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The Transplant

Author: 

  • Nom de Plume

Audience Rating: 

  • General Audience (pg)

Publication: 

  • Fiction

Genre: 

  • Crossdressing

Character Age: 

  • College / Twenties

TG Themes: 

  • Reluctant
  • Proxy / Substitute / Stand-In
  • Stuck

TG Elements: 

  • Breast Feeding / Breast Pump
  • Castration / Male Chastity Devices
  • Estrogen / Hormones
  • Pregnant / Having a Baby
  • Surgery

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)

Photo B.JPG

The Transplant

© 2017 by Nom de Plume

MAN GIVES BIRTH

SAN ANTONIO: Paul Richardson, president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, stunned a packed auditorium at the society’s annual meeting when he announced that a man has given birth to his own daughter, following a womb transplant from his deceased wife. Dr. Richardson said that he knew that this procedure was feasible, since “There’s plenty of room to put a uterus in there. Men and women have the same blood vessels.” He added that although it was necessary for the baby to be delivered by Caesarian section, there were no complications, and father and daughter are doing fine. Dr. Richardson declined to provide any details about the identity of his patients.

* * *

I reread the article for the hundredth time, noting ruefully that Dr. Richardson ought to have said, “mother and daughter are doing fine.” His refusal to disclose any details about me or my baby included his decision to withhold some details which would have shocked the nation, and provided endless fodder for the supermarket tabloids. I glanced over at my infant daughter, sleeping blissfully in her crib beside my bed, and told myself that the incredible, painful journey had all been worth it. Not that I would ever have wished this on myself, or on the wonderful woman who had set it all in motion….

We were high school sweethearts, dating on and off through college, and when I asked her to marry me after I landed my first job, she didn’t hesitate. We were so in love! That first year of our marriage was the happiest time of my life, coming home every day after work to find her waiting for me in our little apartment. She worked too, but we were never too tired for sex, usually several times a night. They say that if a newlywed couple puts a penny in a piggy bank every time they make love during the first year of marriage, then takes a penny out every time they make love after that, the piggy bank will never be emptied. Sadly, we never had the opportunity to give it a proper test.

We took a short second honeymoon after our first anniversary, and I could tell that something was wrong when my wife’s behavior started to change. She complained of constant headaches, and her usual sunny disposition was frequently interrupted by periods of profound depression. When we got back home, I insisted that she make an appointment with her doctor. We both assumed that her condition was no big deal, which only made her diagnosis more of a shock: my wife was suffering from a brain tumor – glioblastoma - the worst possible news. The doctors gave her six months to live.

This wasn’t the first tragedy in my life. Both of my parents had died in a plane crash when I was in college. As their only child, I inherited a sizeable fortune, which didn’t take away the pain, but it enabled me to quit my job to devote myself full time to helping my wife cope with her illness. After studying all of the available treatment options – surgery, chemotherapy, radiation and various experimental therapies – she decided that, given the miserable side effects and the overwhelming likelihood of failure, she would prefer to live her life to the fullest for as long as possible, rather than spend the next six months shuttling between doctors and hospitals in a futile attempt to prolong the inevitable. And she wanted to have a baby, which seemed impossible until we consulted Dr. Richardson. He explained to us that we could preserve an embryo and have it implanted in vitro once a surrogate mother was identified.

The thought of bringing a baby into the world served as a kind of tonic for her, and for the next several weeks it was almost like we were back on another honeymoon. We made love constantly, and when she missed her period, and Dr. Richardson confirmed that she was pregnant, we had the embryo frozen, since the odds were that she wouldn’t live long enough to carry the baby to term. Sure enough, soon her condition began to worsen, and she began to suffer from drastic mood swings.

She was obsessed with how her baby would be brought into the world, so we scheduled a sit-down with Dr. Richardson to talk about the alternatives. It was a meeting which was to change my life forever. The doctor started by explaining that under normal circumstances, a couple would seek out a surrogate mother who would be paid to have the embryo implanted in her womb. Once she carried the baby to term, the newborn would be presented to his or her biological parents, under the terms of a detailed legal agreement which all of the parties would have to sign.

“How can we be sure that this woman won’t try to keep my baby for herself?” my wife asked.

“Well, the legal agreements are binding and specific,” the doctor assured her. “Although I have to tell you that there have been cases where surrogate mothers have tried to assert custody. And recently, a court actually ruled in favor of the surrogate. I believe this case is still under appeal.”

My wife burst into tears. “What if that happens to us? To you?” she added, looking at me with imploring eyes. “Maybe they’ll try to claim that since the baby’s mother is dead, you shouldn’t get to keep it,” she sobbed. The doctor tried to reassure her, which only intensified her despair.

“Doctor, is there any other alternative?” I asked, trying to get the discussion back on track.

His answer was not what I was looking for. “Well, there might be another way, although it hasn’t been tried before. We’ve been consulting with several transgendered women who are interested in having womb transplants.”

“How could that possibly help us?”

“Well, the same legal issues could arise, of course. Unless the surrogate was really the father. Then there could be no dispute between a biological and a birth parent, since they’d be one and the same.”

“You mean my husband could be the surrogate?” my wife asked.

“Now hold on,” the doctor said. “Your husband is not a transgendered woman.” I’m sure the horrified expression on my face told him he’d crossed a line.

But my wife wasn’t about to be discouraged. “Just because he’s not a transgendered woman, that doesn’t mean he couldn’t have my baby, does it?”

“Putting aside the medical issues, we have all sorts of legal and ethical considerations here. First, would your husband even consider such a procedure, once he realized what it entailed?” he asked, looking pointedly at me.

“What do you mean?” she asked.

The doctor sighed. “The implantation of a womb into a male body is theoretically possible, provided the proper environment has been established. Again, our research is still in the preliminary stages, but we assume that the right hormonal balance will have to be in place in order for the surgery to be successful.”

“And what would that entail,” I asked, surprising him. The doctor didn’t know how fragile my wife’s mental condition had become. The whole discussion sounded insane to me, but my wife was grasping for hope, and I had to throw her a lifeline.

The doctor seemed to sense that things were spiraling out of control. “If you’re serious about pursuing this, I think we should get together tomorrow with my research assistant. And before you leave,” he said, looking at me, “we’ll need to take a blood sample.”

* * *

That evening, my wife was almost her old self, and she let me take her out to dinner at our favorite restaurant. She put on a dress for the first time in several months, and my heart ached for her as we sat across a romantic table. Would this be the last time she’d ever be this way?

Inevitably, the conversation turned to the subject that fixated her: our baby. “Do you think we’ll have a boy or a girl?” she asked me, as if she were going to be alive to see it.

“It doesn’t matter to me,” I smiled. “As long as she looks like you, if she’s a girl I mean.”

“Aw c’mon, you’d have made a pretty girl.” It wasn’t the first time she’d said such a thing to me: I was shorter than her when she wore heels, and I scarcely outweighed her. Once, when we were in high school, she’d dressed me up in her cheerleader uniform for a Halloween party, and I was embarrassed by all the “she’s so cutes” I got from her girlfriends, and a couple of the guys too….

I tried to change the subject. “You look so pretty tonight.”

“I feel so much better after today. I hope it’s a girl!” A little cloud crossed her eyes. “I guess you’d be both the father and the mother?”
“Let’s not get ahead of ourselves! We’ll know a lot more after we talk to the doctor again tomorrow.”

“I wonder why they needed that blood test?”

I’d been wondering about that myself. “I dunno, maybe they have to find out if we’re compatible?”

“Well, I could have told them that!” She squeezed my hand. “I just want to say something. Lots of guys would have run for the hills when the doctor suggested that you might be my surrogate.” I was about to tell her that the doctor hadn’t gone quite that far, but she plowed on. “I know this cancer has been as hard on you as it has been on me, and I just want to thank you for hanging in there with me.”

My heart melted. “Baby, I’d do anything for you, you know that.” They were words which I would soon come to regret.

* * *
The next day, the doctor introduced us to his assistant, a pretty young woman named Nicole. It seemed she had spent the last year conducting laboratory experiments to determine whether a womb could be successfully transplanted into a male body. One of the key considerations was the level of estrogen and the absence of testosterone, she explained. For the womb to flourish and be capable of nourishing a fetus, female hormones were essential. I squirmed nervously as she took us through the results of my blood test. “You have normal hormones for a male,” she observed. “Unless we intervene, you would not be a candidate for surrogacy.”

“What do you mean by intervene?” my wife asked.

The doctor cleared his throat. “There are two components, neither of which your husband is likely to agree to. The first would be to put him on a rather massive dose of female hormones, as well as a testosterone blocker, to begin the transition of his body chemistry from male to female. This would have some significant results, not all of which may be reversible, ranging from the softening of his skin, the redistribution of his body fat, the weakening of his musculature and the development of female breasts.”

There was dead silence in the room. I was about to dismiss the suggestion out of hand when my wife asked softly, “And what’s the second component?”

“Well, to accelerate the process and ensure that the level of testosterone is reduced to negligible levels, we would have to perform a surgical procedure called an orchidectomy. That would entail the removal of his testicles, which is definitely not reversible.”

“You want to castrate me?” I shouted. My wife collapsed into tears, and the doctor and his assistant looked on awkwardly on as I took her into my arms and begged her not to cry. “Please don’t cry, baby. Please don’t cry.”

“Did you really mean what you said last night?”

I had no idea what she was talking about. “Of course I did, baby.”

“You told me you’d do anything for me. Well, this is what I want. I want you to have our baby.”

“But you heard what the doctor said….”

“Are you planning to find another wife after I’m gone?” she cried.

“No, of course not.” The thought had never occurred to me.

“Then what’s more important than bringing up our child?”

My head was spinning. “Nothing, you know that.”

“Then whatever it takes for this operation to be a success, you have to do it. You owe it to me and our baby.”

My wife thought that I had agreed to become a woman!

* * *

No doubt the doctor and his assistant were sure that I’d talk her out of it, or flat out refuse. We scheduled a follow-up appointment for the next day, and I drove my wife back to our apartment. She was quiet in the car, and I was trying to think of what to say to her when she took me by surprise once again. “We’re going to have to start working on you tonight. I don’t want you to do this halfway. I have some clothes that you can try on, till you’re ready for your maternity outfits I mean, and I have lots to teach you about makeup and stuff. When we go back to the doctor tomorrow, we have to show him that we’re really serious.”

I was shell shocked. Did she really think I was crazy enough to go through with this? “Baby, we have to talk about this.”

“I know how hard this must be for you, but I’ve made up my mind. You promised me last night that you’d do whatever I asked, and if it wasn’t completely necessary, I would never ask you to do this. Besides, this is not for me, it’s for our baby. Our future.” I tried to interrupt her, but she kept right on talking. “I’ve come to accept the fact that I don’t have much time left. By some miracle we’ve found a way to create new life, if you’re willing to make this sacrifice. I don’t want our baby coming into this world in the body of some stranger, who may not take care of herself, or who may decide to keep our baby for herself. I realize that may be unlikely, but just the possibility of it terrifies me. It terrifies me more than this horrible disease that I have.”

I tried several times that night to talk her out of it, but every time I did, she just dug in deeper and deeper. Every time she burst into tears, I’d tell her I’d do whatever she wanted, just to console her. I’m not sure I ever realized how tenacious she could be, and I’m sure my sympathy for her illness lowered my resistance. So after dinner and several glasses of wine, I reluctantly let her join me in the shower so she could help me shave off all my body hair, and that night I let her dress me in one of her nightgowns and a pair of her panties before we went to bed. We snuggled closely together all night, and we even made love in our nightgowns. It was the last time I ever had sexual relations with her.

The next morning, she sat me down at her dressing table and showed me how to put on makeup. I was surprised by how feminine my face began to look as she went to work with her sponges and brushes. She even found some old hoop earrings and clipped them on. Of course, I thought I was just humoring her – until she pulled one of her wigs over my head and brushed it into shape. I was astonished by the result: if I didn’t know better, I’d have mistaken myself for a girl!

I was in a bit of a trance as she started to dress me up in her clothes. She fastened a padded bra behind my back, and had me step into a pair of matching panties. I felt totally ridiculous.

Then a slip and a dress, which were so foreign to me! The slip was kind of a clingy material, which she explained would help to smooth me out, and the dress she selected hugged my waist before it flared out, just covering my knees. After she zipped me up, I tried to squeeze my feet into some of her heels, but they were too tight. My reprieve was short lived: she had me hike up my dress and she helped me tug on a pair of nude pantyhose, which she said would help my feet slip into her shoes. Her nylons felt very strange against my legs, but they did make them look smooth and silky, and I was able to get her heels on. I even managed to walk round the bedroom in them, although I told my wife they would take some getting used to. A little more jewelry, then she took my hand and led me over to the full length mirror in her closet to see what she had wrought.

I wasn’t what I expected! Looking back at me in the mirror was an attractive woman, in a pretty dress and high heels. I glanced over at my wife, who had a strange expression on her face: pride in her creation, mixed with a sense of loss over what had become of her husband. “This is right,” she said at length. “This is the right thing to do.”

I felt totally vulnerable, standing there in her dress, and I didn’t have the heart to fight with her. “Can I change back now?”

“No! You’re going to the doctor’s office in that dress, remember?”

That snapped me back into my senses. “Are you serious? No way!”

She took my hand. “Sweetheart, listen to me. Of course you’re afraid of what’s happening to you! I’m a little afraid too, but we have to be brave, for our baby. After that doctor takes one look at you, he’ll have no doubt that we’re making the right decision. Please don’t back out on me now.”

* * *

I was certain that after the doctor took one look at me, he’d have me committed to a lunatic asylum. As it turns out, I was mistaken. If the doctor and his assistant were shocked by my appearance, they didn’t show it; in fact, I later learned that they’d both suspected that I was transgendered from the beginning.

The conversation quickly turned to practicalities. Since my wife had eschewed drug therapy and radiation for her cancer, there was an excellent chance that her womb would be healthy enough to transplant into my body upon her death. As for my surgery, the doctor emphasized that this would not be a sex change operation: the protocols for that were quite strict, but there was no reason why he could not administer hormone therapy and remove my testicles to make me an acceptable recipient for my wife’s womb. I knew that if I backed out now, my wife’s last months would be unbearable. Reluctantly, I agreed to go ahead with the transplant.

Once my decision was made, the doctor conducted thorough physical examinations. Other than my wife’s brain tumor, we were both in excellent health, but because her condition was likely to deteriorate at any time, he recommended that we proceed with my surgery and hormone therapy immediately. Before we left, he injected me with a massive dose of female hormones.

The next morning, still not believing that it was really happening, I returned to his office for my orchidectomy. It was an outpatient procedure, and I vividly remember lying on an operating table after a local anesthesia was administered, and hearing the doctor snip away my manhood. After he stitched me up, my wife drove me home, and I cried myself to sleep.

I was sore and tender for a few days, and I felt something akin to morning sickness as a result of the hormone shot, but by the end of the week I was ready to return to the living. My wife insisted on dressing me in women’s clothing, nothing fancy, just capris and pants for the most part. At night, I’d slip into a nightgown and go to bed with her, but I was never able to experience an erection or make love to her again. Whether it was the hormones, the after-effects of my castration, or all in my head, my nights as a man were over. Still, we snuggled together every night, and I’d never felt closer to her.

We both knew that time was getting short for her, but when the end came, it was worse than I’d feared. Dizziness, incoherence, convulsions, incontinence…we set up hospice care in our apartment, during which I reverted to dressing as a man so as not to confuse her caregivers and the friends and relatives who came to say goodbye. By that point, she was heavily dosed on morphine, but she knew I was there with her, even though she had no idea how I was dressed. After she slipped into a coma, I alerted Dr. Richardson, and we rode together in an ambulance to the hospital to await her last moments.

She died a few hours later, and her womb, or uterus, was transplanted into my body that evening. As the doctor explained to me before I went under, her womb was a hollow, pear-shaped organ which would be implanted into my lower abdomen, between my bladder and my rectum. The broader, upper portion of my womb, which was called the corpus, contained muscular tissue which would expand during pregnancy to hold the growing fetus. It was also supposed to contract during labor to deliver my child, but since I didn’t have a vagina, a Caesarian section would be performed before my body tried to go into labor.

Mercifully, my memory of the operation is a blur, although I do remember being surprised when I woke up by how small my incision was – the doctor had given me a “bikini cut” which wouldn’t show once I put on my panties. Because I underwent experimental surgery, I was kept in the hospital for several days, under close observation by Dr. Richardson and Nicole. Meanwhile, my female hormones were starting to kick in, and my hair was growing longer. In a few weeks, Nicole assured me, I’d be able to get it styled into a bob.

The only thing that helped me keep my sanity was the knowledge that part of my wife was inside me now, and that she would always be a part of me. I missed her terribly, and I fell into a deep funk over the prospect of life without her, although her last few weeks had been so miserable that I knew in my heart that it was a blessing that she was gone. She had insisted on keeping her diagnosis quiet so as not to be a burden to her friends and family, and until the very end I honored her wishes. When I finally did tell her parents, her sister and a select few friends a few days before she slipped into a coma, they rallied around her to say their goodbyes, and I’m sure they were wondering why I hadn’t planned a memorial service. This was arranged the day I got out of the hospital, and I put on a black suit and tie and sat stoically through her funeral.

The other reason why I was depressed, of course, was the loss of my manhood. In my darkest moments, I cursed myself for giving in to my wife’s insane demands. But as I sat there while she was lovingly remembered in a church full of friends and family, I was reminded of the real reason she made me do this: to bring our child into the world. Was there something about me that told her that I’d be a good parent, capable of being a good father, and a good mother too?

One thing I didn’t have to worry about was my financial situation. My wife’s medical insurance had covered everything, and her company’s life insurance policy was very generous. This, combined with my inheritance from my parents, enabled me to pay cash for a smart townhouse downtown, within walking distance of shopping and restaurants. So I busied myself with moving in, trying to forget about my losses as my body slowly began to change. I noticed when I tried to move some furniture that my muscles were getting weaker, the hair on my head seemed to be thicker, and my hips and chest began to swell. I was drifting along in this limbo state when Dr. Richardson’s office called to schedule a follow-up appointment to see if my body was ready to carry a baby.

I hadn’t put on a stitch of women’s clothing since my wife died, and my hair was almost down to my shoulders. Was I really ready to go through with this? Probably not, but I was desperately searching for some meaning in my life, and after some serious soul-searching, I knew that I had to honor her last request.

All of her old clothing had been packed into boxes and stored in an extra room in my new townhouse. I took my time unpacking it, each outfit bringing back little memories of the wonderful times we’d spent together. After all of her skirts, tops and dresses were hung in the closet, her shoes laid out and her lingerie tucked into dresser drawers, I treated myself to a long, hot bubble bath, shaving away the faint traces of body hair which had grown back over the past few months. After I shampooed and dried my hair, I was able to pull it back with a scrunchie into a reasonable pony tail, and I took my time with my wife’s old makeup, feminizing my face the way she’d taught me.

Then it was time to get dressed for my appointment with Dr. Richardson. My breasts were enlarging and my penis was shrinking, I noticed as I put on a bra and panties. I decided to wear something simple and casual, a khaki skirt and a girl’s polo shirt with knee sox and flats. I had several hours to kill, so I walked downtown to a nearby hair salon and had them trim my shaggy hair into the bob that Nicole had recommended. I was sure that the ladies working at the salon would read me as a man, but if they did they kept it to themselves, and I even let one of them give me a manicure!

After I treated myself to a light lunch at a nearby restaurant – again being taken totally for a woman – I drove to the doctor’s office. It occurred to me that my male driver’s license would present a real problem if I were stopped or had an accident, but I was still a man underneath my female exterior, so I tried not to worry about it. I don’t know if it was the hormones, or the loss of my manhood, but for the first time in my life I began feeling comfortable in women’s clothing.

The doctor and Nicole greeted me with expressions of sympathy for my wife, and then we got down to business. Another blood sample was taken, and while Nicole went into the lab to analyze it, the doctor and I had a frank conversation. “If your hormone levels check out, we can implant an embryo in your uterus any time. Are you certain that you’re ready to go through with this?”

“I honestly don’t know what I’m certain of any more, doctor. Until this morning, I’d gone back to living as a man. For some reason I decided to dress up like this today, and I have to tell you that it feels very right to me now. I’m sure you could tell that my wife was putting some pressure on me, but she’s gone now, and the decision is mine. I guess I’m trying to tell you that I want to have our baby.”

Nicole returned with the results of my lab work. My testosterone levels were close to zero, and my estrogen levels were identical to a woman’s. Genetically speaking I might still be a male, but chemically, my body was now female. I’d need to take maintenance doses of estrogen, almost like birth control pills which could be taken orally, and the doctor wrote me a prescription. I asked him when he could implant the embryo into my uterus.

“It’s a simple procedure, only a very small incision is required, and we can do it here and send you home the same day. If you fast tomorrow morning, we can do it tomorrow afternoon.”

* * *

And so began my pregnancy. I didn’t feel anything for the first few days, other than some minor discomfort from the outpatient surgery. I declined to take any pain medication for it – my baby was going to be healthy and normal! My wife must have been smiling down at me from on high….

Then morning sickness hit me pretty hard, and I spent several days bedridden before it gradually eased off. For the first month or so, there was nothing noticeable happening, but then my tummy slowly started to swell as my baby began to grow and stretch out my womb. Frequent visits to Dr. Richardson and Nicole confirmed that everything was proceeding normally, and the first time I saw an ultrasound, I broke down and wept. My wife was going to get her girl!

Lots of light exercise was essential for a healthy pregnancy, and I took long walks every day. My feet began to swell up, but by now I’d started shopping for women’s shoes and clothing of my own, including comfortable mary janes and maternity dresses. I discovered that I loved to wear leggings and tights, which were quite comfortable under my dresses as the weather started to turn cold. My baby was expected in February, and I spent hours creating a little nursery for her. Doctor Richardson and Nicole even surprised me with a baby shower!

By the end of January, I was as big as a house, and it was becoming increasingly uncomfortable to perform even the simplest household tasks. So I was relieved when Dr. Richardson told me that it was time to perform my C-section, but terrified too! Nicole (who had two children of her own, and had become like a sister to me) was wonderful, helping me to pack for my hospital stay and even driving me there.

Because I was in excellent health and there had been no complications, the doctor recommended regional anesthesia, which meant that I’d be awake and alert when my baby came into the world. When she did, I was overwhelmed with feelings of joy and sadness – sadness for my wife, who’s crazy stubbornness had made this possible, and who would never get to meet her daughter. Not that my daughter would be without a mother: the first time she was presented with one of my breasts (which had grown amazingly during the last months of my pregnancy) she seized on the nipple like she was supposed to! I can’t describe how wonderful it felt to breastfeed her, to feel my milk being drawn into her tiny body. The void in my life which had been caused by my wife’s death had been instantly, completely filled by my baby girl, and I fell madly in love with her.

* * *

So that’s how it all happened. My daughter is starting to fuss now, so I’m going to have to wrap this up and feed her again. You’re probably wondering what my future holds? I’ve pretty much decided to go all the way with this womanhood thing, and to have the necessary surgery downstairs to complete my transformation. My daughter is going to grow up with both a father and a mother, but the fatherhood bit was completed a long time ago. My responsibilities as her mother are just beginning, and I think it’s worth devoting the rest of my life to.

The Transplant II

Author: 

  • Nom de Plume

Audience Rating: 

  • Mature Subjects (pg15)

Publication: 

  • 500 < Short Story < 7500 words

Genre: 

  • Transitioning

Character Age: 

  • College / Twenties

TG Themes: 

  • Reluctant
  • Proxy / Substitute / Stand-In
  • Stuck

TG Elements: 

  • Breast Feeding / Breast Pump
  • Castration / Male Chastity Devices
  • Diapers / Babies
  • Estrogen / Hormones
  • Pregnant / Having a Baby
  • Surgery

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)

The Transplant II

© 2017 by Nom de Plume

By my third week of motherhood, I was feeling good enough to begin taking my baby on short walks. Bundled up in her stroller – it was the dead of a midwestern winter – she gurgled and cooed while we made our way to a nearby market or drugstore, and I was insanely proud of the fawning comments she got from passersby! I almost always wore pants those first few months, which were much more comfortable against the winter winds, paired with a blouse that I could unbutton or pull up to feed my baby.

Nicole had referred me to her pediatrician, who assured me that my daughter was perfectly normal, in fact she was breastfeeding better than most infants at that stage. She slept a lot during the day, but she woke me up frequently during the night, and I had a lot of time to think as I held her against my breast in the rocking chair in her nursery. Three issues preoccupied me:

1. Her name. When a birth certificate was prepared at the hospital, I’d been too overwhelmed to give it much thought – my name was given as the father, my wife’s name was listed as the mother, and it seemed right and natural to name the baby after her, so I did.
2. Her grandparents. My wife’s parents were totally unaware that their son-in-law had given birth to their grandchild! I knew that I had to tell them about her, and soon.
3. The rest of my life! I had never intended to become a woman, but now that I was a mother, I had to face some hard facts. Perhaps if my baby had been a boy, I might have had my breasts removed, and tried taking massive doses of testosterone in the hopes of regaining some semblance of my lost masculinity. But every time I looked at myself in the mirror, I knew that this was a lost cause. Months of female hormones, and of course my castration, had feminized my body beyond the point of no return. My penis now dangled uselessly in front of my empty scrotum, and I was beginning to think of it as a nuisance every morning when I put on my panties!

So in addition to the pediatrician, I’d been referred to a specialist in gender reassignment surgery. Almost by default, I’d crossed all of the required clinical thresholds, like living as a woman for the past year, and the very fact that I’d subjected myself willingly to the removal of my testicles and the transplant of my wife’s uterus into my body, not to mention my resulting pregnancy and childbirth, had resolved any doubts in the minds of the medical community. My path may have been untraditional, to say the least, but the final transformation of my body from male to female was clearly indicated.

And after much soul-searching, I had decided that I really wanted to complete my journey. Living as a woman had become second-nature to me by now, and I’d gotten used to styling my hair, putting on makeup and wearing women’s clothes. I thought ruefully about how much I missed wearing a pretty dress and heels, now that my daughter was taking up 100% of my time! Some days I’d be so exhausted I’d spend the entire day in a nightgown, robe and slippers.

Of course, my daughter was the real reason that I finally decided to have the operation: it would be much more natural to raise my little girl, to put her in frilly dresses and braid her hair, if her mother was a woman too. So I was trying to figure out how to tell my wife’s parents, and to arrange for someone to watch my baby while I underwent the final surgery, when fate intervened in the form of a letter written by my late wife, shortly before her death. It was delivered by messenger exactly one year later, from the office of the lawyer who had drawn up our wills. At first I thought it was just some routine correspondence, until I opened the envelope and saw that it was a letter addressed to my wife’s parents, with a copy to me:

Dear Mom and Dad,

By the time you read this, I will be in Heaven (at least that’s where I hope I wind up, although sometimes I think that I might have committed an unpardonable sin by the way I pushed my husband into doing the unthinkable). I’m choosing my words carefully, because what I’m about to tell you will be very hard to understand.

Brace yourselves for a shock: you are grandparents! I don’t know whether your grandchild is a boy or a girl, but I know that he or she is mine, and I know that you will love him or her with all your hearts.

The baby’s father is my husband, but you’d better brace yourselves for another shock: he is also the baby’s mother. When I found out that I had incurable cancer, I was determined to have a baby before I died, but the doctors told me that I would be unlikely to live long enough to deliver a healthy child. The solution was a medical miracle: I got pregnant in a hurry, and the embryo was frozen so it could be implanted in a surrogate mother. Now here’s the hard part: I was deathly afraid that the surrogate mother might abuse herself during the pregnancy, or try to keep my baby for her own (this has happened). Then another medical miracle: after I died, my womb was transplanted into my husband’s body, the embryo was subsequently implanted, and he carried our baby – your grandchild – to term and delivered a healthy child.

While you’re recovering from the twin shocks, let me assure you that my husband was a very reluctant participant in this incredible drama. But he went along out of devotion to me, even though it meant the loss of his manhood. I won’t go into all the grisly details, but in order for him to be able to successfully deliver my baby, he had to take hormones, and submit to surgery, which will make it impossible for him ever to father another child. I thought long and hard about the sacrifices he was making, and I have to confess that I begged him to do it, because deep in my heart I knew that he would be a perfect, loving mother, and I can only hope that somehow he’ll forgive me for all that he had to go through. I always thought that he would have been a beautiful woman if he’d been born a girl, and once I started him down the path towards motherhood, I dressed him up in my clothes and with very little coaching, he proved me right.

Knowing my husband as I do, I’m certain that he hasn’t told you any of this, and my purpose in writing this letter is to bring him – and your grandchild – into your lives. For he – or rather, she – is the one who is in need of your love, understanding and support now!

Your loving daughter

Another, shorter letter was clipped to the back of my copy. It was from our lawyer:

Your wife entrusted me with the attached letter shortly before her death, with strict instructions not to deliver it unless certain conditions took place, specifically the successful transplant of her womb, your pregnancy, and the birth of your daughter. These conditions having been fulfilled, her letter has been hand-delivered today per her instructions to her parents and yourself.

I sat staring at her letter in a complete state of shock when the telephone rang. My God, were her parents calling already? I wasn’t sure I was ready to talk to them….I picked up the phone, and was relieved to find that it was Dr. Richardson, the surgeon who had transplanted my wife’s womb into my body, and delivered my baby by Caesarian section. “I’ve been meaning to call to see how you and the baby were doing,” he said.

“Oh, we’re fine doctor, thanks very much. She’s an angel.”

“As you can imagine, the media has been all over me to reveal any details about you and your child. Of course, I’ve refused all interviews, and they have no idea who you are or where you live.”

That was reassuring. “Thank you, doctor, so much.”

“Not at all. I’m not sure if I’ve ever told you this, but if you are ever interested in having another child, I believe that would be fairly straightforward.”

I was astonished. “How can that be possible?”

“Well, as you may recall, we preserved a sperm sample before your orchidectomy.” I remembered, all right – my last male orgasm, a bittersweet handjob into a cup in the doctor’s office the day before he castrated me. “And at my suggestion, after we removed the fetus from your wife, we harvested several eggs from her ovaries before she died.”

“I had no idea.”

“You see, I thought it would be advisable to give you the option to try again if the first procedure failed, and once I explained this to your wife, she readily agreed.”

“So if I ever wanted to have another baby, how would that happen?”

“We would simply fertilize one of her eggs with some of your sperm in vitro, implant the fertilized egg into your uterus as we did before, and the rest would follow the same as your first pregnancy.”

My first pregnancy…my God, the doctor was telling me that I could be a mother again! “Doctor, this is all such a surprise. I don’t think I’m ready to think about that now.”

“Of course, of course, you’ve just had your first baby and it’s certainly premature. I only brought it up because I imagine you’re going to have to make some decisions about your future, and I thought this might be an important consideration.”

“You mean, before I ask you to try to turn me back into a man?”

“In so many words, yes.”

“Doctor, I don’t think I have any alternative but to live out my life as a woman. That’s why I asked you to refer me to a surgeon specializing in gender reassignment surgery,” I reminded him.

“So you’ve decided to proceed with the operation?”

The doctor was getting on my nerves. “You’ll be the first to know,” I said before I hung up.

My daughter was waking up, and it was time to breastfeed her again.

* * *

A few days later, I decided to put on a dress for the first time since my baby was born. After she settled in for her morning nap, I treated myself to a luxurious bubble bath, shaving my legs and washing my hair. After moisturizing all over, I wrapped a terrycloth wrap around my body, applied my makeup and dried and styled my hair, which was becoming easier every time I did it.

Then I slipped off my wrap, clipped on a nursing bra, and tucked my diminishing penis back between my legs. There was nothing left to reveal that I’d once been a man! I used to feel a little depressed when I got dressed as a woman, but those feelings had vanished with the birth of my daughter. I was a young mother now, and my destiny was sealed, so I concentrated on selecting the rest of my lingerie – matching panties, a slip and silky sheer pantyhose – and put on a pretty dress with a bow in front that I tied like I’d been doing it all my life. I stepped into my heels and fussed with the hem of my dress to make sure it covered my slip.

It felt almost natural now to dress myself this way. Good thing, I said to myself, since I’d be teaching my daughter how to dress herself as she grew into girlhood, and became a young woman herself. After putting on some simple jewelry and a spritz of cologne, I was ready for my expected visitors.

I peeked in on my sleeping daughter and checked to make sure the baby monitor was on and working, before I went downstairs to make some coffee. I had just finished preparing a little tray with cups, sugar and cream when the doorbell rang. Smoothing down my dress on my way to the front door, I took a deep breath and opened it to welcome my wife’s parents.

We hadn’t seen each other, or even spoken, since my wife’s funeral. I’d sent them an email the day after receiving my wife’s letter, inviting them to come see their new granddaughter, and they’d readily accepted. I was relieved when they declined my invitation to sleep on my living room sofa and loveseat (the nursery occupied the spare bedroom in my townhouse) and reserved a room at a nearby hotel.

You can only imagine the shock on their faces when I opened the door to greet them. My mother-in-law later confided that they’d been expecting some kind of freakish half-man half-woman, and the sight of their son-in-law in a stylish dress, heels and stockings, with a cute hairdo and perfect makeup, was almost too much for them. Fortunately, my wife’s letter had prepared them for the shock, but actually seeing me in silk and lace was something else, and my father-in-law couldn’t stop staring at me as I invited them in and took their coats. After an awkward hug from my mother-in-law, I whispered, “The baby’s sleeping, but I’m sure you’re dying to see her, so let’s peek into her nursery, and then we can talk and have some coffee till she wakes up.”

They followed me upstairs, and when they saw her for the first time, sleeping blissfully in her crib, tears rolled down both of their faces. She stirred a little bit, but she was still sound asleep, so we made a hasty retreat back downstairs, and they sat down on the sofa while I poured them each a cup of coffee. After I sat down demurely in the facing loveseat, crossing my legs in ladylike fashion, we sipped our coffees in silence until my mother-in-law finally broke the ice. “She so beautiful,” she sniffed. “It’s such a miracle. We have so many questions,” she said, nodding at her husband, “but right now I can hardly think straight.”

“This was all your daughter’s doing,” I said in the soft, female voice that I’d perfected over the past twelve months. “She had strength and determination that I never imagined, and once we found a way to have a baby, it made her last months so much better for her.” Looking at her father, I said, “I never wanted this for myself, but I did it for her, and I’m glad I did.”

“Will you stay this way?” my mother-in-law asked gently.

“Yes. I wasn’t sure at first, but it just seems right to me now, and I’m sure it will be better for my daughter to have a mother. Don’t get me wrong, your daughter will always be her real mother, but after carrying her for nine months and bringing her into the world, I feel like her mother too.”

“I wish you’d have told us!” she finally said. “There’s so much we could have done for you.”

“I wish I’d told you too, but at the time, it all seemed so strange, and to be honest with you, I was embarrassed about what I’d done to myself. It wasn’t until that little girl was born that I realized what a gift your daughter had given me.”

“She’s a perfect baby. How old is she now?”

“She’ll be one month old tomorrow.”

“Oh my. Are you having any trouble getting her to take a bottle?” Although I didn’t realize it at the time, we were instinctively falling into a mother-daughter relationship….

“I’m breastfeeding her,” I said softly.

“What?” my father-in-law blurted out.

“How is that possible?” his wife asked.

“I had to start on hormone therapy in order for your daughter’s womb to be successfully transplanted in me,” I explained. Looking at my father-in-law, I added, “I had to have my testicles removed too.” I could tell that he was stunned. “That was the hardest part. But once I did, with all those female hormones running through me, my body began to change in a hurry.” Looking down, I said, “These breasts are real, and they’re full of mother’s milk.”

The silence that followed was finally broken by the squawking of the baby monitor. “Oh oh, somebody’s awake, and it sounds like she’s hungry,” I smiled. “I’ll be back in a little while, and I’ll introduce you to your granddaughter. You have a lot of catching up to do.”

* * *

They stayed in town for almost a week. It was so wonderful having an extra pair of hands to help me with the baby! I’d accumulated a supply of breastmilk which I refrigerated before their arrival, and we were delighted to discover that my baby readily accepted a bottle. I got my first good night’s sleep since I couldn’t remember when, thanks to my mother-in-law’s firm insistence that I allow her to get up and feed the baby when she cried in the middle of the night.

By the end of the week, I was calling them Mom and Dad. I actually watched the Superbowl on tv with my new-found Dad (in women’s jeans and a Green Bay teeshirt that used to belong to my wife) while Mom cuddled and fed the baby. Their last night in town, they took us out to dinner at the Mexican restaurant that used to be my wife’s favorite, and it was so lovely being able to put on a nice dress, sip a margarita (go easy on the tequila, I’m nursing!) and reminisce about the good times.

Mom brought up the time my wife dressed me up in her cheerleader’s costume when we were dating in high school, which she vividly remembered. “You were so cute!” she said. “I was a little nervous when you two disappeared into her bedroom for what seemed like hours, but she was giggling so hard I figured you were behaving yourselves. When you came downstairs, I actually thought you were another girl!”

Dad, who had loosened up considerably over the past week, looked amused. “Maybe that wasn’t the first time you dressed up as a girl?”

“Believe it or not, it was, and I never did it again until your daughter asked me to, the day I agreed to have the operation. She told me she always thought I looked good as a girl, and I guess she wanted to prove it to me.”

“Was the operation very difficult?” Mom asked. “I understand that the surgery can be quite painful.”

“The depends on what operation you’re referring to! I’ve had four: the orchidectomy, which took care of my manhood (my Dad winced) was an outpatient procedure, followed by the uterus transplant, which was a major operation. Implanting the embryo in my uterus was no big deal, but my C-section was pretty painful, although they were able to do that under a local.”

“Wasn’t there another surgery? You know, that one that turned you into a woman?”

“I haven’t had it yet.”

“You could have fooled me,” Dad said.

“I suppose it isn’t really necessary,” Mom observed.

“Yes it is, to me at least. Before my daughter gets old enough to know, I want to be a complete woman. My days as a man are long over,” I added.

“Can we help you?” Mom asked? “Now that we know the baby can take a bottle, I’d be happy to come back and watch her while you’re in the hospital.”

I actually burst into tears. “Darn these hormones! Oh Mom, that would be so wonderful!”

* * *

The less said about my sex reassignment surgery, the better. I’m sure my surgeon was at the top of his field, and he assured me that the operation went off without a hitch, but that didn’t help me cope with the pain. I was in sheer agony for days! Mom and Dad took turns visiting me in the hospital, and I missed my baby terribly. By then, she was through breastfeeding and eating solid food, and every day I was laid up in the hospital I felt like I was missing out on some milestone in her life. When I was finally able to come home, it was heaven to hold her in my arms again, and Mom stayed until she was sure I was fully recovered.

As a single mom, I was busy 24/7 keeping house and taking care of my daughter. That first year flew by, and by the next spring I felt I was ready to have another baby. I know that must sound insane, but by then I was all woman, in both mind and body, and my maternal instinct was strong. Mom was thrilled when I told her, and Dr. Richardson, who had kept in touch with me, was very pleased. “It will have to be another Caesarian section,” he explained to me. “Even though you have a functioning vagina, your pelvic structure isn’t designed for childbirth.” When he told me that a fertilized egg was ready to be implanted into my uterus, it was a simple outpatient procedure, and his assistant Nicole watched my daughter while I was on the table.

Once again morning sickness hit me pretty hard, and there were some miserable days trying to keep an eye on my very mobile daughter before I gradually felt like myself again. As I write this, it’s almost time to break out the maternity clothes that I put away after my daughter was born, and begin preparing for another baby. At least I’ll have Mom there to help me this time! She adores her granddaughter, of course, and my little girl keeps asking me if she’s going to have a brother or a sister.

And there’s one more thing: Dr. Richardson, who is a confirmed bachelor, asked me if I’d like to have dinner with him on Saturday! I hope I’ll be able to find a baby sitter….


Source URL:https://bigclosetr.us/topshelf/fiction/71361/transplant