by Bigmouthstrikes » Tue Feb 08, 2011 6:11 am
Chapter 3 - O'Connely's
In the two hours since Olivia stormed off, Dylan hand gone from forcing himself to have a good night to having the night of his life. Talking to the girl, whose name he remembered was Alicia, was a good choice. For 2 hours he had been engaged in a magical conversation with her. They had more in common than he ever could have dreamed. They had both played guitar for their high school bands, and both preferred Fenders. They were both competent, but not great banjo players, and she was the only person he'd ever met who loved The Tallest Man as much as he did. She not only went to the midnight premier of Red, but was had read all of the comics and been the same theater he was the night it opened. She was a history major, considered Abraham Lincoln an overrated president, and wrote fantasy fiction all as he did.
She was all smiles as they talked, and it lit up her face. She had a pageboy haircut that he normally hated, but as the evening wore on, discovered that he found more and more cute with each glance. She had a way of talking that made all of the things that scared him about being social, and especially being social women, melt away. She was a sweet, but fragile. As the empty glasses piled up, and the night wore on, she began to talk about the breakup she had just been through and how it was like all the others, and how she knew that the pretty guys she always went for inevitably turned to be jerks, and she even conceded that knew she should look for something else. She explained that she had been lonely after things fell apart, and that she'd come to the bar hoping to meet someone that would make things different. When he suggested hesitantly that it might be him she was supposed to meet, she agreed.
Throughout the night, men came up to her. They offered to buy her drinks or to dance. She turned them all down to keep talking with him. He'd decided that he was glad that his friends had been unreliable that night, and even more importantly, that they were meant to be unreliable to give him this opportunity. This wasn't a random run in with a cute girl at the bar. This was something magical. It was an event for which the stars had aligned to allow, and was fated to be. As he drank, he believed this more and more.
When the bar closed at 2 AM and everyone was asked to finish their drinks and leave, they were still talking. She confessed to being tired, and asked him to walk her home. They talked happily the entirety of the walk.
"If I'd known you were so cool, I would have started hanging out with you way back when we met." She said as they approached her apartment.
"Sometimes it takes a while to find people." He said. "I didn't catch you either."
"That's true." She added with a grin. "Maybe it was just supposed to wait, you know. Until we were ready."
To that, Dylan had nothing to say at all.
They walked up the steps to her place. She turned to him. "Would you like to come in? It's awfully cold, and it's not that late, as far as a non-school night goes."
"I'd love that." He said with a childlike enthusiasm that was fueled both by his inexperience with being coy and his blood alcohol content.
The went inside, and she removed her coat. She asked him if he wanted tea, and he said yes. They talked as she busied herself with making it.
"I've had such a good night." Alicia said as the she put heat on her teapot. "I had no idea I was going to have such a good night."
"I'm glad. I did too. I was supposed to hang out with my friends tonight, but they ended up bailing...not that I'm complaining or anything."
"Well I'm glad they did." She said. "Really."
There was silence after this. The two sat close to each other...within touching distance. There was nothing to talk about that hadn't already been talked about, and nothing to say that hadn't already been said. For Dylan, it was a golden moment. He sat there contemplating his next move, and before he even knew what he was doing, he had leaned over and kissed her.
Alicia took in a deep breath as his lips touched hers. She pulled back, arms wiggling, leaving Dylan hanging forward, empty in the air. She looked sad.
"I'm sorry. Oh, God, I'm so sorry." She said, sounding genuinely upset with herself. "I didn't mean to...oh, God...I'm so sorry."
Dylan felt ill. He reaction was a strong, invisible punch to the gut. It had felt so right. He had known that this was going somewhere.
"I'm sorry." He said. "I thought...ugh, I'm such a moron."
She looked at him with pity, and hugged him, planting a kiss on his cheek.
"You're a great guy, Dylan." She said softly. "But I thought I'd found a best friend...not...y'know."
"It's...fine." He said standing up. Her words were supposed to make him feel better, but they'd made him feel worse instead. Not only had he embarrassed himself, misread the situation and become carried away by his own expectations, now he she felt sorry for him too.
"I have to go..." he said. "I just...I have to go."
He had not been this stammery or uncomfortable in months, or maybe even years.
"I'm sorry." She said, giving him a hug and added sympathetically. "If you want to, we can still hang out. I really do like you."
"Sure, yeah." He said, retreating out the door. When the door closed, and he was no longer looking, Alicia fell onto her couch, and with her head in her hand, cried silently.
She wasn't the only teary one. On his walk back, Dylan felt and saw his eyes gloss over repeatedly. Tears ran down his face. He had never felt this embarrassed, or been this wrong.
I got my hopes up He thought to himself. I shouldn't have done that. I know better than to think someone like her would think that about me. I've known it for years
He got back to his apartment and rushed past his roommate's bedroom. His roommate was a kid named Todd and he was the embodiment of his name: a big, dumb jock who was always bringing some chick home to add to his body count. He could hear her and his lady of the evening going at it through their thin wall, but he was too upset to care.
"Damnit." He said out loud. He knew why this had happened. This did not happen because she had baggage, or because she wasn't ready to see someone. This happened because he was an ugly ginger, and no matter how nice he was, or who he made a connection with, or how perfect he was for someone, he would still be an ugly ginger at the end of the day. The tears flowed. He kicked a small trashcan by his bed, and it skittered across the floor dumping its wadded up crumpled paper contents.
"I wish I was good looking." He said, exasperated.
As he sat there, dramatic things were happening to him on cue. It started at his head. His hair went through what could best be described as an explosion. It grew hard, and fast, darkening slightly as it went from ginger red to auburn. It ceased growing and within seconds, straitened, leaving it resting on his lower back.
It was this that got his attention.
"What the hell!" He shouted, bolting upright from his bed. He was immediately facing his mirror, and could watch the changes hit him. He saw his cheekbones rise creating arcs under his face, and his nose shrink into a small, button shape. His face rounded, and fat began to vanish from it. It stopped just before it was all gone, leaving a trace amount of what was described on pretty people as "baby fat". His freckles were almost gone, but now speckled only an area on his two cheeks, and only lightly at that. His eyes grew slightly larger as lashes extended, and his irises intensified from a muddy green to a bright one. He became aware through the change that his eyesight had become blurry, and that this was remedied when his glasses slipped from his now smaller head. It looked like someone had taken the head of an adorable girl and photoshopped it onto his body.
As he touched his face and hair in wonder, the changes worked their way down to his neck, which became slender. As his torso was engulfed by change, he watched in awe as fat simply vanished. It was as if the air was being let out of him. He started to visibly shrink, dropping from his regular 5'11 height so something that was at least 6 or 7 inches shorter than that. Between his thinning body and his reduced height, his shirt hung on him like a tent. He could feel a tightening in his stomach as his waist clenched. He could see large mounds, or at least large on his new frame, push from his now small, slender chest.
His pants, now far too small, had fallen off him so rapidly that he'd not even had time to undo the belt that had held them up. The revealed in their wake, his legs, which were in the process of shrinking. The grew shorter, and then large buildups of fat on them sucked in just as his torso had. His thick leg hair fell off dramatically and as they fell, shimmered brightly and vanished. He watched them change, becoming curvy, but not fat, and feminine. His hips shrunk hugely, though looking at them on his petite frame, they looked wide. Finally, his butt pulled in, but retained a bubble shape. He had to hold his hair back to see it change.
All the while, Dylan watched her new body take shape in the mirror not with terror, but fascination.
"Beautiful..." She murmured to herself in a now high pitched voice. And then...she fainted.