Author's note:
Since literotica does not support blockquotes, to denote the start and end of a blockquote, I'll use
💬
and
🗨️
respectively.
Chapter Three
Beatrix Speaks, "
Until I leave, no sound may cross the boundaries of this room.
" It grows eerily quiet as the ambient noise from outside disappears.
"Wow," I say, "I wish I could do that. Noisy neighbors blasting terrible music drive me up the wall."
She smirks and hands me one of the cans of Cherry 7-Up she's pulled from her minifridge, then sits silently for a moment while she contemplates where to begin. When she talks, it's with a warm, slightly distant tone, as if she has one foot in the present, here with me, and the other in the unbounded cosmos of her mind, trying to cram giant, inexplicable experiences into the clunky, small containers we call words. All hint of her domineering tone from earlier has vanished. "For the sake of conversation, I'm just going to call my ability magic, even though it isn't. I don't channel a source, like the Weave in D&D, and I don't have access to anything like Investiture in Brandon Sanderson's Cosmere."
She reads Sanderson, too?
I think, momentarily smitten.
Why was I such a cowardly fool that I did not introduce myself the moment I first laid eyes on her in September?
Because you're a nervous introvert
, Sarah Prime retorts,
who's especially self-conscious about creeping out girls in case they're transphobic, as any panicked or disgusted rejection would ruin your week and probably the rest of your life.
Right. I should really get over that.
She speaks on, oblivious to my inner dialogue.
💬
If I had to compare it to something, it's closest to an X-Men mutant ability, though, as far as I know, it's neither genetic nor hereditary. I wasn't bitten by a radioactive street magician, and I wasn't exposed to a freak solar flare while speaking in an ogreish voice. Honestly, I don't know why I have this ability. I just always have, ever since I could talk.
While my "magic" isn't access to some external source of energy, the energy I use to make things happen
is
separate from my conventional bodily energy. It's a... it's like a magic battery, maybe. Once that battery is depleted, I can't do anything more until it recharges, but I'm no more physically tired than I was before.
I can affect the natural world at will, but only so long as it doesn't interfere with people's free will. However, to directly affect
people
, I must have their consent. Not just general consent to affect them, but their continual, specific consent for each effect. If I were to, I don't know, make someone artificially high, even if I had their consent to do so initially, as soon as they no longer wished to feel high, the effect would end. I might be able to cause someone pain, if they consent to it, but I could never
harm
them, even by accident.
My best friend in high school is named Hannah; she's the only person I've ever told about my abilities, or more honestly, the only person who's ever noticed weird things occur when I'm around and confronted me about it. She and I did some rudimentary experiments last summer, teasing out the boundaries of my abilities. We found that if I
did
apply some effect to her, and then she withdrew her consent without me first ending the effect, the drain on my battery was about ten times worse. On top of that, it
hurt
me somehow, just a little, but I got the sense that the pain was proportional to the crime, so to speak.
Here's umm... well, here's the awkward part. My magic is fueled by dominance.
🗨️
I nearly choke on my drink.
💬
The more conventional authority I have, the faster my battery recharges. I believe that it slowly recharges on its own because of the innate authority that humans have over their surroundings. However, if I exert authority over people, it recharges much, much faster. What normally takes a night to recover, instead takes a minute.
And, umm... I can increase the capacity of my battery and the potency of my "spells"—such as the amount of time I can transform your body—by using
magic
to exert authority over people.
🗨️
Beatrix looks at me shy, nervous, like she's fearing—even expecting—some disgusted rebuke.
I don't even have to try to put on my most aroused facial expression as I say, "That's... that's really hot." I notice for the first time how wet I am; I revel in that sensation I have always wanted to experience.
Relief floods Beatrix's face, followed by mischievous excitement mixed with nervous hope. "So, umm," Beatrix continues, "this is what I get out of our bargain, if you agree to it." She pauses, mustering more courage. "I need someone submissive that I can dominate." My eyes widen. "To explore my powers," she adds hastily. Her voice glissandos an octave higher as she says, "And... I thought, maybe, that might be you?"
My head pounds with blood, propelled by my arousal. I can feel my panties being soaked through, a drip pooling at the hem then running slowly down my ass toward my skirt.
I would love this arrangement, Beatrix. This is the sexiest, most thrilling thing that's ever happened to me, a fulfillment of my wildest fantasies. So yes, yes I will be that person for you; I will be that person for
me
.
Beatrix's expression shifts from hopeful to nervous to embarrassed and finally to mortified. "I'm so sorry," she says quickly. "This is awkward. I should never have asked this." She puts her face in her hands and her voice breaks. "We don't ever have to talk again."
I stare, dumbfounded, until I realize I hadn't actually said any of that out loud. I snort at myself—to her confusion—and say, "Yes. Yes, Beatrix, I will be your sub. I will
gladly
be your sub."
Beatrix looks relieved, and then, her voice taking on a sense of formality, she asks, "Do I have your general consent to play with you as I please?"
"Yes," I reply, "you most certainly do."
* * *
We spend the next few hours, sitting side-by-side on her bed, our backs resting against the abutting wall, getting to know each other. Beatrix is a freshman, planning to major in physics.
"Hannah, the friend I mentioned before, is a total nerd, destined to be a leading scientist of whichever STEM field she ends up choosing. I'm a little jealous, if I'm being honest. The more we experimented with my ability, the more I became intrigued with the scientific method. I figured that studying physics might give me a better idea of how to manipulate reality. I'm four months in, though, and I'm realizing I don't actually need to know the science for it to work; I just say the words with the proper intent, and things just... happen." She shrugs. "But I am enjoying the content, and it comes to me more naturally than I had anticipated, so I don't see a compelling reason not to stick with physics, at least for now."
I tell her a bit about my upbringing in Renton, a sprawling town south of Seattle; that my parents say I've been pressing buttons since I was three years old; about the "gifted" program in fifth grade in which I first learned how to write very simple computer programs; and how this grew into my love of computer science.
She tells me about how she was born in the UK and had spent most of her life there; how she moved in year eight to Bear Creek—the boonies northeast of Redmond—for her parents' new jobs at Microsoft. She talks about her relatively painless experience coming out to them as a lesbian when she was ten, how they hugged her and said, "Oh, Trix, we've known
that
since you were four." She smiles fondly at the memory.
I tell her about how I came out to myself in May of my senior year of high school.
"Everything in my life fell into place in my mind; this context made everything I've ever done, felt, or thought make so much sense. After a week or two of introspection, conversations with my counselor and some trustworthy friends I knew held progressive views, and privately trying on dresses to see how they fit, both physically and spiritually—having confirmed to myself that I am, in fact, trans, and this
wasn't
just a weeklong fascination—I called Western's admissions office. I told them I was trans and requested to be assigned to a dorm room with a female roommate, trans or cis. They placed me with my current roommate, Gabi, and thank God. She's wonderful.
"My parents are conservative evangelicals, and so I didn't come out to them until two weeks into my freshman year. They ... didn't take it well, as I had expected." I feel my voice tilt sadward. "My relationships with them have been ... strained ever since. On the plus side, my older sister and brother are affirming, and the rest of my extended family are accepting and most are supportive to varying degrees."