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Chapter 15 by fantaghiro
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settling in
The days blurred into one another, a strange dream-life stitched together by leopard print, perfume, and the echo of your own heels on polished marble floors.
Victor kept his distance, as though he had already won and had no need to flaunt it. Morning glimpses at the breakfast table, evening shadows of him coming home, his voice booming down the hall while you sat in your room in silk and lace. He was polite—never cruel, never unkind—but he was firm, immovable, like the house itself. “Soon, we will be married,” he would say in that baritone, with his thick Russian cadence, as if those words alone were enough to lock you into place.
The staff were ghosts more than people. The two maids flitted about, smiling politely but never lingering. The cook brought meals with practiced formality. They treated you not as an interloper, not even as their mistress yet, but as though you had always been there. It unsettled you at first, but soon their quiet acknowledgment became a kind of comfort.
Left to yourself, you explored. The house was gaudy in its way—marble columns where none were needed, chandeliers too large for the rooms they hung in, gilded frames and plush velvet chairs that screamed for attention. It should have repelled you. Instead, after days of wandering its echoing halls, you began to feel a strange swell of pride, as though the house itself was wrapping around you, whispering: This is yours now.
The wardrobe was worse—or better. At first the clothes disgusted you. Too tight, too short, too loud. Skirts that barely covered your ass, dresses clinging like a second skin, heels that turned every step into a strut. And yet, the more you wore them, the less you fought. Something about sliding into those garments, about hearing your bracelets jingle, about catching your reflection in a gilt-edged mirror and seeing Yulia smirking back—it stirred something that frightened you. Pride. Ownership.
Every morning a girl arrived—Katya, nineteen maybe, with dark hair pulled into a tight ponytail and a matter-of-fact way of speaking that made you feel like a schoolchild. She was supposedly from one of Victor’s boutiques, but she was more tutor than shop girl. She drilled you on Russian grammar, walked you through makeup techniques with practiced hands, adjusted your posture when you tried on outfits.
You wanted to resist. But each lesson slid into your brain with uncanny ease, as though Yulia’s memories were waking up in you. A phrase Katya spoke felt already familiar; the brush in your hand traced eyeliner with a precision you swore you shouldn’t have.
By the fourth day, you weren’t learning Russian—you were remembering it. Words came without effort. Sentences poured from your lips, natural, fluid, yours. But English began to slip like sand through your fingers. When you tried to speak it with Andrea on the phone—short, stilted calls when Victor wasn’t home—you fumbled. Words that once came effortlessly tangled in your mouth. “C–can’t… I… wait,” you would stammer, the accent thick, the syllables fractured.
It terrified you.
And yet, when you sat before the vanity in the evenings, robe slipping from your shoulders, lips painted full and red, you didn’t feel like Steve pretending. You felt like a woman—this woman. You shifted your weight, crossing your legs, tilting your head, and it looked right.
You knew you should recoil. You should fight, resist, claw for scraps of your old life. But instead you found yourself staring into the mirror, whispering in Russian without meaning to:
"Ya ne prosto Yuliya… no ya yesm’ ona…"
(I am not just Yulia… I am her.)
And then, clutching the edge of the vanity, you shook your head violently, whispering in your halting, broken English:
“No… Steve. I am Steve. For kids. For Andrea. I must remember.”
But each morning when Katya smiled and called you devushka—girl—you found it harder to believe.
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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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