Love Less -13- Truth is...

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Everyone has their own truth. But is Les's truth the same as Elle's?

Love Less
 
 
Love Less -13-
 
Truth Is...

 
The Drs. Davenport, Jessie and Owen, re-entered the home office wearing somber expressions. Mrs. Madison stood beside the French windows that opened onto the back porch of the large suburban house, smiling. Les sat in the chair in front of the desk, looking at the floor.

“What is this about, Maddy?” Jessie asked. She and her husband moved behind the desk, but neither sat. They smiled, but Owen’s eyebrows made peaks on his forehead, and Jessie held her hands together in front of her.

“It’s all about Elle’s true status,” the social worker admitted. “I discovered that her parents are unlikely to be able to claim her for months, and in fact, may lose their parental rights for abandonment.”

Owen smiled, and his eyebrows relaxed a bit. “It’s good that Elle’s here with us then.”

“There’s a complication,” Maddy said, putting a hand on the back of Les’s chair.

Les closed his eyes. No one heard him whimper. If he hadn’t already been sitting down, he would have collapsed.

“What sort of complication?” Jessie asked. “Another relative?” She reached out toward Les, but the boy in the dress did not see or respond.

Maddy shook her head. “No. There are other relatives, yes, but no court in this state is likely to give any of them custody, either. Not if I oppose it, at any rate. And if you are still willing to give Elle a home.” She glanced from Jessie to Owen and back.

“Of course,” said Owen and Jessie nodded. “Providing foster homes for girls in trouble is one of our joys.” But their smiles flickered. Maddy’s attitude signaled that something still needed to be brought into the open.

Les trembled under Maddy’s hand and she gave his shoulder a squeeze. He looked up to find both Davenports’ gazes on him.

“Um,” said Maddy. “I don’t want you to feel like I boxed you into this.” Her voice stayed firm even if her words expressed some tentativeness.

Jessie blinked several times, then looked directly into Les’s eyes. “Maddy…” she began.

“Elle is transgender,” Maddy said quickly. “She’s a transgender girl, biologically male. I confirmed this from a fax I received from her school in Colorado.” She paused. “The paperwork I got from the station house yesterday was wrong.”

Owen and Jessie stared at Les. He blinked several times. After a moment, quiet tears rolled down his cheeks, but his eyes were closed again. Maddy bent beside his chair.

“I tried to tell Maddy yesterday and… and Pris last night…” Les murmured before opening his eyes and looking up again. “Please don’t be mad. I know I let you think I was a girl, but I was… so… so scared.”

Owen smiled. “Elle, honey, you are a girl.” He glanced at his wife who had already started around the desk to fold the crying boy into a hug. “The only problem I see is what do we tell the school,” the doctor continued.

Jessie glanced back at Owen while hugging Les. “Elle, I don’t see how anyone could think you were a boy!” She held him out to look at him, laughed, then pulled him in close for more hugging.

Les wasn’t sure what to think about that, but he smiled at her through his tears. It looked like he would get to stay. He tried to relax into the hugging.

Everyone talked at once.

Maddy was saying, “I have paperwork I will have to straighten out….”

Jessie said. “We’ll have to find out if Pris still wants to share a bedroom with you….”

Owen remarked, “I know a doctor that has some experience in this area….”

Les floated halfway between happiness that he would be allowed to stay in the family and fear—fear that this meant he would have to continue trying to convince people that he was a girl. How long could he do that for? “I told Pris… I mean… I don’t have to go to a special school…. Do I? Will my folks have to find out? Is anyone going to tell Mom-Mom?”

“I can get a bigger allowance from the state for Les as a special needs child,” said Maddy.

Owen shook his head. “The money isn’t important.” He looked at Les. “But, Elle, if Pris doesn’t want to share rooms, I’ll move my office into the living room corner and convert this into a bedroom.” He waved at the room, grinning.

Jessie commented. “The school already has another transgender girl attending. I know because I’m on the board there, so that is not really going to be a problem. Or only a minor one, at least.”

Maddy remarked. “I can write letters to all your relatives, Elle.” Then sort of as an aside to herself, “We can manage what we tell them.”

Jessie smiled at Les. “Pris is not going to care, honey. She’ll be tickled that you told her the truth and she didn’t believe you.”

Owen laughed. “No wonder the idea of a physical exam scared you so bad. I’m sorry I was being thick about it.” He shook his head.

Les giggled, cried some more, and got the hiccoughs again. The buzz of talk among the grown-ups continued.

“How soon can we adopt her?” Jessie asked Maddy.

“Six months normally,” said Maddy. “But if I can get paperwork in front of a judge to declare that her parents have effectively abandoned her, maybe in only a few weeks?”

“Would you like that, Elle?” asked Owen.

“Her name was misspelled on the police paperwork, they spelled it as two girl’s names,” Maddy told Jessie. “I got the correct spelling today and investigated.”

Les wondered about that. He had felt sure yesterday that Maddy had known the truth and was just scheming to keep him out of juvenile hall with her masquerade. But now everyone seemed to know he was a boy and assumed that he wanted to be a girl.

Did he? Maybe if it meant he could stay as a member of the Davenport family, maybe he did.

“We can get your name changed as part of the adoption,” Jessie said.

“The doctor I know can give you hormone blockers until you’re sixteen so you don’t have to go through male puberty,” said Owen.

Maddy brought something else up. “Elle was born in Henderson, Nevada. We can get her birth certificate changed to show female even before she is old enough to have surgery.”

Les’s head buzzed with all the talking back and forth. Had he heard what Maddy said right?

“Do you like ‘Elle’ as a first name, honey?” Jessie asked him. “Or should that just be your nickname for something longer? Ellen? Elizabeth Eleanor?”

“Keep your last name as your new middle name,” suggested Owen. “Eleanor Love Davenport.”

They were all smiling. Happy for him. He couldn’t tell them he wasn’t sure, could he? “Where’s the b-bathroom?” he asked, his voice breaking a bit.

Owen indicated one of the rooms other doors. The office turned out to connect with the large disability-equipped bathroom attached to Carol’s first-floor bedroom. He went in and shut the door. The tile, porcelain, glass and metal surfaces made every sound louder and more sharp-edged.

He could still hear the voices in the office through the door.

“She’s adorable,” Jessie was saying. “So pretty and feminine, with that awkward grace like a fawn or a kitten.”

“She would never have survived being put in juvenile detention with the sort of boys she would have been with,” said Maddy.

“I don’t see how anyone ever believed she was a boy,” commented Owen.

Les put the toilet ring up and knelt beside the tall shape of the porcelain bowl, careful not to kneel on his skirt. He gagged a couple of times and spat up some sour fluid into the water. But he did not throw up.

Jessie said, “She wears clothes so well, she could be a model. Pris commented on that.”

Owen speculated. “I know they can give blockers at her age, but I’m not sure about other hormones.”

“We have to do some research,” said Maddy.

“Get her some counseling, too,” said Owen.

“It’s important to do what’s best for her,” said Maddy.

“She might not want to be a model,” Jessie said. “That can be a hard life. We need to find out what she does want to do.”

“Exactly,” said Owen. “That’s the most important thing. Find out what she wants to do with her life. What she really wants to do.”

“And help her be the best person she can be,” added Jessie.

Les blinked tears out of his eyes again. Would he ever stop crying? People wanted to be nice to him, but why did it hurt so much?

“Are you all right in there, honey?” Jessie’s voice came at the door after a soft knock.

“Y-yes, ma’am,” he answered. He took tissue and wiped his eyes.

“All right, dear. We’re going out to the dining room table to strategize and make coffee. Come see us there when you feel better. This is a lot to take in, isn’t it?”

Les nodded then realized she couldn’t see him. “Yes, ma’am,” he repeated.

“You’re not throwing up, are you?” Jessie asked.

“Not so far,” Les said. “But it was close. Ma’am.” He wasn’t used to people caring or even noticing what he did or how he felt.

Jessie was quiet a moment, then said in a softer tone. “You can call me ‘Mom’ anytime you want to, honey. Not required but I would like that.”

Les didn’t say anything but grabbed more tissue, and after a while, he heard Jessie and the others leave the office. He knelt beside the porcelain a while longer, his thoughts circling non-ironically around his situation, his past and his future.

Finally, he stood again, smoothing his skirt the way Pris had shown him. He flushed the toilet, watching the sour spit and tear-stained tissue disappear.

At the mirror over the sink, he examined his reflection. Was he really all that girly? He pulled his long hair away from his face with one hand and covered up his foofy bowtie with the other but could not decide if that made him look more like a boy.

He fluffed his hair back up with his fingers and turned to the full-length mirror on the door. He did look cute in the school uniform with the big red bow at his throat and the plaid jumper skirt. He tried a smile and a pose, then another one. Was that what models had to do? He did have long pretty eyelashes, didn’t he?

Counseling? What would he tell a counselor?

Les opened the door, left the office and turned down the hall toward the dining room. When he entered, everyone stopped talking to turn and smile at him. He made a decision, maybe not a permanent one but for the time being anyway.

Elle stepped into the room, moving toward the chair she had used at dinner last night and breakfast this morning. She needed to talk to her foster parents about seeing a doctor and a counselor. She smiled back at them, trying to feel light-hearted and unafraid.

It couldn’t be that hard to pretend, could it?

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Comments

Love This Story!

Erin, your writing is so well done; so sensitive and believable. So: no criticism, just thinking.

>> So pretty and feminine, with that awkward grace like a fawn or a kitten. <<

I'd say a baby animal's cuteness and appeal is based much more on its age and species rather than its sex. Does the sex of a kitten, a puppy, a cub, a kid, a kit, calf, foal, lamb, etc. determine how much one may like its appearance? It's like our babies and toddlers; when small, almost all can be seen as either sex by the color and gender style of its clothing. It's like what happened with Elle.

Hugs and Bright Blessings,
Renee

Exactly :)

erin's picture

The comparison and the ambiguity of it were not accidental. :)

Thanks for the compliment.

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

I love Elllie,

Wendy Jean's picture

but then I love all kids, I really love this story. Every time a chapter is put up it is a treat.I keep trying to slide back into depression but stories like this and BC closet in general is a major tool for my fight against it, Thank You from the bottom of my heart!

Lots of Emotion

BarbieLee's picture

Erin, you manage to pack a lot of tears, both story and reader, into this tale. I think I was crying and smiling at the same time when I read Elle-Les was accepted for who she was. Excellent writing talent to pack that much emotion into a story, much less one chapter.
hugs hon
always,
Barb

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

If Pris wants another bedroom...

laika's picture

I hope not. Pris being totally okay with Elle + being right there for her is on my wish list for this story.

I also hope Les/Elle isn't being railroaded into an identity they'll be uncomfortable with. If when the situational ambivalence about gender settles they decide they're actually just a very femme boy or something outside the binary I hope they'll get to be that, in the long term even if they have to pose as a girl through school and have female on their birth certificate. Dumb to worry about the long term happiness a fictional character but you really make us care for this little sweetie...
~hugs, Veronica
,

(And if Doctor and Doctor Davenport are Jessie and Owen, does that mean they can run real fast?
I got distracted by that in the first sentence...)

.
What borders on stupidity?
Canada and Mexico.
.

Oops

erin's picture

I didn't notice the name thing. I may end up doing something to fix it. Generally, when a male character has a name change in a TG story, it goes along with other changes. :)

If it's silly to worry about the long term happiness of fictional characters, how much sillier is it when they are your own characters? I wonder if Owen would be happy as a lesbian? :)

HUgs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

counselor

My5InchFMHeels's picture

I think the fact that everyone jumped to the conclusion that Les is female would be enough for extra time. If Les has enough feminine traits, it could take a while to decide if he is really she or if he's really a fem boy.

If Les is willing to live as a girl, I'm sure the doc would have to factor that in.

This poor kid

Samantha Heart's picture

Maybe she is transgender maybe not but what choice does (s)he have? Its eathe Juvy (which will treat him as a criminal when he didnt do anything wrong at all (other then have a lousy family but not Les' fault) or group home & get murdered so in reality this is the ONLY choice unfortunate as it may seam it may well & truly be a blessing

Love Samantha Renée Heart.

Really Good Story!

Things seem to be looking up for Ellie, after much ugliness in the past.

Great story sensatively written

This is a great story sensitively written and it nearly had me in tears. I dont thik it matters what direction Elle takes as long as she doesnt incorrectly railroad herself down the TG route. Good counceling should sort that out.
I like the characterisation of all the main protagonists and maybe Maddy jumped the gun by placing Elle as a girl but at the end of the day it was done for the best of intentions and kept Elle safe.
I love this story

Will

If you could end this with a song ...

AuPreviner's picture

I would suggest this one for this line ...

Elle stepped into the room

Even if it is in French, it suits this story, and in my heart, she has become "mon Elle aussi."

Thanks for a great story!

AuP


"Love is like linens; after changed the sweeter." – John Fletcher (1579–1625)

Thanks yet again, Erin

koala's picture

Thanks yet again, Erin, for another very touching and well-written story. I'm looking forward to see where this leads.

Hugs,

Koala

Inside every older person is a young person wondering what the heck happened.

Truth or escape

Jamie Lee's picture

Maddy dressed Les as a girl to get him placed with Owen and Jesse, thereby keeping him out of juvie.

Now she's told the couple Les, Elle, is TG and has paperwork to show it being so. But as Maddy did at first, might she be doing the same again, providing paperwork that Elle is TG only to keep him out of juvie?

Les's reaction to Maddy's telling Owen and Jesse that Elle is TG shows how fearful he was that the Davenports would kick him out, and that he was being perceived as a boy who was actually a girl.

Or, did Les bow to the porcelain thrown because of the questions he started asking himself about himself? About the truth of Maddy's declaration?

Maddy may have seen the truth about Les during their initial meeting, and it will now take counseling to get Les to see the same within himself.

Others have feelings too.

The End?

Is this the end of story?

All I have of the story so far

erin's picture

It could be continued, but I'm not sure it ever will. I take it that you enjoyed it? :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

A Beautiful story

I wish there was more

Me too

erin's picture

But it ended in a good place. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

*Happy sigh*

This is such a beautiful story! Even though I'd love to see more, I'm also happy with the hopeful note it ended on. I just hope Les/Elle doesn't feel too pressured to be whatever gender will keep him/her/them in the home, instead of finding out what gender actually feels right. Thank you for sharing such a wonderful story, Erin! :D

I'm glad

erin's picture

I'm glad you enjoyed it. I'm also happy to leave Elle in a good place with a chance for happiness among people who are willing to love her. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.

Oh no!

Glenda98's picture

It’s finished! I was loving Elle and the story so much. Erin, You are a Master of storytelling.

Glenda Ericsson

Thank you hon

erin's picture

I do think this is one of my best, I'm happy to have entertained so many people. :)

Hugs,
Erin

= Give everyone the benefit of the doubt because certainty is a fragile thing that can be shattered by one overlooked fact.