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Chapter 7 by fantaghiro
What's next?
meeting Robert
You stepped into the hallway where Robert had been waiting. He stood immediately, eyes searching your face for information.
"She's awake," you said. "And she wants to meet you before making any decisions about the living arrangement".
Robert nodded, but you could see the tension in his shoulders. "How is she? Is the baby okay?".
"Both fine, according to the doctor. But Robert—" You put a hand on his shoulder. "She's not Charlotte. I need you to understand that before you go in there. You're going to see Charlotte's face, Charlotte's body, hear Charlotte's voice. But it's not her. It's my wife, Sarah, and she's terrified and confused and dealing with an impossible situation".
"I know," Robert said, though his voice wavered slightly. "I understand. But I just... I need to see that she's okay. That the baby's okay".
You understood. He was grasping at the only tangible thing he had left—his unborn daughter, currently housed in a body that looked exactly like his dead wife. The cognitive dissonance would be brutal.
You led him back to the room. Sarah had pulled herself more upright in the bed, one hand resting protectively on her swollen belly. When Robert entered, you saw her take in his appearance—tall, lean, with dark hair and glasses, dressed in wrinkled clothes that suggested he'd been at the hospital for days. Young, like Charlotte had been.
But you also saw the moment Robert's composure nearly cracked. His eyes locked on Charlotte's face, Charlotte's blue eyes looking back at him but with an expression his wife had never worn—wary, assessing, unfamiliar.
"Hi," Sarah said, and even that simple word came out wrong—Charlotte's higher, softer voice carrying Sarah's cautious uncertainty.
"Hi," Robert managed. He stayed near the door, as if afraid to get closer. "I'm Robert. I guess you know that already".
"James told me," Sarah confirmed. "About you and Charlotte. About the baby. I'm... I'm so sorry for your loss".
The words were surreal—Charlotte's body expressing condolences for Charlotte's **** to Charlotte's husband. Robert's face spasmed briefly before he got control of it.
"Thank you," he said automatically. "And thank you for... for agreeing to the transplant. For saving our daughter".
"I didn't agree to anything," Sarah said gently. "I was ****. But I'm glad the baby is safe".
She said 'the baby,' you noticed, not 'your baby' or 'her baby.' Carefully neutral language for a situation with no good vocabulary.
"Can I..." Robert gestured vaguely. "I know this is strange, but could I... would it be okay if I...".
Sarah seemed to understand. "You want to feel her? The baby?".
Robert nodded, looking miserable. "I haven't been able to since... since Charlotte died. The doctors wouldn't let me near her body for the transplant prep, and then you were in surgery, and I just..." His voice broke. "I just need to know she's really okay".
Sarah glanced at you, and you gave a small nod. She turned back to Robert. "Okay. But slowly. And if I say stop, you stop immediately".
"Of course," Robert said, moving closer cautiously, as if approaching a spooked animal.
He sat in the chair beside the bed, and Sarah took his hand—an odd gesture, Charlotte's small hand guiding her husband's larger one to the swell of her pregnant belly. You watched Robert's face transform as his palm made contact, watched the tears start tracking down his face.
"She's there," he whispered. "I can feel her".
And then something shifted—you saw Sarah's face change, her eyes widen. "Oh," she said, surprised. "She's... she just kicked. I think she knows it's you".
That broke Robert completely. He bent forward, forehead nearly touching the bed, his hand still on Charlotte's belly, and sobbed. Great, wrenching sounds of grief that he'd clearly been holding back.
Sarah looked helpless, her free hand hovering uncertainly before settling on Robert's shoulder in an awkward attempt at comfort. She looked at you with something like panic—being looked at as Charlotte by Charlotte's husband was one thing, but comforting him while he grieved his wife through touching her body was something else entirely.
You stepped forward. "Robert," you said gently. "Maybe give Sarah some space. This is overwhelming for everyone".
Robert pulled back immediately, wiping his face. "God, I'm sorry. That was... I'm sorry. That wasn't fair to you".
"It's okay," Sarah said, though her voice was shaky. "I can't imagine what you're going through".
Robert took several breaths, trying to compose himself. "James explained the situation. About you staying with me during the pregnancy. I know it's asking a lot, but I—" He swallowed hard. "I promise I won't make it weird. I'll give you space. You can have the guest room, or if you prefer, I can take the guest room and you can have the master. Whatever makes you more comfortable. I just need to be there. For the baby. To know she's safe".
Sarah was quiet for a moment, her hand still resting on her belly. You could see her processing the physical reality of what she'd just experienced—Robert's hand on Charlotte's pregnant body, the baby responding to her biological father, the way Sarah's consciousness had witnessed an interaction programmed into Charlotte's physical architecture.
"What happens after she's born?" Sarah asked. "Have you thought about that?".
Robert shook his head. "Not really. I can barely think past the next day, honestly. I guess... I'll take her. Raise her. Charlotte's parents have offered to help. And after that, I don't know. Maybe we move away, make a fresh start somewhere. I haven't gotten that far in my head yet".
"So this would really be temporary," Sarah said, looking at you. "Four months, then he takes the baby and...".
"And we figure out your future," you finished. "Where you live, what identity you use, how we can be together. None of this is permanent except that you're alive".
Sarah looked down at Charlotte's pregnant belly, her expression complex. "This body is already bonding with her," she said quietly. "I can feel it. The baby moves and something in me—in this body—responds. It's not a choice. It's automatic".
"That's normal," Robert said. "Charlotte talked about that. The bonding during pregnancy. It's hormones, biology. The body preparing to be a mother".
"But I'm not her mother," Sarah said, and you heard the edge in her voice. "Charlotte is—was. I'm just... I don't know what I am. A biological surrogate who happens to be conscious?".
"You're the person keeping my daughter alive," Robert said firmly. "And I'm grateful for that, whatever else is true. If you agree to stay with me, I'll do everything I can to make it bearable. You'll have privacy, space, whatever you need. I just need to be nearby. To know you're both safe".
Sarah turned to you. "James? What do you think?".
You chose your words carefully. "I think it's the least bad option we have right now. I don't love it—the thought of you living with another man, even under these circumstances, makes me insane. But Robert's a good man, and you'll need help during the pregnancy. And after the baby comes..." You shrugged helplessly. "We'll figure it out together".
"Together," Sarah repeated, and you couldn't tell if she believed it or was just clinging to the word.
She looked back at Robert. "Okay," she said finally. "I'll try it. But I want regular check-ins with James—video calls, in-person visits when he's in town. And if at any point this becomes too much, we revisit the arrangement. Agreed?".
"Agreed," Robert said immediately. "Thank you. Truly".
"Don't thank me yet," Sarah said. "We have no idea if this will actually work".
Later, after Robert had left to arrange things at his house, Sarah finally let herself process what had happened. You sat beside her bed, holding her hand.
"That was the strangest thing I've ever experienced," she said. "When he touched me—touched this belly—the body responded. Not me, Sarah, making a choice. The body just... knew him. Recognized him somehow".
"Physical memory," you said, though you were just guessing. "Charlotte's body has touched Robert thousands of times. The neural pathways are there, even if your consciousness is different".
"And the baby," Sarah continued. "When she kicked against his hand... something in me, in this body, felt right about it. Like she was responding to someone familiar. But I don't know him at all. That's Charlotte's husband, Charlotte's baby. I'm just borrowing her biology".
"How does that feel?" you asked carefully.
Sarah was quiet for a long moment. "Invasive," she said finally. "Like this body has its own agenda that my consciousness is just riding along with. The pregnancy is happening with or without my mental participation. The bonding, the physical responses—they're automatic. I'm not choosing them".
You didn't know what to say to that. The framework called it physical architecture, but experiencing it was clearly different from understanding it theoretically.
"And you," Sarah said, turning to look at you. "How do you feel about all this? Your wife living with another man, pregnant with his child?".
"Insane," you admitted. "Jealous, even though rationally I know you're not choosing this. Scared that I'm losing you to a situation I can't control. But also..." You paused, choosing words carefully. "Also grateful that you're alive. That's the bottom line. However complicated this gets, you're alive. Everything else we can work through".
"Even if I birth Charlotte's baby and end up bonded to her?" Sarah asked quietly. "The body is designed for that, James. Nine months of pregnancy, then delivery, then breastfeeding if that's what happens. Charlotte's body is going to mother this child whether Sarah wants to or not. What happens to me—to us—if biology overrides consciousness?".
You squeezed her hand. "Then we deal with that when it happens. But Sarah—your consciousness is still there. Still you. The body might respond automatically, but you're still making the choices that matter".
"Am I though?" Sarah looked at her pregnant belly. "I didn't choose to carry this baby. Didn't choose to live with Robert. Didn't choose any of this. I'm just reacting to impossible circumstances".
"That's all any of us can do right now," you said. "React and adapt. But we're doing it together, even when we're physically apart. Okay?".
"Okay," Sarah agreed, but neither of you sounded convinced.
The doctor entered then, ready to discuss discharge plans. Sarah would leave the hospital in two days, moving directly to Robert's house—Charlotte's house. You'd attend Sarah Baker's funeral, mourn publicly while secretly staying in contact with your very alive wife. And Robert would begin the surreal experience of living with a stranger who looked exactly like his dead wife.
All of you stumbling through an impossible situation with no roadmap, no precedent, and no guarantees that any of it would work.
But Sarah was alive. The baby was safe. And somehow, you'd all figure out how to survive the next four months.
Or you wouldn't, and everything would fall apart. Both possibilities felt equally likely.
What's next?
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The Ultimate Transplant
Someone you know is given a new body & life
PLEASE ADD CHAPTERS! A close friend or family member is horribly injured in an accident. As they lay dying in the emergency room, another patient dies of a brain aneurysm. Both of them are organ donors, so a surgeon decides it's the perfect opportunity for him to try an experimental surgery. He transplants the victim's higher brain (the cerebellum) to the donor's body in an attempt to 'save' a life. Amazingly it works. But the surgery was not approved so the hospital convinces the families to keep quiet, arguing that revealing this operation to the public would bring never-ending media attention to all involved. That means that the patient will have to publicly assume the identity of the donor. What will this mean to your friends and family? Who else will you tell? Although you will spend a lot of time and effort giving support, how will all this alter your relationship to the patient? And how will he or she adapt to a complete change of body and identity? Many transformation stories focus on the change or victim, so I thought it would be interesting to instead have the POV be someone who sees the change from the outside. Writers feel free to explore a change in age, gender, class or ethnicity - and the repercussions that change would have on the main character (and others). This is from my writing.com story with thanks and credit to other contributors, especially Wassel, Wordsmitty, and Enigma. Please see the original at https://www.writing.com/main/interactive-story/item_id/1886863-The-Ultimate-Transplant for the original authors' posts. Also you should check out Wassel's version at https://www.writing.com/main/interactive-story/item_id/1974478-The-Transplant ).
Updated on Jun 24, 2026
by takacube
Created on Jan 19, 2021
by fantaghiro
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