
After My Grandmother Swapped Lives
Chapter 1
I straightened the lace collar of my navy blue dress and checked my reflection one last time. Eighty-one years stared back at me, each wrinkle earned through decades of breaking barriers as the first female engineering professor at Westlake University. The lines around my eyes had deepened from squinting at blueprints and frowning at foolish students who thought women couldn't understand fluid dynamics.
"Mother, are you ready? Everyone's waiting downstairs."
My daughter Diana's voice carried that familiar nervous tremor. Always anxious to please, that one. Too soft for her own good.
"Coming," I called back, my voice carrying the authority that had commanded lecture halls for forty years.
The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed six as I descended the staircase of our family mansion, gripping the banister more firmly than I would have liked to admit. Age might have slowed my steps, but it hadn't dulled my mind or my tongue.
The living room was decorated with tasteful floral arrangements—Diana's doing, no doubt. My brother's son Marcus was there with his wife, both wearing expressions of barely concealed impatience. Several former colleagues had come, along with neighbors we'd known for decades. But no sign of—
"Sorry I'm late!"
My granddaughter Luna burst through the front door in a whirlwind of color and chaos. Her jeans were deliberately torn at the knees, her dark hair streaked with purple, and unmistakable paint residue stained her fingernails. She carried a newspaper-wrapped package tucked carelessly under one arm.
"Luna," I said, my tone making the single word both a greeting and a reprimand. "How kind of you to grace us with your presence."
Diana fluttered between us like a nervous bird. "Luna, sweetheart, I saved you some appetizers. And look, Grandma's cake is beautiful, isn't it?"
"Yeah, great," Luna muttered, dropping her backpack by the door with a thud that made me wince. The girl had no respect for the antique hardwood floors that had been in this house since before she was born.
"I see you've been... creating again," I said, eyeing the paint under her nails. "I do hope it wasn't on public property this time."
Luna's eyes—so like her mother's, so like mine—flashed with defiance. "It's called street art, Grandma. Some people actually appreciate creativity that exists outside museum walls."
"Some people appreciate law and order as well," I replied crisply. "And punctuality."
The room grew uncomfortably quiet. Diana's smile became strained as she gestured toward the dining room. "Shall we move to the table? The caterers have everything ready."
Dinner was a tense affair. I commented on Luna's university attendance, which I knew from Diana had been spotty at best. Luna stabbed at her food and gave one-word answers until Marcus mercifully changed the subject to the real estate market—though his lingering glances at the house's crown molding made me suspicious of his sudden interest in property values.
When Diana brought out the cake—eighty-one candles creating a miniature inferno—Luna finally approached with her newspaper-wrapped package.
"Happy birthday, Grandma," she said, thrusting it toward me with all the grace of a construction worker handing over a brick.
I unwrapped it carefully, revealing a spray paint can decorated with swirling designs.
"You should try something new for once, Grandma," Luna said, her chin tilted in challenge. "Maybe then you'd understand what real art looks like."
The room went silent. I felt heat rise to my cheeks that had nothing to do with the blazing candles.
"Vandalism is not art," I said coldly. "Just as rebellion is not purpose."
"At least I'm not crushing everyone's dreams!" Luna shot back. "Like you did with Mom's music!"
Diana paled. "Luna, please, not today—"
"No, let her speak," I said, anger making my voice shake. "Let her explain how providing stability and practical guidance is 'crushing dreams.'"
Before Luna could respond, the lights flickered and went out, plunging the room into darkness save for the glow of birthday candles. In that moment of forced quiet, I closed my eyes and made my wish.
*I wish I could live her life for just one day. Maybe then she'd appreciate everything I've sacrificed.*
Across the darkness, I could almost feel Luna's similar thought, like an echo of my own frustration.
Then lightning struck with a deafening crack, illuminating the room in harsh white light. The windows rattled, and a section of the old oak tree outside crashed toward the house.
"Luna, look out!" I shouted, pushing myself from my chair with surprising speed. As I shoved her away from the falling debris, I felt something strange—a pulling sensation, as if my very essence was being stretched thin.
The last thing I saw before losing consciousness was Luna's face, her expression shifting from anger to shock as our eyes locked across the chaos.
Neither of us knew that in that moment, our impossible wishes were about to come true.
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