A House Divided, part 3 of 7

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“I don’t like this,” Mom said. “I don’t see how you can keep it up, and the longer you manage to pretend, the more people are going to be hurt and offended when they find out you lied to them.”

I was starting to worry that she might be right, but I wasn’t going to back out unless she and Dad forced my hand by telling people.


A House Divided

by Trismegistus Shandy

Part 3 of 7


Arnie was moving easier than a lot of the other centaurs — like Mrs. Benson, he’d been a little overweight before the changes, so he wasn’t so skinny and had more muscles on his legs. Most of the centaurs were slow and wobbly, like Mom and Will; some of them were using canes or walkers. The centaurs took up more space than before, especially the ones with canes or walkers, and here and there I saw someone walking on all fours; so even though a lot of kids were dead or in the hospital, the halls were more crowded than usual. A couple of times, on our way to class, I saw one of the centaurs fall down, either just because they were weak and wobbly or because somebody bumped into them. I was going to try to help, but other people closer to them helped them up before I got near.

I’m not going to tell you about everything that happened that day; even with all the weirdness of seeing people I knew changed in so many ways, 90% of it was just another school day. Ms. Tang went straight into the next algebra lesson as though we hadn’t been out of school for a week, and really I can’t say she was wrong — I mean, math is the same whether you’ve got two legs or four, whether you eat vegetables or meat or both. Some of the other teachers talked briefly about the changes, and how sorry we were about the people who were hurt or killed, and then went into lessons that weren’t much different than they would have been if they hadn’t been delayed for a week.

I sat near Will during Mr. Meredith’s American History class, but didn’t get a chance to talk to him before class — he hobbled in at the last second, and some of the other centaurs came in late. That was happening a lot, actually; at the beginning of second period the assistant principal went on the intercom and announced that students with “mobility issues” — meaning mostly the centaurs, although I saw a few bipeds in wheelchairs or on crutches, too — could be up to five minutes late to class with no penalty. Will and I walked to lunch together, him steadying himself on my shoulder; I decided to go through the herbivore/vegetarian line with him and sit with him. Arnie joined us when he saw where we were.

Lunch was a disaster. Seating the centaurs at the far end of the cafeteria from the carnivores and omnivores and whatever dubious meat the cafeteria was serving them that day was not enough; there wasn’t enough room to put empty spaces between them, and a lot of them got sick to their stomachs from seeing carnivores go by with lunch trays or seeing them eat meat at the next table. Several actually threw up, including Will. Fortunately, he didn’t get any vomit on my clothes, though I had to clean my backpack after Arnie and I helped him get to the bathroom and clean up. They were both in bad shape, famished from not being able to snack during morning classes, but too sick to eat any lunch. There was another intercom announcement a few minutes later, saying those who couldn’t stand the smell of meat could go to study hall for now and come back to eat later.

Arnie and Will went to study hall from the bathroom, and I went back to the cafeteria to finish eating. I was worried about Arnie and Will, but also looking forward to the next period. Ms. Killian was my favorite teacher, even though biology (which she taught) wasn’t my best subject — it wouldn’t have been in my top three favorite subjects, if she hadn’t been teaching it. I was hoping she’d have something interesting to say about all the changes, and she didn’t disappoint me.

“I think the unit on plant reproduction can wait a few days,” she said. She was a centaur, and steadier on her feet than I would have expected; she wasn’t noticeably overweight before her change, so I was expecting she’d be still be underweight for her new form. “I’m sure you’ve all been thinking about the changes you and everyone else have been through. There’s a lot we don’t know about them yet — most importantly, why and how they happened — but there’s a lot we do know, too. This stuff is more important for your daily lives than the anatomy of plants — to be honest, more important for most of you than half or two-thirds of the syllabus. And it’s a good chance to talk about how scientists work, since the things we’ll be talking about are new discoveries, a lot of them still tentative and controversial. We’ll focus on the changes for the next week or two, and probably return to the subject several times in the course of the year as new discoveries are announced.

“To begin with, can someone offer a brief description of what happened on February fourteenth? Not just what happened here, I mean, but in general.”

Several people raised their hands, including me. Ms. Killian called on a black girl a couple of rows in front of me, who didn’t have any obvious changes. “Latisha?”

“Everybody in the world changed somehow,” the girl said, “and people in the same area changed the same way, but people in different places changed in a lot of different ways. And people who were sick or injured before got better while they were changing.”

“That’s accurate as far as it goes,” Ms. Killian said. “What else? George?”

I knew George Ryder a little bit, though I wasn’t close friends with him; he’d become a Smyrna wolf. “It seems like most people got nauseated for a few seconds, and then went numb all over, while the changes were happening.”

“Most people, as far as we have reports, yes. Jeffrey? Anything to add?”

“Not everybody had the nausea or the numbness,” I said. “In places where there weren’t any physical changes, just mental changes, we had headaches instead.”

“Interesting,” Ms. Killian said, and for a moment I wondered if that meant she hadn’t heard much about places like Huntsville where the changes were mental, or neurological, or whatever. “That’s a good point. As far as we have reports, every human being in the world was affected in one way or another, but there are a few places — relatively few; there may be hundreds of them scattered around the world — where the changes were more subtle, affecting only the brain and not the rest of the body. Jeffrey, do you mind telling us some more about that?”

I squirmed uncomfortably, but I’d set myself up for this, and had to go through with it. I told them what Aunt Karen had said about her telepathy in her emails and IM messages, as though it had happened to me. Fortunately, I hadn’t run out of material when Ms. Killian cut me off. “Thank you. That’s enough for now,” she said. “You might do an extra credit report on that — not just from your own experiences, but whatever you can learn from online research and interviewing people in Huntsville. Talk to me about it after class if you’re interested. Does anyone else have anything general to add before we start talking about specific changes?”

Several people who’d had their hands up earlier had lowered them, and Latisha had raised her hand again. Ms. Killian called on Kirsten Tanger, who’d become a centaur. She’d been really pretty before, and I’d had kind of a crush on her; it was strange to see her with hollow cheeks, bony arms, and a flat chest, and I wondered if she’d be pretty again when she gained some more weight.

“Kirsten?”

“It was too weird to be natural, and too all at once to be something like terrorists releasing a plague germ. So it had to be a miracle.”

Ms. Killian gave a barely perceptible sigh, and I felt sorry for her, having to put up with students like Kirsten. She said simply, “Let’s finish gathering all the facts we have about the changes before we start forming hypotheses about why they happened. Anyone else? Latisha?”

“People who had just one part of their body affected didn’t get numb all over,” she said. “But we had worse nausea than the people who changed all over, I think.”

“Right,” Ms. Killian said. “There seem to be three broad categories of change, and it looks like we have examples of all three right here. We ‘centaurs’ are an example of the first — our whole body changed; even the parts that look superficially similar, our upper torso and head, have some changes to their internal organs. We, and apparently all the others with full-body changes, lost all feeling for as long as the changes took — about eight or ten seconds in our case.

“Some others — Latisha, you can do an extra credit report on your change-region if you want, but for now I’ll give an example I’ve read about: people in some areas of Washington, D.C. had major changes to the structures of their hands and feet, but the rest of their bodies were mostly unaffected — except, presumably, some neurological changes to enable them to control their changed hand and feet. They lost feeling in their hands and feet for a couple of seconds, while the changes were happening, but didn’t experience nausea — I suspect the nausea was an effect of changes to internal organs.

“And others, like Jeffrey, seem to have changes only in their brains, and had headaches during the changes. — Yes, Anna?”

“We must have had changes in our brains, too, or we wouldn’t be able to control our hind legs.” Anna was another centaur; I didn’t know her last name, barely knew her at all. “I mean, a lot of us can’t walk very well yet, but if our brains hadn’t changed we wouldn’t be able to walk at all. So why didn’t we get headaches too?”

“That’s a good question,” Ms. Killian said. “Some scientists think it’s because when we lost feeling all over, that masked not only the pain we would have felt from our skeleton and musculature restructuring, but also the headache that the rewiring of our brains might have caused. But we don’t really know yet.

“There’s another important factor that no one’s mentioned yet — something that’s the same for everyone, no matter how they changed. Anyone?”

No one said anything for a few seconds, then George Ryder raised his hand, and she called on him.

“Conservation of mass,” he said. “We all weighed the same afterwards. That’s why most of the centaurs are so skinny.”

“Exactly,” Ms. Killian said. “That suggests, to me at least, that whoever or whatever caused these changes was limited by the laws of physics, even if we don’t understand how or why.” She looked hard at Kirsten as she said that, and I made the connection; if it were a miracle, God could have created new matter for the centaurs' expanded bodies. He wouldn’t have to just rearrange what was already there.

“Does anyone have any other observations to offer about different types of changes? Can you think of another way of classifying the different changes besides the one I mentioned...?”

I’m not going to repeat everything she said; as for the factual stuff, you can look it up if you don’t already know it. I think that’s enough to give you the idea of what it felt like, when it was all new and nobody knew for sure what was happening. But to understand everything that followed, you need to know that not only was Ms. Killian my favorite teacher even before the changes, but biology was by far my most interesting class for the rest of that school year.

I stayed for a few minutes after class to ask Ms. Killian what she meant about the extra credit report; so did Latisha and a couple of other students who’d become something other than centaurs or wolves. She gave us pointers for finding more or less reliable stuff online about the change-regions we’d been in on Valentine’s Day and what we’d become, but said that there were so many new human species — over six hundred in the United States, twenty-one in Georgia — that a lot of them, especially the lower-population ones, hadn’t been studied much yet except by local doctors. “Try to interview three or more people,” she said, “at least two of them not related to you, and at least one of them a medical professional or scientist. You’ve got until the end of the year, but the sooner you get it done, the more likely I’ll be able to let you do a presentation on it.”

I was wondering where Latisha had been on Valentine’s Day, and I had a strong suspicion from what she’d said in class, but I didn’t feel like asking her right out, and she didn’t say — mostly we were just listening to Ms. Killian and asking her questions, like how many pages did she want, and what did she mean about print sources from before the change, and so forth. One of the others, Tyrone Anderson, said that he’d been in Bainbridge, down in south Georgia, visiting family, and he’d become an insectivore. I realized that he had the same eyes and jaw as Lindsey Babcock, and figured she’d been somewhere in south Georgia too, though not necessarily in Bainbridge — in rural areas the change-regions sometimes sprawled over thousands of square miles. The other was a girl named Tandy Shannon, who had a tail like our new bus driver, and webbed fingers; she didn’t say anything about where she’d been or what other changes she might have that weren’t obvious.

I suggested that we form a study group to meet and talk about how to do the research for these projects, and Ms. Killian said that was a good idea. So we exchanged phone numbers, email addresses and IM names; we didn’t have time to do more before we had to get to our next classes.


I was not looking forward to my next class; it was P.E., and I’d been dreading it all day, worrying about how I could shower and change afterward without anybody seeing what I was missing. As long as I could do that, I could carry on pretending to be a Huntsville telepath indefinitely; if not, my secret would be out, and I’d have to own up to Arnie and Ms. Killian and everybody else that I’d lied to them.

The hoax wouldn’t have been possible at all — I wouldn’t have even tried to pretend — if our school had open communal showers. Fortunately, it had separate shower stalls. But there would be danger of slipping up, every afternoon for the rest of the school year, and every year until I graduated.

Most of the kids at my school had become centaurs, as I think I’ve already told you; in my P.E. class the proportion was even higher. And the principal had decided to let the centaur kids skip P.E. until they’d put on some more weight. So there were only five kids in the class, three boys and two girls; of the other boys, one was a Smyrna wolf and one had something like tentacles where his arms used to be. I’d seen a few kids like him in the halls, but hadn’t had any in my classes so far.

Our P.E. teacher, Coach Ormond (who’d become a Kennesaw chameleon), started the class by talking about how he thought the changes would affect sports. I didn’t care particularly about sports, and hadn’t thought about the way the changes would affect them; he said he expected it would be the end of nationwide or worldwide competitions, since it might be impossible to ensure that opposing teams of different species were fairly matched. And he expected that local sports leagues in most places, including around here, would have to be completely reorganized, but that team sports would continue on the local level. So that was interesting in a way, but I kind of zoned out about halfway through that, since he went on about it for quite a while. When I started paying attention again, he was talking about doctors figuring out how some new neospecies' muscles were structured differently, and how we’d have to figure out new kinds of exercise for people of those neospecies to work out with. Again, interesting in the abstract, but it didn’t affect me.

Finally he put those of us with more boring changes (from his perspective) to running laps around the track, while he worked one-on-one with the kids whose muscles and skeletons had changed a lot to figure out what kinds of exercises would work for them. I paced myself, jogging just fast enough that he wouldn’t yell at me and slow enough that I could last as long as he’d want us to keep running.

With only two other guys in the locker room and showers, it wasn’t as hard as I’d feared to shower and change without them seeing me. I dawdled until both of them were in the shower, then got in myself, closed the curtain, took off my underwear and hung it over the curtain rod, and showered fast. Then I dried off in the shower stall and put on my clean underwear before I got out.

That wouldn’t be possible once the centaurs got strong enough for P.E.. The locker room would be crowded and everyone would be in a hurry; I wouldn’t be able to get away with occupying a shower stall someone else was waiting for while I dried off and got partly dressed. I could figure that out when the time came, though.

The rest of the day was pretty uneventful. I saw Will again when he got on the bus. He sat down across from me, looking exhausted.

“Bad day?” I asked.

“My legs are killing me,” he said. “And I’m starving. They’ve got to let us start snacking between classes, or better yet during class, or there’s going to be a revolt.”

“A lot of the teachers are centaurs too — they must understand...”

“Yeah, but the principal’s a wolf and the assistant principal is I don’t know what. I haven’t seen either of them, but somebody said he’s got a tail?”

“Well, at least you got to skip P.E.”

“Just walking around the halls between classes tired me out as much as the worst P.E. class I’ve ever had.” He looked suddenly thoughtful, and asked me: “So... how was P.E.?”

“Not too bad,” I said. “Tell you later.” There were too many other kids on the bus by then, and I couldn’t really whisper across the aisle.

Mom wanted to know how school had been, of course. I told her most of what I’ve told you — about the problems the centaurs had with lunch, and how I got through P.E. without flashing my new junk or lack thereof.

“I don’t like this,” she said. “I don’t see how you can keep it up, and the longer you manage to pretend, the more people are going to be hurt and offended when they find out you lied to them.”

I was starting to worry that she might be right, but I wasn’t going to back out unless she and Dad forced my hand by telling people.

“Are you going to tell on me?”

“No,” she said with a sigh. “You’re old enough to learn from your own mistakes — in some areas,” she added hastily, seeing my look of wild surmise. “And your father seems to think it’s a good idea, for some reason.”

“He understands,” I said. “He can imagine what it would have been like for him, being in my position.”

“And I can’t?”

“The girls in Athens don’t look any different.”

“Never mind,” she said. “Let’s go fix something to eat.”

“You’re cooking?” I asked, pleasantly surprised. She got up off the sofa, holding my arm, and we went into the kitchen.

“I’m getting stronger,” she said. “I’ll want to sit down again in a few minutes, but I can stand by the counter and stove as long as it takes to get something started.”

I helped Mom cook supper. She sat in one of the kitchen chairs to rest after a few minutes — it still looked strange, even after seeing a hundred centaur kids sitting like that in class, the way she sat down with her hind legs and kind of leaned back on them with her front parts.

“I need to talk to Aunt Karen,” I said, after we’d gotten the potatoes and carrots chopped and put them in the stewpot. I told her about the extra credit report I was going to do for biology.

“Oh, Jeffrey,” Mom said, “I’m worried about this. It’s not enough you’re lying to your friends, but your teachers as well — and in a report? You could get expelled for cheating. That’s it, I can’t let you do this —”

“Mom, hold on,” I said. “I’m not going to say in the report that I’m a telepath. That’s, like, not being scientifically objective. I’ve got to interview at least three telepaths — Aunt Karen can be one, and I can ask her to get me in touch with a couple of other people there in Huntsville that can answer my questions by email. Ms. Killian said anybody could do an extra credit report on any new species they want, as long as it’s not a local one.”

“Maybe it’s all right,” she said doubtfully. “I’ll talk to your father about it some more.”


After supper, I went to my room and turned on my monitor. I had an email from Tyrone — he’d cc’d the girls too — asking us what day of the week suited us best and proposing Tuesdays. I replied, saying that any day but Wednesday suited me, and sent Aunt Karen an email asking her if I could interview her for my project, and if she could help me find other people in Huntsville to interview.

I started the IM client and sent quick “are you online?” messages to Tyrone, Latisha and Tandy. None of them replied right away, so I worked on American History homework for a while, and then started working on a list of questions for Aunt Karen and my other interviewees. I switched windows when the IM client plinked to say I had a message. It was from Latisha.

obsidian14: yeah i’m here

obsidian14: saw tyrone’s mail, tuesday’s okay. i’ve got band practice on mondays and thursdays.

I replied.

scribbler371: then it’s tuesday unless that doesn’t work for tandy? not sure where we could meet. at school maybe, but i’d need to get a ride home from someone — my mom can’t drive and my dad’s usually at work that time of day.

obsidian14: i’ll ask my mom if she can give you a ride home when she picks me up

scribbler371: thanx

scribbler371: btw, you didn’t say where you were val-day?

obsidian14: oh i guess not

obsidian14: i was in hartwell. my whole family was at my grandma’s house for her birthday.

Hartwell? I started to ask her where that was and what happened to people there, but decided to Google it instead of wasting her time.

The Wikipedia article on Hartwell, Georgia told me that it was the county seat of Hart County, that it bordered Lake Hartwell (which was named for the town, not vice versa), that it had a population of 4,188 people at the last census, and...

...that except for a narrow strip along the shores of Lake Hartwell, it was located within the Athens-Danielsville-Hartwell change-region.

I clicked the link to the article on that change-region, but I already knew what I’d find. Before the page loaded, the IM client plinked and I switched windows.

obsidian14: ...we kind of lost our reproductive systems

obsidian14: i’m kind of not sure about this project, actually

I thought hard. Should I tell her? In retrospect, it seems obvious that I should have. But I barely knew Latisha — I’d barely been aware of her before today. I didn’t know if I could trust her to keep my secret.

scribbler371: that’s harsh

scribbler371: i kind of figured it was a limited physical change, from what you said in class

obsidian14: yeah. girls and women don’t look any different on the outside. i feel sorry for the guys though. my dad and my brothers have been really depressed.

scribbler371: i would be too

obsidian14: but you see what i mean. if i’m not going to do a half-ass job of this report, i need to interview both guys and girls. but interviewing guys about this stuff would be so embarrassing. but i need the extra credit.

scribbler371: you could tell ms killian you want to do a report on some other neospecies?

obsidian14: maybe we could swap? you give me your aunt’s email in huntsville and i give you my cousin’s email in hartwell?

scribbler371: um, maybe.

I really did not want to do a report on the “Athens neuters,” to use the more polite of the several proposed names mentioned in the Wikipedia article.

scribbler371: there are lots of others you could write about.

obsidian14: nowhere else i have contacts, really. ms. killian said anywhere outside of metro atlanta, but all my friends and relatives are either here or in hartwell.

obsidian14: that’s where my family is from and it’s the end of us because none of us are ever going to have kids

scribbler371: sorry.

scribbler371: i’ve got to go. ttyl.

I closed the IM client, even though I didn’t really have anything else urgent to do. I didn’t like to keep lying to her, and I couldn’t trust her with the truth yet. I sat there staring at the Wikipedia article on the Athens neuters for a while, not really reading it, and then I got out the small art pad I carried around at school. I looked at some of the sketches I’d done in class of kids of the rarer neospecies, and drew a larger version of the guy in P.E. with tentacle arms, and then a sketch of Tyrone’s face... and then, not really thinking about why, a sketch of Latisha.


Tuesday morning during homeroom, Mrs. Jessup announced that we were going to have major schedule changes.

“We’re going to start splitting the lunch hours by diet instead of grade level,” she said. “The herbivores will eat at third period, and everyone else at fourth period. And changing class schedules for all the ninth and tenth-grade meat-eaters and all the eleventh and twelfth-grade herbivores is going to cause cascading changes in almost everyone’s schedules. I’ve got revised schedules for some of you here...” She started handing papers out. “If we don’t have your new schedule yet, and you’re a carnivore or omnivore — or insectivore — you can skip your fourth-period class to go to lunch at that time, and go to study hall at third period. The office says they’ll have revised schedules for everyone by the end of the week.

“But... if you’re not getting an A in your fourth-period class, and you can stand eating a vegetarian lunch for a few days, I suggest you stay with your current schedule until you’re assigned a new one. If you want to do that, let me know and I’ll let the office know.”

I raised my hand; I’d much rather have a vegetarian lunch with Arnie and Will than skip Ms. Killian’s biology class in favor of study hall.

In my next couple of classes, I noticed that several students were missing and others had taken their places — people who’d had new schedules assigned already. I sat with Arnie and Will at lunch; it was really crowded, since centaurs were way more than half of the students, and all of them were in the cafeteria at once. There were a lot of arguments and a few fights between seniors or juniors and sophomores or freshmen over where they’d get to sit — they all had their usual places staked out at different times, and now they were in the same place at the same time. Will, Arnie and I managed to steer clear of the fights and squeeze into a spot that nobody was fighting over.

I was one of very few non-centaurs present. Of the others, I wasn’t sure how many were herbivores, how many were vegetarians, and how many were just eating vegetarian today so they wouldn’t have to skip their fourth-period class; there weren’t many of us, I suspected. Arnie had worn a skirt to school today; it was a rougher makeshift than the ones my Mom and I had been making, and a lot worse than the one Will was wearing. Mrs. Benson was good at making clothes. I looked around and thought I saw more centaurs in skirts than yesterday, and fewer bundled up in multiple pairs of pants and some makeshift to cover their lower torso.

“See,” Will said to Arnie, “nothing to worry about. It’s so much easier to deal with that everyone’s going to be wearing skirts by the time hot weather comes around.”

“It still feels a little weird,” Arnie said, “and it was cold waiting for the bus, but it was a lot easier to get ready this morning than yesterday or Sunday.”

“You’ll get used to it pretty soon, I guess,” I said. “Has anybody picked on you for wearing skirts?”

“No,” Will said. “I heard about this, though — a couple of sophomore wolves were picking on a freshman centaur who was wearing a skirt, and several sophomore centaurs ganged up on them and made them take it back. It’s weird, they were the fat kids everyone picked on before, and now they’re the buffest kids in the school. Have you seen Tara Saunders?” he asked.

“Not since the change — I sort of know who you’re talking about, but I don’t have any classes with her.” She’d been extremely overweight, and had a bad case of acne too, if I remembered right.

“Yeah, I’ve got history with her fifth period,” Arnie said. “She’s pretty hot now.”

That made me feel weird and left out, and I didn’t say much for a while as Will and Arnie talked about which girls were looking the best since the changes. I noticed that they were only talking about centaurs — that could have been coincidence, since centaurs were the majority of kids at our school, but I was pretty sure it wasn’t. I couldn’t imagine being attracted to any of the centaur girls, even the ones who’d been really overweight before and now looked a lot healthier than most. But that wasn’t all; I hadn’t been attracted to anyone that way, even the ones who looked mostly or entirely human. After a while I tuned out Will and Arnie’s conversation, took out my sketchpad, and drew quick portraits of some of the centaurs at the next table — I could see them better than the ones I was sitting right next to.

In biology, Ms. Killian talked for a little while about the general patterns of the changes — the range of populations and areas among the change-regions, and how people swimming in lakes or rivers or oceans got aquatic adaptations while people swimming in chlorinated pools changed along with the people on dry land around them, and so forth. You probably know most of that, I guess. Did you know that the lowest-population change-region was Antarctica? I thought so.

After a few minutes of that, she started talking specifics about centaur biology — she showed us an anatomical chart of how their skeletons and internal organs were arranged, and I wondered how anyone had managed to find out so much so fast. She told us, soon enough; she always liked to talk about the specific scientists who discovered the things we were learning about, and she told us about a pathologist at Northside Hospital who’d done autopsies on centaurs who’d died in accidents on Valentine’s Day, and written a paper on centaur anatomy. That started several of us crying over the people we’d lost that day, and when Ms. Killian saw that, she apologized and took a break from the lesson for a few minutes.

Since this was a fourth-period class, a fair number of people were missing — all the wolves and other carnivores, and more than half the omnivores. Tyrone and Tandy were both missing, whether just skipping biology in favor of lunch or whether they’d gotten their new schedules assigned already I didn’t know. There were just two other non-centaurs besides me and Latisha.

I copied the anatomical diagram from the projector screen into my sketchpad, not sure how much of that would be on the test but wanting to make my drawings of centaurs more accurate. She couldn’t expect us to memorize the new anatomy of all the new neospecies in Atlanta, surely? But probably most of them didn’t have as radical a rearrangement of their internal organs and skeletons as the centaurs had. And we lived in a majority-centaur area even if we weren’t centaurs ourselves, so it made sense to learn a lot about them.

After class, I talked to Latisha briefly.

“Have you seen Tyrone or Tandy?” I asked.

“I have Algebra with Tyrone,” she said. “I haven’t seen Tandy.”

“So we still don’t know when we’re meeting. I can’t stay after school today, anyway, I’d need to make arrangements for a ride home. We can try for next Tuesday.”

“Have you thought about swapping assignments?” she asked me.

“Um,” I said. I wanted to tell her why I didn’t want to, why it would be just as awkward for me as it would for her — but I still wasn’t sure I could trust her to keep the secret, and even if I could, I wouldn’t tell her there where other people might overhear. “I haven’t thought about it much, but I’d kind of rather not. Maybe it would be easier if you interviewed people you don’t know? Don’t interview your family, but just ask them to get you in touch with other people to interview?”

“Maybe,” she said. “Yeah, that would be easier.”

“I’ve got some stuff you might can use, if you don’t already know about it,” I said. “There’s a doctor in Athens who’s been blogging about what he’s learned about their anatomy, and some other sites, regular people writing about their experiences and stuff. Bloggers like attention, you could interview them.”

“You know a lot about it,” she said, raising her eyebrows.

“I’ve got an uncle who lives in Athens,” I said, “so I already knew a little about it. And I looked some stuff up after you told me last night. My Google-fu is strong.”

That wasn’t totally a lie. I’d followed some links from the Wikipedia article on Athens neuters, and discovered this doctor’s blog that way. But most of the links I was planning to email Latisha were ones I’d found days ago — a couple as early as Valentine’s Day.

“Why didn’t you tell me about your uncle before?”

I didn’t have a good answer to that. I made something up.

“I wasn’t sure Athens and Hartwell were the same change-region until I looked it up,” I said. “I’ve got to get to P.E., let’s talk later.”

P.E. was no worse and no better than the day before; there were four more people in the class, three girls and a guy, all Smyrna wolves, and the guy with tentacle arms was gone — presumably he’d gotten his new schedule. I could still take my time drying off behind the shower curtain before getting my underwear on, with nobody yelling at me to get out and let him in.

I kept thinking about Latisha and what we’d said to each other, during P.E. and Biology and on the bus ride home. As soon as I’d said hi to Mom, I went and checked my email and IM. Latisha wasn’t online, but there was an email from Tandy saying she’d gotten her new schedule and had Mr. Logan for biology at third period now. I emailed Tyrone and Latisha suggesting that we meet next Tuesday in the library after school; then I sent Latisha an “are you there?” IM, and sat at the computer working on homework and waiting for her to reply until Mom stuck her head in and asked if I was all right.

“Doing homework,” I said. “Sorry, do you need help with supper or something?”

“No, we’re having leftovers from last night. If you’re in the middle of homework go ahead, but you could come and heat up some stew any time you’re hungry.”

“Sure,” I said. I ate supper with Mom, distractedly answered her questions about my day at school, and went back to my room as soon as I’d put my bowl in the dishwasher.

There was an IM from Latisha.

obsidian14: i’m here

obsidian14: you said you’ve got links for my project?

scribbler371: yeah just a minute

I went through my bookmarks, copied several links into the IM window, and sent them.

obsidian14: wow that’s a lot of stuff

scribbler371: you’re welcome

obsidian14: were you really in huntsville?

I stared at the screen for almost a minute before I typed,

scribbler371: promise not to tell please?

scribbler371: i’m sorry i lied but you can understand why i think

obsidian14: okay i won’t tell

scribbler371: i was in athens with my other uncle. i really do have an aunt and uncle in huntsville, that’s how i know so much about the telepaths.

obsidian14: can i interview you for my project? :)

scribbler371: maybe on condition of anonymity

obsidian14: you don’t have to, i was just thinking it might be less weird and embarrassing than interviewing my brother or cousin

scribbler371: you have to interview at least two people you’re not related to, why not three or four? like i said those bloggers would probably love the attention

obsidian14: okay. thanks again.

obsidian14: i understand why you’d lie about that. my brother was kind of depressed all last week, but the last couple of days since school started he’s mad at everybody and won’t talk about why. it’s obvious anyway.

scribbler371: guys at school picking on him?

obsidian14: i’m sure that’s it

scribbler371: is he younger than you or older?

obsidian14: older. both of them. leroy is in college, at morehouse, but he came to grandma’s house with us for her bday. lyndon is a senior at HGHS.

If Lyndon was a senior at our school, I’d probably seen him sometime; but I didn’t know him or recognize his name.

scribbler371: that’s what i was afraid would happen to me.

obsidian14: mom says dad should talk to him about it but dad’s almost as depressed as lyndon

scribbler371: sorry. my parents seem to be sort of okay about their changes, but i’m worried because they’re different species. mom’s a centaur and dad’s a wolf.

obsidian14: oh

obsidian14: so they can’t eat in the same room anymore

scribbler371: right

obsidian14: are they still, you know.

scribbler371: i don’t know. i don’t think so.

obsidian14: neither are mine :(

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Comments

A House Divided, part 3 of 7

Seems as if there is a division between herbivore and carnivores

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Well this sucks for them. If

Well this sucks for them. If I was them, I'd try to find out whoever was resposible for this shit and kick their ass - or at least try it ;)
I start to believe it was a rather smart decision of Jeffrey, at least short term. If people are scared and/or unsure they will band together and attack someone alone or weak. It's stupid, but then that's humanity. Almost all of his friends know now, I guess, so it shouldn't really be a problem. If they really are his friends, they should understand...

Thank you for writing this captivating story,
Beyogi

getting picked on for being different

sadly, happens too often. You'd think people who had just been through major changes would be more understanding, but humans are really good at forming groups to attack other groups.

DogSig.png

This is interesting...

Thought provoking, I'm wondering what brought about so many changes? Was it something sinister, or biblical? time will tell I guess. Some artwork on these changes would be interesting to see. Looking forward to the following chapters. Taarpa

Fanart, etc.

I'm releasing this, like most of my stories, under a Creative Commons-Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike license. That means that derivative works are peachy keen, including new stories in this setting and also art based on it. There are no "rules" for the setting per se, like ElrodW recently posted for his MAU setting; I allow all kinds of noncommercial derivative works, both those consistent with my stories and those that aren't. I'm going to post a story bible for the setting, but other writers aren't required to adhere to it if they don't want to.

Someone just PM'd me asking for permission to write in this setting, and others asked similar questions (would I consider making this or that setting an open universe?) in the comments to some of my other stories. Am I not making myself clear enough in the introduction where I say "if anyone else wants to write stories in this setting, feel free" and "You can also create derivative works, including adaptations to other media, or new stories using the same setting, characters and so forth, as long as you mention and point to the original story and release your own stories or adaptations under the same license"? How do y'all suggest that I express this permission more clearly or explicitly? Is the problem maybe that people's eyes glaze over when they see the words "Creative Commons", expecting the rest of the paragraph will be irrelevant legalese?