Wednesday 27 February 2013

Recommended Reading - Making Adjustments

Well for today's recommendation I would like to suggest you take a look at Morpheus' Making Adjustments story, available on Fictionmania.

It's the tale of a mother and son switching not just bodies, but roles as well, gradually assuming the habits and status of their new position in the family.

It's a particularly long and juicy read that is really satisfying. For me the mother's transformation and subsequent conditioning is most compelling, reaching its peak after a night spent camping.

Really excellent stuff from one of the greatest writers in our genre.

Monday 25 February 2013

Lady Ann's Holiday - Chapter Sixteen - Part One

A Working Man

1


Ann barely slept at all and every time he woke he felt a sinking thump in his belly at exactly what had become of him and his so-called holiday; exactly how sickeningly poor his situation was.

At 5am, with nothing better to do and nowhere warm and comfortable to go, Ann eventually decided to walk to the farm where Jeb worked – where he would be working today.

It gave him an awful sense of dread but still an essence of fervour. There was a still a tiny part of him that was loving the intensity of this entire experience, even if it was unpleasant. After almost two weeks of pretending, today he was finally going to become what he had fantasised about. He was going to become a working man – even if only for one day. The idea of that was thrilling – the culmination of the most sordid erotic fantasy of his life.

It made him chuckle. He hadn’t realised what a saucy bint he was as Lady Ann but that dark lust for this kind of kinky exploration must always have been part of him.

It was only when Ann reached the farm and made his way straight to the manager’s office that it occurred to him that he shouldn’t have been able to. He had never been to this farm before – never seen it even; couldn’t have possibly known where the office was... but he had. It gave him an uneasy feeling to realise that it had been another Burt memory, but this one so subtly grafted that Ann hadn’t even realised at first that it didn’t belong to him.

Jeb appeared from a barn to the right, hailing Ann over.  “Eh up Burt, yer’right?”

“Aye,” replied Ann, “but I slept awful like.”

“Well you better be ready to work hard my lad. Unless maybe’s all that time off’s made ye soft.”

“Give over,” snapped Ann, resenting the challenge to his manhood. “I ain’t never been stronger. I can do anything you throw at me and then some.”

“Well you better get up to the north field. There’s digging to be done and lots of it.”

“Digging?” Ann couldn’t think of a worse; or more mindless; job.

“Aye. Unless this fortnight off o’yours has given you airs. Maybe’s you think your quality now.” He chuckled.

“Ardly,” said Ann sorrowfully. If there was one thing he wasn’t in any doubt of after his day in the stocks and his night sleeping rough, it was that he was definitely not one of the quality... anymore.

“Well then,” said Jeb. “You’d best be getting along.”

“What about you?” asked Ann.

“Me? I’ve got to stay down here and help with the lambing.”

“Lambing? Well why can’t I do that?” asked Ann resentfully.

“No offence mate,” replied Jeb, “but lambing needs fellows with more...” He shrugged. “It ain’t your fault you’re ain’t got much goin on upstairs.”

Ann’s face fell.

“You’ll be ‘appier up there doin the diggin than down ere runnin about keeping the lambs alive, I’ll tell you that much.” He pointed. “Just follow the track up along the hedge line past two gates. You’ll see the other labourers there.”

Jeb smiled and walked away, leaving Ann looking up the track toward his fate.

The other labourers...

That’s what he was now. Not pretending anymore. For real. And like the real Burt he had no choice in the matter. It was either do a long day of back-breaking labour or sleep rough and go hungry.

With a deep sigh, Ann started walking up the track, desperately wishing that “Lady Ann” would hurry up and get back to Yorkshire to save him from this awful situation.




2


Burt enjoyed the wind in her hair as she cantered across the park on a lovely filly she’d borrowed from the stables.

She still felt forlorn that this wonderful holiday was coming to an end but in other ways she craved its termination. Being Lady Ann had become just too much torture, being tantalised with a life that couldn’t be hers. The sooner she was back in her own rightful body and life, the better. It would be a terrible comedown now after this but at least she could start to put these glorious experiences behind her and get back on with her life.

“Ann! I say! Ann!”

She turned in the saddle and felt her heart lurch as the identity of the caller became apparent. It was Lord Hurley – trotting toward her on a black stallion!

“Ann, wait! Please!”

Burt considered riding away but propriety made her stop and Lord Hurley circled round until he was at her front. “Ann. Thank goodness I’ve found you. I hoped me might be able to talk...”

Tears welled into the edges of Burt’s eyes. “I’m sorry Richard but I’ve already told you how I feel.” She started to turn her horse away but Richard stopped her with a word.

“Please.”

She froze.

“Please Ann. Since I saw you again in London I have... greatly enjoyed sharing time with you and would be deeply aggrieved if we were to part on unpleasant terms.”

“Richard, please...”

“I don’t ask much my dear, honestly. I know you must be reluctant to extend an acquaintance with your departure so imminent. Perhaps you fear to establish an association that would surely flounder when separated by hundreds of miles.”

“It would be much further than that,” murmured Burt, unheard, her back to Lord Hurley, the tears quivering, preparing to fall.

“I don’t request any long term commitment of you Lady Ann. I want to assure you that I will not press that matter. All I ask is that we enjoy a quiet dinner before your departure, perhaps the day after tomorrow, on your last night. Just to say goodbye. Might you... be amenable to that?”

Burt lowered her head and the tears trickled down her soft cheeks silently. Then before she could stop herself she breathed the word, “Yes.”




3


Ann shovelled up some more dirt and tipped it onto the growing pile of earth beside the hole, hating every second of it.

Where would he have been now if he’d still been a woman? He’d have still been in London getting “bored” – but what would that have actually meant in context with this arduous unending struggle?

He would have slept in, in a luxurious feather bed, then he probably would have eaten a sumptuous breakfast. After that he might have spent some time reading before going for a slow walk or a ride. True, he would have had to attend a dreary luncheon at midday but at least he would have been sitting down, surrounded by beautiful opulence.

Instead he was here, shovelling spadeful after spadeful of earth, dirty and sweating as the sun started to climb in the sky. He’d already been here for three hours and there was another seven hours of labour ahead of him.

It was breathtaking. As a woman he’d never had to do anything strenuous – had barely been forced into any activity, especially for an extended period of time. Now though, he had to stay here. He had to stay here all day and do as he was told. There was no escaping it. If he walked away he wouldn’t get paid and the time he’d spent here so far would be wasted. Worse, he’d be starving and homeless for two more nights.

And that still wasn’t the worst of it. The earl owned these lands. If he walked away from the job, the earl might well find out and only God knew what kind of punishment might be meted out on him for it.

He still resented how servile he’d acted in front of the earl; begging to be saved from the stocks... but he continued to live in abject terror of them; of angering the earl for any reason.

No. For now there were no two ways about it. He was a working man.

But thinking that gave Ann a kind of tingle still. This was, after all, exactly what he had fantasised about being all along. Today he had really taken on every aspect of that. He really was a lower class working man.

Thinking that gave him a flutter of different impressions: a kinky, dirty feeling of self-degradation but also a level of pride. For over a week now he had felt a level of guilt somewhere in his body that while he was Burt it was only right to live up to Burt’s responsibilities.

That was surely what he was doing now.

He dug up another shovelful. “I’m a working man.”

And another. “I’m a working man.”

Another. “I’m a working man.”

And another. “I’m a working man.”

And he was so busy working he didn’t notice the warm tingling in the back of his skull, gently working on his mind with each reiteration.


4


When Burt arrived with grandmamma at the Jessop’s she was greeted graciously and invited inside.

They made pleasantries with their hosts for several minutes before Burt caught sight of the lazy maid who had had the effrontery to try on her jewellery. Betty saw her there and paled visibly and Burt gave her a cold smile and turned away, otherwise ignoring the girl.

When she brought in the lunch things on a silver tray she was shaking with nerves, eying Burt repeatedly as she made polite conversations with the girl’s employers.

Gregory Jessop was into tobacco and had made a fortune importing it from abroad. His father had been a close acquaintance of Grandmamma’s husband when he was alive and she had known Gregory since he was a little boy. Burt got along famously with the couple and they both remarked on her outstanding beauty and on her impeccable breading... which Grandmamma took full credit for.

Burt watched the ignorant maid go about her duties, contemplating the objective of their visit and questioning whether she should really go through with it. Since the chance meeting with Lord Hurley earlier she had lost the malaise that had afflicted her disposition. Now there didn’t seem quite so much need to do this stupid girl down as there had been.

She decided to let the luncheon play out for now but when she excused herself to use the powder room the girl approached her in the hallway.

“Excuse me miss.”

Burt turned to her and found her voice to be more sharp-edged than she had intended when she said, “What is it?”

“Please miss. Please don’t make trouble for me ere. I got a good fing going and I don’t want it ruinin.”

Burt winced at the awful lower class accent of the girl, feeling it like the screech of fingernails on a blackboard. She resented the tone of the girl and the demands this urchin was making. Who was she to make demands of one of her superiors?

Burt turned away, ignoring her.

“Miss please!”

Burt stopped. He looked back to face Betty then said, “If I were you I would keep a low profile my girl. All you are doing now is reminding me exactly why I had you fired in the first place. Your laziness and stupidity are bad enough. Your insolence makes it far worse. And as for your dim-witted expression and lackadaisical attitude...” She turned her back on the startled girl and disappeared from view.

When she returned to the dining room the dull-brained maid was nowhere to be seen. Lady Jessop made enquiries to be told the girl was feeling ill. Burt smiled thinly and said, “You know we had the same girl under our employ.”

“Oh really?”

“Yes. And she always came across as lazy and good-for-nothing. Her work was shoddy and half-hearted and she was found... going through my things.”

“No. Really?” Lady Jessop looked deeply shocked.

“Indeed,” replied Burt. “I shudder to think what might have happened if I hadn’t come across her with her hand in my jewellery box.”

“Do you mean to say the girl’s a thief?” asked Lord Jessop.

Burt looked him in the eye. “I couldn’t say for certain, no; though I know in my heart that it’s true. And I also know that I couldn’t sleep soundly at night knowing she had free run of my house.”




5


When Burt was climbing into the carriage at the front of the Jessops’ townhouse with Grandmamma at the luncheon’s end she caught sight of the lazy maid emerging from the servant’s entrance.

The girl was dressed again in her ordinary clothes and carrying a threadbare bag of clothes and other belongings. She looked utterly despondent as she climbed the steps from the lower level onto the street.

Burt and Grandmamma watched her forlornly start to walk away, head hung low, steps shuffling.

“She’ll never get another job in service now,” said Grandmamma. “Not with two bad references. She’ll be blacklisted.”

“Well,” replied Burt snippily, “she should have done a better job when she had the chance.”

The carriage started to move off and for a moment Burt’s eyes met the sad-looking girl.

The maid gazed disconsolately out of her muddled face, and in return, Burt gave her a cold and triumphant smile.

Then she was gone in the carriage’s dust and within a minute Burt had put the ignorant girl entirely out of her mind.


Friday 22 February 2013

Recommended Reading - Getting Nailed

Well, with real life getting in the way a bit I'm a little behind on my release schedule so today I thought I'd tell you about one of my favourite stories by another author:

Getting Nailed by Brandy Margarita

(If the link breaks you can search for it on Fictionmania)

It's a personality change story with a great nationality change element, emphasised through vocal distortions.

And it's the kind of story you can read in five or ten minutes - which is lovely for a change - while still retaining all the impact of a longer story.

Excellent!

Wednesday 20 February 2013

Cleaner - Part Three


Topaz was climbing out of the pool as I approached. She scowled at me as she threw the towel over her shoulder. “Melissa, I thought I told you to scrub the hall floor by hand. I just had Roger check up on you.” (He was the butler) “He said you were using the mop.”


I was taken aback by her tone. It was imperious and patronising. She’d never used it before.


“If you expect to clean for me then you’d better get used to doing it right. I expect that marble to gleam, do you understand me?”


I mumbled “Yes.”


“Do you understand me Melissa?”


I lowered my head. “Yes miss.”


I hadn’t prompted this. Her hostility was purely of her own making. It made me feel subordinate – inferior.


I loved it!


Topaz slipped her feet delicately into her heels and walked gracefully round to the near side of her sun lounger. She looked gorgeous, smooth long legs and slender arms. Her stomach had only a slight roundness to it that accentuated her femininity. She tied her damp hair was into a bun at her crown, then casually and slinked one leg over the other.


I nervously twiddled my fingers, waiting for her to dismiss me.


“As you’re aware Melissa,” she said, “today the two of us will be truly swapping roles. I will be attending a party where I will announce my intention to make a comeback. You will return home to your squalid little house.”


“Yes,” I said, kept off balance by the way she was suddenly taking control of our interactions.


“Obviously it’s important that you don’t break from character at any point.”


“Yes.”


“Is that clear Melissa?”


“Yes miss.”


“Your ‘husband’ hasn’t seen you for several months – that will help matters – but if I hear that you have bungled things up then there’s going to be hell to pay.”


I made a flicker of eye contact but looked away. She was glaring right at my face and I didn’t like to meet her gaze.


“What that means,” said Topaz, the temperature of her voice dropping, “is that if you make any mistakes you might end up living my old life forever.”


I gaped at her. She sounded serious.


It was genius. I loved it!


I hadn’t prompted any of this. She was embellishing the situation with her own ideas. I knew she wasn’t really serious obviously, but it added an enormous amount of spice.


“Is that clear?” she snapped.


“Yes miss.”


“Good.” She uncrossed and recrossed her legs the other way. “Now get out there and scrub that floor. Once it’s done you can go.”


I turned to leave, relieved that I didn’t have to face her anymore.


“And Melissa?”


I looked back.


She picked up a magazine and started scanning it. “Do a good job this time. Your work has been really slack lately.”


I grinned. I couldn’t help it. “This is great!” I said, “You’re really playing the part. You’ll get a healthy bonus at the end of this Melissa.”


She turned her eyes up to me and glared. The muscles in her cheeks hardened. “Don’t presume to speak to me like that cleaner,” she snapped, “I think if you look in the mirror you’ll see who Melissa is and who is Topaz.”


“But I—“


She threw down the magazine and came up to me, grabbing a chunk of hair at the back of my neck. There was a free-standing mirror to my right and she swung me round, my face wincing from the needles of pain in my scalp. “Look!” she said, “Look there in the mirror!”


The reflection showed both of us, my chubby body cowering, face contorted with pain and fear, her athletic form standing over me, her features hard-edged with anger.


“Who’s fat?” she demanded.


“Me,” I whined.


“Who’s ugly?”


“Me.”


“Who’s nothing but a worthless cleaner?”


“Me!”


She threw me forward and I fell to the floor at the foot of the mirror. She came up behind me, dominating the glass, hands on hips. “And who’s beautiful – hmmm? Who’s a rich and famous model? Who owns all this?”


Under my breath I mumbled “You.”


“I can’t hear you Melissa!”


“You do.”


“That’s right.” She folded her arms. “Now I told you not to slip up and give the game away. You just called me Melissa. That’s your first life gone. If it happens a third time then you can say goodbye to ever getting your old life back.”


My knees were stinging from where she threw me down. I wiped my eye with the heel of my hand. “Yes miss. I’m sorry miss.”


“Now get up and get back to work. What do you think I’m paying you for.”


I struggled up, still not used to the extra bulk. I was carrying almost my own body weight again in fat. Any kind of challenging movement like that was difficult.


Topaz took her seat again on the sun lounger, laying back this time, legs crossed, magazine resting on her thighs. She ignored me.


I started to speak but decided not to. It was tempting to blow my last two “lives” here and now and see what she said and did. My face was tingling. But I didn’t. To be honest, I was afraid of her. I didn’t want to make her mad again. So I just backed slowly away and went out to scrub the hall floor on my hands and knees. 



Monday 18 February 2013

Cleaner - Part Two

I put the mop and bucket away and walked back across to where I’d left my shoes.

They formed an inverted reflection in the marble floor at the foot of the wall mirror that stood next to the cloakroom and I caught a glimpse of myself lumbering towards them as I got close.

It wasn’t long since the bandages from the plastic surgery had been removed and it startled me seeing this other woman – this fat woman. I moved closer, touching my face and watching the mirror woman doing the same. Melissa’s face, the fold of soft skin hanging from her chin making her face round, her thick glasses, doubling the size of her eyes beyond them – these were mine now. It was my face. Even my hand and my arm were such a complete contrast to my old form, bulging and round. In the kink of my elbow the doughy flesh pressed outward, seeming even chubbier than it was.


My dress was a new one I picked up abroad. It was grey and straight, stopping high enough to reveal my chunky calves and knees, leaving my arms bare and displaying some of my monstrous cleavage. Through the fabric I gripped the bulge of my stomach and squeezed it in. It was months since I started this little experiment, to assume the guise and daily working persona of my cleaner, but every SINGLE time I had cause to look down at myself or see myself in a mirror or window, it startled the hell out of me.

I was Topaz. As a model there was a time when I was on the cover of at least one glossy magazine every month. I had been voted Vogue top model of the year twice running. I was the “face” of a perfume called Diabolique. I was the perfect embodiment of beauty and the poster girl of anorexics everywhere. But looking into the mirror, I could see that I wasn’t Topaz anymore. If there was a slim supermodel behind this face she was covered in rivers of fat. Not even the face was hers anymore with its slightly hooked nose and close-set eyes.

Fingerprints and dental records were the only thing that said who I really was beneath it all now. Even my past wasn’t purely mine anymore. I had given it to my cleaner. While we’d been away I had drilled stories into Melissa’s head, filling her mind with anecdotes that only I could have known and getting her to fill my mind up too. I wanted our disguises to be perfect. I wanted that because the next stage was for both of us to step out into the light of day for all to see. There couldn’t be any slip-ups.

So in almost every way I wasn’t Topaz anymore. She was.

I was Melissa. The cleaner. The fat one.

It scared me actually – to look at that face gaping back at me. I knew Melissa would never cheat me – the fortune I had offered her to switch temporarily would hold her in check – but it made me a little edgy to think that if something happened to her, people might not believe who I really was.

It was a delicious feeling. I grinned. I’d never had a high like this or felt so alive.

I looked down at my chubby bare feet, pulling my dress clear. I’d painted the toenails pink to match my fingernails. Another shiver of shock to look at them and think they were mine but a shimmer of delight too. 

I tried to push them into my heels. It was a strain. I had to hook my fingers into the backs to act as a shoehorn and that was a further strain. I wheezed, trying to crease this fat body.

Finally they were in and I took another glance at myself.

Melissa.

Me.

I straightened my bob, trying not to be too surprised as I always was when I saw straight dark brown where it had once been wavey blond, then turned and walked into the depths of the house looking for my “boss.”