Authors: Marcia Talley
Melanie stared thoughtfully at the county map of Ireland etched on the window glass behind me before answering. âI guess it's OK. I already told Jay.' She put her fork down, folded her hands on the edge of the placemat in front of her and leaned across the table toward me. âOne evening when I was waiting for Hutch, I overheard Tom and Laurie talking. Do you know what SRS is?'
I thought for a moment, running through a myriad of possibilities. Sound Retrieval System? Student Record Services? Scoliosis Research Society? I gave up. âDo I have to play twenty questions?'
Melanie didn't smile. âIt's sexual reassignment surgery.'
I took this information in, turned it around a few times, but it didn't go anywhere. âSo?' I took a sip of my iced tea, waiting for Melanie to answer. She was taking her time.
âLaurie is a man.'
I sucked iced tea into my lungs, and began coughing so violently that nearby diners turned their heads and whispered to one another behind their hands as if deciding who'd be the first to get up and save me with the Heimlich maneuver. When I finally regained control of my lungs, I laid down my napkin and croaked, âThat's impossible.'
âYou can think that, but you'd be wrong.'
My mind reeled with images of Laurie, svelte, glamorous Laurie, gliding around the dance floor, sharing beauty tips with me in the dressing room. âBut I've seen Laurie in her underwear! She's got bigger boobs than I do! Are you sure that you heard correctly?'
Melanie nodded. âThis was a bit more serious than my mistaking “where there's life there's hope” for “where's the lavender soap”, so before going to Jay with what I suspected, I confronted Laurie. She admitted it.'
I must have managed some sort of gasping denial because Melanie continued, âLaurie has been living as a woman for three years, Hannah. She's supposed to have SRS next month in Singapore.' Melanie leaned closer. âBut SRS or no SRS, nothing will change the fact that
she
is still a
he
.'
I took a deep breath. âI simply can't believe it. Laurie's so feminine. How . . .?'
âDepilatories, hormones, surgery. You know.'
Hormones and hair removal products aside, what really blew my mind was I'd seen Laurie in the raciest, laciest panties in the Victoria's Secret catalog. If Laurie were a man, and she hadn't yet had her surgery, where did she hide her, oh gawd, privates? When I got home, I'd have to ask Paul. Maybe he'd know.
When I eventually remembered my seafood pie, I was amazed the dish was still hot. After toying with my entrée for a few minutes, I looked up and said, âExcuse me, Melanie, but I don't see where you're going with this. So what if Laurie is actually a man living as a woman. What harm is there in that?'
â“It's an abomination before the Lord.” Deuteronomy 22, verse 5. “The woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man, neither shall a man put on a woman's garment.”'
The words of a song from
Porgy and Bess
swam immediately to mind: âThe things that you're liable to read in the Bible, they ain't necessarily so.' Up until a few moments ago, I'd always liked Melanie, but then our conversations had never strayed into the landmine-strewn territory of politics or religion. Now I was having wickedly unchristian thoughts, like suggesting to Eva that she introduce Melanie to Jeremy Dunstan.
âMelanie,' I said at last, trying not to let my exasperation show. âSurely you recognize that there are laws in the Old Testament that simply don't apply to modern life. How to sacrifice animals, for example, or sell your daughter into slavery. And for some silly reason, we're not allowed to stone people any more.'
Melanie speared a shrimp and popped it into her mouth.
âAnd contrary to Deuteronomy, you are wearing pants today.'
âThe men in ancient Israel didn't wear pants.'
Oh, Lord. Where was Pastor Eva when I needed her? She could quote chapter and verse with the best of them, using the Bible to prove or disprove just about any point. This conversation with Melanie was going nowhere fast.
I pushed aside my seafood casserole, no longer hungry. âOK, so let's take it as a given that Laurie Wainwright is biologically a man. So what?'
âThe Sweetheart Ball Championships that Tom and Laurie just took several firsts in?'
âYes?' I'd read all about it. The results were already posted on the Sweetheart Ball website: First place. Waltz, Tango and Quickstep. International Standard Advanced. Thomas Wilson with Laurie Wainwright. Second in foxtrot and Viennese.
âThe championships are sanctioned by the National Dance Council of America,' Melanie continued. âThey have very strict rules, and one of those rules is: “a couple is defined as a male and a female.” Page four.'
I was beginning to think that Melanie could tell me on what page of the white pages my telephone number appeared. But I could see what she was getting at. According to the NDCA rules, Tom and Laurie were not qualified to dance as a couple. Oh-oh. âSo, what will the Sweetheart people do if they find out? Take away their vouchers and plaques?'
Melanie shook her head. âIt's probably too late for that now, but they'd certainly be barred from future competitions, if they continue to dance with each other, I mean.'
âMaybe after Laurie has the surgeryâ' I began, but Melanie cut me off.
âAs I said earlier, it's really none of my business.'
âBut you told Jay.'
Melanie shrugged. âHe didn't believe me, either. So I suggested it might be something he'd like to look into, that's all, if he was concerned about protecting the reputation of the studio.' She took a deep breath, then let it out slowly. âBut it's a moot point, now, isn't it?'
âIt is?'
âApparently Jay never said anything to the organizers, or to the judges. Tom and Laurie danced. End of story.'
I sat back, stunned, thinking, You self-righteous little fool. Do you think you can open a Pandora's box of trouble, and simply walk away? End of story? No way.
I managed to finish my seafood pie, but when the waitress came by to refill our tea, I asked for the check. In spite of the tempting treats on the menu â crème brûlée cheesecake? â Melanie took a rain check on the bread pudding. Neither one of us was in the mood for dessert.
âW
ell, that explains the scarf,' Paul said when I told him about Laurie.
âIt does?'
âAdam's apple,' he said, touching his throat. âWomen have them, too, but they're far less prominent. Laurie wore the scarf to hide it.'
âRight,' I said, feeling stupid. I took a few deep breaths. âOK,' I continued. âAdam's apples, I get. But how on earth did she hide . . . you know?'
âHer sexual organs?'
âExactly.'
âWell, the testicles could be tucked up into the body where they originally came from, I suppose. Whenever they get cold, they tend to migrate northward anyway.'
âThey do?' In spite of sex education classes in high school and decades of marriage, this fact was news to me. âAnd the penis?'
âHaving little experience wearing ladies' underpants, I really haven't a clue.'
âThat's reassuring, darling, but not particularly helpful.'
âThat's why God invented the Internet.'
Logging on to the Internet in our basement office a few minutes later, I discovered that what Paul told me about the testicles was true; they could easily be persuaded to disappear within the body. As for what âtranswomen' did with their inconvenient penises, well, let's just say that I now know one hundred and
two
uses for duct tape.
I also learned about breast augmentation, facial feminization surgery, tracheal shaves, androgen blockers, and laser hair removal, not only on the face, but on the chest and arms as well.
Ouch!
I clicked around a bit after that to read about sexual reassignment surgery, but when I landed on a south-east Asian site featuring colorful before and after photos, I decided Too Much Information, and switched the computer off.
âI still can't believe it,' I told Paul that night over dinner. âLaurie is feminine in almost every possible way. We were comparing fingernail polish, for heaven's sake!'
âShe's had a lot of practice, Hannah. She's been passing for, what did you say, two years?'
âThree.' I served myself some green beans. âI'm still flabbergasted. If you put ninety-nine women and Laurie in a room and told me to pick out the one who's a guy, I never would have picked her, not in a million years. The teller at the BB&T drive-through, maybe, or that woman who makes the sandwiches at the snack bar in Dahlgren, but not Laurie.' I plopped some mashed potatoes on my plate and garnished them generously with butter. âTruth or consequences. You danced with Laurie. Didn't you pick up any vibes?'
Paul blushed. âNot even a hint.' He chewed thoughtfully on a piece of his tuna steak. âAre you sure Melanie's being truthful?'
âWhy on earth would she lie?'
Paul shrugged. âJealousy?'
âOf what? Besides, Melanie told me she confronted Laurie, and that Laurie admitted it.' I shook my head. âNo, it's probably true.'
We ate in silence for a while until with a contented, well-fed sigh, Paul laid down his fork and leaned back in his chair. âFrankly, I admire the hell out of her. Imagine all she's endured just to get this far. And after the surgery, it'll be too late to change her mind.'
I thought about what I'd learned about SRS from the Internet and said, âPretty drastic, and needless to say, irreversible.'
Paul rose from his chair and started to clear away the dishes. âMelanie's probably one of those fruitcakes who believes all it takes to be âcured' is constant prayer and a hefty dose of theologically-based reprogramming.'
Carrying the wine glasses, I followed my husband into the kitchen. âHow could Melanie possibly understand? Melanie wasn't born a man in a woman's body.' While Paul rinsed the plates, I tipped the wine glasses over pegs in the dishwasher. âWhy would anyone go through all that heartache, soul-searching, counseling, pain and considerable expense involved in a permanent sex change if they didn't deeply believe that they were born into the wrong body?'
âDid you notice,' I said after the dishwasher began surging away, âhow we keep referring to Laurie as “she”? Even Melanie didn't use male pronouns when she was talking to me about Laurie.'
Paul smiled. âI would say that Laurie's made a success of being female, wouldn't you?'
âCompletely.'
âThen I wouldn't worry about her.'
âBut I do. I really like Laurie and Tom. And I hope Melanie's big mouth doesn't make trouble for them.'
Paul gave the kitchen counter a final swipe with a damp sponge and tossed it into the sink. âYou said she told Jay Giannotti?'
I nodded.
âAnd he didn't do anything with the information?'
âNot that I know of.'
Paul gathered me into his arms. âHannah, you worry too much. Give it a rest.' He kissed the top of my head.
So I stopped worrying.
For a whole minute.
âI wonder what Laurie's name was before it was Laurie?' Next to my nose, his shirt smelled freshly of Tide.
âHannah!'
I looked up. âLawrence? Laurent? Luke? Leonardo?'
âLaurie can be a boy's name, too,' Paul reminded me as he released me and headed in the direction of the living room. âRemember
Little Women
?'
âOh, right.' I was addressing his broad, navy T-shirt-covered back. âThe boy next door. The one who marries Amy when Jo jilts him.'
I was still mulling over names â a totally pointless exercise â when Paul and I settled down in the living room to watch a new episode of
Law and Order
.
He pointed the remote at the screen and began clicking through the channels, searching for the station in hi-def. âYou know what, Hannah?' he said as the screen pulsed with quick-cut images and the familiar theme began to play.
âWhat?'
âMale or female, Laurie Wainwright is prettier than most, and a damn fine dancer.'
The next day I called ahead, and since Jay was still in the hospital, I decided to visit. I doubted that the subject of Laurie's gender would come up, but if it did, I planned to mine the opportunity. If Jay planned to use the information Melanie had provided to make trouble for Laurie, at least I could be a good citizen and give the girl a head's up.
When I got to Jay's room I found Kay standing by the bed, picking food off an insulated, compartmentalized plate with her fingers. âHow about a green bean, Jay? It's overdone, just the way you like it.'
Jay was propped up on three pillows, looking terrible. His eyes were dull and sunken, jittery in their sockets. His luxurious eyebrows had thinned, giving him an oddly surprised expression. In spite of the tan, his face looked ashen.
I knocked lightly on the door frame. âMay I come in?'
Kay turned away from the food tray and said, âHi, Hannah. We're just having lunch.'
From the amount of food left on his plate, it didn't look like Jay was having much to do with lunch. I entered the room, and set a gaily-wrapped box of candy on the foot of the bed. âMaybe this will do for dessert?'
Jay winced, then smiled wanly. âThanks, Hannah. Maybe later.'
âYou were out of it last time I visited.' I managed to dredge up a smile. âI'd come by to tell you how much I enjoyed your paso doble.'
Jay raised a hand, waved it feebly, then let it fall on to the covers. âI really screwed it up big-time, didn't I?' He turned his head, trying to catch his wife's eye. âI keep telling Kay I'm too old for this, but she doesn't listen.'