Chapter 16: Finding my voice
The clothes are obviously Chapman’s, and I’m made to fit them.
The central piece of the ensemble is a TARDIS dress. Probably because it’s blue.
There’s also a pair of sunset orange ballet flats with orange supportive insoles in them. A pair of gloves, a purse, and a pair of sunglasses, all of the same color.
The purse is bigger, and in better shape, and with a longer strap, than the purse I’ve been using. So I happily transfer everything over to that. And that’s really super easy with my new sofa-primate hands.
There’s a simple makeup kit in the purse, including a mirror, that I’m entirely too afraid to use.
I’ll catch a glimpse of myself in a window or a bathroom mirror eventually, but I don’t need that now, and I don’t know a thing about makeup. A lot of women locally don’t wear much of it, if any at all, anyway. I’ll blend in just fine without it.
Except that I’m wearing these clothes, and they are telegraphing who I am to anybody who might suspect I’m wearing a pendant that can do this in the first place.
There are panties that are the same blue as the dress.
No bra. The dress has a shelf bra, and what I’ve got on my chest probably doesn’t even need that. I’ve still got them, though. Definitely bigger than I’ve ever had before.
A lot of women around here don’t wear bras either. So, again, not a huge deal. And one less thing to delay my exit from the parking garage.
When I’m all dressed, the pendant hangs all the way down to the bottom of my sternum, under my dress, completely hidden by it and its high neckline.
In a pinch, though, I can still grab it with both hands and haul it right over my head and out of my dress. But if I do that, the dress won’t survive. Nor will the shoes or gloves. Or panties.
There are a lot of reasons I don’t like this, now that I’m doing it, and I want to take the pendant off now. However, that would shunt me over to escape plan B, and that might result in more of last night’s kind of bologna, actually.
But I look like I’m going to a science fiction convention.
As I stick my nose out through the crack in the door of the stairwell, I smell, hear, and see a police car roll by and head for the ramp up. They obviously didn’t see me even crack the door, but I let myself be convinced that my disguise is already working, and lick my lips before opening the door more fully.
Another police car swerves and pulls to a halt in front of me as I step out of the door, and I make startled eye contact with the driver.
He pulls his microphone from his dash and puts it to his mouth, to say, amplified and way too loud, echoing throughout the complex, “Ma’am. Please vacate the premises immediately for your safety. There is a dangerous reptile wandering the parking garage.
I still don’t see animal control anywhere.
I nod, and wave, and stumble out, around and past the car to the sidewalk.
I hope they don’t hurt that poor lizard.
Fortunately, I happen to know that she’s making a cunning getaway. But, they might yet track her down, I suppose.
What if they have a wizard on their staff?
The door of the coffee shop opens, setting off the chime to let everyone know that the first customer of the day has entered.
Well, no. Chapman and Rhoda are already there, in the back of the main room, waiting for me.
Jill and Cerce, who open on Saturdays, have been told what to expect, but Cerce gawks from behind the counter as Jill steps out to get a good look at me and then at Chapman and back again.
I understand we don’t look exactly alike, though I couldn’t tell from memory when I had taken a peek at myself in a shop window. But, it does look like our bodies were stamped out of the same base mold.
There are some differences.
My boobs are bigger.
My hair is dark brown and not cut in a side shave, and it falls to my shoulders. It has a slight wave to it.
Chapman had said sie had based my facial features on hir favorite autistic comedian from Australia, mixing them with hir own. And the result is that we could be siblings, cousins, or painfully gay partners, depending on if the beholder has prosopagnosia like me or not. And I’m honestly fine with any of those assumptions. I feel like I’d have fun playing each of them up. If I could focus on socializing as if I’m human.
Jill stops in front of me and asks, “Meghan. You look stunning. And stunned. Are you all right?”
I open my mouth and I squeak.
Jill blinks.
See, there’s a bit of a problem.
I hold up a finger. Straight up. It surprises me and I look at it in wonder for a second, then I glance at Jill, and then Cerce. And then I reach into my new purse with both hands and pull out my enchanted tablet.
I almost go to put it on the ground in front of me, but stop myself from bending over more than a couple degrees and make a coughing noise. Then I rub my nose and straighten up and deliberately hold the tablet in front of me.
At which point I reach with one of my hands and turn it on.
Holding it with one hand directly in front of my face at half an arm’s length out, I press on the screen with the knuckle of my other hand.
This feels so freaking awkward and weird.
But soon the AAC app is open and I can talk again. So I say, in my own now familiar voice, that of the tablet, “Can’t talk.”
“What? I don’t understand!” Jill exclaims. Then looks questioningly at Chapman.
Cerce utters, “Oh.”
And Chapman nods at her and then says, “She has a larynx now, Jill. Not only does she not know how to use it, but I imagine it feels really weird when she tries.”
I nod vigorously.
“But didn’t she have one before?” Jill asks.
“I don’t know,” Chapman says. “I never got to study a dragon before the metamorphosis. No one did. We didn’t know who they were. But if I had a guess, I’d say she did, but she lost all memory of how to use it when that old disguise was discarded.”
Jill half points at me and asks, “And how did you say she got this way again?”
“I very pointedly didn’t,” Chapman replies. “And I won’t.”
Jill squints at me and examines me further and says, “I do feel like I recognize her, even though she’s never looked like this. Just like the first time she changed. Will all the other dragons be able to do this?”
“Probably not. Or, if so, one at a time.”
“So weird. And so cool, and,” she looks at me in the face. “Are you really OK with this?”
I shake my head, making sure that she and Cerce and Rhoda and Chapman see me do so. Then I use my tablet to say, “Have to.”
“OK. OK.” She nervously smiles at Chapman, then back at me. “Well, you look good.”
There’s a full length mirror in the back room, where they’re going to eventually set up my computer, and I’m really annoyed that I’m using it to look at this body and not my own.
I could take off all my clothes again and then the pendant, and get to see, but that would be a lot of trouble. I’ll get to see eventually.
And, even though it’s a full length mirror, it’s not really wide enough to give me a full third person view of my wingspan. When I have one.
It’s just fine for a human, of course.
I’m.
I’m a woman.
Only I’m not.
This is how I know that I’m not.
Oh, I am definitely female. I am so supposed to be female. I am almost laser focused now on the idea of laying eggs in the spring.
I might be in the need to look for a suitable egg laying lair, actually. It’s a whole half a year away, but now I’m thinking of that pretty solidly.
But anyway, female dragons are not typically women, and this is definitely not me.
Kind of like before my first metamorphosis, I feel like I’m seeing a completely different person in the mirror. Like, as if it’s literally not a mirror but a window, with another person on the other side. My brain will absolutely not let me see it as a mirror. Even as that person mimics my movements and expressions.
But the person I see is cute!
And unlike before, she looks like someone I’d like to at least be very good friends with.
I sure wouldn’t mind looking like her if I absolutely had to. At least humans would treat me almost right if they saw her when looking at me.
Which, for the time being, they will. Which is a startling revelation to keep having. It never stops being jarring.
I do find it a little weird that I can walk just fine, but I can’t talk. It feels like a continuity oversight in a science fiction show. Or a plot hole. But I speculate it might have something to do with dissociation, and what specifically triggers my dysphoria and what doesn’t. Maybe.
It is magic. And very particular, literal magic at that, from Chapman’s explanation. Like programming the universe itself. So, it might just be that I’m missing the code for speech but not for walking. Though, why that would be the case, I’m just not sure. It makes less sense to me than my dissociation explanation.
I tilt my head to the side and watch as the other person does it too. They do remind me a lot of Chapman when sie isn’t around.
I again ask myself this question, because the topic just happens to be on my brain regarding eggs and just how human I might be at the moment. Would I have sex with this person if I could?
Maybe?
If I appear to be human, and she is human, maybe I could. Socially. Accept that.
Physically? Can I imagine enjoying the physical sensation of that?
Honestly, I just can’t even bring to mind memories of physical human contact, let alone daydreams of it.
Why do I ask myself this?
Because humans are constantly talking about it. Or, a lot of them are. Every relationship in every story seems to center around eventually having sex. And it’s the one way they ask whether they’re compatible with each other. And I guess it’s one of those habits I’ve learned from them.
Again, I don’t know what happens in the spring, which I’m guessing is mating season, based on thoughts I keep having.
I turn my head away from the mirror.
I’m supposed to be using this thing to practice acting and moving like a human woman. And I’m failing even at moving like a human, actually. I can tell that much.
I awkwardly move to open the door and walk through the short dark hallway out into the cafe. There are some other customers there now, and Chapman comes to me and indicates we should head back into the back room again.
I was going to ask hir to help me, but apparently I don’t have to.
Rhoda moves to come back, too, but Chapman stops here and says, “Just a moment, OK?”
And then, once we’re back there, Chapman closes the door and stands in front of it.
“Maybe we don’t need you to practice being human today. Just keep the disguise on until we’re done,” sie says. “It’ll be more convincing if you’re draconically weird for the interview. Blending in with people will be needed later, maybe, when you want to use it.”
Then we talk about a few other things before inviting Rhoda in to plan the next phase.
It’s the end of the summer and this weird man is wearing black jeans and a black leather biker’s jacket. His black hair is the kind of mess they strove for in old photos of geniuses, but his mutton chops belong at the Subdued Stringband Jamboree. He’s wearing cowboy boots and holding a small notepad and a pen, his right leg propped up on his left as he sits and listens to me explain things using his laptop with the AAC program installed on it.
I find the keyboard is reasonably easy to use, once I get used to using my fingertips to hunt and peck.
I used to be a touch typist, but I think this way now for some reason. But I’m still getting full sentences out in reasonable time.
He’s nodding as I talk.
Occasionally, he asks a question.
What I find absolutely hilarious is that his name, his literal given name, is Seagull. Seagull Phil. It sounds like a nickname, but it isn’t.
The coincidence of that made my stomach growl at the weirdest moment in our introductions.
He works for the weekly paper, and we’re having this interview in the back room of the shop.
He has a voice like a 1930s transatlantic radio announcer. Soft, gentle, and extremely articulate. It does not fit his physical image in the slightest. He’s six foot three, too.
The whole affect is disarming and makes me feel at ease despite my mounting and raging dysphoria. I almost forget that I don’t look like myself.
Rhoda met him at the Council meeting, and befriended him when it was adjourned abruptly to his great dismay. She’d told him that he could interview a dragon.
I’m keeping my human disguise for this so that I can type easier, really.
When we’re done, I’ve promised to shed it so that he can verify that I’m the Meg that everyone is talking about.
What I’ve learned is that apparently I’ve been targeted by the authorities because I’ve been leading the morning roll calls, and someone thinks that that will break up the grip the rest of the dragons have on the city. But also, the property management of my building had called the police for my forceful eviction from the premises (which they had momentarily achieved). They have no idea I’m trespassing.
I’m telling Seagull as much of my story as I can manage in the time we have.
Between this interview and the letters that Astraia and I sent to City and County Councils, there may be some hope for a better resolution, Seagull says.
I want to believe him.
Now I see myself in that full length mirror.
I still wish it was a mirror in a dance hall, or something like that. But between it and my ability to twist and crane my neck to look at my back and belly, or to look at the mirror from any angle, I get a really good look at myself.
I’m alone again in the back room to do this.
And I’m relaxed in ways that I didn’t think even mattered.
It’s like my very cells have unclenched.
It’s that energized looseness and lethargy you might feel after the best massage, if your soul had been massaged.
So, when I described my torso and limbs as being similar in scale to a human’s, that didn’t really do any justice to their form or function, or actual shape. Just a vague sense of scale that explains why and how I can enter buildings with little trouble.
I’ve only seen morphology like this in recent speculative illustrations of dinosaurs, with the major addition of a third set of limbs. My wings.
Unlike how dinosaurs are thought to have been, based on their skeletal structures, I believe I am about as flexible as a monitor lizard.
But my back is high and arched, and my chest does have a keel like a bird’s, because wing muscles demand that. This makes my torso tall, like a dogs, and gives me a barrel chest like a swan’s. Also, my neck starts at the base by going up and curving gracefully to my head, which can be described as before. But now I’m thinking of it as kind of a cross between a goat and caiman in shape, nearly straight horns swept back. And my tail tends to be held upright and straight out for balance. I can’t curl it terribly tightly with muscles alone, but it’s more flexible than it looks when I move.
My wings are more forward than my forelimbs. Which actually makes my wings my forelimbs. My arms, I guess, are set further back out of the way of my flight muscles. But they’re still partially linked, and I do flex them a little in sync with my wings when I’m flapping hard.
If I stretch out, from tip of nose to tip of tail, I might be ten or eleven feet long.
I know I don’t weigh nearly as much as I did when I presented as a 5’10” human man that was 280 lbs.
On the other hand, I think I may have notably grown in length and girth in the last week. I have no measurements to confirm it, but I just feel like it has happened.
My left shoulder still has that nasty gash in it, which isn’t there when I’m in human disguise.
But even with that gash, every inch of this body, as I look at it, every scale, every tiny curve, every bump and nobble, every movement of it, everything is mine. Mine in the same way that this building is mine, and this coffee shop. The way that my friends are mine. And the city itself. The way that my soul is mine.
Not the mine of ownership or domain. The mine of association and identity.
The mine by which I derive my sense of being and purpose and place. Contentment. Joy. Pride.
It can be injured and made weaker, but even then that’s mine, too.
It’s the kind of mine I can mine for strength.
Inspired by this feeling, I spend a little time learning a few more simple, one syllable words, so I can say them faster when I need to.