105 All in the Family

I found Dad alone in his study the next day, watching the Bowl games. This time, he hadn’t even tried to ask me to join him, but I waited for a commercial and then sat on the arm of his chair and said, “Hi!”

Sadly, he flinched. He’d been doing that for most of the week since I’d told him my secret. “Marsh! Um… you didn’t… I mean, did you want to watch the game with me?”

“Would you like me to, Dad?” I asked, watching him carefully. Over the past few months, it had become normal for me to call him, “Daddy,” but that was one of those things that really seemed to bother him now, so I’d stopped.

“Um, well… you’ve never… I mean, of course, Pr – I mean, Marsh.” The pain in his voice tore at my heart. “I don’t know what to think, anymore… Marsh. I feel as though a giant hole has been torn in my heart and I can’t even do anything about it. You’re suddenly a stranger to me, and, well…”

“That’s why I came in, Dad. I think we need to talk.”

He took a deep breath and nodded. “Of course, M– Marsh. We really do.”

“Would you like to wait until half time?”

“No.” Suddenly decisive, he picked up the remote and switched off the TV. “This is much more important than which college is going to be able to boast about having the best record.” He stood and gestured to the armchair in which he had been sitting. “Sit down, M– Sit down.” And pulled over his desk chair to face me as I sat down.

“I suppose I’ve been avoiding you,” he continued, “and I’m sorry. You’ve been dealing with this for, what, three months now?” I nodded. “Then it’s about time I started to deal with it as well. I don’t want to ‘take over’ again. You tell me what you want to tell me. And… tell me what you want me to call you.”

Mom and I had talked about this a lot. It might have been easiest for Dad to pretend he didn’t know about me and go on calling me his ‘princess,’ and I’d gotten really comfortable with that. I’d decided that it was silly for me to worry about my masculinity being threatened, under the circumstances, and to tell the truth, I’d really grown to like the closeness Marsha had had with him. But I didn’t see any way to go back to that.

“You can just call me, ‘Marsh,’ Dad. It was my nickname as Marshall as well. Um… what would you like to know?”

He chuckled. “Neither one of us wants to go first, I see. OK, tell me what you… what Marshall was like. What kinds of things did you enjoy? Um… how were you… socially?”

“I had a lot of girlfriends, if that’s what you wanted to know, Dad.” He protested that it wasn’t what he was asking, but I saw him relax. “Um… and I was intimate with a number of them.”

“I see.”

“I guess that’s something very different between me and Marsha.”

“Um… yeah.”

“I was a bit taller then you, and not really athletic. But girls really seem to like a guy who plays the guitar, and I play – or rather played – very well. A lot better than I showed you the other day.”

“I see.”

“And I really can’t complain about you as a Dad – you’ve always been the greatest Dad a guy could ask for,” I told him.

“Well, I wasn’t trying to–”

“I just want you to remember something. I am a girl, now. I might not be the girl you remember, but I’m still… well, I’m not your son, now. I wish I was, but I’m not. I’m… I’m your daughter. It’s taken me a lot of time to come to terms with it, and I’m not saying that I like it, but that’s the way things are right now.”

“I see that. I’m sorry, Marsh. It’s just been a real surprise for me. And… I’ve been remembering that the last time I took you to the train, you asked me if I missed having a son. I’m afraid that I didn’t realize then why you were asking.”

“It’s OK, Dad. You gave the answer that Marsha would have wanted to hear. And… I couldn’t really expect you to miss me, when you never knew me.”

He nodded again.

“But now… I don’t know if I can change back, but as long as I’m a girl, I’ll be acting like one.”

“So it’s an act?”

I squirmed a bit. “I didn’t mean it that way. I mean, I really do feel the things a girl in my position would feel, and that includes liking boys. It doesn’t mean anything about what I was like as a boy.”

“Ah, I see. I guess you might think your Dad’s being a bit overly emotional. It’s just a bit difficult to keep treating you as ‘my little girl’ given…”

“Yeah, I see. I just want you to know, that I’m OK with it. It’s actually easier for me. If you see what I mean. And I didn’t mean that I don’t need your help. I know that there are lots of things you can do for me that I can’t do for myself, including dealing with some aspects of this situation.”

“You seem to have managed pretty well,” he acknowledged. “You’re clearly a big girl now – I mean, a… well, you’re very mature.”

I laughed. “’Big girl’ is fine, Dad.”

He stood and pulled me into an embrace. “You know,” he said. “Children do change as they grow up, but this isn’t quite what I was expecting!”

We both laughed at that. With his arms around me and his chin nuzzling the top of my head, I felt a real urge to snuggle against him and call him, ‘Daddy’ again, but I resisted, because he really seemed uncomfortable with it.

“So, would you like to talk over the plan of action now, or when I take you to the train station?” he asked after a moment.

“Um, Dad…” I said. “Actually, I’m going to drive up with Jeremy.”

He held me at arms length and stared at me in surprise. “You’re…?” He shook his head. “OK, I need to get used to this. I should just think of you as Marsha and forget what you told me? Do a bit of doublethink?”

I look up at him, a bit red-faced. “I guess so… sometimes that’s what I do. I feel like I’m ‘Marsh’ when I interact with my friends and… boys, and ‘Marshall’ when I’m working on the problem of changing back. So, seriously… if you wanted to pretend that I was Marsha and treat me the way you did until last Saturday, that would be OK. I mean it, Dad. Daddy.”

He flinched again, only not so much.

“Let me think about that, Marsh. Um…” He sat down and gestured me back to my seat. “Let me talk to Marshall for a few minutes, then.”

I grinned. “Ok, here’s where we stand. I told you my friend heard where the lab probably is. When we all get back to school, we’re going to go and see if we can get in.”

“And then? What do you expect to find? People? Equipment?”

I sat back. “I really hadn’t thought that far ahead,” I admitted. “I just figured we’d find out and go from there. I guess… we’re probably not going to find any people, but maybe we’ll find something that they forgot which will lead us to them.”

“OK, anything you can find… if you can figure out where they’re hiding, I might be able to do something. With all of the secrecy, the ‘reputation of the college’ excuse doesn’t make sense to me. It’s possible, of course, but I’m betting that there’s some kind of lawsuit being threatened.”

“Really?”

He sounded comfortable now, back in his own element. “There could be a lawsuit from one of the victims’ relative forcing them to keep it all quiet, or possibly one threatening damages. If it were the latter, I’d expect somebody to try a class-action lawsuit and advertise a lot. Since I haven’t heard of any such thing, that seems less likely. So I’m going to assume that somebody outside of the college wants this all hushed up for some reason.”

“I don’t follow you,” I admitted. “How does that help?”

“Well, if I’m right, and we can get some evidence, we may be able to make the whole thing moot – and get the school to help us out here. But in the mean time, we can expect them to conceal and deny and make it as hard as possible to figure things out. And they might be able to put some pressure on people they think know more than they should. But if they were trying to get you to out your friends, that suggests that the guy who did the experiment isn’t cooperating, and they don’t know who the victims are.”

“And Dean Patterson…?” I asked.

“He knows that you’re part of this group. What he isn’t sure of, I think, is whether you actually know that the experiment is real. I certainly didn’t know when I spoke with him, after all. Sorry about calling him, by the way. I did what I thought made the most sense at the time.”

I nodded. “I know. If I had told you earlier… I’ve told Chad about this, too. Can he be in on the conversation?”

Dad raised his eyebrows. “Really? OK. Chad seems pretty level-headed.”

I told him about my agreement with Chad, and he said that he would discuss it with Chad, and maybe agree to call me together. That way we could all talk at once. Dad asked again if I wanted to watch the game with him, and I accepted. I think he was still trying to figure out whether to treat me as a boy or a girl, because at one point he started to explain the game to me and then caught himself and apologized. This was clearly going to be complicated.

And then, the one person that I had thought was supposed to be easy to relate to – my sister – suddenly turned on me. I’d asked her for her opinion on the dress I was going to be wearing back to school.

“Since when are you worried about what dress you’re wearing, Marsh?” she’d snapped.

My eyes bulged. “Haven’t I been asking your advice all along – well, the last two times I went out with Jeremy?” I countered. “We’ll be driving back together, and I thought it would make sense to look appropriate for the trip. This isn’t a date, but he’ll see me, and I don’t know how to dress for something like that. Is there a problem?”

“Just wear the green and blue,” she said, starting to close her door on me, but I stuck my foot in the way.

“Is there a problem here, Teen?”

“Why should there be a problem? Mom and Dad know everything, so we don’t have to keep secrets from them, right?”

“So what’s the issue?”

“There is no issue. Do you mind? I think I’m going to get a snack,” she said, and suddenly pushed past me.

She ran down the stairs and I almost stumbled, trying to keep up with her. She got to the kitchen ahead of me, and was already talking with Mom about something else and not looking at me. But whatever game she was playing, Mom didn’t seem to be in on it.

“Hi, Marsh,” Mom said. “Tina and I were about to make some cookies. Did you want to join us? You can bring some back to school with you.”

“Oh,” Tina said. “You know what, Mom? I just remembered that I have a report to write.” And she started to push past me again.

I guess she must have been a bit too obvious, because Mom snapped. “Tina!” and then when she didn’t stopped, called “Come back here!”

Tina didn’t stop, and Mom and I exchanged looks of surprise.

“Marsh, you get out the ingredients,” Mom said. “I’m going to go talk to your sister.”

21 Comments

  1. scotts13 says:

    This is the kind of conversation – with someone, with ANYONE – I’ve been waiting a hundred and five chapters for Marsh to have. This is the first time Marsh comes together as a personality, instead of a collection of impulses and emotional Brownian movement. Kudos. Let’s just hope she doesn’t pick up the idiot ball while trying to figure out what Tina has stuck in her craw. Careful, Russ.

  2. von says:

    I like some of this. Good tension with Tina. Liked Dad’s line, “Let me talk to Marshall”. Think the ‘sex’ issue should have raised more comment.

  3. von says:

    >>This is the kind of conversation – with someone, with ANYONE – I’ve been waiting a hundred and five chapters

    I think I have been waiting only a hundred and three chapters, and I was waiting for it to be with Dad, and it didn’t quite rise to the level I would have liked but, except for those details, I agree.

  4. scotts13 says:

    >> Think the ’sex’ issue should have raised more comment.

    Not really. It’s made very, very clear there are some things Dad’s not comfortable talking to Marsh about, and that probably tops the list. And remember, this isn’t the same Dad from previous scenes; this guy has at least 40 more IQ points. He’s smart enough to know Marshall may be different from Marsha, and he doesn’t want to go there.

    Interesting there are so few comments on what I consider a rather significant chapter.

  5. von says:

    >>Not really. It’s made very, very clear there are some things Dad’s not comfortable talking to Marsh about, and that probably tops the list. And remember, this isn’t the same Dad from previous scenes; this guy has at least 40 more IQ points. He’s smart enough to know Marshall may be different from Marsha, and he doesn’t want to go there.

    Wierd. totally missed those aspects of his character. I guess I will have to re-read eventually.

  6. scotts13 says:

    >> Weird. totally missed those aspects of his character. I guess I will have to re-read eventually.

    I was thinking mostly in terms of the confines of this chapter. This is a different Dad. The old one didn’t appear to think enough to be uncomfortable, he just reacted to the preconceptions already in his head.

    I really want to see the next chapter.

  7. Russ says:

    > I really want to see the next chapter.

    I really want to post it, but it’s not ready…

  8. von says:

    >>I was thinking mostly in terms of the confines of this chapter. This is a different Dad. The old one didn’t appear to think enough to be uncomfortable, he just reacted to the preconceptions already in his head.

    Ah. Well if you are thinking only of this chapter, and I would like to have seen the chapter be different, then I suppose that I would have liked t here to be a different dad in this chapter 🙂 I really like the one flash of dad we had way back there… I forget the exact quote but you will remember I said I loved it.

    The sex and modesty differences between Marsh, Marsha, and Marshall are something that a good, intelligent, dad would discuss. this politically correct dad might, as you suggest, wimp out.

  9. gal192 says:

    Congrads on one year of Take a Lemon. I really enjoy reading it every time another chapter comes out.It reads like a personal diary. I wished I had the money I would turn this into a tv show or a movie. I like to reread it to see if I come close to what happens next. Even if Marsh decides to stay a female, I am looking forward to how they changed everyone and what was the purpose of the experiment. Keep up the good work.

  10. v0n says:

    Anytime people talk, it seems really awkward. For example, “this is much more important than which college is going to be able to boast about having the best record.” This isn’t really the correct way to discuss sports. A shorter, more to-the-point and casual way to go about it is “this is more important than the postseason” or something. All of your characters seem to be written from Marsh’s stance, not from their own being of individual characters. The world is revolving around her in terms of character development, where it’s a LOT more natural from another stance.

    And transitions from scene to scene all happen at uncomfortable rates. Sometimes you describe a scene in intense detail, while othertime you just try to jump to the next bit of diologue. Those places where you have writer’s block are pretty obvious. This leaves a good sense of inconsistency and unparallels the fluidity of the story.

  11. von says:

    Not sure why someone is trying to imitate my name, but the above comment was NOT written by me.

  12. scotts13 says:

    >> Not sure why someone is trying to imitate my name, but the above comment was NOT written by me.

    Don’t worry, we can tell. “unparallels”?

  13. Chris says:

    Russ, I’m wondering if all the comments and criticism that you’ve been getting have made you a bit gun-shy about posting. I’ve enjoyed your story from the beginning and when and if I run into something that just doesn’t click, I chalk it up to artistic license. It’s your story, you can write it the way that you want and if someone doesn’t like it, then they’ll probably survive.

    I don’t think that anyone is looking for or expecting perfection. The question is, are you writing this for yourself or to please other people?

    Don’t let potential negative comments scare you away from writing a good story. The suspense is killing me. 🙂

  14. Russ says:

    Thanks for the concern, Chris. No, actually, I’m a bit stuck at the moment. I know where I want to go in the current chapter – I’m just having a bit of trouble getting there. There’s just one little bridge that I can’t find…

  15. Skimmer says:

    Long time reader, first time poster here.
    I’ve really enjoyed your story so far, Russ. It approaches several interesting concepts, such as “Is the mind the plaything of the body?” and to what degree we are a construct of our environment, rather than self-determined beings.
    That, and I enjoy a nice detective story with human elements.
    Thanks for letting us be your readers!

  16. v0n says:

    Unparallel is a word. Please refer to a dictionary before you mock. Some of us on this site do know how to write.

  17. scotts13 says:

    >> Unparallel is a word. Please refer to a dictionary before you mock. Some of us on this site do know how to write.

    (Snicker) Indeed it is, if a rather obscure and awkward one. However, to quote a greater philosopher than myself, “You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.” I don’t see the application. No matter, we know the difference between von and v0n now. The other one has manners.

  18. Trax says:

    Some of us do, but this happens to not be the case this time. Unparalleled is a word, meaning something that is unequaled or unmatched. The jury seems out on ‘Unparallel’ as a word, as my spell checker has a fit over it, and only one of 5 online dictionaries I checked even mention the word, giving only one vague and unsatisfying definition of it.

    Furthermore, if the word ‘unparallels’ were to exist, which my quick research suggests otherwise, your use of it still makes your final sentence very painful to read. “..sense of inconsistency and unparallels the fluidity of the story.” The heck?

    If you know how to write, you’ve got a pretty bad Thesaurus and try too hard to sound smart. I suggest dropping the ‘v0n’ name as well, you aren’t really fooling anyone.

  19. brich says:

    I just stumbled upon your story yesterday and read the first chapter thinking it looked fairly interesting. I am now very tired because I’ve been up all night last night and tonight perusing your archive. I can’t believe that I blazed through the entire story, but what a ride it’s been so far. You have no idea how excited I was last night when I finally had to go to bed and still had like 60 chapters left. Now I’m sad to not be able to binge any more, but I can’t wait for your next update! Like others I’ve seen posting, I’m on the edge of my seat.

    I think it’s been very well-paced so far and I can easily relate to Marsh and almost all of the other characters’ reactions. Also I’d like to echo what Chris said about this being your story. It’s good to accept take consideration of others’ advice but you needn’t worry about pleasing them. I’ve seen some negative comments coming your way, and not a lot of positive reinforcement. Allow me to share my love of what you have created so far and my anticipation for more!

  20. April says:

    “So, would you like to talk over the plan of action now, or when I take you to the train station?” he asked after a moment.” <- extra quote

  21. TJ says:

    Man this story making my chest tighten, I want to know more, and it hurt when i can’t read cause of work or sleep or other.

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