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Chapter 13
by
fantaghiro
What's next?
sleep and the next morning
The sleep that finally claimed me was thin and jagged, nothing like the peace I had known in Steve’s body. My eyelids closed, and the hospital room dissolved, the satin sheets melting into a shifting landscape that felt disturbingly familiar—and alien all at once.
I was running, but my legs weren’t mine. They were softer, heavier, yet supple, carrying me forward with a strength I recognized but couldn’t claim. Faces flickered past: strangers, friends, Andrea… and Marsha. Her eyes, her smile, her anger, her vanity—it all pressed into me, embedding fragments of a life I had never lived but now somehow could access.
Dreams bled into each other. I felt Marsha’s habitual motions, the **** pride she carried, the petty resentments and jealousies she had stored over decades. I felt Andrea, of course, too, but through Marsha’s lens: her daughter, her creation, the child she had molded and sometimes envied, the same one I loved with every fiber of my being. Touching her, holding her close, desiring her—every act in these dreams was double-edged, steeped in both lust and maternal complicity. I recoiled and surrendered in the same instant. I screamed inside my own skull, yet no sound came.
At one point I found myself lying next to a man who felt both intimate and alien—his face half-Marsha, half-unknown—and I could feel the lingering traces of Marsha’s mind whispering through me: her reactions, her memories, the subtle ways her body had responded to others over decades. I couldn’t tell which desires were mine, which memories were hers, which emotions were real or constructed. Every sensation—pleasure, revulsion, longing, guilt—was magnified, conflated, warped.
I woke sweating, heart pounding, lungs heavy, staring at the ceiling. My new body, Marsha’s body, felt like a stranger still, yet it reacted to my own remembered impulses. Every muscle betrayed me, every curve reminded me of the forbidden. I was terrified of sleep, yet exhausted beyond comprehension, caught in this liminal space between Steve and Marsha, between desire and horror, love and disgust.
Then came a gentle knock.
“Mom?” Andrea’s voice, trembling slightly, carried through the door.
I sat up, stiff and awkward, feeling the weight and shape of this body in every movement. Marsha’s chest rose and fell with my adjustments, the satin slipping over curves I didn’t know how to inhabit gracefully. I realized I hadn’t even touched the glasses—the first of countless mundane betrayals reminding me that this body was not mine.
Andrea stepped inside, carrying a small bag of Marsha’s belongings, moving carefully, as though the slightest misstep could shatter both our fragile psyches. Her eyes darted to my hands, my shoulders, the strange tilt of my neck, lingering on the alien curves she couldn’t stop staring at.
“Sleep okay?” she asked softly, trying to mask the tension in her voice. But the way she bit her lip betrayed her—she was watching me, studying me, searching for traces of Steve beneath the surface of Marsha’s skin.
“I… I think so,” I rasped, voice dry and alien. “But… dreams. They were… disturbing. I think… maybe some of them… weren’t mine.”
Her eyes flickered, hesitation and curiosity mingling. “Not yours?”
I swallowed, fumbling with the satin nightgown. “I… I think… parts of her… her memories, her emotions, maybe… her subconscious… seeped in. Dreams I… shouldn’t have had, but I felt them, lived them… as her. And some… some of them involved you. And me. And her. All at once. It… it was impossible to sort out.”
Andrea froze, gaze fixed on me, mouth slightly open, as though my words had landed on some uncharted psychological terrain. She stepped closer, almost instinctively, but kept a careful distance. “I… I don’t know how to respond to that,” she whispered. “I… I just want to help you. I need to help you get ready for… Dad.”
Her hands hovered over mine, hesitant, seeking connection without pressing into territory that would ignite both desire and guilt. I felt a rush of longing and shame: longing for her closeness, shame that her touch—even tentative, professional—stirred my body in ways Marsha’s instincts had trained it to respond.
I stood stiffly, letting her guide me through dressing, brushing hair, adjusting clothing. Every movement reminded me of the betrayal of this flesh, of the way it remembered Marsha, her vanity, her routines, her knowledge of Andrea as her daughter. Every shared glance was a psychological knife: my heart still pulsed for Steve’s wife, yet Marsha’s awareness of Andrea intruded at every instant, twisting desire into nausea and fascination, lust into guilt and horror.
Andrea’s presence, warm and tender, was a lifeline and a torment simultaneously. I could see her struggle, her own mind flickering between Steve and the shell he now inhabited, reading me, gauging me, testing how far she could cross before fear or revulsion overtook longing.
Finally, she spoke softly, voice near a whisper, as if addressing a fragile animal. “We’ll get through this, Mom… I mean… Steve. You just… you just need to be ready.”
I nodded, understanding the truth behind her words: it wasn’t just Doug we were preparing for. It was the impossible, delicate negotiation of identities, of desires, of selves that had collided in this room, in this body, in this life. Every second, every glance, every brush of her hand reminded me: Steve was still here, trapped in Marsha’s skin, and Andrea was navigating the impossible—her love for me intertwined with the primal maternal associations Marsha’s body brought into play.
And I realized, with a cold, thrilling clarity: the psychological labyrinth we were in was just beginning. Every action, every moment of intimacy or separation, would test us, push us, twist desire, guilt, and love into shapes neither of us could predict—and neither of us could escape
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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 15, 2026
by RunningR
Created on Jan 19, 2021
by fantaghiro
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