126 Searching Questions

Eric was the first to react. “May I see that?” he asked, holding out his hand for the paper. I gave it to him and he held it so that Martin could see as well. “These are all Piques contacts, aren’t they? The email clearly is, and the phone exchange is the one all of the landlines here use. Have you called?”

“Not yet,” I admitted. “I wanted to figure out…” I trailed off as he pulled out his cell and called.

He listened and nodded for a moment and then hung up. “It’s an answering machine. The voice sounds like the one from the videos we shot.”

“That’s what I expected,” I said. “As I was saying, I’m assuming that if we left a message, Davis would get it. The question is, how do we make him answer?”

“Or maybe there’s something else we should be doing,” Vicky suggested. “With a first name, can’t we just check the phone listings? Piques can’t control everything.”

“Better yet,” Martin pointed out, “let’s find a paper phone book. As far as we know, Davis had no reason to hide at the start of the year. Even if his number is unlisted now, it might have been published when he first got here.”

The three of them went at it enthusiastically, almost ignoring me. I heard them suggest passing out images from the video to the Strangers, in hopes that somebody might spot him on campus – just in case the administration had simply moved him to a different building. They talked about trying to find him on Facebook; they even discussed trying to find friends or colleagues at Rocky Lake who might know him. All of them sounded like intriguing ideas, any of which might work. Why, then, was I getting a bad feeling about the whole thing?

If Vicky noticed my lack of participation, the boys certainly didn’t. They were so hot in pursuit of an interesting problem that the reticence of one petite girl in the corner barely registered. They talked about faking messages from friends and relatives, from search committees, from newspapers, and even from the Piques administration, showing that at least they’d heard my words, even if I myself seemed to be inconsequential.

Within half an hour they had used Vicky’s computer to type up a plan of action, printed four copies, and handed them out. Then they shook Vicky’s and my hands and rushed out enthusiastically, leaving my head spinning.

“I’m excited about this!” she said. “Are you…” then she did notice my expression. “What’s wrong?”

“You didn’t notice how they basically ignored me?” I managed to choke out. “I’m the one who brought the new information. I’m the one who basically organized this group. I’m the one who was most affected by this experiment, and –”

“And right now, you’re a girl. Guys do this all the time; I guess you’ve never noticed. You’ve been having so much fun with your oh, gee, it’s so much fun to wear dresses and have a boyfriend who takes care of me thing that you’ve pretty much ignored real life. One boy at a time – the right boy – is a lot of fun. But you try working with a group of them and they might not even hear you.

“But don’t worry,” she continued. “We’re going to save you despite yourself. You’ll be much happier, Marsh, when you’re back to your own body, and can get back to what you’re used to.” I opened my mouth to reply, but she cut me off again. “Don’t thank me, Marsh. I’m just doing what a good girlfriend should. I’m watching out for my guy.”

“Don’t – don’t I get a choice, here?” I asked, sounding a bit whinier than I would have liked.

“You won’t have a choice if we don’t find Davis!” she retorted in exasperation. “Is that what you’re asking for? That we call off the search?”

“No. No, of course not. I just don’t want to be forced into anything, that’s all.”

She sat on the bed next to me and put her arm around my shoulder. “Marsh, this isn’t just about you. Maybe you could be happy either way, but… well, I want my boyfriend back, and your father wants his son back, and… well, if you change back, your cousin Tyler will have been born, and…”

I could hear her struggling for more reasons, and with a sigh I supplied some. “If I were a boy, Tina would get a lead in the high school musical, and some girls I don’t know would end up with the roles I’ve gotten, and another one would get Jeremy…” I rested my head on her shoulder, very conscious of our role-reversal. “You think I’m being selfish, don’t you? A lot of people could be happier the other way.”

“And I think you will be, too, actually. Didn’t you say it bothered you, being in the wrong body? Feeling like a phony?”

I nodded, reluctantly. Why had I told her? Now she was using it against me. I needed to think; there should be some way for all of this to make sense, some way for it to come out the way I wanted it to. With a sigh, I picked up the plan and looked for my name. “Looks as though my first job is to go look up the archives at The Messenger and see if they have any press releases about Prof Davis coming to Piques. I suppose I can write to that reporter and see if he’ll help me again. And… you’re going to try to find a paper phonebook. Eric and Martin took the more promising possibilities for themselves. Terrific.”

“Don’t let it get you down, Marsh,” she encouraged me. “It doesn’t really matter who finds the answer, as long as we find it, right?” Then she walked me out.

Troubled, I walked back to my dorm a bit more slowly than usual. Dad’s call had made me question things I thought I had just resolved, and Vicky had pushed me even further – I was pretty certain I didn’t want to change back, but I wasn’t sure I could justify not taking the chance, if given it. I might have to just start thinking of this time as a chance to explore and to cherish, but not to keep.

Jeremy’s ringtone sounded from my phone just as I thought that, and I jumped guiltily, remembering how I’d snapped at him. “Hi-Jeremy-I’m-sorry” I said hurriedly, and waited for his reaction.

It sounded as though I had really caught him by surprise, as he sort of choked a bit before laughing, “You mean I shouldn’t apologize?”

He’s always been so sweet to me, I thought. Maybe it would be better if I moved aside and let him fall for a real girl – maybe even that girl I’d seen in the bathroom this morning. Not just yet, though, I promised myself. What, me, jealous? Maybe more than a bit.

“Marsh?” he asked again, when I didn’t answer right away.

“Oh!” I said, embarrassed. “No, you shouldn’t–”

“I just wondered if I could see you tonight.”

“Yes!” I said, eagerly. After all, if I was going to be forced to give him up, the more time I could spend with him in the meantime, the better.

“Great. Um, I don’t real feel like dancing or a movie; how about ice skating?”

“Ice skating?” I echoed, a bit surprised. “I didn’t know you ice skated. I mean, yes, I’d love to.”

“I’m not great, but I can mostly get around without falling I think it’ll be fun.”

I’d always thought of skating as a perfect date, actually. “I agree,” I said. “Come get me around… 7:30?”

“See you then,” he agreed before hanging up.

My step was definitely lighter as I made my way back to my room, and I’d nearly gotten there before I realized that I’d been humming, I’m in Love With a Wonderful Guy. Hmm.

When I told me roommates our plans, Lee Ann looked thoughtful. “You know, long skirts aren’t really practical for ice skating. Let’s see what I have that could work.”

When she took out a pair of stretch pants, I was hesitant.

She saw my expression and forestalled me. “I know you’re worried about modesty, Marsh, but I think it won’t be a problem. As I remember, you said that the problem with pants was that it accentuates the crotch area, right? And you don’t wear short skirts because you don’t think you should be showing off your legs, and because you think boys will be hoping for a glimpse of your underwear?”

I nodded. I’d never heard it explained that way, but it made sense to me.

“Well, we can fix that. These pants will cover your legs, and,” she then took out a miniskirt, “if you wear this skirt over it, it hides your crotch area but doesn’t inhibit your movement.” It also gave me an excuse to wear a short skirt, which I hadn’t dared do since Jeremy spotted me in the one I’d just bought.

I was a bit nervous when Jeremy came to pick me up, and I was hardly surprised when his eyes bulged on seeing me. I knew what the male imagination could do, even if I was technically dressed modestly. “Is it OK?” I asked, turning so he could get the full effect.

“Um…,” he choked out. “You… look great.” Terry snickered from the door to her room, and I glared at her.

Looking back at Jeremy, I asked, as innocently as I could, “so it’s OK for me to wear short skirts, now?” and watched him turn an interesting shade of red. It was going to be a fun evening.

As we walked to his car, he seemed to feel the need to defend himself. “I didn’t mean that you weren’t allowed to wear short skirts,” he said, “I just really appreciate that you’re usually so modest. You’re not, you know, practically falling out of your clothes in public and besides, what you’re wearing isn’t really immodest or anything and it really is more practical, and…”

“It’s OK,” I cut him off, giggling. “I’m just enjoying your reaction. It’s flattering to see you noticing my body.”

“I never not notice you! I mean, I think you’re beautiful, and I really like looking at you and–” This time I stopped him by putting my arms around his neck and giving him a long kiss. Then we just gazed into each other’s eyes in silence for a few moments before kissing again, briefly. If not for his ‘no sex before marriage’ principal, I suspect we might not have made it to the rink.

It turned out that my experience with roller skating hadn’t quite prepared me for ice skating; fortunately, he was a pretty decent skater, and he did keep me from losing my balance a few times. But he wasn’t all that familiar with skating with a partner and at one point I tripped and wound up pulling him down on top of me. He managed to break my fall so it didn’t hurt, and we just lay on the ice for a minute or two, laughing, while the other skaters went around us.

“Why don’t we take a break?” he asked, as he helped me up. “You find us someplace to sit, and I’ll go get us some hot chocolate.”

I smiled and nodded and headed for some benches on the side of the rink. In fact, I think my smile was almost hurting at this point; I had been smiling constantly for some time. I’m really enjoying myself, I realized. I don’t want this feeling to end. I can’t believe we haven’t been together for much more than a month.

Jeremy obviously noticed my expression when he came back and handed me my drink. “I didn’t realize you liked skating so much,” he said, sitting next to me, “you’re a lot happier than you were this morning.”

I rested my head against his shoulder. “It’s not the skating,” I said, laughing, “it’s you.”

We sipped our hot chocolate. It warmed my insides, but I was already feeling pretty warm, cuddled against him. It’s not fair, I thought. Why does this have to be borrowed time?

“You seem lost in thought,” he observed. “Anything you care to share?”

I giggled and shook my head.

“Well I have a thought to share,” he said, carefully taking my half-filled cup from me and putting both of them on the bench next to him. I looked at him curiously, and he put his hands around my shoulders, drew me close and kissed me, a slow, lingering kiss. Then with our faces just an inch apart, he said, “I love you, Marsh.”

“I love you, too, Jeremy,” I responded, and kissed him back. And then I realized what I was doing. I had no right to be falling in love right now. Even if he didn’t remember anything, my changing back would be a breakup. What if he did have some memory of it? What if I started pulling away as things came to a head with the search?

“What’s wrong?” he asked, clearly reading my sudden hesitation.

I pushed myself away and stood up, facing him. At the very least, I need to wait until we track down Davis, I told myself. All kinds of things could happen, and it’s not fair to him; not fair at all. “I… I can’t do this,” I said aloud. Jeremy, I… there’s something I have to work out before… it’s not fair to you. I have no business dating anybody until this is resolved.”

“What?!” he exclaimed, coming up behind me and putting his hands on my shoulders. “Until what’s resolved?”

“It’s just important,” I said, starting to cry. How I wanted to just lean back against him and pretend it was nothing. “I… I have a terrible secret, Jeremy. I…” Wait, I can’t tell him the truth, not now! He’d feel horribly betrayed and embarrassed if I told him he’d just confessed love to another guy. “I can’t tell you. I just can’t. I never should have let things go this far.”

“Whatever it is, Hun, we can talk it out.”

“No!” I exclaimed, facing him. Then I realized that I was causing a scene in public. “We need to go,” I whispered. “I’ve made a horrible mess of things. We need to break up. This isn’t fair to you. I need to set you free so you can be with another girl. Somebody who doesn’t have these problems.”

“I’m not interested in another girl,” he whispered back. “How long is this secret going to take you to resolve?”

I sniffed and tried to wipe my tears with my glove. “I don’t know… days, weeks, months, maybe? Years? I don’t know.”

He took off his own glove and used a napkin he’d gotten with the hot chocolate to dab tenderly at my tears. “I’ll tell you what, then,” he whispered. “We love each other, right? We’ve just said so.” I nodded. “Then we’ll stay together, for now. I’m willing to risk any heartache; I don’t want to lose you. If this isn’t resolved by the time I graduate, and you still think we have to break up, we’ll break up then, and we’ll probably never see each other again. OK?”

I should have stood firm. I thought of warning him that he could be risking being alone for Spring House Parties, that he could get badly hurt, but I was too weak. I wanted to hold on to him as long as I could, so I agreed and clung to him with all my might.

But one thing was now absolutely clear to me. One way or another, I had to resolve this. Finding Professor Davis was now my number one priority.

15 Comments

  1. scotts13 says:

    Nicely done. Jeremy went up quite a few notches in my eyes; Marsh is still acting like an idiot, but I’m used to that by now. Even Vicky is behaving. Good chapter.

    (pause)

    OK, I have to vent a BIT. You either tell a secret or you don’t. The worst POSSIBLE thing you can do is tell someone you’re keeping something from them, then shut up. I knew this before first grade. Why doesn’t Marsh? BEST case, you hurt their feelings. Worst case, you stimulate their concern, curiosity, or both, to the extent they meddle in your business. Grrr!

  2. von says:

    >>I tripped and wound up pulling him down on top of me. He managed to break my fall so it didn’t hurt, and we just lay on the ice for a minute or two, laughing, while the other skaters went around us.

    Ummm… Marsh falls, and pulls Jeremy down on top of him, but Jeremy manages to break Marsh’s fall. The physics of that are, like, way complex.. to complex for me.

    >>f this isn’t resolved by the time I graduate, and you still think we have to break up, we’ll break up then, and we’ll probably never see each other again. OK?”

    Liar.

    Dittos to Scott, except I would add that (sorry this comes out so mushy) “if you really love someone, you don’t keep secrets from them”. (OK, end mush). The right thing to do in this case is to tell Jeremy. Marsh’s handling of this moral dilemma is spectacularly bizarre.

  3. TJ says:

    When I told me roommates our plans, Lee Ann looked thoughtful.

    I think ME, should be MY.

    This is an interesting Chapter. Every time Marsh takes a good step forward, it always seem other forces drag her back. I feel bad, though the only way to feel better is to tell Jeremy the truth. It a shame though, could leave her feeling worst if he leaves her after that, choices like these, suck.

  4. von says:

    I feel bad, though the only way to feel better is to tell Jeremy the truth. It a shame though, could leave her feeling worst if he leaves her after that, choices like these, suck.

    Oh, poor pitiful Marsh. Oh, wait, he has dug this whole absolutely by himself! “Oh what a tangled web we weave…”

    I’m beginning to think that this is a morality tail about the importance of telling the truth.

  5. von says:

    edited to add:

    Every time Marsh takes a good step forward, it always seem other forces drag her back.

    Von wonders what TJ considers ‘forward’ and what TJ considers ‘back’?

  6. TJ says:

    Well you may not feel it is forward, but the steps he taken with Vicky last chapter were good steps i think. Now She kinda back where she started, Vicky manage to push her there, and now these thoughts, wanting to push away Jeremy. It just feel, to me, as going backwards.

  7. April says:

    But one thing was now absolutely clear to me. One way or another, I had to resolve this. Finding Professor Davis was now my number one priority.

    I can’t help but feel like, if I had a quarter for every time that Marsh said this, that I would be able to personally pay for Take a Lemon’s publishing through Random House. 😛

  8. von says:

    Well you may not feel it is forward, but the steps he taken with Vicky last chapter were good steps i think. Now She kinda back where she started, Vicky manage to push her there, and now these thoughts, wanting to push away Jeremy. It just feel, to me, as going backwards.

    Forward, for the bizarre, antiquated, person that is ‘Von’ would involve such things as:
    a) Being honest
    b) Being rational
    c) Being morally courageous
    … etc.

  9. von says:

    I can’t help but feel like, if I had a quarter for every time that Marsh said this, that I would be able to personally pay for Take a Lemon’s publishing through Random House.

    Especially if you also got a quarter for every time he then said the equivalent of ‘but in the meantime’…

  10. April says:

    Also, I do have to say that telling someone that you have a hugely important personal secret but you can’t tell them isn’t actually the best path for relationship success. I once gave Tracy a line like that — except my deadline for resolution was after her work shift, six hours later — and she nearly went crazy in that short period of time, thinking I had cancer or was leaving her or something.

  11. von says:

    The male equivalent is the wife calling at work and saying, “We have to talk. No, I can’t talk now, we’ll talk when you get home.”

    Arrrrrrggggghhhhhhh

  12. April says:

    Yes, that’s pretty much what I did to Tracy. It was the bad-wife thing to do, but I learned my lesson after that, and never did it again.

  13. BMeph says:

    New plans aside, new section (o hai there!) aside, teasings about new plans, and forward progression on many fronts in the story line aside,

    …I hate um, strongly dislike, this chapter.

    Sorry, Russ, but 1) you’ve spoiled us with your start-of-year burst of energy; 2) von is, for some unbeknownst-to-us reason, being ridiculously mild with the comments. Therefore, I feel the need to point out some “flow clunkers”.

    >> “All of them sounded like intriguing ideas, any of which might work. Why, then, was I getting a bad feeling about the whole thing?”

    I could guess, but it sounds like no one has a clue. Maybe it has something to do with that whole “…just getting a message to him isn’t enough. We have to get him to respond.” that last chapter ended with. It “feels” like Marsh isn’t satisfied with the discussion, for some reason. I Wonder Why…

    >> “If Vicky noticed my lack of participation, the boys certainly didn’t. They were so hot in pursuit of an interesting problem that the reticence of one petite girl in the corner barely registered.”

    Okay, maybe I’m just too old-fashioned for my own good, and too geeky to relate to the real world. In my world, anyway, petite, but attractive girls have no problems letting the people around them know how they feel. Sometimes, too much for my techie tastes. I think someone’s trying too hard to not-object. Maybe I’m just factoring in too much expectations of Marsh being able to communicate feelings and direct attention, what with doing all of that acting…oh, wait: (turn sarcasm mode to “on”) Marsh is a dumb, flighty chick now. That makes PERFECT sense. (sarcasm mode at “standby”)

    >> “… well, if you change back, your cousin Tyler will have been born, and…”
    Man, whatever idiot that mentioned no one bringing up Tyler is sure getting his money’s worth now, huh. Oh, wait, aren’t I the idiot? I’d say, “Stop, this is creeping me out,” but hey, it’s your story, Russ; like Sony’y EQ tag line went, “We’re in YOUR world, now!” It still looks odd, though. Enough, going on.

    >>I nodded, reluctantly. Why had I told her? Now she was
    >> using it against me.

    Oh, I know why! (Flips sarcasm switch to “overdrive”) Because Vicky’s always been so selfless, considerate and great with relationships! Also, because Marsh is such a bold aggressive type, always acting, then thinking, and talking last. Sigh. (Puts sarcasm switch back into “standby”.)

    >> I needed to think;

    “And the Oscar for ‘Most Ironic Understatement in a Web-Based Story’ goes to…”

    >> “… there should be some way for all of this to make sense, some way for it to come out the way I wanted it to.”

    Wait, you mean there IS a way you want it to come out? As our previous Great Leader is known to say, “That’s News to Me!”

    Well, I’m still annoyed way too much for comfort, so I’m going to skip for now, about how stretch pants are bad, and mini-skirts are bad, but both of them together are Just Fine! (I’ll just wait for the “I’ll wear leggings!” episode….) Plus, other folks have discussed the “Epic Fail” of “I’ve Got A Secret, but I can’t tell YOU! Oh, by the way, I Totally Love You, until my bipolar meds kick in, anyway.” Bah! Let me calm down, and maybe von will pick up the slack again, and I can rant at least semi-coherently again.

  14. von says:

    von will pick up the slack again,

    Von does most of his ranting on Skype, and is a little tired of being the ‘Why can’t people just leave the story alone?” fall guy.

    I, personally, love, comments, on, my, books… especially negative ‘fix this’ comments.

    Von goes off in a huff…

  15. Estarlio says:

    When you think about it he’s (Marshall) acting the part of what he thinks a woman behaves like. Marsha’s effectively dead, he’s inherited her body. I can only assume Marshall was some sort of extreme chauvinist.

    Well okay, maybe not actively so but – naive under the more flattering interpretation – and now he’s a she rather than learning and growing and maybe doing away with those old prejudices she’s learning to be happy with the act. Marsha doesn’t /deserve/ to change back.

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