Gender Swapped By Aliens! (7 page)

Read Gender Swapped By Aliens! Online

Authors: Ivana Johnson

BOOK: Gender Swapped By Aliens!
2.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

After I finished with my breakfast, Mom insisted on going into the living room to brush my hair.  Whenever the brush snagged, I winced with pain.  Besides being more emotional, I wouldn’t have much of a pain tolerance now.  Tears stung my eyes as Mom yanked back hard on my hair, splitting it in half.

“No pigtails,” I whined.  “They’re for babies.”

“OK, sweetie.  How about braids?  You look so pretty with braids.”

“Fine,” I mumbled.

Mom’s hands weaved my hair with expert precision.  In no time I had a braid dangling over each shoulder.  It didn’t make me feel much more mature than the pigtails, but it was a little more grown up.

She gave me a hug and then let me up.  “Your lunchbox is on the counter.  And I think someone left her backpack on the couch last night.”

“I’m sorry, Mommy.”

“It’s all right, sweetie.  Is your homework done?”

“Yes.”

“That’s good.  You make sure to pay attention in spelling.  I don’t want to see another B+ when report cards come home.”

“I’ll try, Mommy.”

“That’s my girl.  Go on now.”

I hurried back into the kitchen.  Instead of brown paper sacks, there were two plastic lunchboxes on the counter.  I guessed the My Little Pony
one was Karen’s.  That left me with the Bratz one.  I cracked it open to find a peanut butter-and-jelly sandwich, juice box, bag of chips, apple, and chocolate pudding cup; the same lunch Mom had packed when I was a little boy.

As Mom had indicated, there was a pink backpack propped on the couch.  I swung it off the couch, grunting at the weight.  What did I have in there:  lead weights? 

By the front door were a variety of tiny shoes.  I tried on a pair of sneakers with Barbie on them; the shoes fit with room to spare.  I set down my backpack so I could bend over to tie the laces.  My stubby fingers had a little trouble, again bringing up the urge to bawl or to wail for Mommy to come help.

I finished the second shoe when Karen came racing into the hallway.  Mom had combed her hair and pinned it back with a couple of butterfly barrettes.  She wore pink overalls and a white-and-pink-striped shirt that made her look impossibly adorable.

She grabbed a pair of Minnie Mouse sneakers that were nearly as big as mine.  “Can you help me tie them?” she asked.

I sighed as if she had asked me to solve an impossible math problem.  “Fine.  You’re supposed to know how to do this already.”

“It’s faster if you do it,” Karen said.

“If I keep doing them for you, you’ll never learn.”  I did the laces for her anyway, though I wasn’t sure how much quicker it really was than if she had done it herself.

“Jackets, girls,” Mom called out.

“Yes, Mommy,” we answered.  On hooks by the front door were two puffy winter jackets—pink, of course.  I took the bigger of the two and then handed the other to Karen.

With that we were finally ready to go outside.  Despite the jacket and sweater, I still felt a chill run through me.  Most of it was the cold, but some of it had to be the thought that soon I would have to get on a bus and go to school.  I didn’t even know what grade I was supposed to be in.  Third?  Fourth?

I nervously twitched at the end of the driveway.  I could see the schoolbus’s blinking red lights down the road as it picked up some other kids.  I pointed excitedly.  “Mommy, the bus!”

She led Karen over to stand next to me.  Then she bent down to give Karen a kiss on the forehead.  “You girls behave yourselves.  Don’t get into any trouble.”

“We won’t, Mommy,” I said.

Mom gave me a hug.  “Watch out for your little sister.”

“I will.”

“I’ll be right here when you get off the bus.”

“Will you have cookies for us?” Karen asked.

“Only if you’re good.”

Karen pouted at that, too little to understand that Mom would have cookies no matter what.  Mom took a step back to give us some room as the bus squealed to a stop.  I had a moment of déjà vu, remembering when I had been middle-aged Lynn Fong.  I was even shorter now, but at least no one would expect me to have exact change.

I clomped up one step and then another, until I reached the top.  Karen squeezed past me to race down the aisle.  She threw herself onto an empty seat in the middle.  With a sigh I sat down next to her.  I hugged my backpack in my lap as the bus got underway.

***

It was a noisy, albeit uneventful ride to Benjamin Harrison Elementary.  I got to my feet and then started to shuffle off with the other children.  My stomach was probably fluttering a lot worse than any of theirs.  I shouldn’t be here.  I should be a big girl—or boy.  I had children of my own:  Mark and Tonya.  No, that wasn’t right.  Their names were…Mike…and Tammy.

I sighed with relief.  The aliens were finally getting to me, all their reality distortions eroding my memories.  I would have to be more careful.  I would have to keep reminding myself of Michael and Tammy and…Jo Ann?  No, that was their name for her.  Her real name was—

“Denise!” I blurted out.  I broke into a run.  She stood next to a tree, a cell phone pressed to her ear.  As I got closer, I realized that I would only come up to the center of her chest now.  She was still a grown up.

She smiled and then lowered the phone.  “Hello, Billie.  You’re looking pretty.”

“Thanks,” I mumbled, my voice suddenly shy.  I was a little girl and Denise was a grown up.  It wasn’t fair!

“You better get to class,” Denise said.  “You don’t want to be late.”

“Yes…ma’am,” I said, correcting myself at the last moment.  It would be rude for me to call her “Denise” now.

She put her phone back to her ear to continue her conversation while I trudged away.  I hoped the other kids couldn’t see my silent tears or else they would think I was a baby.  I discreetly wiped at my eyes and then followed the crowd inside.

“Are you sick?” Karen asked me.

“No.  Just, um, allergies.”  I forced a smile to my face.  “Hey, I bet you don’t know what classroom I’m supposed to go to.”

“Do so.”

“Do not.”

“You have to go to Mrs. Cauffield’s classroom.”

“Oh, really?  Which one is that?”

Karen huffed with irritation.  “I’ll show you.”  She stomped in front of me a lot more confidently than I felt.  We passed by a few classrooms with crude drawings on the walls.  One of those was probably Karen’s.  Around a corner and then at the end of the hall was Room 117.  Karen pointed at the door.  “See?”

“That’s real good,” I said.  I patted her on the head.  “Thanks, squirt.”

“Don’t call me that!” she whined.

“Fine.  Just go get to your classroom before someone calls Mommy.”

“Bye-bye!” she called out and then scurried away.

I pushed open the door.  The problem now was I didn’t know which of the two-dozen desks belonged to me.  I could just pick one at random, but then I would look like an idiot.  I went to the back of the room to take off my backpack and coat.  The jacket I hung on a hook.  The other girls and boys had their backpacks by their desks, so I kept that with me.

I hovered by the hooks, trying to appear nonchalant.  As more kids came in, the number of possible choices dwindled.  I was down to just three possibles when Denise walked in.  “Good morning, Mrs. Cauffield,” the other kids said.

“Good morning, kids.”  As Denise sat down behind her desk at the front of the room, her eyes met mine.  “Billie?  You want to have a seat?”

“OK.”  I heard kids snicker as I plodded down an aisle, towards an empty desk.  When I sat down, the kids laughed louder. 

“That one, Billie,” Denise said, pointing to a desk at the front of the room. 

I valiantly fought back tears as I took my seat.  “I’m sorry, Mrs. Cauffield.”

“It’s all right, Billie.  When you get to be an old lady like me, you’ll forget lots of stuff.  Speaking of, who remembers what we were talking about yesterday for history?”

As Denise began to lecture us on the American Revolution, I tried to slouch down to the point she couldn’t see me.  Those mean old aliens!  They had not only made me a child; they had to humiliate me further by having Denise be my teacher.  It wasn’t fair.  I wasn’t supposed to be a little girl—

The first time my tummy rumbled, I thought it must mean I was hungry.  The next time it came less as a rumble and more as a pain that made me squeak.  It didn’t feel like the same kind of pain as when I had to poop.  I slouched down more in my seat, putting a hand to my tummy.

Denise was lecturing us about photosynthesis when I couldn’t help groaning with pain and doubling over on my desk.  She turned to look at me with concern.  “Billie?  Are you all right?”

“I…I gotta potty,” I said, which made everyone laugh.

As tears clouded my eyes, Denise patted my back.  “It’s all right.  I’ll give you a pass.”

“Thank you.”

Denise wrote out a yellow slip of paper that I tucked into my pocket.  There were still snickers and chuckles as I scurried away.  The pain in my tummy was getting worse.  Had Mom’s pancakes done something to me?  Or maybe I was coming down with something else.  It might even be my appendix.

I raced into the bathroom, where a girl was doing her makeup at one sink.  She looked like a miniature version of Denise, except her hair was longer and curly.  She had to be a year or two older than me, mosquito bumps showing under her T-shirt.  I gaped at her, my pain momentarily forgotten.  “Tammy?”

“What do
you
want?” she snarled.

“N-n-nothing.”  The way she looked at me was the way a wolf looked at a rabbit.  I was younger than my own daughter now!  And in the social hierarchy of elementary school, that meant I was her victim if I hung around too long.

I bolted into the nearest stall.  I locked the door seconds before another pain doubled me over.  I whimpered, though I tried to keep it down so Tammy wouldn’t hear.  Through the crack in the door, I saw she had gone back to her makeup.

I shuffled back from the door and then dropped my pants.  When I did, my eyes widened.  There was blood in my panties!  As I watched with horror, a few more drops trickled onto my panties.

If I had kept calm, I would have realized what was happening to me.  But I reacted to the blood the way a little girl would; I fumbled to unlock the door and then staggered out with my pants around my legs.  “I’m bleeding!” I shrieked.

“What are you talking about?” Tammy growled.  She twisted her lipstick back into the tube to glare at me.  “You cut yourself?”

“No.  It’s coming out of me where I pee.”

Tammy began to laugh.  “Oh my God!  Are you serious?”

“What’s so funny?  I’m bleeding!”

“Christ, your mom hasn’t told you anything, has she?  I guess she wouldn’t.  I mean, you’re still a little baby.”

“I am not!”

“You totally are.”  Tammy snickered at me, prompting me to cry harder. 

“You gotta help me!  I’m gonna die!”

“Jesus Christ.  You are so pathetic.”

“You’re mean,” I snapped back.  I was Tammy’s daddy; she was supposed to be nice to me.  Instead she was being such a poopyhead.  If she wouldn’t help me, then I would have to go ask Denise.  She would be nice.  She was my mommy—no, my wife.  She was my wife and I was her husband. 

I sniffled and then pulled up my pants.  “See you later, kid,” Tammy called out as I ran away.  I could hear her laughing as the door closed behind me.

As I ran, I was leaving a trail behind me, droplets of blood staining the floor.  Tammy could have helped me.  She could have told me what was happening or she could have at least fetched a grown up to explain it.  Instead she called me names and laughed at me.  I hated her. 

But Denise would still help me.  She was a nice lady.  And a teacher.  She would have to help me.

I threw open the door.  As soon as I slipped through the doorway, everything shimmered for a moment.  The world seemed to swell around me as if I had entered a world of giants.  Something else was bigger too:  my tummy.  It stuck out so much that I looked like a tiny pregnant lady.  My big stomach pressed against a cute sailor dress with a white top and dark blue skirt.

I heard other kids start to laugh at me.  Denise turned from the chalkboard to look down at me.  Before I had come up to almost her boobies, but now my eyes were level with her waist.  She squatted down to look me in the eye.  “Can I help you, young lady?”

I wanted to tell her what was happening, but I couldn’t.  I was frozen with terror.  She was so big.  Everything was so big.  I desperately wanted my mommy.  Mommy would make me feel better.

“Hello?  Sweetheart?  Are you lost?”

I said nothing.  Then I felt my underpants starting to turn wet.  I hoped no one would notice, but a girl in the front row pointed to the floor.  “She’s peeing!”

Everyone laughed harder at me.  Even Denise.  She quickly put a hand to her mouth to cover it, but I saw it.  She was a meanie like all the others.  She was supposed to be nice to me, but she wasn’t.

I started to sob.  The mean lady ran a hand through my hair.  “It’s all right, sweetheart.  Why don’t you tell me your name?”

Other books

The Orenda Joseph Boyden by Joseph Boyden
In an Adventure With Napoleon by Gideon Defoe, Richard Murkin
Flipped Out by Jennie Bentley
Barbara Cleverly by The Last Kashmiri Rose
Dog Run Moon by Callan Wink
Guinea Dog by Patrick Jennings