Amy 3: Little Orphan Amy!
by Amy Komori
The original characters and plot of this story are the property of the
author. No infringement of pre-existing copyright is intended. This
story is copyright (c) 2010 Amy Komori. All rights reserved.
Chapter One:
Liz Phair's Second Album
I still had no real identity, but once we got back from Florida, Mrs.
Komori immediately started building a fake one for me. The idea was
that as soon as Mrs. Komori could swing it, Amy Komori would become a
real live girl, with a Social Security number, a school record and a
past. Mr. Komori had been a lawyer, and Mrs. Komori had connections,
so she knew what records were needed and what wheels to grease.
The initial discussion?"This is what I'm going to do."?ended with a
debate on whether or not I should go to school in the fall. I was
against it; after all, I'd already been and graduated. But Mrs. Komori
insisted it'd enable me to create a life. Maybe becoming socialized
would help me forge some kind of compromise between my body and my
mind.
This was probably the most important part of the plan. Because while
Mrs. Komori probably could have made up a fake life for me all the way
up to age 18 or beyond, it would have required my staying under wraps
for the most part until I could step into it, and there was no telling
what that kind of isolation might do to my brain. I mean, there was no
way on earth I could fake being even a young adult the way I currently
looked; in fact, sometimes I was concerned I wouldn't even pass for
twelve. So until my body matured or the sex-change process somehow
reversed itself?and we weren't so sure it wouldn't one day?I had to
have something to do, to stay occupied. To live.
To that end, Mrs. Komori wanted me out and around people in a semi-
controlled environment. So she'd decided school was the best option.
With my intelligence and learning, the academic part would be a snap.
The social aspects would allow me to form a new psyche or personality
or identity to replace the one I'd lost. I'd get a truly intense
education in what it meant to be a girl growing up in America as a
bonus, along with a paper trail that Mrs. Komori didn't have to fake.
Real records we could then use to get me into college one day, or might
help me to have an actual life when I grew up... again.
That settled, I left it up to her.
"Hey, think of the grades you'll make," Emily told me later that night.
"You already know all that shit."
"Think of all the stupid things I'll have to put up with," I said.
"Getting up early, obeying rules, passing tests, eating crappy
cafeteria food, making friends, figuring out social cliques."
"You did all that when you were in school?"
"I tried to. Kinda, I guess."
"You must've been a little kiss-ass. A total brown-noser."
"I wasn't. I got in trouble a lot, too."
"I didn't. I got away with everything. Therefore, you must also have
been stupid."
"That's bullshit and you know it, Bullshitter. You did not get away
with everything. You told me about the time you and that girl
whatshername got caught leaving school grounds?"
"It's like when you lost your rod, you totally lost your sense of
humor, too."
"I?" Damn, it was always so easy for Emily to put me on. I was
helpless against her.
Mrs. Komori worked all day, then made dinner for us and spent her
evenings doing paperwork at the dining room table. I burned with
curiosity about where she came up with all this biographical
information for me. As far as the system goes, a person is
information. Without that, you weren't a person. How was she making
me a person? I finally couldn't stand it anymore and asked her.
"I hope you don't mind," she told me. "In order to do this, I'm having
to call in a lot of favors from people and it's so difficult keeping
everything straight. So what I'm doing is, I'm using a lot of my own
little details. It's easier for me to remember my own life than make
one up for you. Is... is that okay?"
"Oh yeah," I said. "Sure."
What did it matter? I was just shocked an upstanding citizen like Mrs.
Komori would do something for my sake that was what you might call
"somewhat dodgy." Dodgy as in "totally fucking illegal in all fifty
states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands." A big ass federal crime.
Not that we were going to use it for outright fraud. Well, I suppose
someone could argue that point in criminal court, but we weren't out to
scam little old ladies. Just the United States as a whole. For all
intents and purposes, Martin was as dead as Kurt Cobain. Deader, even,
because at least Cobain left a musical legacy. All Martin left was a
broken lease. So why did Amy Komori have to be his corpse?
I looked over Mrs. Komori's shoulder at the piles of paper. Reading
her neat handwriting, I learned I'd just turned twelve years old and
was whip-smart, as Liz Phair might have it. Mrs. Komori apparently
started first grade at 5 years old, the little nerd; this meant Amy
did, too, and was also a nerd. Based on transposed details from Mrs.
Komori's childhood, I discovered that at Amy's previous school, she
took advanced placement classes, was active in both the Glee and
Science clubs and the Gifted Program. The only thing Amy's biography
gleaned from my own was her ability to play guitar somewhat as
evidenced by her short stint in the school's mariachi band. That last
bit was my singular contribution.
As I read the notes and letters, tragedy edged into it? Amy Komori
wasn't exactly Mrs. Komori's niece: she was the daughter of some
distant relatives, orphaned at a young age. Traffic accident. She'd
lived with a series of foster parents until Mrs. Komori learned of her
pitiful existence and enfolded her back into the loving embrace of
family. What a lucky child I was! Like a Hans Christian Anderson or
Brothers Grimm character: Dumbelina.
"What are you gonna tell like your real relatives, Mrs. Komori?" I
asked. "I mean, they'll kinda know you didn't adopt me from any other
branch of Komoris. And even if you did, it went through pretty
fu?uh?frickin' fast."
"Oh, I'll figure something out," she said. "Um... the less you know
about this part of it, the better. I'll hit you with the things you
should know when I get it all straight."
"You want me to..."
"A little privacy, yeah."
I left the dining room and went back to my room. Down the hall, Mrs.
Komori was creating me. A girl of paper was forming on that dining
room table, and she was me and I was her, and I'd be her flesh and that
was that. I'd start back to school in the fall. But first, there was
the last month or so of summer, and a lot of things to work out in my
head.
Emily knocked and came in. She sat on the corner of my bed and said,
"Mom's pretty busy, huh?"
"Yeah, she's giving birth to me."
We both laughed.
"I'm an orphan, apparently. I'm not sure if I'm adopted or just living
with you guys."
"Well, that makes sense. I mean, no one's ever going to believe you're
my natural sister. You don't look anything like me."
"Well, she's still gonna have a lot of 'splainin' to do, mang," I said,
aping Al Pacino in "Scarface," which had been on TV the night before.
"Jou don' worry jour leetle head about that, mang," Emily teased. She
ruffled my hair. "Oh fuck me, what a mop."
"Lemme introduce jou to... I kinda... wish I did look more like you."
"Really? Why?"
"I dunno. I don't wanna open up a whole can of dead worms or anything,
but I didn't date you 'cause of your brilliant mind."
"Oh, fuck you. You did so."
"Okay, that was part of it."
"'Cause I am a fuckin' genius. I can do all kinds of maths and
scientifical junk."
I smiled mysteriously and said no more. But it was true. I did kind
of wish I looked more like Emily. Maybe we truly could be sisters,
then. I couldn't remember a time in my life when I wished I looked
like any girl, but there it was.
"You look..." Emily said, and she searched for a suitable adjective.
"Well, I don't want to insult you by saying cute. You're a really good
looking kid, Marty-boy."
"I look half starved."
"You're an orphan. All the coolest orphans look that way. Oliver
Twist, Annie... um... that... other one..."
"There is no other one."
"Yeah, that one!"
The phone was ringing and Emily hopped off the bed to answer it. It
was Darla or someone and then I was alone to fend for myself during the
long hot dog days before fall and school.
Chapter Two:
Amy Goes Rolling
With Mrs. Komori creating me from thin air and her own childhood, and
Emily gone with her friends so much, I learned to amuse myself. How I
chose to do that was with a pair of inline skates I found in Emily's
closet. If I layered three pairs of socks, I could wear the skates and
stumble around in them out on our driveway to my heart's content. Mrs.
Komori saw me one morning, and took me to the mall (those punks again!)
and bought me a pair my size, plus some pads and a helmet and I took to
skating right away, as if I'd been born on wheels.
Since I weighed about as much as if I'd been carved from balsa wood,
flat surface skating came easy for me. I had balance and speed.
Looking for a challenge one afternoon, I tossed on the last remaining
pair of my humungous boy's pants and a tee, my helmet and knee pads
(they go under the pants, by the way) and headed down to the empty
parking lot that passed for the local skate park.
Where those same skater punks who harassed me hung out when they
weren't propping up the dry fountain at the mall or huffing glue. I
saw them as I came rolling up the sidewalk. Territorial apes.
I almost turned around and went home. I could feel fear, palpable and
strong, like a clammy hand around my chest and stomach, squeezing. I
trembled with adrenaline, ready for fight or flight. Somehow, I forced
myself to stay. I just made sure I kept as far from the skateboarders
as possible without rolling on the sidewalk. It wasn't long before
they noticed me, gliding around by myself at the far end of the lot.
First came smothered laughs, then coughs that sounded a lot like, "Fuck
off." After that didn't work, they started upping the ante with nasty
sexual remarks that got louder and more pornographically detailed until
they caused my face to burn. But they directed their most vicious
insults at my inline skates.
Scared to the point of almost peeing in my pants, I still showed up day
after day, just to prove something to them and myself. I skated
through a shitstorm of verbal abuse.
"Look at that stupid bitch," one kid would say and I'd fume and try a
360?or even a 180-- crack up and land with a loud, "OOF!" and a clatter
of plastic, narrowly avoiding the shattered beer bottles glittering
diamond-like on the lumpy asphalt. If I hadn't had that helmet, I
would have scrambled my brains.
The umpteenth time I destroyed myself in one of my spectacular,
sprawling, incredibly painful falls, one of the kids ironically called
me "Maki," after an aggressive skater who had recently been on ESPN.
His buddies had no idea who she was, so he explained it like this:
"She looks like that fuckin' Maki off that rollerblading shit. Did you
see that the other day?"
"Fuckin' rollerbladers, dude. Get that weak shit outta here."
"I'd fuck that Brazilian chick, though, dude."
"Why don't you fuckin' go home and play with your precious little
Barbie dolls, Maki?" another one said. Fucking mouthy little asshole.
"Why don't you go home and play with your precious little dick?" I told
him. I got up with my head turned away from them so they wouldn't see
my shameful tears, swiftly wiped away on my shoulder. I looked down at
my bony brown arm, my dumb, wounded left arm with little pills of
rubbed-off skin and shiny red blood droplets starting to bead up among
them, then over at Mouthy with narrowed eyes and the boys all reacted
with mock fright, trying to embarrass me more.
But as the days went by, I learned a lot of the intimidation they aimed
at me was from their own insecurities. They could zip around on their
skateboards and ollie and do kick flips and 540s, and curse and spit
and call me a stupid girl and a rollerblader, but they weren't actually
going to do anything physically. They were too scared of each other
and their opinions to risk humiliation if I proved to be a little
wildcat or something. They weren't even trying to break me, I
realized. They were trying to break me in.
Finally, one of them actually talked to me like a human being.
"Hey, Maki," he said from under his blond hair, his eyes squinting at
me, his head at an angle. He held his skate deck under his arm, and I
could see blood running down from his elbow in bright rivulets, a
startling crimson against his pale skin.
"What?" I said with an exasperated snort.
"Where you from?"
"Cali," I lied. "My name's not Maki."
"Oh, no shit. I didn't know that. What is it?"
"Ma?my name is Amy."
"How come you do rollerblading?"
I couldn't back down, or I'd have to stop rolling at the park for good.
"It's not rollerblading, fuck-knocker. Roller Blades is a brand name.
These are..." Actually, I didn't know what brand my skates were. El
Cheapo Grandos from Toys-R-Us or something. I felt dumb.
"Whatever. How come you do it? You're like the only kid I know who
does it."
I decided to keep playing it tough, with a thundering in my chest
making me feel anything but. "What makes you think you know me?"
He kind of smiled, his upper lip rising to show perfect white teeth,
the results of his parents' belief in high-priced orthodontia. About
an hour later, he broke out all the front ones and his mouth was a huge
red smear that made everyone forget about his damaged elbow. He cried
like a baby and I threw up twice before his parents came to take him to
the ER or dentist or wherever. But by the time that happened, I was
provisionally accepted as part of the tribe, and they even gave me high
scores for my demonstration of projectile vomitry. I wiped my mouth
smiled weakly with sweat pouring down my face as they lightly punched
my bare arms and bumped fists with me. The girl who was into the
lamest, most weak-ass shit anyone could be into, but with her own
little niche nevertheless.
The very next weekend, some older guy with designs on making our ad hoc
park the real thing with regular competitions came with a work crew of
university kids. He told us what he was planning and how we were lucky
kids because we could help him prove its viability, and they built a
wooden halfpipe vert. Not a little shitty one, maybe not full-sized,
but large enough so we were all excited and chattering like monkeys
about it. We sat on the low concrete wall with bushes shading us and
watched the guys hammer and screw it together.
"Check that shit out, dude," one kid said, going down the line in front
of us. "Sick, dude. Fuckin' sick!"
I was just kind of dazed and happy to be sitting with them, my skates
letting my feet touch the ground instead of dangling. The kid pretend-
slapped me in the face and I kicked him in the butt with my boot.
Work completed and our mysterious benefactor locked in a life-death
struggle with the city council over zoning permits, the university guys
christened the vert with a few runs, and then we mixed in with them.
One of the guys took a look at me and said, "Damn, kid. What's that on
your feet? Roller skates?"
"Inline?"
"I'm just messin' with you, dude. It's cool. But aren't you kinda
young?"
"I am now," I told him and got ready for to drop in. My eyes were wide
and wild because I'd never done this before. Launching, I went
straight down as if I'd jumped off a diving board into a waterless pool
and ate wood at the bottom, landed with an impressively loud thump.
Above me, everyone went "Ooooooo!" in unison.
"I think she's dead," someone said softly.
I rolled over on my back and sat up. Shaken, not really hurt anywhere
other than in my pride, I skated off the vert, climbed the ladder and
got set up to try again. The university guy grabbed the back of my
pants and I swung out, kicking. He jerked me back and stood me on my
wheels.
"I don't think you should do it from up here," he said. "You're going
to break every bone in your body."
"But?"
"Start from the middle, dude," he told me. "Everybody hold up while
Cool Breeze here tries it from the center."
He took me down and showed me, kind of pushing me while I choked down
helpless rage and embarrassment and pretended to be grateful. Later,
pouting at home by myself, I conceded he was right.
So I set about learning how to do what I learned the aggressive skaters
called "pumping," which sounded nasty but was anything but. Since
everyone around me was a skateboarder, I had to figure it out for
myself from inline skating videos and magazines. Starting in the
middle the way the university guy showed me, I rode up, back down, up,
back and forth like a timid old lady re-learning how to walk after
rehabbing a broken hip, trying to go higher and higher while everyone
waited, their impatient energy making me push myself. It was scary as
hell at first, but once I gave into gravity and started tucking into
the drop, I found myself going high and higher up the vert walls.
Pumping on a vert. When I learned to turn around so I came down
forward on both sides, I was almost skating for real.
My breakthrough was when I managed to do a 180 without falling to my
knees and sliding down amid the same mocking, egalitarian laughter that
greeted the boys' crashes. With that figured out, I got higher and
higher up the vert walls with every run until one spectacular afternoon
I reached the coping... and went above it.
I shrieked with joy!
And because I was so light, I could throw myself up until I felt almost
as if I were flying, not caring if I broke my neck. I'd explode upward
into the sun, these crazy high-pitched sounds coming out of my lungs
and throat in a completely involuntary reaction. It felt so good, I
almost wet my pants. I was reusable like the space shuttle, launching
myself over and over, rising ever upward. Total fucking rapture!
As soon as everyone saw how massive my airs were, they re-nicknamed me
Ayumi, after another Japanese professional skater-- not that I was
anywhere near her class?because it was closer to my real name.
This time I didn't mind having a nickname because I was actually
becoming better at riding the vert?and everyone enjoyed my sliding,
crashing failures at doing anything more than a 180, although I tried
and tried to do 360s and once even a flatspin-- than most of the local
posers on their skateboards. There were a few hardcore guys who were
miles better than the rest, of course. They could do shit like little
Spider-Men on wheels. Fear of bodily harm kept the rank and file
somewhat in check, whereas vert rash made me feel strong again.
Bad-ass in a way I'd never even felt when I had XY chromosomes. Kinda.
To an extent...
Once I'd proven I could skate the halfpipe with the woodpushers and
take their shit, the boys started getting other ideas about me, and
that was definitely not something I wanted or needed.
The first time it happened, I was just talking to this one guy while I
was putting on my skates. I was sitting on top of the vert, my feet
hanging off and he was sitting beside me. One of his friends called
out his name and when he stood up there was this awkwardness about his
movement that made me kind of look. His crotch was right at eye level
so I couldn't help but notice he'd had quite a reaction to our
conversation. Okay, no big deal. Guys got boners. It may not even
have been because of me.
A few days after that, I dropped in for my run and every time I got
near the coping, I could hear my buddy Patrick, he of the newly-
repaired grillwork (his smile still wasn't quite the same as it had
been on the day he first dared talk to me), and some of the other guys
talking, including Boner Boy. I had other things on my mind?such as
not falling?and my helmet, the sound of my wheels and banging around so
hearing the conversation was like listening to an almost-out-range
radio station, but they were so loud and careless I caught just enough.
I definitely heard "Ayumi" once, and "like to bend her" and "like a
boy" and "no titties" and "full of shit" and "fuckin' sicko" and
"future dyke" and "get the fuck outta here!"
Patrick was kind of quiet the rest of the day. He looked pretty pissed
at everyone and if anyone said anything, joking or otherwise, to him,
he scowled. He'd picked up a new nickname, too. Sushi-Boy. Just
before dark and heading home, I skated up to him.
"You okay?" I asked.
He blushed. "Yeah, fine."
"What's with the Sushi-Boy thing?" I asked, kind of rolling my eyes
like I thought it was so amusing.
Instead of explaining, Patrick said, "Nothin'," and darted away on his
skateboard, leaving me standing there with my suspicions. I'd really
believed when I skated, everyone forgot I was girl. The next day's
incident was a reminder of my true status among them, as big as a
billboard and as brightly lit.
"Hey, Ayumi," Patrick said as I painted flowers on his skate deck with
a paint marker, my tongue sticking out with concentration. He'd been
acting strange all morning, talking to me a lot more than usual, but in
a babbling way, all nervous and antsy. He'd been getting on my nerves
big time, and then he'd asked me to do this paint job and pulled out
some paint markers from his backpack. I agreed, and now I was
regretting it. I could feel his hot breath on my bare neck and I was
vaguely considering brushing him away as if he were a fly or gnat. He
was leaning way over, getting a little closer with every breath.
"I'm doing this, dude," I told him softly. I intently formed another
silver petal.
"I finally got a fuckin' Playstation for my birthday. Wanna come
over?" Almost in my ear.
I was about to say, "Sure," when Patrick did something that made me shy
away like a skittish kitten. He reached out and started stroking a
tuft of my hair behind my ear in this flirtatious way, with the backs
of his fingers against my neck. As I squirmed, chill bumps breaking
out all over, I looked up at him and he had this sleepy expression in
his eyes. Then he closed them and leaned towards me. I ducked my head
and his nose thumped into my hair. Hard.
"Ow!" he yelped, drawing back. His hand went to his nose and he
sneezed twice. "What the fuck, Ayumi?"
That set me off in a major way.
"Fuck you!" I snarled. I threw the marker at him, pushed him on his
ass. As I skated away, I could feel his and everyone else's admiring
looks all over me as they poked loud, braying fun at Patrick for liking
boyish Ayumi the way guys like girls, and at me for getting so freaked
out about it. All I could think was, Don't look at me like that! Don't
think those things about me!
I stopped, wheeled around, balled my fists on my hips and jeered, "Fuck
all you little Playstation-playing pussies!"
Immediately, everyone shut up. They looked so stupid, like a bunch of
dressed-up chimps, I started laughing my ass off. I felt like Emily all
of a sudden.
Patrick wasn't quite so friendly the rest of the day, and there weren't
so many one-of-the-gang put-downs directed at me. I got a wide berth.
A few girls had just started coming around since the vert went up, so I
hung with them the rest of the week when I wasn't skating. I didn't
have to worry about coming up with smart-ass replies or one-upping
anyone with them, and could just sink into their group. We chatted
about skating and general topics like school and music. It lasted
until Friday afternoon. And while the Patrick incident had flamed out
one of the engines, the next few hours sent the Amyplane right into the
mountain.
I'd made all of one run before falling and tearing up my elbow.
Patrick was around, kind of staring at me with these yearning puppy dog
eyes and I just wasn't feeling it at all. So I retired over to the
wall where the girls were sitting and nursed my stupid booboo and we
started talking about what we'd do if we were rich. These weren't the
kind of girls who wanted to buy ponies or anything like that. They had
bigger plans.
"If I had the money, I'd pay like a million dollars and get the
Breeders and maybe like Cibo Matto to play at the Lava Lamp," I said
when it was my turn. It was this silly fantasy I had from time to
time. The two bands involved changed frequently. "I'd let anyone come
for free."
"Could I come?" this girl asked.
"Oh, fuck yeah. If it's free, why not?"
"I mean, would I be on like the guest list or something?"
"Yeah, okay."
Then she flat out told me, "Geez, Amy, I wish you were a guy-- you'd
make a cool boyfriend."
I grinned like an idiot and just about melted into the gutter and down
the storm drain. It was flattering but as I chewed my lower lip trying
to think of something to say back, I felt the first hairline fractures
form. Apparently, I was more brittle even than Patrick's teeth. And
heart.
"I-I better go," I said.
"Why?"
"I just have to."
"You're back early," Emily called from her bedroom when she heard me
come in.
Finding her home perked me up a little. I thought, Yeah! It's about
damn time I got her to myself! I quickly threw my skates and helmet on
the floor in my room, pulled off my knee pads and pants, changed to
shorts and went to show her my latest skating wound and talk to her
about everything that had been happening lately. Emily would explain
to me all about how to deal with boys having girls as friends and I'd
know what to do and how to react and skating could be fun again.
She and Darla were sitting on the floor, their backs against the bed,
both of them holding scissors, colored construction paper scattered
around them. Darla gave me a look, a jack-o-lantern stare, a
mysterious flickering behind her eyes. It scared the living bejabbers
out of me.
I backed out quickly, thumping heart, alone with my troubles. I took a
shower, wrapped myself in a towel, put an oversized Band-Aid on my
elbow and plopped myself on my bed with wet, uncombed hair. I could
hear Darla and Emily murmuring to each other right through the wall.
It made my heart race even more.
Crack. I shattered completely. I tried to force some tears, hoping I
could squeeze out the hurt and fear the way I would a big ol' turd, but
nothing happened except a few dry sobs. That ended my first stint as
an aggressive inline skater. I just didn't have the heart to go back
to the skate park and face those kids. I couldn't be anyone's
girlfriend. I couldn't be anyone's boyfriend. I couldn't be anyone's
anything.
Chapter Three:
The Loneliest Fairy Princess
At home, not wanting to do anything and mired in this sludge-like
personal inertia, I moped for a day or two. My inline skates, helmet
and pads lay where'd I'd dropped them on the floor. Sometimes I rolled
over in bed and stared at them through the black foliage of my hair,
blinking because the strands tickled my eyelashes. Disinterested. The
ceiling light reflected dully on the plastic skates, the bland wall
beyond.
"You wanna go somewhere?" Emily asked through the door. I thought to
myself, You're just asking because you feel guilty about abandoning me.
As soon as one of your friends calls, you'll ditch me. Ditch me for
Darla.
"Go away," I told her. And she did.
It was like being in limbo. Male soul, female body. No one could
possibly understand how it felt. Well, maybe a few people could, but
they had been born with it; mine happened while I was conscious of
every little development. Ugh... so fucking complicated! The whole
world sucks, I thought.
But I could feel myself coming to a decision. While Emily had been
this huge "Grease 2" fan, I knew "Grease" to be the superior movie and
I'd forced her to watch it with me once (although afterwards she told
me she hated it, simply out of spite). Yeah, "Grease." For some
reason, I started thinking about how, towards the end, Sandy realizes
she can't go on living as this sweetie-pie girl next door and keep
Danny Zucco. So she gets Pinky to trick her out head to toe in bad-ass
black and tease up her hair. At the school fair, she blows Danny's
brains out with her smoldering sexiness and they sing and dance and fly
away in a fantasy version of Greased Lightning, their pet hot rod,
probably to some castle in the sky where they fuck like crazed monkeys.
Okay, that last part was my own story innovation but it was at least
hinted at, right? I felt dumb framing my dilemma in terms of Sandy's
choice, but maybe genderless freak wasn't what I was meant to be
anymore than she was meant to be a na?ve young virgin. A wild sex
kitten had been living inside Sandy all the time.
What lived inside me?
Maybe some kind of girl. Yeah, I should just fucking go all the way
and be a girl, I thought, and my mood-clouds parted with a hint of a
sun reluctant to show itself for fear it was all just a joke. I
imagined it as looking a little like the Raisins Bran sun, with a face
and everything. No, Mr. Sun, it's definitely no joke. I'm totally
serious about this.
Then I lectured myself: I mean, maybe that's the message you received
from your secret heart when you fell in love with that sundress at
Macy's, and you can't deny it 'cuz you know you wanted it. You wanted
it at the store, you wanted it at the beach. That was your heart
saying, "You are a girl now. Go ahead and be one!"
It felt good to admit it. Yeah, I could just try being a girl. I
mean, that's what Patrick wants me to be. That must be what God or
Satan or Darla or a virus or bacteria or whoever or whatever turned me
into this wanted as well, or why else would I be lying there feeling so
tiny and helpless? That's what that Macy's asshole sales guy and those
little old ladies want. Everyone wants me to be a girl, so why
shouldn't I get with the program and be happy for once?
The sun was out and smiling and showering me in raisins while I danced
in the vineyard. I sat up, got dressed and went into the kitchen where
Mrs. Komori was enjoying a Saturday morning off.
"Um, I have an announcement to make," I said.
"Okay..." Mrs. Komori said, looking a little confused.
"I-I kinda... I want to get some girl clothes and try... you know..."
"Try them on?"
"Well, that, too. But I mean more like try on... gender. I want to
try on a new gender. I mean, the way I see it, I may be a guy inside
and stuff but maybe I could try being a girl. Just to see if I can do
it. Like it. See if I like it. Or something."
"And you feel you need girl's clothes to do that?"
"Yeah. I mean, don't I?"
"If you want them, I guess. I mean, personally, I don't feel clothes
make any difference. If you're happy dressing like a boy..."
"But I'm not. That's the point. I thought I was, but I'm really
miserable like this. I don't know what I am."
"You're you. You're Martin."
"Yeah, but that's just it. I don't know if I am anymore. Inside,
yeah. But like when I was skating I was free but then the... Patrick?
He he like... like-liked me. A-and this one girl... It was like I
couldn't escape. But it's like why did they have to treat me like
that? Why couldn't I be just a person with them? When I did things
before, as a guy, I was Martin. Now when I do things, I'm Amy to
everyone else no matter how I think about myself. It's like everyone
wants me to do this. So I'm ready. I wanna do it."
"Slow down. You're really not making any sense."
She was right. I'd been babbling and waving my hands around like a
crazy person. But I was thinking on the fly, working out things out
loud instead of in my internal dialogue. It was a jumble but what I
was trying to explain to her was this feeling that Martin-soul in
Martin-body equaled one person, Martin-soul in Amy-body equaled another
person. I'd tried just being the old me wearing a new skin, but it led
me to ennui, to malaise, defeat, depression, gloom and bizarre
fixations on Olivia Newton-John and the Kellogg's Raisin Bran cereal
mascot. I had to be a new me. The one people expected when they saw
this bony girl.
So I cajoled Mrs. Komori into taking me right back to that Macy's
store?I was so impatient to get out to the mall I was actually
squirming and grinning like an idiot in the car-- and buying some tops,
dresses and skirts for me. Since school was coming up, we needed to be
practical and mostly bought items for fall, but they were all intensely
feminine in a wannabe teeny-bopper way. This time, when I tried
clothes on, everyone seemed to approve; I was being rewarded for doing
things in the right way. If Mrs. Komori evinced any doubts, she was
careful not to voice them.
"You look great, Amy," she said, but I thought I heard something off in
her tone.
I was too busy, too focused to care.
"I wanna check one more thing," I said. My eye brows up, I looked
questioningly at the clearance rack. End of season sales, big mark
downs and discounts. Would it be there? What if it wasn't? I bounced
over to check...
And it was. That little sundress, like pure love made of cotton and
summery colors. It had waited for me, and this had to be a sign from
the gender gods. We're well pleased with you, Daughter of Eve. I
beamed happily as I took it off the rack, but turned to Mrs. Komori
with this hesitant, embarrassed feeling in my stomach. Oh shit, what
was Emily going to say or think? She knew I wanted this stupid thing
since way back and she was gonna give me so much shit about it! But
the wanting was strong and overrode all other desires and fears.
"That's soo cute," the sales woman told me. Mrs. Komori came over,
felt the material, and checked the price tag, which was marked in red.
It was super cheap.
She said, "Go. Go try it on. I'll wait."
I practically ran to the dressing room. I couldn't remember being this
excited about a piece of clothing in my life. I pictured myself
skating in my old Martin pants, hurtling skyward off the vert into an
impossibly vivid sky, a kind of shaky-cam mind-video of the butch
little monster I'd been less than a week before. As I slipped out of
my clothes for the billionth time that day and into the sundress-- the
pale lines on my shoulders sharply contrasted with the darkness of my
tanned skin-- I saw that aggressive skater girl take a huge tumble and
come up changed. There she was in the mirror, farmer tan and all, but
much softer now, frail and pretty. Black hair, ridiculous. Black
eyes, glittering. High cheeks, long nose, a couple of black freckles
like lonely stars in an empty galaxy, waif-thin body in a floral dress
that came down to just past her almost chocolate knees.
Oh fuck yeah, I sighed to myself. This is what I was craving all
along. Despite the misgivings in her eyes she tried but couldn't fully
hide, Mrs. Komori took it all so bravely. She even greeted me with a
supportive hug, helped me pick out a sweet pair of brown Teva sandals
to complete my sundress outfit, plus enough undies to last two weeks
and put all my discoveries on her credit card to boot. I felt warm all
over as I wore the sundress and sandals home, the cashier cutting the
plastic tags for me while I stood there smiling.
My cheeks hurt!
Emily was in the kitchen drinking a Dr. Pepper when we came in. She
did a spit take, spewing soda and foam all over the kitchen counter,
which pissed off Mrs. Komori and led to a short little argument between
them while I put the bags in my bedroom. I checked myself in the
mirror. Still a girl, I thought.
"Marty-marts!" Emily called. "Come lemme see your new look!"
I bit my lip. Oh fuck, here we go, I thought, and walked down the
hall, my arms stiff at my sides. I stepped into the kitchen and Emily
was still wiping up her mess with a paper towel. She stopped and
looked me all over.
"Turn around," she said.
I folded my lips back and mashed them firmly with my teeth as I slowly
rotated.
"Wow," Emily said. "I mean, just wow!"
"Wow good or wow bad?" I asked.
"I don't know. How does it feel?"
"Pretty good. I didn't tell you before, but I've decided I'm gonna try
to be a girl now."
"Okay... Don't know why you need a dress to?"
"Emily," Mrs. Komori said, a warning in her voice. "This is what she
wants."
"She?"
"Yeah," I said. "And you don't have to call me Martin anymore. Just
Amy."
"I was already doing that half the time anyways, in case you didn't
notice."
"I noticed."
"Well... okay. I mean, good for you. I just think you should be who
you are?"
"This is who I am. Now."
"If you say so."
"I do."
Emily was really scrutinizing me. I could tell her bullshit detectors
were working overtime and she usually had them set to high-gain or
ultra-sensitive frequencies anyways. I had no idea what she detected
there in the kitchen, or what she thought she was detecting.
Mrs. Komori left us alone to go put up her bag and car keys. Emily
came over to me and flicked the little string bow over my left
shoulder. She circled me, just looking down at me. It made me feel
pretty dumb, almost naked. She appraised me with her artist's eye and
that cunning, evil genius mind of hers.
"Yeah, I knew you wanted this dress the first time you saw it," she
said quietly, her voice almost conspiratorial. "I just never expected
to actually see you in it."
"Yeah. I dunno why I wanted it. Something just clicked."
"That's cool. You look really good in it. Remember when I suggested
getting a haircut? You should let me take you to the place I get mine
done. If you want."
"Yeah, cool."
"I've kinda been neglecting you, but there's all this shit I have to do
before school starts back."
"Yeah, I remember what it was like. I guess I'm on track to start... I
don't know what grade. Eighth?"
"Um... Amy?"
"Yeah?"
"You really know... like dresses and stuff? I mean, yeah, I like them
too and all but it's not really necessary or anything. If you really
do want to be a girl, just be one in your own way."
"This is my own way."
"I hope so." Then she added, softly, "Or you're in for a wicked
surprise."
The following Monday, wearing my awesome, freshly laundered sundress, I
took Emily up on the haircut thing. She had her hairdresser?this
muscular cool dude in a tight tee and jeans?give me a bob with short
bangs and little points curling below my tiny ears, the back
practically shaved, almost the same haircut Natalie Portman had in "The
Professional," only a bit more extreme. We hit Moldy Oldies for a
vintage dress, long and in ice blue velvet. We even stopped by this
jewelry story and I had my ears pierced... two little silver rings in
one, three in the other, one up top. Seemed like the thing to do. I
felt so adorable, it was sickening.
Little Amy Girly-girl. I hadn't the slightest idea what I was doing,
but I worked at it with more diligence than I'd ever approached
anything before, other than aggressive inline skating. In a way, it
was like learning to pump on the vert all over again. It was certainly
very physical. I tried walking like a girl, talking like a girl. And
while it caused me pain at first, I fake-giggled a lot.
But whenever we drove past the skatepark on some Komori family errand,
I ducked down in the car so Patrick and the others wouldn't see what
I'd become. They probably don't even miss me, I thought. Fuck 'em.
I'm a girl now. Girls don't do that stuff. Well, Maki, Fabiola, Ayumi
and some others do. And the girls on skateboards tearing it up on the
vert without me?there were more now. But most girls don't. And I'm
like them. The acceptable majority, acceptably girly in the most
acceptable of ways. I will play with my precious Barbies. Except for
being too old for dolls and not even interested in them in the least.
I can do this, I thought confidently. Bravada. Soon school would
start and I'd be pretty well versed in this being a chick business. So
I thought. Then I overheard Emily and her mom discussing how concerned
they were about ridiculously exaggerated my act was becoming. Not
long after that, Emily took me aside.
"Knock it off with the fucking drag queen act, okay?" she whispered.
"What?"
"You're flitting around like a-a little flamer. I liked you better when
you were a butch little skater."
I flushed with anger instantaneously. She'd poked me hard, right in
the spot most sore. "What am I supposed to do? I'm a girl now!"
"Act like a girl, then. Not... I don't know. This is exactly what I
tried to tell you! I don't know what you're acting like, but it's
scary!"
"Yeah, and nobody's teaching me how!"
"Teaching you? Amy, I have my own life, too."
"But I don't! I don't have any life at all! And I'm doing this all
alone!"
"Do you honestly believe that? I mean do you really and truly think no
one is doing anything to help poor little you?"
"I don't know! Probably! The only thing I do know is I used to have
this thing between my legs I'd stick in you... remember that?"
Emily slapped me. She instantly looked more shocked and hurt than I
did. "Oh shit, Amy... Martin! I'm sorry!" So distressed, the
situation so twisted, she didn't even know what to call me anymore.
But I was already running to the bathroom. I took off my dress and
climbed into the bathtub in my underwear and turned on the water, hot
and steaming. Emily came in to apologize, and I screamed at her, my
face red, my eyes streaming, "Go away!"
"Martin, I'm so sorry! I-I didn't mean?"
"Get out! Get out!"
She did. I cried in the tub for hours and no one came to check on me.
My fingers turned all prune-like and I compulsively gnawed the
fingernails down to the quick. They itched and bled.
This was worse than breaking up with Emily at the beach. It was
breaking up with myself. I'd failed at staying me, I'd failed at being
a girl. What did that leave me?
Nothing is what. Even Emily and Mrs. Komori started freezing me out.
Their patience had limits, and I'd trampled all over them with rage and
ingratitude, scared the only two people I had left in the world right
out of my life. I had food on the table, but we all ate in silence and
I retreated back to a room that wasn't really mine and where the closet
was stuffed with both boy and girl clothes and my inline skating stuff
lay ignored.
Chapter Four:
I Don't Meet Mayim Bialik
Now I was alone, trapped in a girl's body with no one to turn to, a
stranger in the Komori house, a stranger to myself. To really stick an
ice pick in my heart, Emily started dating Toby again, and I learned
that the only kind of pain as luscious as having an ulcer on your
tongue you could flick against your teeth was the hurt I derived from
stealing "Playboy" and other glossy sex magazines from convenience
stores. Most of the stores put the porno behind the cash register
where you couldn't get at it, but I found the ones that did and looted
them at will.
It wasn't that difficult. If I had on a dress, I found I was really
adept at putting the magazines behind my back, hiking up my skirt and
slipping them down into the waistband of my panties. If I had on
pants, they went down the front. Then I could slide sideways out the
door, duck around the corner of the store, pull the magazines out and
run like hell in case anyone followed.
Sometimes I'd even be laughing or maybe crying as I ran, but I couldn't
tell the difference.
I'd usually just stick my loot under my dress or shirt when I got back
to the Komoris' house and walk to my room quickly with my arms folded
across my stomach, hopefully hiding my contraband. Then I'd lock
myself in my room and sit cross-legged on the floor and flip to the
centerfold and just stare.
Why did I even want these magazines? When I was around this age as a
boy, the answer was pretty simple. Naked women, any naked women, made
me excited and I'd jack it like millions of other kids my age. As I
got older, I developed a kind of ironic detachment from the imagery
versus the reality, plus a vague unease about objectification I really
never examined because?you know-- it sure felt good to jack it looking
at hot chicks. But now, under these circumstances? I really didn't
have clue.
Because mostly the women in them made me feel a new kind of
strangeness, kind of uncomfortable. After all, we were the same
general species or family now, sisters or cousins or something. Well,
we had the same junk; after that we diverged wildly. I'm not even sure
what it was they were saying to me or about me. What comment on
womanhood does a surgically-altered sex object who's about twenty
percent post-consumer recyclable plastics make to a thin, vaguely
genderless person with a skinny kid-girl body? I was hardly more
likely to look or be like any of them than I had been when I'd worn a
guy's flesh. Huh, I thought, maybe even less likely now. And I didn't
even want to look or be like them.
The magazine women, the centerfolds or whatever, were usually blonde,
obviously enhanced and heavily airbrushed. This one posed falling out
of her clothes in a garage, that one pretended to masturbate in a fake
French villa. I never tried to match their poses or figure out what was
the big deal about it by touching myself down there, but staring at
these seemingly impossible bodies made me feel a wimpy kind of warmth
inside that might have been all I had left of a libido or the first
inklings of the one I'd have when my new body passed through puberty.
I wondered sometimes if I'd still like women, or would I be into men.
Or both. Or neither. Eventually, I'd get the urge to pee and shove
the magazines under my bed.
The twelve-year-old pervo. Or perva.
I also stole cigarettes from people when they weren't paying attention
and smoked while I gazed at the world through eyes like black slits.
I'd rarely smoked when I was alive but I decided it didn't matter much
if I did now that I was dead. And I kind of liked the way it made me
feel. Nauseated.
But the end of summer wasn't all theft, the joys of light literature
and addicting myself to nicotine. Now that I officially no longer gave
a shit about myself or anything else, I started skating again. I found
the call was too strong to resist. It was so mighty, in fact, it
completely overrode all other considerations at the park, like
Patrick's crush or sexual desires or whatever it was little skating
deviants had in their brains, hearts or nether regions for girls. My
illicit activies brought me little joy, but I skated with fierceness
now.
It was exhilarating. Already an invulnerable thief, I decided I wasn't
a girl, I wasn't a guy, I was something new, something both and bad-ass
and dangerous (in a humiliatingly cute and tiny way). I felt full of
this wired energy, a runaway robot shaking itself apart, shooting out
sparks, streaming acrid white smoke, catching the dry leaves on fire.
On the vert, I gave my new philosophy its fullest expression. If I'd
been reckless on the vert before, now I was downright suicidal. Damn
those stupid consequences to hell! My airs became larger, I kept going
higher and higher. And when you do that, you have to fall back to
earth sometime. Gravity demands it.
Gravity, my friend. Gravity brought me sliding down the curved side of
the vert on my face, on my shoulder, on my knees. Gravity dumped me
off the side of the vert onto the asphalt one time when I lost my
balance while I was screaming my head off at some slight by Patrick,
real or imaginary.
Patrick and the other guys and girls at the skate park were actually
scared of me. I showed up every day, climbed to the top of the vert,
stuck a cigarette in my mouth and waited my turn, barely saying a word.
When and if I did, it was usually something biting and mean. I made
people cry. They still called me Ayumi, but now it was usually in the
context of a quick, "Here comes that crazy Ayumi bitch" and they'd
scatter before me like the gulls had at the beach and stand as far away
from me as possible. The new Ayumi lived in an unhappy world all her
own, with gravity frequently her only companion.
And boom, just like that, gravity really nailed me. Just when you
think you've hit bottom, gravity, like a true bosom pal with your best
interests in mind, shows you there's a whole lower level and it's
covered with rusty nails and broken glass. Gravity tosses you there
and rubs your face all over, slicing you deeply. Causing tetanus of
the soul. I got caught stealing. Busted. Imagine the surprise on
that fat cashier's face when she stopped me going out the door and made
me come back in, only to reveal my booty-- a men's magazine.
"What would a little girl be doing with smut like this?" she asked. She
barely had any teeth.
"I like chicks," I said casually, with a harsh edge that sounded
strange in my little girl voice; Emily could've pulled it off better,
though, with her deeper pitch. I pulled out my cigarettes and slipped
one into my mouth. I immediately thought of Winona Ryder in "Heathers,"
right before Christian Slater blew up. Yeah.
The cashier took my cigarettes away from me and my lighter. In a really
unfair trade, what she gave me back was a long lecture about Jesus and
sin and Hell.
"Don't they believe in Jesus in your country?" she asked. "Don't they
pray?"
"First off, I'm as American as you. And second, the only thing I'm
praying for is for the police to come and throw me in jail before I
have to listen to anymore of your bullshit," I told her mildly, with my
eyebrows raised.
She looked angry for a moment, then shook her head. "You are just
about the rudest little girl it has ever been my sorry luck to meet. I
feel sorry for your parents."
"They're dead. I live with my aunt."
She sputtered a little. "Well, I'm sorry to hear that. It explains a
lot, but I am truly sorry to hear that. I'm gonna pray for you, I
honestly am."
"Yeah, well... You're sure sorry about a lot of stupid shit."
Just then two cops came in and I started to get nervous. They acted
officiously and efficiently, asking direct questions with little or no
trace of warmth, took down my name and Mrs. Komori's phone number and
address. Everyone talked, and the cops took notes. I hoped the
cashier wouldn't notice the slight quaver in my voice as I explained my
point of view, which was I was guilty as could be and I had no excuse.
I stared at my feet as the cops escorted me to the car (they didn't
cuff me), and I overheard a couple of racist comments from other people
in the store. I wanted to punch everyone in the face. I was so full of
anger and self-loathing. My skin crawled, my clothes disgusted me.
So this is how it ends, I thought at the police station while another
cop, this time a sergeant with white chevrons on his blue-gray sleeve,
looked me over. I was sitting in a thinly-padded metal chair beside
his desk and other cops were busy typing or running their mouths all
around us. It was a lot like any office, only kind of dirty and
everyone had a gun except me. I was slouched down, trying not to meet
the sergeant's gaze, looking down at my knees, which were shaking a
little. I pressed them together to try to stop the trembling.
"Need to use the little ladies' room?" the sergeant asked.
"No."
"Wanna tell me what you thought you were doing?"
"No."
"You realize stealing is wrong, right?"
"No. Uh... yes? Yes."
"Uh huh. You think stealing is cool, huh?"
"No. Uh... yes?"
"Well, I guess you're learning otherwise now, huh? Not too happy,
huh?"
"Not very."
"Okay, kid. Don't you think your parents are going to be pretty
disappointed?"
"Mrs. Komori will, yeah."
"Tell me your full name."
"My full name?" I thought about it for a second. Again with the
names. I had at least two I could give him. Then I told him in the
squeakiest voice possible, my throat very raw, "My name is Amy Komori."
"No middle name?"
"Not that I know of, no."
I was kind of tired of having to say "Amy Komori." The cop sergeant
made me tell him my address again, too, and asked me a lot of questions
about right and wrong in between more practical bits of info about what
I was being charged with?some kind of misdemeanor-- and how I'd get a
juvie court date for a hearing plus many other things I barely heard.
I nodded my head as if I understood.
While we were doing that, Mrs. Komori showed up at the door and one of
the cops who'd arrested or whatever they'd done to me met her there and
took her away someplace for what I guessed would be a very interesting
talk that would seal my fate. The bestest, most wonderfullest moment
of this special "Blossom" episode-- guest starring me as Blossom's
irresponsible friend who learns her lesson that stealing is a cry for
attention but never appears on the show again-- came when the cops
decided it was time for the heartwarming, climactic reunion between
adopted parent and juvenile delinquent. While the cop sergeant
repeated to Mrs. Komori a lot of the information he'd already told me,
I stared at the tile floor and then I was released into my "caregiver's
custody," he called it.
Driving me home from the police station (now Amy Komori had a police
record-- cool!), Mrs. Komori had a long talk with me, the first time
she'd spoken to me in days. She started lamely, just stuff about how
she'd had some trouble enrolling me in school because of the late start
she'd gotten with the paperwork.
"Apparently, they set the rolls months in advance," she explained. "I
guess that makes sense. They need to know who's in what class and blah
blah, whatever. But I was able to talk to someone at your school and
with the administration. Anyways, you squeaked by and we're good to go
come September. Which isn't that far away."
"Uh..." I said. Why was she telling me all this at this specific
juncture in time? Didn't we have a more pressing issue? Actually, I
was more than a little afraid-- "more than" as in "extremely"-- she was
dancing around her real topic, namely the kicking of my narrow ass out
of her house for good. I'd be in school and living with a foster
family for real.
She said she knew I was going though something very difficult,
something no one had probably ever gone through before. No shit. But I
let her talk without any sarcastic comments, because I wasn't feeling
so tough at the moment; Patrick and the gang, I felt sure, would have
been embarrassed for me if they'd seen me. The hammer was about to
drop, smashing me flat.
"I know Emily and you slept together, Martin," she said. My first
thought was to deny it, but I kept my mouth shut instead. Here it
comes, the first bit of recrimination to justify her decision to cut me
loose, as if she needed it; I'd done more than enough. "And I resigned
myself to that, because I knew you loved her, and I knew that she'd
slept with other boys who probably never loved her as much as you did."
"Yeah, I did," I said softly as I sunk into the seat. For some reason,
I wished, really wished I didn't have butterfly-shaped barrettes in my
hair.
"I'm telling you this because I want you to know I care very much for
you," she said. "And I know Emily does, too."
"I?"
"No, let me finish. Like I said, I know it's difficult but beyond
that, I really can't even begin to fully understand what you're going
through. Sometimes even I can't believe it, and yet there you are.
Um... not really sure why you thought being more like a girl was what
you ended up doing. Because it was a little... bizarre. I really,
really wish I'd handled that better, too. I just?Well, whatever.
Water and bridges. And here we are."
"But?"
"Uh uh. Please. Were you really happy doing all that giggly, dress-up
stuff?"
"No. I thought I was at first. Well, not doing it exactly. More like
because I thought I was finally doing what I was supposed to be...
doing. Obeying the rules or playing the game or something. Although,
yeah, I do really like that one dress. I don't really know why. I
just do, I guess."
"Yeah, that's kind of what I thought," Mrs. Komori said. She told me
there were all kinds of ways to be a girl, and while choosing a few
stereotypical behaviors and playing them up to the nth degree might be
one of them, I'd probably be happier finding some other method. If
that was what I truly wanted.
"But I don't know how to... do anything."
"Who does?"
"Yeah! That's right. I know it is. I thought everyone wanted me to
be a girl, but that was a disaster. I just wish I knew who I was
supposed to be."
And then she told me, "You're so freaked out about figuring out who
you're supposed to be or what stupid people want for you that you're
forgetting just to be. You know how we learn who we are? By being."
"Yeah? What about doing?"
"Doing, being. What's the diff?" she told me, smiling. "And you know
what? You may not like hearing this, but eventually, you might find
having a woman's body, or being a woman isn't so bad after all. You
might even come to like it. We can do some amazing things."
I really wanted her to explain all about those "amazing things" because
it definitely would've made me feel happier, but instead she told me
how being a woman in the United States was still a difficult
proposition at times. She said she tried not to focus on it too much,
but if I was ever interested she could tell me a lot of what she
claimed were real horror stories, or just minor incidents that added up
over time. At the same time, she talked up a lot of progress that had
been through the efforts of so many incredible women down through the
years?and some men, she went out of her way to mention?and that she
enjoyed so many more opportunities than her grandmother had, or even
her mom. She said she hoped Emily?"And you, too, depending"?would have
an even easier time of it.
"There's still a long way to go, though. Life isn't fair," she said.
"Is that supposed to be encouraging or discouraging?"
"I'm really not sure. But it's up to you. Be a woman, be a man, be
anything at all your heart desires. Just to throw this out there,
there are other paths you might take. I have no idea what they might
be, but they may not involve you being a woman at all. Emily told me
you didn't want to go to the hospital when this started. Well, you may
want to go to a therapist at some point."
"I probably could use some kind of therapy."
"I'm talking about a-a gender therapist person or something. Who
knows? For now, just don't get so hung up on what you think others
expect of you. You just might become something no one's ever seen
before. And now for my next point, and this one is going to be a
little more difficult for you to hear."
"Shoot." Here it comes, I thought. The ol' don't let the door hit
your fanny speech.
Mrs. Komori explained all the things she and Emily had done trying to
help me, no matter what fool ideas otherwise I'd gotten in what she
called my "messed-up little head." She let me know in no uncertain
terms she considered my responding shitty attitude inappropriate and
insulting. My stomach clenched; I was listening to the perfect lead-in
to her final self-justification for fobbing me off on the state.
As a little hail mary ploy, I quickly interrupted: "I know you're
doing all that work for me and stuff, and I'm so grateful I have a
place to stay. God, I can't even begin to tell you how grateful I am
for all that. I mean, no matter how stupid I've been acting. I'm so,
so sorry."
Place to stay. I hoped she realized this was my way of begging for a
home without actually getting on my knees. Although if I'd had my
skate pads on, I might have been tempted.
Then she went on to tell me a lot of other things, about how Mr. Komori
died, and how painful that was for her, and how Emily just took it
quietly, then cried alone at night and became a very different person
afterwards. But eventually, even though the pain never went away
completely, they got on with their life together. Everything, Mrs.
Komori said, depended on our ability to do that. Otherwise the sorrow
of simply living would overwhelm us all and we'd do stupid things like
kill ourselves. Or simply steal. Or smoke.
"Y-you know about that?" I asked.
"I do wash your clothes. Or haven't you noticed? You smell like a
fire in a tobacco barn."
"Oh..." Wow, I knew I had been a complete little bastard around the
house. Or bitch. But I'd never even considered that during all the
silent phase and awkwardness following that massive break with Emily,
someone had continued to see not only that I was fed, but that I had
clean clothes, as well. I'd never even for a second thought about why
my smelly, sweaty, smoky clothes were vanishing from heaps on the floor
and coming back fresh and folded and carefully placed on my made-up
bed. Food was a necessity; laundry, however, was an expression of...
Of...
Then, Mrs. Komori said, "I don't know if it's even my place to stop you
from doing that. I guess I'll figure that out as we go along, too.
I'll be just being right there alongside you. But what's most
important is, I want you to know I will be here for you through all of
this. I love you. I see this hurt child and I can't help it. I love
you whatever or whoever you decide to become."
Love! It was love! I was right! I couldn't stop myself from smiling
at her from the first real happiness I'd felt in months and months.
When I met Emily, I loved her so much, I thought I'd die. And I thought
I'd die again when I changed into a girl and lost myself and her
simultaneously and forever. But I didn't die. Thanks to Mrs. Komori,
I lived.