again and shut the cabinet quickly.
The shower contained two of the little wire shelving units Bret had
seen in some ladies' bathrooms, also brimming with more shampoos,
conditioners, body scrubs, exfoliators and moisturizers than Bret, in
his ignorance, knew existed. Strangely enough there seemed to be no
soap. Whoever heard of a shower with no soap in it? There were sixteen
different kinds of scented moisturizing body wash, but no damned soap.
Bret pushed aside the bottles of bath oil and salts which were on the
side of the tub and shed his (?) clothes into a pile on the floor. He
tossed the fluffy pink towel on the closed lid of the toilet and
climbed into the familiar-yet-foreign shower, turning on the water and
closing his eyes as the warm spray cascaded down his face and body.
Maybe he'd open his eyes and everything would be back to normal
somehow.
He rubbed the back of his neck and scratched himself on the backside -
a time-honored male shower tradition - and was a little surprised to
feel his erection bobbing up and down with the motion. Something about
the sights and scents of the feminine were causing him to become very
aroused. He briefly entertained the notion of 'letting his fingers do
the walking' for a minute, but on the off chance that this was someone
else's place he didn't want them to catch him wanking off in their
shower.
Instead he tried to make do by losing himself in the warm fall of the
water against his skin, working kinks from stressed muscles.
He straightened, putting the little Lady Sensor razor back in its rack
on one of the shelves and looking down at his handiwork. The legs were
smooth and shiny - Nair was a wonderful thing - and the bikini line
trimmed to a slender little 'V.' The pits were shaved and it was almost
time for him to rinse the five-minute conditioner out of his hair. His
skin felt tingly and soft from the exfoliator he'd applied.
Bret gasped in shock. What had he just done? Washing his hair roughly
and scrubbing his face with both hands, he realized that in his zone-
out he'd shaved his armpits, crotch and legs without even thinking. Was
this girl stuff starting to warp his mind somehow?
He hopped out of the shower quickly and scrubbed his skin dry - a very
uncomfortable process, given the pampering he'd just given his skin.
Red and kind of raw, he kicked the clothes he'd worn that morning and
went into the bedroom in search of something a little more unisex. His
still-throbbing erection was going to be a bit of a problem.
Rummaging through one of the shelves in the closet, he groaned. No
boxers, no briefs, no nothing. Just row upon row of lacy, feminine
panties. Selecting a pair of pink cotton hi-rise panties from the stack
- they had 'Blossom' from the Powerpuff Girls on the ass, but Bret
couldn't see any others that would make him feel any less ridiculous -
he slid them up his hairless legs (which was a rather pleasant feeling,
some part of him that wasn't in a blind panic noticed) and began
rummaging around for clothes. He finally had to settle on a little
yellow 'baby' tee with the Playboy Bunny on the front and a baggy pair
of 'London Jean' overalls which hid his shiny, silky legs.
He shoved his glasses onto his nose, only to find that while the
prescription hadn't changed, they were now tiny little 'Radar O'Reilly'
glasses with lightweight lenses in a chic feminine style.
Hoping he didn't look like too much of an imbecile, he fished through
the sea of shoes and found a pair of little black 'flip-flops' with a
rattan insole which seemed to fit all right. He had to get out of that
place. It was making him crazy. Maybe things would be all right at
work. He decided to make a dash for the office and hope that things
were normal there.
Grabbing his little black leather purse from beside the telephone, Bret
dashed out the door and towards his car. Slider, from his nest in the
laundry basket, looked on amusedly before tucking a paw beneath his
chin and catching a much-needed nap.
* * *
Bret must have walked past it and back ten times before he checked in
the purse - he'd actually grabbed a purse on the way out the door - for
the keys. Something was really wrong. His parking place - slip number
53, where he'd been parking since he moved into this complex two years
ago - where his dirty blue Chevy Malibu should have been slowly leaking
its oil onto the pavement, was instead occupied by a late-model red
Volkswagen Cabrio that was washed and waxed to gleaming perfection. The
grey interior was spotless under the raised ragtop.
Bret looked at his keys. Gone was the simple ring with the keys for his
car, his mom and dad's place, his apartment, the mailbox, the laundry
room and his safe-deposit box. Now he had a thick brass ring on which
were threaded other keyrings, some that contained no keys at all. There
was a rabbits' foot and a little picture-gazer from a local theme park,
a leather holster containing pepper spray, and - sure enough - a key to
a Volkswagen.
He opened the door and sat in the driver's seat. Oddly enough, the
mirrors, seat and wheel were adjusted perfectly to him. The new Cabrio
was gassed up and only had eleven thousand miles on it - almost new.
Even though it was kind of a 'girly' car (but what in his life wasn't
girly right now?), Bret had never gotten to ride in a car quite so
nice. He rummaged around, acquainting himself with all the amenities -
particularly the CD player. Although the selection was not to Bret's
tastes - he didn't like Madonna or the Beastie Boys and he certainly
didn't care for any of the techno groups in the car - he did manage to
find an Indigo Girls CD that he remembered liking back in college.
Since he couldn't be sure when he was going to wake up and all of this
was going to be gone, he decided to make the most of having a decent
car while he still could.
He was just lowering the automatic top when Mrs. Kennedy from upstairs
walked by on the sidewalk and made direct eye contact. No time to hide
or pretend that he hadn't seen her - Bret set his mind to the
instantaneous fabrication of some explanation as to why he was sitting
in a little red convertible with a tiny little Playboy Bunny tee which
didn't cover his navel and a pair of ladies' overalls, fussing with the
Audrey Hepburn cats'-eye prescription sunglasses he'd found in the
console, just as the Indigo Girls CD started up.
"Uh..." Bret stammered.
"Hi, there, honey? You off to work again?" she asked brightly.
"Uh... yeah. Work," Bret managed, ever the soul of eloquence.
"You work too hard, sweetie. It's Saturday. You should be out having
fun."
Bret managed a stunned smile. Did Mrs. Kennedy not even notice how
ridiculous he looked? "I know, Mrs. Kennedy. But it's important."
The older woman smiled a patient smile. "Of course, dear. Well, be
careful."
"Thanks."
The woman continued along the sidewalk as if nothing were out of the
ordinary - she hadn't even mentioned the new car. Something was
definitely wrong. And it was time to find out what it was.
* * *
Bret pulled into the first available parking spot he could find and
jogged as quickly as the little platform sandals he'd grabbed would
allow. He dug in the little black purse for his ID and security badge
once he came to the magnetically locked door.
It was amazing how much shit was crammed into that tiny little purse.
There were as many cosmetics in the purse as there were on the bathroom
counter at home, a hairbrush, several half-consumed packs of gum, at
least four mirrors, several pounds of wadded tissue paper, a ladies'
fold-over wallet-slash-checkbook, a little plastic sleeve containing
still more photographs of people he had never seen before, a pack of
skinny Capri 120 cigarettes, fifteen or so disposable lighters, a Palm
VI personal digital assistant, some cassette tapes, one of those Nokia
cellphones with the interchangeable colored covers and finally his
security badge.
He clipped it to the front pocket of the overalls after sliding it
through the card reader and opening the door.
The office was still the office, at least - that much hadn't changed.
He wandered through the maze of cubicles until he found his own. Except
that the nameplate on the wall wasn't the customary B. Reed which had
adorned that wall for all the time he'd been there. His pictures from
the Big Bend national park, his college diploma, his little pull-out
poster of Stevie Ray Vaughan, his die-cast model '65 Mustang fast-back,
all gone.
Instead it was one of those cubes dedicated to the display of action
figures. The nameplate read S. Krishnamurthy.
Sunil? Sunil was sitting here now?
"Hey, Bret, what's happening?" a familiar voice said from behind him.
Bret whirled, prepared to explain why he was in women's clothing,
carrying a purse to the best of his limited ability with untruth.
It was John Coleridge, his oldest friend at the company. He was in his
customary cutoffs with Birkenstock sandals, a concert tee and baseball
cap.
"John! Should've expected you to be here on a Saturday," Bret said
shakily as John gave him the once-over-lightly. "Listen, uh, about the
purse..."
"Looking for Sunil?" John asked, not seeming to notice Bret's
appearance.
"Uh, I... I don't..."
"He said he was coming in today but he didn't say when," John said.
"You might want to try back this afternoon. He usually likes to sleep
late on Saturdays."
"Hey, John... do you notice anything unusual about me?" Bret asked
carefully.
John scratched his chin. "Not really. Did you cut your hair or
something?"
Bret smiled, halfway between hysterical relief and genuine fear. No one
seemed to notice what was happening. Which either meant that it wasn't
really happening - this was all some kind of sick dream brought on by
pepperoni pizza before bedtime - or that Bret was well over the line
between genius and insanity.
"No," he said, perplexed. "Forget I said it."
"Okay," John said, turning back towards his own cubicle, opening the
soda he'd gotten from the development fridge. "See you later. I'll tell
Sunil you stopped by."
"Sure," Bret said, turning around again. John acted as if Sunil had
always sat here. Which may be true, given the accumulation of paper and
detritus which adorned the shelves and desktop. But if Sunil was
sitting here, then where the hell did Bret work now? What the hell was
going on?
He was walking out of the cube-maze in a daze, trying to make
everything make sense somehow. He turned at the end of the row, passing
by the little offices along the wall that held the managers and the
marketing staff.
Past Dee Dee Carter's office, the VP of Marketing at the software
company, then the cubicles of the rest of her marketing and
communications staff - Eric Lewis, Ginger Simmons, Hayley Sparks,
Jennifer Traynor and Christina Cullen - all the 'marketing bimbos' at
the company who the developers made fun of to mask the fact that they
desired them so much sexually.
Bret himself had enjoyed several long, informative gazes at Ginger and
Jennifer when they'd been bent over in their short skirts to get
something from the bottom drawers of their filing cabinets.
He walked past all the offices, ticking the names off in his head. D.
Carter. E. Lewis. G. Simmons. H. Sparks. J. Traynor. B. Reed. C.
Cullen.
He stopped dead. B. Reed? That was where he was working now? In a
cubicle on Bimbo Row? How the hell did that happen? He went in, looking
around carefully. Some of his things were there - the diploma was on
the wall and the die-cast Mustang and the pictures from Big Bend. But
now there was a little vase full of flowers and another little teddy
bear, plus a couple of Escher prints and some Far Side cartoons.
The papers collected on the desk were all press releases and trade show
brochures, schedules and lists of phone numbers of people he didn't
know. The books were all about technical and persuasive writing, none
of his tried-and-true programming texts which had helped him so many
times. Even the computer was different - none of his development tools
were on the desktop where he'd left them, replaced by things like
Outlook and Word and Excel and PowerPoint and hundreds of cheesy clip-
art libraries.
The desktop wallpaper was a scanned image of Marilyn Monroe, one of the
art prints of her sitting in a convertible and blowing a kiss to the
camera.
Bret sat down heavily, blowing out his breath in a long exhalation.
This was all some horrible dream, he decided. It had to be. These kinds
of things just didn't spontaneously happen. Lives didn't just radically
change and spin around like this in the space of a night. He was sure
he was going to wake up soon.
But until then, it was time to accentuate the positive. At least he had
dreamed himself up a new car. And it was time to take it out on the
road.
* * *
It was about noon by the time Bret decided that his whirlwind tour of
the freeways should come to an end. He decided to splurge - a hamburger
sounded really good to him right now - and stopped by the ATM to grab a
little bit of cash from his worn-out bank account to treat himself to a
McLunch. He fussed through the little black purse again, pulling out
handfuls of useless junk until he found his ATM card.
Hoping that his PIN number hadn't magically transmogrified with the
rest of his life, he stuffed the card in the slot and punched in the
numbers, getting out his last 20 dollars before the next paycheck. He
sighed, wondering how he was going to make the money last another four
or five days.
Strange that he still looked forward to payday - even though he only
had the nice balance in his account for a day before he wrote the
immense checks to MasterCard and his old alma mater, it was still nice
to see a couple zeros.
He took the cash, card and receipt from the machine and stepped back to
the car. He gave the receipt a cursory look-over - an old, old habit -
and nearly missed the step off the curb. Fourteen hundred dollars?
There must be some mistake! He didn't make that much money with one
check, and he never had more than about $40 in the account once all his
checks cleared the bank.
Checking the receipt number against the number on his ATM card, they
matched. He marched over to the machine again, re-inserted his card and
checked his balances. The machine still maintained with electronic
surety that his checking account held $1413.77 and that now, his
depleted savings account (which was only there to cover the checks he
wrote that brought him overlimit) was the proud owner of over three
thousand dollars in funds.
Impossible! There wouldn't have been this much detail - not even in a
dream. Usually his dreams were oriented around the actions, not the
details. He dreamed about Rebecca Romijn-Stamos with a can of whipped
cream, not the nutritional details on the side of the can! This
couldn't be a dream, or some whacked-out hallucination. It was real.
He was really wearing women's clothes, he really did have a cubicle in
the marketing department at work, he really was driving a red
convertible and he really had all that money.
Stunned, his lunch forgotten, he sat numbly in the car again and
steered it for home.
* * *
Slider watched his human with a mixture of curiosity and feline worry
as he sat, dumbstruck, on the new striped couch staring blankly at the
wall. Even his best efforts at lovability were received with a comatose
stare and a distracted stroke - not even a decent ear-scratching.
Losing patience Slider hopped from the couch and stood brazenly on the
counter, trying to elicit the wonderful yelling and chasing and water-
pistol firing that jumping to the counter or sharpening the claws on
the couch entailed.
The human didn't notice. Did other cats have this problem with their
pets?
Slider decided that the only thing left to do was to use the most
powerful weapon in his entire feline arsenal. The curl-up-and-writhe-
adorably-on-the-floor method. Seldom used in this household - Slider
preferred subtlety to the direct, frontal assault - but evidently
necessary to snap his human out of the stupor he sat in.
Flopping on the carpet, Slider curled his feet and rolled onto his
back, regarding the human with round eyes as he rubbed the top of his
head on the carpet, flattening his ears. The rolling from one side to
the other would come a bit later, after the bait was taken. There were
definite rules governing such tactics, and Slider was a stickler for
rules.
Slider allowed himself a flash of satisfaction. The human moved, looked
down, and noticed how utterly adorable he was behaving, and the mask
slipped. The human did that strange corners-of-the-mouth expression
that bared all the teeth.
"Am I not paying enough attention to you, kid? I'm sorry."
The human crept onto the floor, legs curled beneath it, and began to
stroke and scratch all the proper spots to elicit the purr. Slider
obliged full-throatedly, rewarding the human with the roll-from-one-
side-to-the-next maneuver.
"It's been a strange, strange day, Slide," the human said. "My whole
life is upside down right now. I don't know what happened. I mean, last
night everything was normal and then I fell asleep and everything was
different. The last thing I remember was petting your tubby little
belly and reading comics. Right after I said that I wished..."
The stroking stopped. Slider turned right-side-up and looked at the
human strangely.
"I said I wished that things could be different," Bret said,
realization dawning. "I said I wished I could stop caring about things,
like the party crowd at college. And then I thought about that party
that I went to at the Tri-Delt sorority my junior year. That was where
all the party girls were. I remember thinking how lucky they had it,
with their parents putting them through school and their easy degree
plans."
Bret sank his head into his hands. "And now I'm turning out just like
them," he moaned into his palms. "Be careful what you wish for, Bret.
Be careful what you wish for."
* * *
Bret sat and wept silently for a little while before he got his wits
collected. Slider was curled up next to him, lending support of the
warm and furry variety. It made Bret feel a little bit better. Finally,
with an effort, he stood. It was time to figure out something about
what the hell was going on here.
He dropped the forgotten purse next to the telephone and noticed that
the high-end digital telephone (much better than his Goodwill cordless)
was blinking its message light. Bret pushed it, ignoring the electronic
"Q*bert" voice announcing that he had two new messages.
"Hey, Bret, it's Kaylee. So are you in or out? Expansion, tonight,
about nine. Everybody's going to be there. Call me. Ciao."
Bret thought for a second. Kaylee was evidently one of his friends now,
and she had invited a group to go to one of the most upscale and
popular dance clubs in town tonight. Ordinarily, Bret would have been
sweating the cover charge, but not after a peek at the bank balance.
The machine beeped again. "Hey, Bret, it's Becca. I called all those
people on your list and they said they'll all be there next Saturday. I
was just going to order a deli plate or something to feed them. Give me
a call later and let me know what else we need. See ya!"
Okay, no mention of any Becca and Bret hadn't checked out the Palm
Pilot or a calendar or anything yet, so he didn't know what was
suddenly going on in his life. It was time to do a little snooping
around.
First was the little box next to the computer on the table, full of
bills and check stubs. How the hell was this possible? According to the
pay stubs, a marketing bimbo was apparently making more than a
developer. But they didn't do anything, at least not that Bret could
comprehend. They chatted and had meetings and talked on the phone, but
he never saw them actually do anything. And it turns out that he was
making nearly ten grand a year more than he was actually building the
company's product? Did the other developers know about this? It would
cause a riot in the cubes.
The computer was a mystery. Lots of text documents and some scheduling
stuff, a few games and the obligatory Marilyn Monroe desktop wallpaper.
Apparently, whoever he was, he wrote a lot. There were more text files
than anything else on the computer.
The Palm Pilot was a much bigger jackpot. It held all the phone numbers
and contact information for the people who were suddenly calling. Becca
could only be Rebecca York, and there were about seven numbers after
that name - home, work, cellphone, pager, Rick's house (whoever the
hell Rick was - probably Becca's boyfriend).
Scarily enough, this new life Bret had landed in required him to know
every person and phone number in the tri-state area. The schedule on
the Pilot was utterly Byzantine, filled with cryptic meetings,
conference calls and after-work activities. The next Saturday that the
mysterious Becca was talking about was a 'reading,' whatever that was
(God, he hoped it wasn't some New Age bullshit) at the apartment
complex meeting room at 3.00 in the afternoon. Unable to shake the
feeling that he was an invader in this life and the rightful owner
might walk in at any moment, Bret dutifully entered the information
from Becca into the schedule.
Maybe whoever it was who was supposed to be living this life would
thank him, later, for 'lifesitting' so responsibly.
He stepped out onto the apartment's little balcony to see that his
venerable lawn chair was still in place, but now surrounded by a lush
green little garden of potted plants. Two birdfeeders and a dream-
catcher hung from the eave. There was even a little plastic outdoor
table next to the lawn chair with a couple of candle stubs and a coffee
can full of cigarette butts.
Slider walked out onto the balcony behind him, sniffing the outdoor air
with some interest. Bret slumped into the lawn chair heavily and the
cat jumped into his lap, squinting in the afternoon sun.
"Jesus," Bret breathed. "I wish I knew what the hell is going on."
The cat only purred as Bret dug in the purse, looking for more clues as
to what was going on, who this person was who left their life behind
for him to wake up in. The cellphone was crammed with as many phone
numbers as the Palm Pilot and seemed to be charged up and ready to go -
Bret had noticed the car charger in the little red Cabrio when he'd
driven it.
The wallet was stuffed - a checkbook, literally hundreds of ATM and
credit card receipts - mostly to stores like Rave, Wet Seal and
Charlotte Russe, the stores that sold the more daring outfits he'd seen
in his infrequent jaunts through. There were also a whole lot of movie
ticket stubs, which was a good thing. There was his drivers' license
and Social Security card, an insurance card for the Cabrio and his ATM
card.
But now there was a platinum MasterCard which he'd never seen before.
There were also charge cards for Dillard's and Foley's department
stores and one for Victoria's Secret and a Texaco gasoline card as
well. All in his name, even though he'd never applied for any of them.
The pictures were also a mystery. Lots of people he'd never met and
places he'd never seen - pictures taken at theme parks and on the
beach, some pictures taken in a theater on a large, lavishly designed
set for a play. But there was one picture with him in it - wearing a
cap and gown and holding a college diploma.
Beside him was a smiling grey-haired woman and a tall man with a
rounded belly and silver hair. They had arms around him, hugging him
tight, and all three were smiling ear-to-ear, laughing just for
laughing's sake.
He'd had a similar picture taken on his graduation day, with his
parents.
"Oh, God," Bret breathed. "Are these my parents now?"
He tried to summon the image of his own father and mother - his father
a foreman at an auto plant and his mother an events planner at the YWCA
- but he couldn't manage to get any picture in his mind. The images
were hazy and indistinct. But when he tried to remember events -
graduations, birthday parties and the like - they all sprang into his
mind with perfect clarity, but instead of his balding father with the
huge forearms and his heavyset mother with the curly brown hair and the
librarian glasses, he could only picture the silver-haired man and the
slight little woman from the picture in the purse.
They smiled a lot, and laughed a lot, like his real parents had. He
remembered a happy childhood, for the most part, and there weren't the
memories he had about the plant shutdown and his father's layoff, the
starting work at 15 in a local bar just to help his mom and dad with
the groceries. Working his ass off just to get into a college, and then
having to work his way through.
He didn't remember his mother's hysterectomy and the endless headaches
trying to offset the medical bills. Instead he remembered getting a car
for his sixteenth birthday and working summers as a lifeguard and a
hairstylist at a beauty salon, going out with friends, going to his
junior and senior proms and cheerleading practices after school for the
championships in Daytona, Florida...
Waitaminnit. Cheerleading practices? Bret had played baseball. One of
the few scholarships he'd gotten was for his work as an All-Region
second baseman. His grades had been okay, but not nearly enough to get
him anything academic.
But then how did he distinctly remember getting straight A's and a nice
scholarship to the university? And cheering for the football and
basketball teams in college? Those memories were crystal clear.
Bret decided to take a cue from Slider, who was curled up and sleeping
in his lap, and stop worrying about it for a little while. He leaned
back in the chair and crossed his legs, starting a little at the feel
of his hairless legs against the denim.
Now why in the hell had he done that? Shaving his legs was a real
strange thing for him to do. He'd been standing under the warm water
and letting his mind drift, and the next thing he knew he'd just done
it. Kinda like now. The sunshine and the soft, warm cat in his lap,
listening to the birds in the treetops. It lulled him a little bit.
He snapped back to reality with a little jump, realizing what he was
doing. The cat was gone from his lap, back inside, and here he sat on
the balcony, with a glass of diet soda sitting beside him, a copy of
Vogue open in his lap and one of the super-skinny and long Capri
cigarettes between his lips. He exhaled and a pale blue streamer of
smoke escaped his lips. Normally he hated smoking - he never really
tried but once and it had left him coughing and choking for nearly an
hour afterwards - but now it seemed to be the most natural thing in the
world to him. It even tasted kind of good.
Bret decided to try another drag, and the bitter acrid smoke made him
almost gag. He tossed the butt into the coffee can, trying to clear the
tears from his eyes, and noticed the bottle of pink nail polish sitting
open next to the ashtray. Looking himself over, he now noticed that his
fingers and toes were adorned with several coats of pink polish. He was
even holding his hands as if he was waiting for them to dry.
God! He zoned out for half a second and the next thing he knew he'd
done his toes, nails, and had smoked a cigarette and read Vogue until
they dried! What the hell was happening to him? It seemed like every
time he let his mind drift, the minute he stopped thinking about what
was going on, he went and did something like shave his legs or paint
his toenails.
He decided to try and keep his mind focused as sharply as possible, so
that he didn't have any more lapses. There was no telling what would
happen if he didn't keep himself sharp. Maybe a few hours of
television, something distracting like that.
He turned on the tube and flipped channels for a while. He found 'A
Bridge Too Far' on cable, a good manly-man war movie that might be able
to drive the girly-ness from his thoughts and life for a little while.
Besides, it was a good film, just a little long. He tried to remember
if he'd ever made it all the way through - it did kinda drag in the
middle, and sometimes he just kinda dozed - not asleep, but not fully
awake either. He was just reflecting on that when he felt his eyelids
start to get a little heavy.
* * *
He came back to reality in fire-edged darkness, a persistent buzz in
his ears underneath the sounds of the Wallflowers. He smelled something
akin to coffee. His skin was warm - very warm, hot in fact - and he
felt as if he was enclosed somehow. There were strange tensions on his
skin as well, not uncomfortable, just pulls and tugs where he wasn't
used to feeling them.
Suddenly the fire at the edge of the darkness faded and the hum was
gone. Moving slowly, Bret pushed away the weight hovering atop him and
felt his face. The darkness was caused by an opaque pair of what felt
like goggles. He stripped them off and got his bearings.
He was laying in a tanning bed in a little salon room. His overalls,
shoes and shirt were in a pile next to the door as well as the little
black bag which had been hanging on the doorknob in his bedroom. The
strange tugging was due to the string bikini which stretched across his
broad male chest and the little thong which was nestled in the crack of
his behind, the little red triangle of fabric stretched tight across
his cock.
The coffee smell was obviously the tanning accelerator he was wearing -
the tube laying next to the tanning bed was called 'Cappuccino.'
How in the hell did he get here? Oh, yes. Of course. His concentration
had drifted as he'd dozed during the movie on television and he wound
up here. The clock on the wall said four p.m. - a good two hours had
passed. Bret searched his memories as best he could as he smoothed the
cool after-sun aloe gel on his cooling skin, which was now a very rich,
healthy mocha color.
He noticed that his hands were different, too - his fingernails now
sported acrylic extensions with a sexy French manicure applied. They
were buffed very shiny and glossy, square-cut and about an inch from
cuticle to tip. Bret idly wondered how he was going to be able to do
anything with these claws, no matter how good they looked.
He remembered getting up and taking his tanning bag from the door,
trotting down the stairs to the car and taking off. He'd gone to Nails
Exotique first, getting the extensions and the manicure because he
remembered deciding that the old set was no good and not even the
polish he'd applied had been able to save them. He decided on square-
cut this time because she saw them on the Cosmo cover model and thought
they were really cute. The little Vietnamese girl who'd done her nails
had smiled broadly when Bret had tipped her and gone out to her car to
head towards Tropic Tan.
He flashed his pass - a lifetime membership, of course - and gotten a
bed without waiting. He'd stripped to his skin and put on the little
red thong bikini he'd gotten two months ago out of the Venus Swimwear
catalog, rubbed his skin down with Cappuccino Tanning Accelerator
lotion and set the bed for a twenty-minute bake. He'd put on the new
Wallflowers album, which he'd bought on cassette specifically to play
in the little stereo in the tanning bed, slipped on the headphones and
just relaxed.
No cellphone, no schedule, nobody who even knew where he was. Tanning
was the best. He went four times a week, he remembered, and it was the
time when no one was allowed to intrude on his life. It was his great
solace.
Once he was covered liberally with the soothing aloe gel, he threw on
the little Playboy baby tee and overalls over the bikini. He slipped
into the sandals and stuffed his underwear, eye goggles and tanning
lotions into his tanning bag. He left the salon quickly, stopping only
to wave back at the tan shapely girl at the front desk who greeted him
by name. Bret hopped into the little red Cabrio and started the engine,
finding that the Indigo Girls CD had been replaced by Madonna's
"Immaculate Collection." Bret fumbled for the stop button - he really
disliked Madonna's music, even though he had a very powerful memory of
how much he'd liked it in high school and college. He tried the radio,
but the presets were all tuned to the 'mix' and 'alternative' stations.
Finally he manually tuned in his favorite 'classic rock' channel and
tried to let the Stones calm him down.
He pulled into traffic and headed back towards the apartment, this time
pausing at the Jack in the Box to pick up something to eat - his
stomach was growling by this point and he still had the twenty dollars
he'd pulled from the ATM earlier today. As he pulled into the drive-
thru line, a pickup seriously in need of a muffler blasted by him. Bret
distinctly heard a wolf whistle out the passenger side window as it hit
the street in a chirp of tires.
Great. Now he had cowboy-wannabes whistling at him. He ordered his
usual burger and fries and pulled to the window. The little pimply-
faced teenager on the register gave him a once-over-not-too-lightly and
spoke only to Bret's chest. Bret grabbed the food almost violently -
tearing the bag a little with his nail extensions - and slammed the
little convertible into gear, gunning it into traffic without even
checking out how badly the teenager had desecrated his order.
He walked in the apartment to the jangling accompaniment of a ringing
phone. Dropping the sack onto the coffee table and the waiting nose of
a very curious Slider, Bret picked up the phone and pressed 'Talk' with
the tip of a carefully-manicured thumbnail.
"Hello?"
"Hey, baby girl, what's up?" a very cheerful, bubbly voice asked him.
"Who is this?" Bret asked.
"It's only your best friend," the voice replied. "You know, Kaylee?
God, you are so blonde sometimes. Who did you think it was?"
Bret cleared his throat. "Uh, I was expecting a call from Becca.
Sorry."
"So, you coming out tonight? It's going to be a good time. Kaitlyn and
Ashlea are already here, and Jana and Lori are on their way."
Bret closed his eyes, trying to shut out the very clear pictures of
people he'd never seen before that popped into his head as Kaylee named
them off.
"I'm not feeling very good," Bret attempted. "I think I'm just going to
take a bath and call it a night."
"Oh my God, you are being such a grandma these days," Kaylee chided.
"Get your ass up, slap on some makeup, put on that little sequined
dress you bought and get out here."
"I really don't think..."
"We're not leaving without you, Bret," Kaylee demanded.
"Seriously, Kaylee," Bret said. "I really don't feel good."
There was a long considering pause before: "Do you need me to get you
anything?"
Bret rubbed a hand through his hair, almost impaling his scalp with the
unfamiliar nails. "No, thanks, I'm okay," he said. "I just want to take
a bath and go to bed."
Kaylee's voice took on a conspirational tone. "I get it. What's his
name?"
Bret was mystified. "What's whose name?"
"The guy you have over there. The only way I know that Bret Reed would
miss a night of drinking and dancing is if there was a big, hunky man
involved."
"There's no guy," Bret said, a little annoyed. "I told you, I don't
feel good."
Kaylee giggled. "Oh, well, whatever. We'll be at Expansion if you
change your mind, baby girl. Call me, okay? Ciao."
Bret couldn't even answer before the line went dead. God, what pushy
friends this new life had to offer! He set the phone back in the cradle
and took out his meal, clicking on the television and scanning some
channels until he found something to eat by. He knew that the classic
movie channel was going to be running a Marx Brothers marathon tonight,
so he started in that direction.
He looked down at his half-finished burger. He'd zoned out again and
had managed the meal - Bret didn't even remember tasting it - and was
watching the 'Fashion Emergency' show on the E! network. He dimly
remembered feeling envy for the models, and expressing strong opinions
about some of the clothes that they showed.
He tried to take another bite of the burger but couldn't. The smell of
the grease and meat just turned him off. Same with the fries. He
must've been hungry for something else. Putting the burger on a plate
and covering it with Saran Wrap, he saved it for later - never waste
food, not on his salary - and before he knew it he'd lit another of the
long super-slim Capris and was puffing away contentedly on the couch,
watching the fashion show.
Bret was nearly panicked. He hadn't even dozed off that time, or lost
focus. He'd just done it because it felt so natural. He always had a
cigarette after dinner, ever since he started smoking regularly. He
vividly remembered sneaking his first cigarette out behind the girl's
locker room with Cindy Hanson and Stacey Johnson after junior high
cheerleading practice. They'd almost gotten sick, but it was just so
naughty and sexy-looking and it made them feel so grown-up that they'd
kept at it.
They both slept over at Cindy's house that next Friday and had paid
Cindy's big brother to buy them cigarettes and beer. They'd sat out by
Cindy's parents' pool and smoked the whole pack of Marlboro Lights and
drank two cans of Miller apiece. They'd all had headaches the next
morning, but they hadn't gotten sick or anything. After that, Bret had
put his five dollars in the collection when Cindy's brother had bought
cigarettes every week after that.
But none of that had ever happened. Bret could dimly remember that he'd
sneaked a cigar with his best friend Anthony Butcher, but his dad had
caught them and given them both a spanking. He'd never been popular
enough to get to know any of the girls like Cindy Hanson or Stacey
Johnson. He'd jerked off while fantasizing about them, just like all
the other boys in his grade, but he'd never exchanged more than a 'hi'
with them for the whole time they were in school together.
Bret looked down. He'd put out the cigarette in an ashtray on the
coffee table and was putting some kind of a moisturizer on his lips.
His lips were always dry after tanning, he knew, even though there was
no way he could know what happened to his lips after he tanned because
he'd only done it for the first time today.
"What the hell is happening to me, Slide?" he asked.
The cat only wore his 'wise' expression and didn't answer.
* * *
Bret looked up from the computer. He'd put himself to the task of
trying to zone out while still focusing on writing a short biography,
some way to figure out just whose life this was supposed to be, anyway.
The bio wasn't too long or involved, just the basics of where and when.
Parochial school until he was thirteen, then junior high at Madison and
on to High School at T.C. Jester. He worked summers as a lifeguard at
the YWCA pool and also helping out as an apprentice hairstylist at a
beauty salon near campus.
He'd gotten an academic and cheerleading scholarship to the university
and had met and fallen in love with Richard Klein there, dating him for
two years until they broke up. It was Bret's first real heartbreak.
He'd dated a great deal in high school, but never gotten more serious
than a heavy pet session, and she'd never fallen in love like that.
He needed nearly a year to recover from Richard and had sworn off men
for a while, concentrating on his cheerleading and his double major -
communications and film. He'd graduated cum laude with two Bachelor of
Arts degrees and had moved to the city to find a job. He'd hired on
with GeoTech two years ago in marketing and had just been promoted a
few months back to Public Relations Director. Ginger, Jennifer and Eric
all worked for him now. He was also about to make a move into writing
and directing his first short film, which explained the 'reading' next
Saturday.
His parents' names were still Marla and Howard Reed, but Bret's mother
now worked as a professor of literature at the local community college
and his father was a consultant for Andersen Consulting, as well as
being a Methodist minister.
Great, thought Bret. Now I'm a preacher's kid, to boot.
But one thing was made clear in the short little bio. Whatever part of
Bret had written it, whatever ghost was possessing him, had clearly
stated that pledging and joining the Delta-Delta-Delta sorority at the
university was the best thing that ever happened to him, and his
friends Becca, Kaylee and Monica lived in the same city and they were
still as close as ever.
He deleted the file and closed the laptop with a sigh.
* * *
Slider had long since lost interest in the human's antics as he'd gone
through every square inch of the apartment, looking for clues to
identity. After pouncing masterfully on the shoestrings of his human's
sneakers and investigating all of the boxes, bags and other containers
which were being dragged out of the closet, Slider curled up in the
last square of waning sunlight on the table outside and tried to catch
some much-needed sleep.
After a short and very refreshing nap, Slider began a short search for
his human, hoping for a bite of dinner, perhaps, or some more
scratching behind the ears (ever since the human had lengthened its
claws, the ear-scratching was heavenly). He found the human sitting on
the strange chair in the water room, head in hands and making strange
noises. Leaping effortlessly onto the counter, he summoned the human's
notice with a butt of the head against its shoulder.
"Slider," the human said miserably. "Will you look at me? Jesus. I
wasn't thinking and all of a sudden I sat down to pee. I sat down to
pee."
Slider continued his head-butting onslaught, even going so far as to
add the purr, before the human caught his subtle suggestion and took up
a casual ear-scratching.
"I can't even remember what my real parents look like," moaned the
human. "I don't remember what my first girlfriend looked like, only
that her name was Angie Garver. I'm scared, Slide. Really fucking
scared."
The human got up and touched the shiny lever that summoned the loud
'whooshing' sound. Slider laid his ears back at the affront. The human
was standing in front of the strange window where the other human who
looked just like him lived, the one who had a cat who looked exactly
like Slider and they copied one another's actions perfectly. Slider's
human was examining his face intently.
"I don't look different. I don't feel different. I don't understand why
everything around me is different. My life doesn't fit me anymore. It
may have sucked, but at least it was mine."
"Or is this life the one that's mine?" he asked the cat, scratching the
forehead absently with long nails. "When I stop worrying about it, I
live it like it's the one I've always had. It's a pretty nice life,
from what I've seen of it."
"So is it my life doesn't fit me, or I don't fit my life?" he asked the
mirror once again.
"Everybody sees me as a girl," he decided. "Mrs. Kennedy, John
Coleridge, nobody seems to notice that I'm a guy wearing women's
clothes and stuck in a woman's life. Hell, that guy at the Jack-in-the-
Crack even whistled at me. So if nobody seems to notice that I'm a guy,
why should I be worrying about it so much. It's not like I was using my
cock or anything like that when this happened. It's not that great a
loss."
He looked at the cat, suddenly. "So whaddaya think, Slide? Think I
should go out dancing? Take this new life for a spin?"
He ruffled the cat's fur playfully. "I thought you were going to say
that. Going out it is."
* * *
Bret managed to find a version of 'autopilot,' as he'd started calling
it, where he could still observe and think and even have some measure
of control. The best he could describe it was putting his mind in the
strange, rising state right before a sneeze, and the 'other life'
seemed to take over the habits, movements and provide the basic
knowledge that Bret needed, while leaving him still in control.
Stepping out of the day's overalls and t-shirt, Bret went to the closet
and rifled through the racks, trusting his new instincts to stop him
when he came to something promising.
He finally decided on a little pink sequined tube-dress with spaghetti
straps and a little gauzy see-through pink jacket with long sleeves.
Bret also chose a little strapless demi-bra and matching thong panties
from the drawer along with a pair of dark pantyhose with a glittery
finish. He slid into the panties and bra (which still looked admittedly
weird on his male body) with the ease borne of his new instincts.
Sitting on the bed he glided the pantyhose up his hairless legs - a
wonderfully erotic feeling, he discovered - and managed to get them
snug against his crotch over the panties.
After that the dress went on over his head and he had to do a little
'shimmy' to get it to slither down over his body. A little tugging and
twisting got it straightened and seated properly across the nonexistent
cleavage. The dress could hardly be qualified as a body covering. The
hem was only a few inches below his crotch and there was no back to
speak of - his entire upper body and shoulders were bare. The little
gossamer jacket probably wasn't going to help, but the instincts told
him to leave it on the bed for the time being.
Bret draped a towel around his neck and went back to the bathroom.
Letting his instincts keep control while he tweezed his own eyebrows
was a real triumph of willpower. But once all the stray hairs were
removed in a thankfully quick time, Bret found his hands taking up
concealer and sponge and applying strange shapes on his face - just
under the eyes, along the ridge of the nose, under the chin and
eyebrows, on the forehead.
Then a little darker stuff under the cheeks and around the temples.
Bret then found himself attacking the whole thing with a triangular
sponge, blending the whole thing into his skin to create contours and
shading. A little cr?me foundation to even things up. After all that
paint, Bret was sure his face would have felt sticky and oily, but the
application was so masterful that he could hardly tell it was there at
all, and most of that was smell.
Next he loaded up a fat soft brush with purplish-pink powder and blew
off the excess. He applied it to his temples and cheeks, dusting it
lightly across the forehead and chin as well. It gave him a rosy,
healthy glow. Next - and Bret was sure to stay far away from
interfering with the instincts here - he lined his eyes with a black
pencil, which looked entirely too sharp to his male sensibilities to
hold that close to his eye. He line