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Chapter 44 by fantaghiro
What's next?
the rest of the week
The Week
By Wednesday, you'd developed a system. Laura treated you exactly like every other student—professionally distant, occasionally calling on you in class, nothing that would raise flags. But there were moments. A brief look held too long. A hand that brushed yours when collecting assignments. A comment about needing help moving books in her classroom after school that was completely innocent if anyone asked but meant something entirely different to you.
You didn't take her up on it. You couldn't risk it. You felt paranoid, like everyone was watching.
Instead, you spent your time in a state of constant low-level arousal mixed with crushing guilt. Allison kept asking to hang out, and you kept making excuses. Your grades were slipping in everything except Government, where you'd somehow started paying attention in a way you never had before. You couldn't help it—watching Laura teach was magnetic now that you knew what was underneath the professional exterior.
Thursday night, your mom called.
"Hey, I'm heading over to Laura's tomorrow night to check on her," she said. "She invited me over for dinner. Apparently she's been cooking. Isn't that sweet? I'm so proud of how she's adapted."
Your blood went cold. "That's... that's great, Mom."
"She really has turned it around since the accident," your mom continued, and you could hear genuine warmth in her voice. "I was so worried about her at first, but she's become such a poised young woman. She was telling me about her lesson plans and her ideas for the curriculum, and Tim, she's just thriving. I think having someone to mentor has been really good for me too. It reminds me what it's like to help someone find their way."
You wanted to throw up.
"That's... good," you managed.
"Are you okay?" your mom asked. "You sound weird."
"Yeah, I'm fine. Just tired."
"Well, I'll be late tomorrow night, so don't wait up for dinner."
After she hung up, you texted Laura immediately.
You: my mom is coming over tomorrow night
Laura: i know. we've had it planned for a week
You: why didn't you tell me?
Laura: because you would have freaked out. and i need her to see that everything is normal. that i'm handling the transition well.
You: this isn't normal
Laura: i know. but she can't know that. which means you need to act normal too if you see me at school. no weirdness. no tension. can you do that?
You: yes
Laura: good. because if your mom figures it out, everything falls apart.
You put the phone down and stared at the ceiling.
________________________________________
Friday morning, you made it through Government class in a fog. Laura was perfect—professional, engaged, treating you like a student. It was brutal in its ordinariness. By lunchtime, you were vibrating with tension.
Allison found you in the hallway.
"Okay, I'm officially concerned," she said, grabbing your arm. "You've been acting insane all week. Are you cheating on me?"
The accusation hit too close to home. Your face must have given something away because her expression shifted.
"Tim?" Her voice got smaller. "Are you?"
"No," you said, and it wasn't technically a lie. "I'm just stressed about school."
"Bullshit," she said. But she looked hurt more than angry. "You barely touch me anymore. You're always somewhere else. And you're acting like you're keeping this huge secret."
"I'm not," you lied.
"Yes, you are." She pulled her arm away from you. "And honestly? I don't think I have the energy to deal with this right now. My family stuff is already crazy, and I can't be with someone who's not even here."
She walked away before you could respond.
You stood in the hallway, watching her disappear into the crowd, and felt something settle inside you. Relief. Guilt. But mostly relief.
________________________________________
That evening, your mom got ready to go to Laura's. She was excited—actually excited. She'd bought wine and was going on about how nice it would be to spend time with another woman her own age, even if Laura was technically a student (it was different, she insisted, because she was an adult).
After she left, you sat in your room staring at the wall.
Around 9 PM, you got a text from Laura.
Laura: your mom is amazing. she just left. we had the best conversation about teaching and feminism and what it means to navigate professional spaces as a woman. she thinks i'm doing so well.
Laura: come over?
You should have said no. You should have given yourself time to process Allison, to think about what was happening, to acknowledge that you were becoming complicit in something that was spiraling.
Instead, you were in your car within ten minutes.
When Laura opened the door, she was still dressed, but her hair was down and she was barefoot. She pulled you inside without saying anything and kissed you—deep and demanding and full of something you couldn't name.
"Your mom is so proud of how I'm adapting," Laura said against your mouth. "How independent and strong I've become. How well I'm handling the transition."
She was laughing—a slightly unhinged sound.
"She has no idea," Laura continued, pulling you toward her bedroom. "She thinks I'm thriving because I'm becoming this perfectly adjusted adult woman. She doesn't know what I'm actually becoming."
"Laura—" you started.
"No," she interrupted. "I know what I'm becoming. I'm becoming someone who has everything I want. A career. Independence. A beautiful life in this beautiful body." She pushed you onto the bed. "And a best friend who can't stay away from me."
She straddled you, and you realized she was wearing nothing under her dress.
"Your mom left forty minutes ago," she whispered. "We have all night."
And you let her take you, even though you knew—on some level you absolutely knew—that this was the moment you stopped being able to pretend this was okay.
What's next?
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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