The September sun beat down on Ethan's back as he lounged in Jordan's backyard, a half-empty can of soda warming beside him. It was one of those lazy weekend afternoons where time seemed to stretch endlessly, a welcome break from the first few weeks of their senior year that had already proven to be more demanding than expected.
"So I've been thinking about our D&D campaign," Ethan said, flipping through a dog-eared Player's Handbook. "Maybe we should restart with new characters instead of picking up where we left off last time. That dungeon was a total party killer."
Jordan didn't respond. He was checking his watch for the third time in as many minutes, clearly distracted.
"Dude, are you even listening?" Ethan tossed a bottle cap at his friend.
"Sorry," Jordan said, looking up. "I've been working on something. Actually, I wanted to show you." He hesitated, then added with poorly concealed excitement, "It's pretty cool. In the shed."
Ethan raised an eyebrow. Jordan had always been into building things—custom computer rigs, modified Nerf guns, elaborate Halloween props—but lately, he'd been weirdly secretive about his projects.
"In the shed? That tiny thing can barely fit a lawnmower."
"Just come on," Jordan said, already standing up.
Curious despite his skepticism, Ethan followed his friend across the yard to the weathered garden shed. Jordan unlocked the padlock and pushed open the door. Inside was exactly what Ethan expected: garden tools hanging on the walls, a lawnmower in the corner, bags of fertilizer stacked against one wall.
But then Jordan pushed aside a false panel in the floor, revealing a steep staircase descending into darkness.
"What the hell, man? When did you build an underground lair?"
Jordan grinned. "My dad's always working late, and I needed more space. Started digging last spring. Pretty cool, right?"
"Pretty illegal, probably," Ethan muttered, but he followed Jordan down the stairs anyway.
The underground workshop was surprisingly large—maybe fifteen feet square with a low ceiling reinforced with wooden beams. The space was cluttered with half-assembled electronics, tools scattered across workbenches, and what looked like computer servers humming in one corner. The air smelled of solder and ozone.
"Dude, this is insane," Ethan said, genuinely impressed despite his concerns. "You built all this yourself?"
"Yeah. I've been getting these... ideas. Like, I can just see how things should fit together." Jordan's eyes lit up as he talked. "It's like the schematics appear in my head fully formed. I just have to build them."
Ethan nodded slowly, taking it all in. This wasn't just Jordan's usual tinkering. The complexity of the equipment, the detailed diagrams pinned to the walls—this was beyond high school hobbyist level.
"So what did you want to show me?" Ethan asked.
Jordan's excitement visibly increased. "That," he said, pointing to the far wall.
Ethan turned and noticed for the first time the massive contraption that dominated the back of the room. It looked like some kind of sci-fi movie prop—a jumble of computer parts, strange crystalline structures that glowed faintly, and at its center, what appeared to be a transparent cylinder large enough for a person to stand in.
"What is it supposed to be?" Ethan asked, approaching cautiously.
Jordan followed, practically bouncing with excitement. "I'm calling it the Quantum Image Replicator. QIR for short."
"That doesn't tell me what it does."
"It creates things," Jordan said, his voice dropping to a reverent near-whisper. "Real things. From images. Watch."
He moved to one of several small pedestals connected to the main apparatus by colorful cables. On each pedestal sat what looked like action figures or small statues. Ethan realized with mild embarrassment that they were anime figurines—including several characters he recognized from shows they'd binged during previous summer breaks.
"You've got to be kidding me," Ethan said as the realization dawned. "You're trying to build a girlfriend?"
Jordan had the decency to look slightly chagrined. "Not just any girlfriend. The perfect girlfriend."
"Based on... anime characters?" Ethan couldn't keep the incredulity from his voice.
"They're just reference models," Jordan said defensively. "The machine scans them to create a three-dimensional template, then combines attributes to generate the ideal form."
Ethan stared at his friend. "You can't just... build a girlfriend, Jordan. That's not how anything works."
"I can if I have the right equipment," Jordan insisted. "And look, I know it sounds crazy, but I've tested it on smaller stuff." He gestured to a nearby shelf where several objects sat—a perfectly formed glass orb, what looked like a miniature tree complete with tiny leaves, and something that appeared to be a small moving clockwork mechanism.
Ethan had to admit, the craftsmanship was impressive. But there was a world of difference between making small objects and creating a living person.
"Even if this thing works—which I seriously doubt—it would be wrong, man. You can't just create a person."
Jordan waved away the concern. "I'm not creating consciousness or anything. Just... you know, a form. The rest is just biochemistry."
"Just biochemistry," Ethan repeated flatly. "You're talking about building a sex doll with extra steps."
"It's not like that!" Jordan protested, though his reddening face suggested Ethan had hit uncomfortably close to the mark. "Look, I just need help calibrating the final sequence. Then you'll see."
Against his better judgment, Ethan found himself curious. Part of him wanted to see if the machine would do anything at all, while another part wanted to be there when it inevitably failed so he could talk Jordan out of this bizarre obsession.
"What do you need me to do?" he asked reluctantly.
Jordan's face brightened. "Just hold these two components together while I initiate the sequence," he said, pointing to two metal rods protruding from the side of the device. "They need to be perfectly aligned, and I can't reach them while I'm at the controls."
It seemed simple enough. Ethan positioned himself by the metal rods while Jordan moved to a keyboard and monitor setup on the adjacent workbench.
"Ready?" Jordan asked, fingers poised over the keyboard.
"I guess," Ethan replied, still not convinced this was anything more than an elaborate science project destined for failure.
Jordan began typing, and the machine hummed to life. Lights flickered across its surface, and the crystals embedded throughout began to glow more intensely. The anime figurines on their pedestals were bathed in scanning light, rotating slowly as data was collected.
"Everything's nominal," Jordan called out. "Keep those conductors aligned!"
Ethan held the metal rods steady, feeling a slight vibration through them. The machine's hum deepened to a low throb that he could feel in his chest.
"Is it supposed to be this loud?" he asked, raising his voice to be heard.
Jordan didn't answer, too focused on the readouts flashing across his monitor. His expression shifted from excitement to confusion.
"That's weird," he muttered. "The energy readings are spiking. The pattern recognition algorithm is—"
A sharp crack interrupted him as one of the crystals in the machine fractured. Sparks erupted from a nearby junction box.
"Something's wrong," Jordan said, his earlier confidence evaporating. "The feedback loop is—"
"Should I let go?" Ethan called out, but it was too late.
The machine's vibration intensified, and the metal rods in Ethan's hands suddenly grew hot—not enough to burn, but uncomfortable enough that he instinctively tried to pull away. To his horror, he found he couldn't. His hands were locked in place as if magnetized to the rods.
"Jordan!" he shouted in alarm.
Jordan was frantically typing commands, but the machine wasn't responding. "I can't shut it down!" he called back, panic edging into his voice. "The failsafes aren't—"
Before he could finish, the central cylinder lit up with blinding intensity. Ethan felt a sudden powerful pull, and in a disorienting moment, he was no longer standing next to the machine but inside the transparent cylinder.
Everything happened at once. The air around him seemed to liquefy, filled with swirling patterns of light. His skin tingled painfully as if every cell in his body was being systematically unraveled and rewoven. He tried to scream, but no sound emerged.
Through the transparent walls, he could see Jordan shouting something, frantically working at the controls, but the sound was muffled to nothing. The workshop around him began to blur as the pain intensified.
And then, just as suddenly as it had begun, it stopped. The light faded, and Ethan collapsed to his knees inside the cylinder, disoriented and nauseous. The door slid open automatically, and cool air rushed in, carrying the acrid smell of burned electronics.
"Ethan! Are you okay?" Jordan's voice seemed to come from far away.
Ethan tried to respond, but his voice felt strange in his throat. Higher, softer. He coughed and tried again. "What... happened?"
Even those two words told him something was terribly wrong. That wasn't his voice.
He looked down at his hands, and a wave of disbelief washed over him. They were smaller, more delicate, with longer fingers and smooth skin. And beyond them...
Ethan scrambled to his feet, a wave of dizziness almost sending him back down. His body felt wrong—the balance was off, the proportions altered. And there were unmistakable new contours beneath his now-loose t-shirt.
"What did you do to me?" he demanded, the unfamiliar voice rising in panic.
Jordan stood frozen, staring at him with an expression of shock that gradually morphed into something else—fascination? Awe? His mouth opened and closed several times before he managed to speak.
"The reference models," he said weakly, gesturing toward the anime figurines. "The machine must have... I didn't think it would actually..."
A particularly prominent figurine caught Ethan's eye—a red-haired female character from an anime they'd watched together last summer. The recognition hit him like a physical blow.
"Ranma?" he asked incredulously, voice shaking. "Your perfect girlfriend template was RANMA? The character who switches between male and female forms? Are you kidding me?"
"I didn't... I mean, she wasn't the only reference model," Jordan stammered. "The machine was supposed to sample multiple attributes and create an ideal composite, not just copy one character. I don't understand what went wrong."
Ethan stumbled to a small mirror hanging on the workshop wall and found himself staring at a stranger. The face looking back at him was undeniably feminine—delicate features, big blue eyes, and long red hair flowing past his shoulders. Her shoulders.
"Change me back," Ethan said, turning to face Jordan, voice dangerously quiet. "Now."
Jordan's expression shifted from shock to distress. "I... I don't know how. The machine wasn't supposed to do this. It wasn't designed for... transforming people."
"You built this thing!" Ethan shouted, the strange new voice cracking with emotion. "If you can build it, you can reverse it!"
"I'll try," Jordan promised, his own voice shaking. "I'll figure it out. I just need time to understand what happened."
"Time?" Ethan repeated incredulously. "What am I supposed to do in the meantime? Go home like this? What about school? Tell my parents their son is now their daughter because my best friend was trying to build himself an anime girlfriend?"
As he spoke, his anger and panic built. The air around him seemed to shimmer faintly, though neither boy noticed.
"Look, you can stay here," Jordan offered desperately. "My dad's on a business trip for the next three days. I'll work non-stop to fix this, I swear."
Ethan ran his hands—these unfamiliar, smaller hands—through his new long hair, trying to think clearly through the panic.
"This is so messed up," he muttered. "You're a freaking pervert, you know that? Building girlfriends in your basement. And now you've turned me into one."
"I didn't mean to—"
"I don't care what you meant!" Ethan shouted, slamming his hand down on a nearby table.
The beaker sitting on the edge of the table vanished with a soft 'pop' sound, reappearing instantly in mid-air across the room before crashing to the floor.
Both boys froze, staring at the shattered glass.
"Did you..." Jordan began.
"No," Ethan said, looking at his hand in confusion. "I didn't touch it. It just..."
They looked at each other, the implication dawning simultaneously.
"The transformation," Jordan said slowly. "It must have done more than change your appearance. It gave you... powers."
Ethan closed his eyes, struggling to process this new development on top of everything else. "Fix this, Jordan," he said finally, his voice quiet but firm. "Find a way to change me back. Because if you don't..." He left the threat unfinished, too overwhelmed to even articulate what he might do.
Jordan nodded rapidly. "I will. I promise. Whatever it takes."
As Ethan turned away, he caught his reflection again in the mirror—a stranger's face looking back at him with his own eyes, holding his own fear and anger. Whatever Jordan had done, whatever this machine had changed, Ethan knew with grim certainty that nothing would ever be the same.
What neither of them realized then was that in less than two weeks, they would both be enrolled at Whateley Academy, a school they'd never heard of, leaving behind the shambles of their normal lives.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
End of Chapter 01.5
Hey All!
SO, this is 2 big things for me.
My First attempt at the wonderful Whateley Academy Universe!
AND
My First Contest Entry!
There will be 10 chapters in total for my entry plus 3 flashback chapters.
I will release them daily or so (so as not to overwhelm the front page)
Likely I will be continuing this series, and no my other series are not on pause. I did slow down on them just a little bit while I go this one pounded out. But they are not put to the side.
https://discord.gg/NYjPU3auVy(link is external)
Join Me and some other people to talk shop, discuss artwork, stories, chatter, or just share fun videos or memes!
If you want future chapters ahead of my posted works support me on Patreon!
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Also, feel free to PM me if you have any questions or wanna comment.
TTFN Everyone.
Ethan stared at the female school uniform spread across her bed, each piece mocking her with its inherent femininity. The Melville Cottage uniform consisted of a black pleated skirt, black feminine dress jacket, white blouse, and a dark purple necktie with three gold stripes. Black mary jane shoes completed the ensemble, arranged neatly beside the bed by someone with far more enthusiasm for this nightmare than Ethan possessed.
"This can't be happening," she muttered, picking up the skirt with two fingers as if it might bite. The fabric was surprisingly soft, high-quality. Of course it would be, at a place like Whateley.
She glanced at the plain white bra that had been included with the uniform and immediately shoved it into a drawer. "Not happening," she muttered firmly. The panties were barely tolerable—a necessary evil given the skirt—but she drew the line at strapping herself into a bra.
After delaying the inevitable for another ten minutes, Ethan began the awkward process of dressing. The mechanics of the uniform proved more complex than anticipated—the skirt had an inner button and a side zipper, the blouse required precise tucking, and the necktie was a complete mystery. The white thigh-high socks felt particularly foreign as she pulled them over her smooth legs. Each garment required adjustments to accommodate her unfamiliar curves.
A knock at the door froze her mid-struggle with the necktie.
"Ethan? You decent?" Jordan's voice called from the hallway.
"Define 'decent,'" Ethan replied, swinging the door open to reveal Jordan impeccably dressed in the boys' uniform—black slacks, white shirt, black jacket, and the same purple and gold necktie. The contrast between them made Ethan want to slam the door in his face.
"Wow, you look—" Jordan started, his eyes immediately dropping to the white socks highlighting Ethan's legs before jerking back up to her face. His cheeks flushed as he made a visible effort to maintain eye contact.
"Don't," Ethan cut him off. "Just... don't say anything."
Jordan moved past her into the room, his eyes darting briefly to her chest before he focused intently on the wall behind her. "You're going to be late. Here, let me help with that tie." Before Ethan could protest, he stepped forward and began fixing the tangled fabric at her neck, studiously avoiding looking anywhere else even as his peripheral vision betrayed him with quick glimpses.
"I don't know how girls do this every day," Ethan grumbled, staring at the ceiling to avoid eye contact. "The shoes pinch, the skirt feels like I'm wearing nothing, and this blouse makes me feel like I'm on display."
"If it helps, everybody else is in uniform too. You won't stand out." Jordan finished with the tie and stepped back.
"Right. I'll just blend in with all the other girls who used to be boys until their best friends turned them into anime characters."
Jordan winced. "I said I was sorry."
"Sorry doesn't fix this." Ethan gestured at her body.
"No, but Whateley might. That's why we're here." Jordan glanced at his watch. "We should go. Powers Theory starts in fifteen minutes."
Ethan sighed, grabbed her messenger bag—the one item she'd insisted on keeping from her old life—and followed Jordan into the hallway, pausing only to lock her door.
"At least we have our first class together," Jordan offered as they walked. "Introduction to Superpowers. It's supposed to cover the basics for all freshmen."
"Great. Learning to be a better freak," Ethan muttered, tugging at her skirt hem.
As they navigated the campus pathways toward Dunn Hall, Ethan observed other students in their uniforms. The standardization provided some comfort—at least until she noticed subtle customizations. A girl with metallic skin had added matching silver cufflinks. A boy whose hair constantly changed colors wore socks that did the same. These small expressions of individuality only emphasized how trapped Ethan felt in her new form.
The Introduction to Superpowers classroom resembled a small lecture hall, with gently sloping rows of seats facing a central demonstration area. Ethan and Jordan found spots in the middle row, neither wanting to appear too eager nor too disinterested.
Their instructor entered with purposeful strides. She had a professional yet approachable presence, dressed in tailored slacks and a stylish blazer in muted blues. Her dark hair was cut in a sophisticated bob with subtle silver streaks, and she wore a vintage-looking pin with the Whateley crest on her lapel. Her intelligent eyes carried warmth behind their analytical gaze as she scanned the classroom, taking measure of each student. Once the classroom filled, she began without preamble.
"Welcome to Introduction to Superpowers, the foundation of your education at Whateley Academy. I am Dr. Amanda Hewley, and I'll be guiding you through the classification and understanding of preternatural abilities." Her voice carried effortlessly through the room. "Before we begin cataloging power types, I want to emphasize one crucial point: powers are extensions of the self, not separate entities."
Ethan shifted uncomfortably in her seat. Her powers felt precisely like separate entities—unwelcome intruders that had hijacked her life.
Dr. Hewley continued, "Today, we'll overview the major power classifications. In future sessions, you'll undergo detailed assessment to determine your specific category and sub-types."
For the next hour, she outlined a complex taxonomy of mutant abilities: Energizers, Exemplars, Warpers, Wizards, Psychics, Manifestors, Shifters, and more. Ethan tried to focus, but her mind kept drifting to her own situation. According to Dr. Hewley's descriptions, she was primarily a Warper with spatial manipulation abilities—teleportation specifically—but the added martial arts skills suggested something more complex.
When Dr. Hewley began discussing "power integration" and "alignment with self-concept," Ethan's attention snapped back to the lecture.
"—which is why resistance to one's abilities often creates increased instability. The mind and body seek harmony. When we reject aspects of ourselves, particularly powerset manifestations, we create conditions for unpredictable outcomes."
Ethan felt as if Dr. Hewley was speaking directly to her. Was her resistance making her powers worse? The thought was disturbing—it suggested accepting this new form as a prerequisite for control.
After class, as students filed out, Dr. Hewley called out, "Ms. Anderson, a moment please."
Ethan froze, then turned back. Jordan gave her a questioning look, but she waved him ahead. "I'll catch up."
When the room had emptied, Dr. Hewley approached. "Your file indicates spatial warping with control issues. I noticed you seemed particularly interested in the section on integration conflicts."
"I—I was just paying attention," Ethan said defensively.
Dr. Hewley smiled slightly. "You're far from the first student to struggle with reconciling identity and abilities, Ms. Anderson. Especially given your... unique circumstances."
"You know about that?" Ethan felt her face heat up.
"I review all incoming student files, particularly those with unusual manifestation patterns. Your case is certainly distinctive, but not entirely unprecedented."
"There are others like me?" Hope flickered briefly.
"Not exactly like you, no. But transformation-related manifestations occur with some regularity. I've scheduled you for comprehensive powers testing this afternoon." She handed Ethan a slip with room information. "The results will help tailor your education plan."
Ethan took the paper, uncertain whether to feel reassured or more anxious. "Thank you."
"One more thing," Dr. Hewley added as Ethan turned to leave. "Given your teleportation incidents, you might consider requesting a medical exemption for physical education classes until you gain better control."
"I'll think about it," Ethan replied, though the suggestion of hiding away made her bristle slightly. She'd spent enough time feeling trapped already.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Powers Testing Laboratory occupied a secure section of Kane Hall, accessible only through biometric scanners and reinforced doors. Ethan arrived five minutes early, clutching Dr. Hewley's referral note and fighting escalating nervousness.
The waiting area contained several other new students, each eyeing the others with varying degrees of curiosity or wariness. Ethan recognized a few faces from her morning class but didn't attempt conversation. She was too preoccupied with what might happen if her powers acted up during testing.
A young woman with slate-gray hair and a tablet approached. "Ethan Anderson?"
"That's me," Ethan replied, standing.
"I'm Paige Donner, testing assistant. This way, please."
Paige led her through another set of security doors into a large chamber filled with various equipment stations. Several white-coated technicians moved between monitoring devices, while in the center stood a circular platform surrounded by what appeared to be sensors or scanners.
"We'll begin with baseline readings," Paige explained. "Please stand on the central platform and remain still during the scan."
Ethan stepped onto the indicated spot, trying to ignore the fluttering anxiety in her stomach. The platform hummed beneath her feet, and she felt a tingling sensation as unseen energies passed through her body.
"Excellent. Now for the interactive assessment," Paige continued after a minute. "We've assembled various objects for you to attempt manipulating with your abilities. We understand you've experienced incidents of teleportation?"
"That's one way to put it," Ethan muttered.
A technician wheeled over a cart containing items of varying sizes: a pencil, a rubber ball, a book, and what appeared to be a small potted plant.
"We'll start with the pencil," Paige instructed. "Try to focus on moving it from the cart to that table across the room."
Ethan stared at the pencil, unsure how to consciously trigger an ability that had thus far only manifested accidentally. "I don't actually know how to do this on purpose."
"That's perfectly normal," Paige assured her. "Many new students haven't developed conscious control. Just focus on the pencil, visualize it moving to the table, and reach toward it with your mind."
Feeling slightly ridiculous, Ethan concentrated on the pencil. Nothing happened.
"Try closing your eyes," suggested an older technician who had wandered over. "Sometimes visual distractions interfere with initial control attempts."
Ethan closed her eyes, picturing the pencil clearly in her mind, then imagining it appearing on the distant table. Still nothing.
After several more failed attempts with different approaches, Paige made notes on her tablet. "Let's try something else. Sometimes emotional states trigger manifestations. Can you recall what you were feeling during previous teleportation incidents?"
Ethan thought back to the hallway incident with Kira, and the cafeteria moment with Rex. "Mostly embarrassment. Or surprise. Maybe stress?"
"Interesting. Let's try—"
A loud bang from across the lab made Ethan jump. One of the monitors had sparked and shut down, and a technician was hastily unplugging it.
The startled reaction triggered something in Ethan. She felt the familiar tingling sensation spread through her body, but this time it concentrated in her hand rather than enveloping her entirely. Before she could process what was happening, the rubber ball from the cart vanished with a soft pop sound, immediately reappearing ten feet away on a desk.
"There!" Paige exclaimed, eyes lighting up. "Excellent work!"
"I didn't do that on purpose," Ethan protested.
"But you did do it," the older technician pointed out. "Your subconscious recognized the pattern from previous manifestations and directed the energy more specifically this time. That's progress."
Over the next hour, they continued experiments with mixed results. Ethan managed to teleport the pencil intentionally after several attempts, but larger objects proved more challenging. The potted plant stubbornly refused to move, while a coffee mug unexpectedly vanished and rematerialized upside-down, spilling its contents.
Toward the end of the session, another student was brought in to observe—a girl with distinctive blonde hair streaked with pink. Ethan froze when she recognized Kira, whose expression shifted from boredom to alarm upon seeing Ethan.
"Why is she here?" Ethan demanded, feeling her anxiety spike.
"Ms. Devereux assists with shifter assessments," Paige explained. "She's here for the next student, but since you've demonstrated spatial manipulation, we thought her observational input might be valuable."
"I'd rather she didn't—" Ethan began, but she felt the tingling sensation returning, stronger this time. "Oh no."
"What's happening?" Paige asked, moving forward.
"I think I'm going to—" Ethan didn't finish the sentence. The table in front of her, complete with testing apparatus, vanished with a much louder pop than before. It reappeared moments later, floating briefly near the ceiling before crashing to the floor.
The noise and commotion brought additional staff running. Amid the chaos, Ethan caught Kira's eye. The shapeshifter wasn't smirking as expected, but watching with an oddly contemplative expression. When she noticed Ethan looking, Kira quickly averted her gaze.
"I think that's enough for today," the lead technician announced, helping a shaken assistant pick up scattered equipment. "Ms. Anderson, we'll continue assessment another time. You should rest—power manifestations can be physically draining."
As Ethan gathered her things to leave, Paige handed her a white wristband with "PACIFIST" printed in bold red letters. "Standard procedure for students with uncontrolled abilities that could affect others. It lets security and staff know to approach with appropriate caution."
Ethan stared at the band. "Great. A warning label."
"It's for your protection as much as others'," Paige explained. "And it's temporary—once you demonstrate consistent control, you'll be reclassified."
Ethan slipped the band onto her wrist, feeling branded. As she headed for the exit, Kira stepped into her path.
"Nice job with the table," she said, her tone dripping with sarcasm. "Is there anything else you'd like to send flying around the room? Maybe the ceiling next time?"
"Didn't mean to do it," Ethan replied stiffly.
"That's kind of the problem, isn't it?" Kira's ears twitched slightly—not fully shifting to fox form, but betraying some emotional response she was trying to suppress. "You're a walking disaster zone. Do you have any idea how dangerous uncontrolled warping is? Or is property damage just your hobby?"
"Thanks for the lecture," Ethan said, stepping around her. "I'll add it to the pile of things I didn't ask for."
Kira's amber eyes narrowed. "Just stay away from me, teleport freak. I don't want to end up as your next accident." Despite the harshness of her words, something flashed behind her eyes that didn't quite match her tone. She moved aside with a huff, ears still twitching faintly.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The final assessment of the day was with Sensei Ito in Laird Hall's martial arts complex. After the teleportation incident in the testing lab, Ethan approached this evaluation with even more trepidation. The last thing she needed was to accidentally teleport equipment—or worse, people—during combat practice.
Sensei Ito was a compact, stern-faced Japanese man with a penetrating gaze that seemed to strip away pretenses. He greeted Ethan with a formal bow, which she awkwardly returned.
"Anderson-san. I see you have been designated Pacifist." He nodded toward her wristband.
"It wasn't my choice," Ethan said.
"Few things in life are." He gestured to the training mat. "Show me your stance."
"I don't really have one. I've never trained in martial arts."
Sensei Ito's expression remained neutral. "Assume a defensive position as best you can."
Feeling foolish, Ethan adopted what she thought might be a fighting stance. To her surprise, her body moved with unexpected fluidity, settling into a balanced posture she didn't consciously recognize.
Sensei Ito circled her slowly. "Interesting. Your stance suggests training, despite your claim."
"I'm just trying to copy what I've seen in movies," Ethan explained.
"Is that so?" Sensei Ito said, his face revealing nothing. "Let us test your reflexes then."
Without warning, he made a swift strike toward her face, stopping just short of contact.
Ethan's body reacted before her mind registered the movement. She deflected his hand with her forearm and pivoted away, assuming a new stance that she had no conscious knowledge of.
Shock registered on her face. "How did I do that?"
"As I suspected." Sensei Ito nodded. "Your transformation appears more comprehensive than even you realized. Your file mentions you were changed through a device based on an anime character. It seems certain skills transferred along with the physical form."
"That's impossible," Ethan protested, staring at her hands in disbelief. "Skills are learned, not... downloaded."
"And yet," Sensei Ito gestured to her perfect defensive posture, "your body knows movements your mind does not."
For the next thirty minutes, he put Ethan through a series of exercises designed to test the limits of these inexplicable abilities. To her growing amazement, her body responded with techniques she couldn't name but executed with practiced precision. Complex movements, blocks, kicks, and evasions came naturally, though she couldn't explain how she knew them.
"Your situation is unusual but not without precedent," Sensei Ito explained as they concluded. "Some Warpers manifest abilities that draw from parallel realities or conceptual spaces. Your transformation appears to have created a connection to the skill set of the character that inspired your new form."
"So I didn't just get turned into a girl," Ethan said bitterly. "I'm turning into someone else completely."
"Not necessarily. The skills are there, but how you use them remains your choice." Sensei Ito made a note on his tablet. "I'm recommending you for Basic Combat class despite your advanced physical abilities. Without mental training to complement your instinctual knowledge, you risk developing erratic patterns."
"Does that mean I can skip the Pacifist restriction?" Ethan asked hopefully.
"No. That designation concerns your warping abilities, not your combat skills." Sensei Ito handed her a class schedule. "Basic Combat meets three times weekly. I expect punctuality and dedication, regardless of your unusual circumstances."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
That evening, Ethan sat alone in a quiet corner of the Crystal Hall cafeteria, picking at her dinner while reviewing the day's events. The testing had confirmed she was primarily a Warper with uncontrolled spatial manipulation, but the martial arts revelation had thrown her completely. She'd never studied fighting techniques in her life, yet her body had responded to Sensei Ito's tests with practiced precision. What else might be lurking beneath the surface, waiting to emerge? The thought that Jordan's machine had altered more than just her appearance was deeply unsettling. Was she slowly becoming someone—or something—else entirely?
The white "Pacifist" band with its glaring red letters felt like a brand on her wrist, marking her as dangerous and unstable. At least she'd managed to teleport smaller objects intentionally. Small victories, she supposed, though it hardly balanced out the table-launching incident.
She was jarred from her thoughts when she noticed a student from her Powers Theory class approaching with a tray. He was athletic and energetic-looking, with short, styled black hair and an easy confidence in his movements. He wore the standard uniform, but there was something distinctly casual about how he carried himself despite the formal attire.
"Mind if I join you?" he asked, gesturing to the empty chairs at her table, a friendly smile lighting up his face.
Ethan hesitated, then nodded. She'd been avoiding social interaction all day, but isolation wasn't helping her mental state.
"I'm Jasper Chen," he said, setting down his tray with a fluid motion that spoke of athletic training. "But most people call me Jace. You're Ethan, right? I saw what happened in testing today."
"Great. Is everyone talking about it?" Ethan stabbed at her pasta.
"Not everyone. Just those of us who were there." Jace seemed unfazed by her curtness, his outgoing nature apparently immune to social awkwardness. "For what it's worth, I think it's cool you can teleport things. My power is way less impressive—I just absorb kinetic energy from impacts."
"That sounds useful," Ethan said. "Better than randomly sending stuff flying around the room."
"Maybe. But I had to break three ribs and my collarbone before I figured out how it worked," Jace replied, rolling his shoulder at the memory. "Powers are weird that way. They never seem to come with an instruction manual."
Despite herself, Ethan smiled slightly. "No kidding."
Another student approached—a girl with dark curly hair and piercing green eyes. "Is this the new student corner?" she asked, her voice carrying a faint accent Ethan couldn't place.
"Apparently," Jace replied, gesturing welcomingly. "I'm Jace, this is Ethan."
"Elara," the girl introduced herself, sitting down. "I'm in your Powers Theory class too."
As they ate, the conversation flowed more easily than Ethan expected. Neither Jace nor Elara pressed her about her powers or background, instead sharing their own experiences as new students. Jace described growing up in the foster system and discovering his abilities during a street fight. Elara spoke of her family's history with secret societies and her chronometry powers—the ability to manipulate time on a small scale.
"So you can see the future?" Ethan asked, intrigued despite herself.
"Not exactly," Elara explained. "I can accelerate or slow time in localized areas, but only for seconds. And I get these... time glitches when I'm stressed. Sometimes I see brief flashes of potential outcomes, but they're unreliable."
By the time they finished eating, Ethan felt marginally better about her situation. At least she wasn't alone in navigating unfamiliar abilities. As imperfect as Whateley might be, it offered something her previous life couldn't: context for what was happening to her.
Walking back to Melville, Ethan spotted a familiar figure in the courtyard—Jordan, deep in conversation with another student Ethan didn't recognize. The student was gesturing enthusiastically while Jordan nodded, looking more animated than Ethan had seen him since they arrived.
Ethan changed direction, approaching them. "Hey."
Jordan looked up, startled. "Ethan! I was going to come find you after dinner. This is Zephyr Dubois—he's in the art program."
The lanky student with unruly brown hair nodded at Ethan, his sweater bearing faint paint splatters despite the uniform requirements. "Call me Zeph. Jordan was just telling me about his inventions. Sounds fascinating."
"I'm still settling in," Ethan replied cautiously.
"How was testing?" Jordan asked.
"Fine," Ethan replied flatly. "I got labeled a Pacifist. Apparently teleporting tables is frowned upon."
"You can teleport things?" Zeph asked, his tired eyes lighting up with creative interest. "That's amazing! I just manipulate air currents. Mostly for artistic effects—patterns, swirls, that kind of thing."
"We should probably head back to the dorm," Jordan suggested, noticing Ethan's exhaustion. "It's getting late."
"Sure," Zeph said easily. "See you around. Maybe at the next study group?"
As he walked away, Ethan raised an eyebrow at Jordan. "Making friends already?"
"He overheard me talking about devisor theory in the library," Jordan explained. "He's pretty cool. Has these air manipulation powers he uses for art."
"Fascinating," Ethan said dryly. "Meanwhile, I spent my day being poked, prodded, and labeled dangerous."
Jordan's expression sobered. "I heard about the testing incident. Are you okay?"
"I'm fine. Just tired." Ethan sighed. "And confused. Apparently, this transformation goes deeper than we thought. I've somehow inherited martial arts skills from the character your machine based me on."
"That's... wow." Jordan looked genuinely surprised. "I didn't program anything like that into the QIR."
"Well, something happened," Ethan said. "Sensei Ito says my body remembers skills my mind never learned. He called it a 'quantum personality overlay'—whatever that means."
Jordan's expression shifted to one of intense concentration—his inventor face, as Ethan had come to call it. "That could explain a lot. Maybe the transformation isn't just physical but extends to certain mental patterns or muscle memory. If the QIR somehow accessed information about the character beyond just appearance—"
"I don't want to talk about this right now," Ethan interrupted. "I'm exhausted, and tomorrow isn't going to be any easier."
"Right, sorry." Jordan stepped back. "Get some rest. We can figure this out, Ethan. I promise."
As Jordan walked away, Ethan stood alone in the gathering dusk, feeling the weight of the white band on her wrist, its red letters seeming to glow accusingly in the fading light. Her first day at Whateley had confirmed what she feared most: her transformation went beyond skin deep. Whatever Jordan's machine had done to her, it was rewriting her from the inside out.
The question now was whether anything of her original self would remain when the process was complete—and whether she'd even notice when it was gone.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
End of Chapter 02
Hey All!
SO, this is 2 big things for me.
My First attempt at the wonderful Whateley Academy Universe!
AND
My First Contest Entry!
There will be 10 chapters in total for my entry plus 3 flashback chapters.
I will release them daily or so (so as not to overwhelm the front page)
Likely I will be continuing this series, and no my other series are not on pause. I did slow down on them just a little bit while I go this one pounded out. But they are not put to the side.
https://discord.gg/NYjPU3auVy
Join Me and some other people to talk shop, discuss artwork, stories, chatter, or just share fun videos or memes!
If you want future chapters ahead of my posted works support me on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/c/alyssnancyonymous
Also, feel free to PM me if you have any questions or wanna comment.
TTFN Everyone.
The bedroom door slammed with such force that the framed diploma on the wall tilted sideways. Ethan didn't bother to fix it. She collapsed onto her bed, staring at the ceiling she'd gazed at for the past seventeen years of her life. The same ceiling, the same room, but everything else had changed.
More than a day had passed since Jordan's machine had transformed her. She had spent it hiding in Jordan's basement, watching his increasingly desperate attempts to reverse the transformation. Ethan had needed to get away, to be surrounded by something familiar, something that still felt like her old self. So when Jordan had suggested they take a break and reconvene tomorrow, Ethan had seized the opportunity to return home.
"You sure you'll be okay?" Jordan had asked as they stood at the corner of Ethan's street. "My dad won't be back until tomorrow evening, but you could still stay with me."
"I just need some time alone," Ethan had replied. "In my own space."
She'd managed to get into the house while her parents were at their weekly church meeting. The plan was simple: hide in her room, pretend to be sick if they knocked, and figure out next steps after some time to think.
The sound of the front door opening downstairs sent a jolt through her. Voices drifted up—her parents returning earlier than expected. Ethan froze, listening to their movements. The refrigerator door opening and closing. Footsteps on the stairs.
A knock at her bedroom door. "Ethan? Are you home?" Her mother's voice.
"Yeah, Mom," she called back, trying to deepen her voice and failing miserably. "Not feeling well. Think I'm coming down with something."
A pause. "You sound strange. Let me in."
"It's just a sore throat. I'm really tired—"
"Ethan Ryan Anderson, open this door right now."
Panic rising, Ethan scrambled for options. There were none. With trembling hands, she opened the door.
Her mother's expression shifted from concern to confusion to shock in the span of three seconds. "Who are you?" she demanded, stepping back. "Where's my son?"
"Mom, it's me," Ethan said, hating how high her voice sounded. "I can explain."
Her mother's face drained of color. "John!" she called downstairs. "John, come up here right now!"
What followed was twenty minutes of chaos. Her father's stunned disbelief. Her mother's accusations that this was some kind of trick. Ethan's fumbling attempts to explain about Jordan's machine, about the transformation, about the small objects that occasionally disappeared and reappeared when she got upset.
"Demons," her father finally said, his voice cold and certain. "This is demonic."
"It's not demons, Dad. It's technology. Or mutation. I think I might be—"
"A mutant," her mother cut in, her voice barely above a whisper. "One of those... things they warn about at church."
"What do you mean?"
"The government has been experimenting with this... with these abominations for years," her father said. "We've heard the sermons. Read the pamphlets."
Ethan stared at them in disbelief. "You can't seriously believe that."
"I believe my son has been corrupted," her father replied, his expression hardening. "By what, I'm not entirely sure. But whatever you are, you're not staying in this house."
"Dad, it's still me. I'm still your kid."
"My son wouldn't allow himself to be turned into..." he gestured vaguely at Ethan's body, unable to even articulate what he was seeing. "This is unnatural. Against God's will."
Ethan felt something crack inside her chest. Not a dramatic shattering, but a small, painful fissure. "So that's it? You're kicking me out?"
"You have one hour to pack your things," her father said, not meeting her eyes. "Only because I believe somewhere inside that... form... is my son. Otherwise, I would be calling the authorities."
"John," her mother began, uncertainty crossing her face.
"No, Margaret. We've discussed this. We know what to do if something like this happened."
"You've discussed what to do if I got turned into a girl?" Ethan asked incredulously.
"If you became one of them," her father corrected. "A mutant. Or whatever this is."
The small crack widened. Ethan had always known her parents were religious, conservative even, but this level of preparedness for rejecting their own child had never crossed her mind.
"Fine," she said, fighting to keep her voice steady. "I'll go."
Her mother stepped forward hesitantly. "Where will you go?"
"Jordan's, I guess. His father works for the Department of Paranormal Affairs. He might know what to do."
Her father's face darkened further. "Williams. I should have known. Working for that government agency that handles all those mutant freaks. No wonder his son is mixed up in this."
Ethan began grabbing clothes from her dresser, though most wouldn't fit her new form properly. She stuffed them into a duffel bag along with her laptop, phone charger, and the few mementos she couldn't bear to leave behind.
Neither parent offered to help. They stood in the doorway watching, as if afraid to enter the same space she occupied. When Ethan finished packing, she faced them one last time.
"I didn't ask for this," she said quietly. "I didn't want it. But I'm still me."
Her father's expression didn't soften. "The son I raised would have fought against this corruption, not embraced it."
"Embraced it?" Ethan's voice rose despite her efforts to stay calm. "You think I wanted this? That I chose this?"
"Everyone has choices," her father replied. "And you've made yours."
The words hung in the air between them, a final judgment. Ethan shouldered her bag and walked past them, down the stairs that had once felt like home, and out the front door. She didn't look back.
Night was falling as she walked the eight blocks to Jordan's house, the weight of the bag nothing compared to the heaviness in her chest. The crack had spread, but instead of collapse, Ethan felt a strange numbness setting in. It was almost a relief.
Jordan's father arrived home the following evening, a tall man with a serious expression and the same dark skin as his son. Ethan had spent the intervening twenty-four hours alternating between hiding in Jordan's basement room and helping him attempt to recreate aspects of the machine that had transformed her. Jordan had been uncharacteristically quiet, guilt evident in his every interaction.
William Williams—a name that had always struck Ethan as redundant—sat across from them at the kitchen table, his government ID badge still clipped to his suit jacket pocket. His face remained impassive as they explained what had happened, though his eyes widened slightly at the mention of the teleportation incidents.
"Let me get this straight," he said when they finished. "Jordan built a machine to create a girlfriend—"
"Not exactly—" Jordan began.
"—which instead transformed Ethan into a female form with some sort of teleporting abilities."
"That's the short version," Ethan confirmed.
Mr. Williams pinched the bridge of his nose. "And your parents kicked you out?"
Ethan nodded, the wound still fresh enough that she didn't trust herself to speak about it.
"I see." He was quiet for a moment. "Jordan, what you did was incredibly reckless. The implications alone... do you have any idea what kind of attention this could bring?"
Jordan stared at the table. "I'm sorry, Dad. I didn't think it would work like this."
"That's the problem, isn't it? You didn't think." He sighed heavily. "But what's done is done."
He glanced at his DPA badge and purposefully removed it, placing it face-down on the table. His voice lowered. "The first thing we need to do is make sure this stays quiet. The DPA would classify both of you as persons of interest immediately. Jordan for creating the device, you for the transformation and these teleportation manifestations."
"Is that bad?" Ethan asked.
"It could be," Mr. Williams said grimly. "The political climate around mutants has been deteriorating. Registration would be mandatory, and there would likely be testing, monitoring. They might even separate you for what they'd call 'specialized assessment.' The DPA isn't what it used to be."
Jordan looked up in alarm. "But you work for them—"
"Which is exactly why I know what they're capable of," his father cut in. "There are good people there, but the organization as a whole views new manifestations as potential threats first, people second."
"So what do we do now?" Ethan asked, hope cautiously rising. "Can you help change me back?"
Mr. Williams studied her carefully. "The DPA has resources, but nothing that could safely reverse this kind of transformation without understanding exactly how it happened. And since Jordan's machine was damaged in the process..."
"So I'm stuck like this?" The numbness that had protected Ethan began to crack, panic seeping through.
"For now," Mr. Williams said. "But I know people who might be able to help. Specialists in these matters, outside the government."
"What kind of specialists?"
"There's a school," he explained. "Whateley Academy. It's designed for young people with... unusual abilities. Like yours."
Ethan exchanged a glance with Jordan. "A school for freaks, you mean."
"A school for mutants and others with paranormal traits," Mr. Williams corrected. "They have the world's leading experts in powers research, including transformation cases."
"And they might be able to change me back?"
"It's possible. At the very least, they can help you understand and control these new abilities." He leaned forward. "Ethan, I know this isn't what you wanted. But Whateley is your best option right now."
"What about Jordan?" Ethan asked, suddenly realizing the implications. "He made the machine. He has abilities too."
Mr. Williams looked at his son. "Yes, I suspected as much. I think Jordan should go as well."
"To the same school?" Jordan asked, perking up slightly.
"Yes. I'll need to make some calls tonight. I have a few contacts who might be able to help expedite admissions, off the books." He rubbed his temples. "It won't be easy, but it's better than the alternative. The DPA would never let either of you attend—they'd want to study you themselves."
"How soon could we go?" Ethan asked.
"As soon as I can arrange it. A week, maybe two. The sooner the better. These things tend to... escalate without proper guidance." Mr. Williams stood, straightening his tie. "I'll need to make some calls now. In the meantime, Ethan, you're welcome to stay here until we figure things out."
As he left the room, Ethan and Jordan sat in stunned silence.
"Whateley Academy," Jordan finally said. "I've never heard of it."
"Me neither." Ethan's mind raced with questions and fears. "What if they can't change me back?"
Jordan hesitated. "Would it be so terrible? I mean, if you had to stay like this?"
Ethan shot him a sharp look. "Yes, it would. This isn't me, Jordan. This isn't who I am."
"I know, I'm sorry." Jordan looked genuinely contrite. "I just... I want you to be prepared for all possibilities."
Ethan leaned back in her chair, exhaustion washing over her. She'd lost her home, her parents, and potentially her identity in the span of a few days. Now she was being shipped off to some mysterious school for "people like her"—a category she'd never imagined belonging to.
"One week," she said, more to herself than to Jordan. "One week, and then everything changes again."
But everything had already changed. Ethan could feel it in the way her body moved, in the occasional tingling sensation that preceded objects vanishing, in the reflection that still startled her every time she passed a mirror. The question wasn't whether things would change, but whether she could ever get back what she'd lost.
If there were answers to be found, they waited at Whateley Academy. It wasn't much to hold onto, but for now, it would have to be enough.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
End of Chapter 02.5
Hey All!
SO, this is 2 big things for me.
My First attempt at the wonderful Whateley Academy Universe!
AND
My First Contest Entry!
There will be 10 chapters in total for my entry plus 3 flashback chapters.
I will release them daily or so (so as not to overwhelm the front page)
Likely I will be continuing this series, and no my other series are not on pause. I did slow down on them just a little bit while I go this one pounded out. But they are not put to the side.
https://discord.gg/NYjPU3auVy
Join Me and some other people to talk shop, discuss artwork, stories, chatter, or just share fun videos or memes!
If you want future chapters ahead of my posted works support me on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/c/alyssnancyonymous
Also, feel free to PM me if you have any questions or wanna comment.
TTFN Everyone.
Ethan sat alone at a corner table in Crystal Hall, pushing her food around her plate without much enthusiasm. The massive geodesic dome cafeteria buzzed with lunchtime activity, students of all descriptions moving between the various food stations and tables. Sunlight streamed through the transparent panels, illuminating the central fountain and tropical arboretum that gave the space its distinctive character.
She tugged self-consciously at the sleeve of her black dress jacket, still uncomfortable with how the uniform fit her new form. The black pleated skirt felt particularly alien, constantly reminding her of her transformed state. The white "Pacifist" band with its bold red lettering encircling her wrist stood out starkly against her pale skin, marking her as someone who should avoid conflict.
"Mind if we join you?"
Ethan looked up to see Jasper and a girl she didn't recognize standing beside her table, each carrying a tray of food. Jasper looked as athletic and energetic as ever, his athletic build and confident posture unmistakable even in the standard uniform. The girl beside him had a striking, disciplined demeanor—pale skin, short dark hair, and intense blue eyes that seemed to assess everything with military precision. Her uniform was worn with perfect regulation correctness, not a wrinkle or fold out of place.
"I guess," Ethan replied with a shrug.
Jasper slid into the seat across from her. "Ethan, this is Anya Volkov. She was in our Powers Theory class yesterday."
Anya nodded curtly as she sat down, her movements efficient and controlled. "You're the warper, correct? The one who teleported the testing apparatus."
"That would be me," Ethan confirmed, her voice flat. "The walking disaster zone."
"Abilities are only a disaster when poorly understood," Anya replied matter-of-factly. "I have osteokinesis—bone manipulation. When my powers first manifested, I shattered my left wrist and forearm trying to extend bone spikes."
Jasper grinned. "See? Everyone starts somewhere. My kinetic absorption took forever to control."
Ethan found an unexpected appreciation for her tablemates' matter-of-fact attitudes toward their powers. Unlike the counselors and teachers who approached everything with clinical interest, Jasper and Anya simply accepted powers as part of life—difficult, sometimes dangerous, but ultimately manageable.
Before they could delve deeper into their conversation, a shadow fell across their table.
A tall, imposing student had approached, carrying himself with the easy confidence of someone accustomed to deference. His uniform, though identical to every other male student's, somehow looked more expensive on his athletic frame. His dark hair was expertly styled, and his features had the chiseled quality of a classic statue—handsome in a way that suggested he knew it all too well.
"Well, well," he said, his voice carrying a hint of practiced charm. "You must be the new girl everyone's talking about." His eyes moved over Ethan with an appraising gaze that made her skin crawl.
"Not interested in talking," Ethan muttered, looking away.
The boy either didn't hear or chose to ignore her response. He leaned closer, resting his hands on the table. "I'm Rex Harding. I thought I'd come over and personally welcome you to Whateley." His smile was practiced, revealing perfect teeth. "Maybe I could show you around campus sometime? There are some... private spots worth knowing about."
Jasper shifted in his seat. "She's got a white band, Rex. Probably not the best person to harass."
Rex's eyes flickered to the "Pacifist" band on Ethan's wrist, but his smile didn't waver. "Oh, a submissive one? Even better. I like girls who know how to follow directions." His tone turned even more condescending. "Don't worry, I'll be gentle with you."
A wave of discomfort washed over Ethan, followed by the now-familiar tingling sensation that preceded her teleportation incidents. She tried to employ the breathing techniques Professor Reynard had taught her, but Rex's continued presence made it difficult to focus.
"Please leave," Ethan said, her voice strained with the effort of maintaining control.
"Come on, don't be like that," Rex persisted, reaching toward Ethan's arm. "I'm just being friendly."
The tingling intensified, spreading throughout Ethan's body. She could feel her power building, responding to her discomfort and anxiety.
"Rex, seriously, back off," Jasper warned, his expression growing concerned as he noticed Ethan's distress.
It was too late. Just as Rex's fingers brushed against Ethan's sleeve, there was a soft but distinct pop sound, and Rex vanished completely. Only his shirt remained, floating momentarily in the air before drifting to the floor where he had stood.
The cafeteria fell silent as students turned to stare at the floating shirt and then back at Ethan, whose face had gone pale with shock.
"I didn't mean to—" Ethan started, panic rising in her voice.
Anya placed a calming hand on Ethan's arm. "Breathe. Focus on stabilizing your energy now."
After a moment of stunned silence, worried murmurs began to spread through the cafeteria. Where had Rex gone? Was he hurt? A staff member from the cafeteria was already moving toward their table, his expression concerned.
"I could be confined to my room for this," Ethan muttered. "Or worse, expelled."
"I doubt it," Jasper said, a hint of amusement in his voice. "He was being a jerk. Maybe a little teleportation will teach him some manners."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Kira Devereux watched the entire scene unfold with a mixture of fascination and alarm from her position at the far side of the cafeteria. She had been keeping one eye on the new warper girl since their first uncomfortable encounter, though she would never admit to anyone that she found Ethan intriguing.
When Rex Harding had approached Ethan's table, Kira had initially rolled her eyes—Rex's predatory attention toward new female students was well-known. But when the boy had suddenly vanished with that distinctive pop sound, leaving only his shirt behind, Kira felt a jolt of both concern and something else she didn't want to acknowledge.
She rose from her seat almost without thinking, drawn toward Ethan's table as the cafeteria staff moved in the same direction. The cafeteria was buzzing with shocked whispers and speculation, but Kira tuned it all out, focused entirely on the red-haired girl who looked pale with shock.
As she approached, Kira felt the familiar, unwelcome sensation of her shapeshifting beginning to manifest. It started as it always did—a slight prickling at the tips of her ears, then along the backs of her forearms. She concentrated on maintaining control, but her agitation made it difficult.
Before Ethan could respond to Jasper, the cafeteria staff member reached their table. "Ms. Anderson, you need to come with me to the administration building. The incident needs to be reported."
Ethan gathered her things with a sigh of resignation. As she stood to follow the staff member, Jasper gave her an encouraging nod. "Don't worry. It'll be fine."
"Try not to teleport the security chief," Kira called after her, though her tone lacked its usual edge.
Ethan glanced back, surprised to see Kira standing nearby, arms crossed tightly to hide the fur threatening to appear. Their eyes met briefly before Ethan turned away to follow the staff member out of the cafeteria.
"So, you just randomly teleported another student?" Kira asked, intercepting Ethan before she could leave, her arms crossed tightly to hide the fur threatening to appear. "That's not exactly normal, even for this place."
"It wasn't on purpose," Ethan replied defensively, those striking sapphire blue eyes flashing with frustration. "I can't control these powers yet."
"Wow, that's comforting," Kira said sarcastically, struggling to maintain her typical aloof demeanor even as she felt her ears beginning to shift. "A walking, teleporting liability who can randomly send people flying who knows where."
Her eyes flicked involuntarily to Ethan's chest, and she noticed something that gave her an opportunity to deflect from her own discomfort. "And by the way, if you're going to walk around without wearing a bra, don't act surprised when guys like Rex come sniffing around. You're practically flaunting yourself."
She regretted the words as soon as they left her mouth—especially when Ethan's face flushed crimson and her arms crossed protectively over her chest. Kira knew better than most how difficult it was to adjust to body changes you didn't ask for. But lashing out was easier than admitting any kind of understanding or, worse, attraction.
"I'm not flaunting anything," Ethan hissed, obvious humiliation burning through her voice. "I'm just trying to get through the day."
Despite her harsh words, Kira found herself studying Ethan more carefully than she intended. There was something about the way Ethan carried herself—a mixture of vulnerability and defiance that Kira found oddly compelling. She caught herself staring and quickly reinforced her dismissive expression.
"I told you, I can't control it yet," Ethan emphasized. "What part of 'uncontrolled warper powers' is confusing to you?"
"The part where you're allowed to wander around campus like a teleportation time bomb," Kira retorted, but even she could hear the reduced bite in her own voice. She was making a conscious effort to control her shapeshifting, tension visible in her shoulders and jaw as she fought to keep her ears from fully transforming.
Jasper looked between them with undisguised interest. "You two know each other?"
"Unfortunately," Kira muttered, at the same moment Ethan said, "We've met."
Anya observed Kira with clinical detachment. "Your shapeshifting is manifesting," she noted, nodding toward Kira's slightly twitching ears.
Kira shot her an irritated glance. "Mind your own business." The last thing she needed was more attention drawn to her involuntary transformations. She'd spent years learning to suppress them, and this new girl had somehow managed to trigger them multiple times in two days.
As they argued, Kira felt her control slipping further—a patch of pastel pink fur had appeared on her forearm, and her ears were definitely more pointed now. The more agitated she became, the harder it was to maintain her human appearance.
"You mean to tell me you just accidentally sent someone to who-knows-where?" she demanded, returning her attention to Ethan, determined to keep the focus off her own shifting form.
"That's exactly what happened," Ethan replied. "You of all people should understand what it's like when your body doesn't do what you want it to."
That comment struck a nerve so precisely that Kira almost gasped. Her ears twitched more visibly, and she quickly pulled her sleeve down to hide the fur patch on her arm. How dare this girl—this newcomer—turn Kira's own issues back on her?
"Not the same thing," she said tersely, fighting to keep her voice steady. "At least my... issues... don't endanger other people."
The cafeteria staff member cleared his throat impatiently. "Ms. Anderson, we really need to go now."
Kira stepped back, her face flushed with a mixture of emotions she couldn't quite name. She watched as Ethan followed the staff member out of the cafeteria, feeling strangely conflicted about their interaction.
"Try not to teleport the security chief," she called after Ethan, surprised by the lack of real hostility in her own voice.
Realizing her ears were still partially transformed, Kira headed for the nearest restroom to compose herself, wondering why this particular girl had such a strong effect on her control.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
That afternoon, Ethan sat in Introduction to Advanced Technologies, grateful that the reporting of the Rex incident had been relatively straightforward. The administration had taken her statement, recorded the details of what happened, and informed her they would be in touch once they determined next steps. No immediate punishment had been handed down, which was a relief, though she suspected this wouldn't be the end of it.
Professor Marcus Chen, a compact man with an enthusiastic demeanor and a tendency to speak with his hands, paced energetically at the front of the classroom. Unlike many of the other faculty, he wore an outfit that seemed deliberately casual—dark jeans and a button-up shirt with the sleeves rolled to the elbows, revealing forearms covered in intricate circuit-board-like tattoos that occasionally seemed to pulse with faint light.
"Advanced Technologies isn't just about understanding existing tech," Professor Chen explained, "it's about recognizing how mutant abilities push the boundaries of what's scientifically possible. The most revolutionary inventions of the past thirty years have come from collaborations between traditional scientists and those with paranormal capabilities."
Ethan found herself surprisingly engaged as Professor Chen discussed various case studies—mutants whose powers had led to technological breakthroughs, devisors whose creations defied conventional science, and gadgeteers who enhanced existing technologies in unexpected ways.
"The relationship between our minds, bodies, and the technology we create isn't as clear-cut as we once believed," Professor Chen explained, projecting a holographic model of what appeared to be neural pathways intertwined with circuit designs. "For some of you, your powers represent a bridge between human potential and technological possibility."
The class worked in small groups to analyze components of a decommissioned deviser device, theorizing about its function and design principles. The technical focus provided Ethan with a welcome distraction from the morning's events, allowing her to engage with concepts rather than emotions.
As the class ended, Professor Chen approached Ethan. "Ms. Anderson, I heard about the incident in the cafeteria. Warper abilities can be particularly challenging to calibrate. If you're interested, I have some technical papers on spatial manipulation theory that might give you a different perspective on your powers."
"Thank you," Ethan replied, surprised by the offer. "I'd appreciate that."
"Of course. Your next appointment is with Dr. Aguilar in Doyle Medical Complex, correct?" At Ethan's nod, Professor Chen smiled reassuringly. "Don't let today's events discourage you. Every student here has had moments where their powers got away from them. It's part of the learning process."
By the time Ethan reached Doyle Medical Complex for her mandatory counseling session, she felt marginally better than she had after the cafeteria incident. The academic environment of Professor Chen's class had reminded her that Whateley was, first and foremost, a school—designed to teach and support students like her, not just restrict and monitor them.
Dr. Raquel Aguilar's office was unlike anything Ethan had expected. Warm lighting, comfortable furniture, and plants created a space that felt more like a living room than an institutional office. Dr. Aguilar herself, a woman with warm brown skin and a gentle smile, greeted Ethan with a calm demeanor that immediately put her more at ease.
"Please, make yourself comfortable," Dr. Aguilar said, gesturing to several seating options—traditional chairs, a small couch, even a couple of large floor cushions. "This is your space while you're here."
Ethan chose one of the chairs, sitting somewhat stiffly. "I'm guessing you've heard about what happened in the cafeteria."
"I have," Dr. Aguilar confirmed. "But I'd like to hear your perspective on it."
Ethan recounted the incident with Rex, but this time Dr. Aguilar asked questions that went beyond the mere facts—focusing on how Ethan felt before, during, and after the teleportation occurred.
"You mentioned a tingling sensation that spreads through your body," Dr. Aguilar noted. "Is that always present before a teleportation incident?"
Ethan thought about it. "Yes, I think so. It starts small and then builds until it feels like my whole body is vibrating at a different frequency."
"That's very useful information," Dr. Aguilar said, making a note. "Physical sensations often provide the first warning signs of power activation. If you can learn to recognize that tingling at its earliest stage, you might have more time to implement grounding techniques."
They discussed various strategies for managing emotional responses and recognizing power activation cues. Dr. Aguilar seemed particularly interested in the martial arts abilities Ethan had displayed during testing.
"Sensei Ito mentioned a 'quantum personality overlay,'" Ethan said. "Do you know what that means?"
Dr. Aguilar nodded thoughtfully. "It's a theory that applies to certain transformation cases, particularly those involving external templates or models. Essentially, when your physical form was changed, some associated skills and abilities from the template were transferred as well. In your case, the martial arts proficiency of the anime character."
"So I'm turning into someone else?" Ethan asked, unable to keep the worry from her voice.
"No, not at all," Dr. Aguilar assured her. "Think of it more like acquiring a skill set. The core of who you are—your memories, values, personality—remains your own. But you now have access to abilities you didn't consciously learn."
Ethan wasn't entirely convinced, but the explanation was at least somewhat reassuring.
"I'd like you to keep a journal," Dr. Aguilar said, handing Ethan a leather-bound notebook. "Record any incidents of power manifestation, the circumstances surrounding them, and your emotional state before, during, and after. This can help us identify patterns and triggers."
They spent the rest of the session discussing coping mechanisms for gender dysphoria and strategies for navigating the social complexities of Whateley. By the time they finished, Ethan felt more centered than she had all day.
"Remember," Dr. Aguilar said as their session concluded, "your goal right now isn't to completely suppress your abilities, but to understand them. Sometimes the path to control begins with acceptance."
As Ethan returned to the Melville Cottage, she encountered Kira in the dormitory lobby. Both girls froze momentarily, surprised to see each other.
"Hey," Kira said, her tone lacking its usual edge. "How did the... security thing go?"
"Could have been worse," Ethan replied cautiously, wary of another confrontation. "They just took my statement. No punishment yet, anyway."
Kira nodded, seeming unsure how to proceed. "Look, about what I said earlier, about the..." she gestured vaguely toward Ethan's chest, clearly uncomfortable with the topic, "...that was out of line."
Ethan blinked, stunned by what almost sounded like an apology. "It's fine. I'm still figuring things out."
"Yeah, well..." Kira's attempt at reconciliation was already faltering. "Just try not to teleport anyone else, okay? It makes things complicated for everyone."
"I'm doing my best," Ethan said, a hint of defensiveness returning to her voice.
"Your 'best' is terrifying," Kira replied, but there was less bite in her tone than usual.
A student passing by glanced at them and smirked. "Lover's quarrel?" he called out teasingly.
Kira's ears instantly began to shift, points emerging as her temper flared. "Mind your own business!" she snapped at the student, who hurried away, still grinning.
"We are NOT—" Ethan began, equally flustered.
"Don't even finish that sentence," Kira cut her off, her face flushed. "This is ridiculous."
"Why does that bother you so much?" Ethan found herself asking. "The idea that someone might think we're... you know."
Kira's ears twitched more prominently. "Because it's absurd," she said, but something in her tone lacked conviction. "I barely know you. And you're... well, you're..."
"Not really a girl?" Ethan finished for her.
"That's not—" Kira stopped, clearly uncomfortable. "I mean, you look like a girl now, even if you weren't before. That's not the point."
"Then what is the point?" Ethan pressed, surprised by her own boldness.
Kira seemed to struggle with her answer. "The point is that I don't do relationships. With anyone. It's complicated enough just dealing with my own issues without adding someone else's to the mix." She glanced down at the patches of pink fur now clearly visible on her arms. "Especially someone with even less control than I have."
There was a vulnerability in that admission that caught Ethan off guard. For a brief moment, the hostility between them seemed to dissolve, replaced by a strange sense of shared understanding.
"I get that," Ethan said quietly. "Believe me, a relationship is the last thing on my mind right now."
Kira nodded, an awkward silence falling between them. "I should go. I have... homework."
"Yeah, me too," Ethan replied, though they both knew it was an excuse.
As Kira turned to leave, she hesitated, then looked back over her shoulder. "For what it's worth, I hope they find that jerk Rex soon. Whatever he is, he had it coming."
Before Ethan could respond, Kira walked away, her fox ears still visible above her blonde hair. Ethan watched her go, more confused than ever about their strange relationship. It wasn't friendship, certainly wasn't romance, but it wasn't quite the antagonism it had initially seemed either.
As she continued toward her room, Ethan mulled over the day's events. The teleportation incident with Rex. Professor Chen's class. Dr. Aguilar's counseling session. And now this bizarre almost-moment with Kira.
Each interaction, each new piece of information about her powers, added another layer to the puzzle of her new existence. The martial arts skills. The quantum personality overlay. The strange relationship developing with Kira. None of it fit neatly into the simple narrative of "find a way to change back as soon as possible" that she'd been clinging to.
Opening the journal Dr. Aguilar had given her, Ethan began to write about her day, documenting not just the teleportation incident but also her conflicted feelings about the emerging abilities and relationships that came with her new form. As she wrote, she wondered how much of herself would remain recognizable by the time she found a way to reverse the transformation—if such a way even existed.
The question that haunted her as she finally closed the journal and prepared for bed was whether anything of her original self would remain when all was said and done—and whether she'd even notice when it was gone.
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End of Chapter 03
Hey All!
SO, this is 2 big things for me.
My First attempt at the wonderful Whateley Academy Universe!
AND
My First Contest Entry!
There will be 10 chapters in total for my entry plus 3 flashback chapters.
I will release them daily or so (so as not to overwhelm the front page)
Likely I will be continuing this series, and no my other series are not on pause. I did slow down on them just a little bit while I go this one pounded out. But they are not put to the side.
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TTFN Everyone.