Wings

39 of 62: Chibi Thursdays



Mr. Paget — or Ms. Paget, as she usually was around this time — encouraged the employees to venn into holiday-appropriate forms, like the many bunny-morphs I’d seen around Easter or the turkey-girl Jill had mentioned being for Thanksgiving, but lately she’d started doing other special events and promotions, too. One of her ideas that didn’t work out so great around this time was Chibi Thursdays. I was basically familiar with chibi art by that time due to watching a fair bit of anime with Jada and Britt, but some of the other staff were having trouble with the concept as Ms. Paget showed some of us a slideshow early one morning before the restaurant opened.

“Joy tells me she has some experience venning her friends into chibi forms,” Ms. Paget said, indicating an anime girl with pink hair who waved cheerily to the rest of us. She’d been hired not long after me. “Here’s where she venned me into a chibi form yesterday...” The slides of chibi art from manga and anime gave way to a photo of a freakily adorable little girl in a sailor fuku with a huge round head and huge eyes relative to her head, posing for the camera with the library in the background. Seeing someone with chibi proportions in real life was kind of unsettling, and I wondered if it might be entirely unsettling for people who weren’t familiar with chibi art.

“Your arms look pretty short,” Jill pointed out. “How are we supposed to carry trays like that?”

“And on short legs like that we’d have to trot around twice as fast and get tired out twice as fast,” Anna said.

“The arms are stronger than they look,” Joy said. “And you’ll have a lot of energy in that form, like a little kid.”

“A toddler will run you ragged for a few hours, and then collapse and nap for an hour or two,” Jill said. “I don’t know if an adult with a body like a toddler’s could work an eight-hour shift, much less twelve.”

“Let’s try it,” Ms. Paget said. “Joy and I are going to be chibis on Thursday, and I’d like to get some other volunteers to do the same. You don’t have to wear schoolgirl uniforms or anything; you can be chibi mice or chibi dragons or whatever, even chibi robots,” (nodding toward Todd, who was in one of his less humanoid robot forms today). “If it works out, we might make it a regular thing. Chibi Thursdays. Come in anime cosplay, or better yet venned into a chibi form, and get 10% off...”

“I’ll try it,” I said. It looked cute, if potentially impractical, and I didn’t think Ms. Paget would stick to it for long if it didn’t work well. So the following Thursday, I and several other people on the morning shift met up with Joy at the library and let her venn us into chibi versions of our usual work bodies. I got Jill to take a photo of me with my phone, and sent it to my friends. I got back squeeing responses from Meredith, Jada and Lily in the next few hours, and Jada asked if she could post my chibi photo on Facebook. I said sure, just mention Chibi Thursday at Metamorphoses.

It sort of worked, in the sense that we got a fair number of anime and manga fans coming in on Thursday afternoons and evenings for the next couple of weeks, but not so well because, as Jill and Anna had noted, chibi forms weren’t all that practical for serving and busing tables. We were stronger than we looked, true, but we still weren’t as strong as our usual full-size, more sensibly proportioned selves and tired out more quickly. After a couple of Thursdays where several of us had to take a break to go venn into a more practical shape, Ms. Paget cut it back to having just the greeter be in chibi form, and a few weeks after that she quietly dropped it.

Before that, we had the Fourth of July. Ms. Paget was an Uncle Sam, male for the first time in weeks, though he’d had to buy the costume at a store and venn into a body that would fit it. There were a couple of bald eagle morphs, a cyborg George Washington (Todd), and several furries with red, white and blue fur (but never in the stars and stripes pattern of an American flag; just getting the colors the right shades of red, white and blue at the same time was tricky enough, and a lot of people couldn’t manage it). Anna tried to get the scales of my dragon body to be red, white and blue, but the white was slightly silvery and the red a bit pink.

There were other promotions that were more successful: Cyborg Mondays and Furry Fridays. I preferred scaly forms, but I didn’t mind venning into a furry of some sort when I had a shift scheduled on Fridays. Ms. Paget gave a discount to customers who came in venned into cyborgs or furries on those days, as well.

I was still snuggling with little Jada every night, and seeing big Jada and Britt at least once a week. One afternoon, after hanging out with Britt at her house for an hour or so, I left little Jada with her while big Jada and I went to see a movie, then went for a walk around downtown Catesville, doing a little shopping and a lot of people-watching.

Carmen had only been home with their sister briefly before moving into an off-campus house in Greensboro with Serena and Bailey, and they’d extended an open invitation to come visit sometime that summer, but so far Meredith and I were having trouble making our work schedules line up with Carmen’s. We finally managed it toward the end of July, spending the better part of a day with them, playing video games at their apartment and going to an escape room where the employees were venned into monsters, which you had to “trick” in certain ways to get out.

I had my second therapy visit a few days after that. Ms. Ferreira and I talked mainly about my anxiety issues this time, tabling my family stuff for the next visit.

One morning in July, a month after Jada had split in two, I woke up and plushie Jada was gone. I had a series of texts waiting for me saying Jada had woken up early in the morning with an influx of memories and wanted to get together to talk about it as soon as we could. “Right after work,” I texted back.

Jada took “right after work” seriously. She was there to pick me up from work when I got off. I texted the Ramseys to tell them I wouldn’t be home for supper, and Jada and I went to eat at the Mexican place on Catesville Road.

“So what was it like, merging all those memories?” I asked. “The most I’ve ever merged was about two weeks’ worth, and those experiences weren’t nearly as divergent.”

“It was a trip,” Jada said. “Being your plushie was wonderful. I want to do it again. Snuggling with you wasn’t as good as making out when we have organic bodies,” she added, bringing a warmth to my cheeks that hopefully didn’t show through the scales, “but it was a lot better than not seeing you for days at a time.”

“You need to calm down and think before you do anything about that,” I said. “I’ve heard about how people can get addicted to almost any form if they stay that way long enough and people treat them nicely while they’re like that. I won’t venn you into a plushie again for at least... um, let’s say a week. And I hope Britt won’t, either — I’ll talk to her about it.”

I hadn’t exactly gotten addicted to being a dragon statue, but it hadn’t been long before I was used to it and didn’t miss being human nearly as much as I’d expected. And I hadn’t gotten nearly as much affection as a statue as Jada had as a plushie. I was pretty sure plushies had a more sensitive “skin” than animate ceramic statues, too.

“Would you say the memories of being a plushie are more vivid than the memories of being human for the last month?” I added after chewing a mouthful of food.

“Maybe? Probably not. Not much really stands out from being a plushie, except that time you and Meredith took me with you to see your friends in Greensboro. But it was a lot nicer overall. No highs like the times we made out on our dates, but no lows like the terrible day at work I had a couple of days ago.”

“After you go to college, you’ll be able to get a more fulfilling job than working the cash register at Food Lion,” I said.

“Yeah, I’m not giving that up. I just want to be your plushie at the same time.”

“Maybe later,” I said with a smile. “For now, let’s do some stuff that a plushie can’t do.”

“I like the sound of that,” she replied with a lascivious wink.

 

* * *

 

By this time, I had already heard back from the colleges I’d applied to back in April, and was beginning to hear back from some of the ones I’d applied to after graduation, as well as a couple of scholarships and grants. After I’d gotten the job at Metamorphoses, something to put on the applications that would make me look more creditworthy, I’d started applying for loans as well, though I didn’t want to rely entirely on loans if I could help it. So far I’d been accepted to Mynatt Community College, East Carolina University, and Winston-Salem University, and I was strongly leaning toward East Carolina if I could get enough scholarship and grant money. So far, I’d been turned down for two scholarships and one grant, and gotten another one that would just cover textbooks. I’d done the math on how much I’d be able to save over the next year, and the only place it would cover tuition without more grants or scholarships would be Mynatt Community College.

In late July, the Ramseys spent a long weekend visiting their relatives in Georgia who’d visited them last Thanksgiving. They asked me not to have guests over while they were gone, so although Jada suggested we use the opportunity for a rare bit of privacy that weekend, I regretfully refused. “They’ve been too good to me,” I said, “taking me in and helping me with my ID change and charging me a ridiculously low rent. I want to respect their wishes.”

So instead, Saturday evening after work, Britt, Jada and I met at the library. Britt venned me and Jada into tiny forms, a couple of inches high, and took us home in an open shoebox lined with an old pillowcase. Once we got to her house, we sat on her lap, chatted with her and watched a couple of movies on her laptop. When she went to bed, she put us back in the shoebox and set it on her dresser. Jada and I made love for the first time and slept blissfully tangled up in each other. The next morning, Britt took us back to the Venn machine to venn each other into our everyday bodies before we had to go to work.

I’d been meeting up with Mom every week or two and talking to her on the phone at least once a week, often twice. I still hadn’t seen Dad since that evening at the church back in April, and I hadn’t seen much of Nathan since he’d moved into a house in Mars Hill with several other guys, though he’d come to visit Mom and Dad (and me) not long after I graduated.

Mom came by the Ramseys’ to see me one evening when Dad was working late. It was three or four days after Jada’s plushie venn expired, a couple of hours after I’d gotten off work.

“I wanted to tell you in person,” she said; “we’ve found a house. And it’s closer to your father’s office than we were thinking we could afford. Not far from downtown Durham. A lot of people are leaving Durham lately, since so many people have venned into healthier bodies and several of Durham’s major employers are hospitals and clinics. I hear Duke is converting some of its hospital space to apartments and offices.”

“So you’ll be living an hour and a half from here.”

“Yes. We’ll be moving as soon as we can sell our house here. We’ve got a buyer lined up, but there are things that could still go wrong between now and the closing, which should be in a couple of weeks if all goes well.”

“Oh.”

“I don’t have a job in Durham yet, though I’ve applied to a number of places,” she said. “So until I find one, I could come back here to see you on some days when I don’t have interviews.”

“But I can’t come to see you. It wouldn’t be reasonable to ask the Ramseys or one of my friends to drive me that far.”

“I’m sorry. But that long commute is really doing your father in. I’ve tried to talk him into venning for his health — what Erin did for me has worked wonders — but he won’t hear of it.”

I shook my head in amazement at Dad’s stubbornness. “I’ll miss seeing you, Mom. Let’s talk on the phone more often to make up for it.”

“Yes, let’s do that. I’ll keep working on him, Lauren. I hope he’ll come around soon. Maybe by Thanksgiving we can all be together.”

“I hope so, too.”

 

This week's recommendation is "The Case of the Disappeared Villain" by stabbyunicorn.  It's a Worm fanfic, very divergent from canon, where Taylor is assigned to do a group project with two of her bullies, a report on a supervillain who turns out to be very poorly documented in the official sources.  They begin to suspect a coverup, and the report turns into investigative journalism with high stakes.

My fantasy romance/courtroom drama, The Bailiff and the Mermaid, is available from Smashwords in epub format and Amazon in Kindle format. (Smashwords pays its authors better and more promptly than Amazon.)

You can find my other ebook novels and short fiction collection here:


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