Author's note:
As this is a romance novel first, an erotica second, and a computer science textbook third, I'll warn you up front that the first truly erotic scenes don't show up until chapter four. However, the first three chapters are peppered with hints of BDSM that I hope will sate your lusts until then.
Sarah is transgender. If you aren't okay with transgender people and still decide to read this story, please don't be an ass in the comments. As a trans woman, myself, I get enough of that IRL. Alternatively, if you fetishize transgender sex (totally fine by me), be warned that there will be little to no mention of male anatomy during sex scenes. Sorry, but that would amp up my already substantial gender dysphoria.
Without further ado, allow me to present: Subclasses.
Chapter One
It's Tuesday of the second week of winter quarter of my sophomore year attending Western Washington Universityā"in the year of our Lord, two thousand and twenty-three," I'd say with snarky jazz hands if I was speaking to someone. They'd be able to sense that I spelled out the year, too, rather than simply using numerical digits. Trust me.
Western sits in the heart of Bellingham, or, more accurately, the liver of Bellingham. Maybe the west kidney. It's sandwiched between Bellingham Bay to the west and the Sehome Arboretum to the east. The campus runs north to south, with little to the east or west of its red brick thoroughfare.
So far, I have spent almost my entire collegiate life on the south side of campus, where both the Fairhaven Stacks and Communications Facilityāhome of the computer science departmentāreside. My roommate, GabiāI adore herāand I play Mario Kart and Super Smash Bros for the majority of our evening free time.
Gabi is a peachāa half-Black, half-Hispanic Georgia Peach, to be precise (and, coincidentally, she mains Peach in Smash Bros). She's currently a junior dual-majoring in linguistics and Spanish with minors in Italian and French, because, as she puts it, "I need to know
all
the love languages if I'm going to be a foreign diplomat." I'm not sure of that logic. I'm not sure she's sure about it, either. One of Gabi's moms being a naval officer, her family moved to Oak Harborāa navy town an hour south of Bellinghamāwhen she was seven. With enviable, flawless brown skin and soft facial features, Gabi possesses a curvaceous physique. Her luscious black curls spring slightly when she moves her head, and a mild Southern twang adds to her charm. It's no surprise that Gabi canāand regularly doesāget any boy she wants.
Gabi does not care the least bit that Iāa pre-op trans-femme lesbian a year into her transitionāhave a penis. She's not shy around me when we're getting dressed, and she has never once misgendered me. She doesn't even balk at either of us seeing the other in the nude. Despite my slender but unmistakably masculine build, Gabi sees me as just another girl; she makes me feel perfectly at ease. She is, in short, a godsend. Whichever goddess in the student housing office that chose to place Sarah Delphino as Gabi's roommate my freshman year deserves a raise and a Klondike Bar. And, if I believed in magic, I'd think she might just be clairvoyant.
That said, while Gabi and I do talk, it's mostly surface levelājoking and goofing aroundāno talk of deep thoughts or emotions. Pillow fights 'n shit. Any time I turn the conversation in a heavy direction, Gabi is supportive but clearly uncomfortable, and she never mentions her own heavy stuff; I don't know whether she saves that for her male friends or deals with it alone or what. Whatever the case, it works for her. I've never seen her lose her chill. I love Gabi heaps, and while we banter like an old married coupleāsomething our friends never let us forgetāthere's not a hint of romance between us, and wouldn't be even if she weren't straight as a ruler: Gabi's pure, casual BFF material.
I am, of course, kidding about the pillow fights. We girls don't actually do that between middle school and porn star school, though sometimes I wish we did. This had always been my suspicion, as I hadn't come out to myself until my senior year of high school, but Gabi confirmed it when I asked her. She had rolled her eyes at me, naturally.
The Fairhaven dorm is a series of numbered cement buildings called stacks, four floors apiece. I live on the third floor of Stack 6 this year. Most evenings, the dozen-odd people on my floor plus a couple charming gay dudes from the floor below us who, thankfully, nudged their way into our posse, head to the Fairhaven cafeteria as a group and eat and gossip and generally have a good time laughing at stupid jokes. And yet, it still feels lonely. I love being with them but I don't feel
connected
to any of them save Gabi. Maybe it's that the only physical flexibility I've ever had is that yoga stretch called foot-in-mouth. Maybe it's the year-and-a-half of Covid my junior and senior years of high school done remotely online. It's not that I didn't have friends back then, but I think something broke in people my age when the pandemic shut everything down; we lost some of our outgoingness and friend-making skills. It seems to me that we might all be a bit lonely and just pretty good at hiding it, like I am.
Tonight is no different. We enter as a group, grab our respective dinners, and sit at a table in the Georgia O'Keeffe Wing, a large room with one wall of windowsānatural light blocked by a dense evergreen mini-forestāand three beige walls filled with O'Keefeian watercolors of flowers resembling feminine genitalia. When the group conversation turns to something I don't care about, my mind begins to wander. It has been a while since I last masturbated, and the destination of my mind-wander is a fantasy of being tied up, suspended, my body that of post-surgery meāme with a vulva, imitation though it be. A vague woman in a leather corset pushes a lubed vibrating egg into me and plays wickedly with the settings on her phone, my hands bound and helpless to stop myself from turning into a mindless puddle of subtastic bliss.
* * *
This quarter I have a chem lab on Wednesdays in the STEM building, an inconveniently placed structureāinconveniently for CS majors who prefer to haunt the third floor of the Comm Facilityājust north of the center of campus. The lab is also inconveniently scheduled at 11:30, taking up ninety of the hundred-five minutes that the cafeterias serve lunch.
Lab just ended and I have three options if I want to eat before my "I learned that in 9th grade" Linear Algebra class, fifty minutes from now in Bond Hall, the building just north of my lab, abutting Red Square:
time travel back to last night, drive a car I don't own to the Haggen at the bottom of the long hill south of campus, spend the little money I have on groceries in order to retroactively prepare a lackluster PB&J, and hope it doesn't get squished in my backpack,
sprint southward, praying I don't trip on Western's walkwayādesigned by a fetishist of heterogeneously leveled bricksāto the Fairhaven dining hall before it closes, eat quickly, and sprint north again to get to math on time, or
walk north to the Viking Union to eat less tasty food in a large, vulva-flowerless cafeteria.
Look, somehow the VU cafeteria food is worse than Fairhaven's, even though the food for both comes from the same company. It just is. But, a relaxed, 30-minute, mediocre lunch beats an out-of-breath slightly better tasting lunch crammed into five minutes with a side of
that girl who runs places
reputation any day, even without flower vag artwork.
I grab my foodāa small salad with honey mustard dressing, half a turkey sandwich, a slice of pepperoni, and a dessert plate of chocolate pie (Western's cafeterias serve the
best
chocolate pie)ātake a seat at an empty table, and dig in.
I'll admit, I have work to do to improve my mindfulness. Mindful eating means taking time to really notice the sensations. The heft of the cool fork in your hand with a piece of pie skewered to the end of it. How it feels when the pie brushes past your lips, entering your mouth. The satisfying viscous squish of the hybrid chocolate mousse and brownie as your teeth bite down. And the glorious, sweet, dark-brown-and-white taste of milk chocolate as it swishes around your tongue. When you have thoughts, notice them, and let them drift away, recentering your focus on the sensations of eating. Let the background noise and sights of the cafeteria fade to the background.
But today, I don't do thatālike I said, I need to work on the practice to be the zen master of mindfulness my DBT counselor wants me to beāand somewhere between thinking about the lab I just finished, mindful eating, and the math class I'm about to attend, I am distracted by the fantasy from last night and the fact that I didn't touch myself before going to sleep. I see it again: me bound and hoisted by white linen straps, my wicked Mistress in leather, taking pleasure in my helpless, frustrated state, pleasure at my expense.
I'm hungry and not just for food.
When I'm distracted internally, like I am now, my subconscious autopilot takes over my body, taking in my surroundings, noticing everything, ready to notify my mind of anything noteworā
We lock eyes, my lips slightly parted. I've seen her around campus several times before, but always at a distance; we've never met nor even made eye contactāuntil now. About 5'7" (170cm) with fair skin. Long, straight blond hair always in an immaculate, mouth-watering high ponytail that apexes half an inch above the top of her head. Every time I've seen her, she's worn a wide, light pink scarf to combat the chilly winter Bellingham weather. Today, she's in a white-on-black dress with a V-neck neckline, showing a hint of what I imagine is substantial cleavage, her signature scarf slung over the back of her chair.