
After My Grandmother Swapped Lives
Chapter 3
I arrived at Professor Martinez's sculpture class ten minutes early, clutching Luna's sketchbook and supplies. The classroom smelled of wet clay and turpentine—oddly comforting, reminiscent of the engineering labs where I'd spent decades of my life.
Students filtered in, most avoiding eye contact with me. Was Luna truly this isolated, or was it my awkward attempts at portraying her that kept them at bay? I straightened my posture instinctively before catching myself—eighteen-year-olds rarely stand with the rigid bearing of an octogenarian professor.
"Today," Professor Martinez announced as he strode in, "we're solving a common problem in clay sculpting—flow dynamics and structural integrity."
My ears perked up. Flow dynamics? Now this was something I understood.
"Your assignment," he continued, gesturing to clay blocks on each table, "is to create a cantilevered form that maintains structural balance while accounting for the clay's tendency to slump under its own weight before firing."
Students around me groaned, but I felt a surge of excitement. This wasn't art—this was engineering!
Martinez paused at my table, his expression skeptical. "Miss Reyes, perhaps you'll actually complete this assignment instead of telling me how irrelevant traditional techniques are to your...street expressions."
The condescension in his voice ignited something in me. I'd faced that exact tone from male colleagues for decades.
"Actually, Professor," I said, picking up the clay, "this is a simple matter of viscoplastic flow under gravitational loading."
His eyebrows shot up. "Excuse me?"
My fingers worked the clay as I spoke, my mind calculating stress distributions and deformation rates. "Clay behaves as a non-Newtonian fluid with yield stress properties. If we account for the viscosity gradient as a function of water content..."
I sketched a quick formula on my paper, then continued molding the clay into an elegant arch that perfectly balanced the competing forces.
"See, if you apply Bingham plastic principles and calculate the pressure gradient across the vertical axis, you can predict exactly how much support the structure needs."
The classroom had gone silent. Martinez stared at my hands, then at my face, his mouth slightly open.
"That's...graduate-level engineering analysis," he finally managed.
"Is it?" I said innocently, suddenly remembering I was supposed to be Luna. "I just...read about it somewhere."
A student behind me whispered, "Since when does Luna Reyes know fluid mechanics?"
Martinez circled my work, inspecting it from every angle. "This is...correct. Perfectly balanced." He looked thoroughly confused. "Where did this come from, Miss Reyes?"
I shrugged, trying to channel Luna's defiance. "Maybe there's more to art than you think, Professor."
He walked away shaking his head, and I noticed several students looking at me with newfound curiosity—particularly a lanky boy with wire-rimmed glasses who kept stealing glances from across the room.
After class, I wandered the campus, trying to piece together Luna's schedule from her phone. That's when I noticed a commotion near the arts building. Campus security officers were removing torn paper from a wall, tossing the pieces into a large trash bin.
"Another eyesore removed," one officer said to another. "Dean wants zero tolerance for this graffiti nonsense."
Something compelled me to look closer. As I approached, my heart sank. The fragments contained splashes of color and line work that matched Luna's sketchbook style.
"Excuse me," I said, "what are you doing with that artwork?"
"Artwork?" The security guard scoffed. "Vandalism, you mean. Against university policy."
I peered into the bin and caught glimpses of the torn mural—three female figures reaching toward each other across a starry void. With a jolt, I recognized the oldest face as my own. The middle one was clearly Diana. And the youngest...
"This is Luna's work," I whispered.
When the guards left, I did something I never thought I would—I climbed into that trash bin and carefully gathered every fragment of the destroyed mural, tears stinging my eyes. My granddaughter had created something beautiful about our family, and it had been discarded as garbage.
Back at Luna's dormitory, I spread the torn pieces across her desk, determined to reconstruct what had been destroyed. That's when her roommate Sarah sauntered in, her cheerleader uniform impossibly pristine.
"Still dumpster diving for your trash art?" she sneered. "God, you're pathetic, Reyes."
I felt something snap inside me—not the cautious restraint of an eighty-one-year-old woman, but the righteous fury of someone who had fought battles against dismissive attitudes her entire life.
"Interesting perspective," I said, rising slowly to my full height—Luna's height, but somehow I made it imposing. "Perhaps you'd like to share more insights while finding new accommodations?"
Sarah laughed. "What are you going to do about it, freak?"
Without breaking eye contact, I walked to her side of the room and lifted her entire packed suitcase with one hand—channeling the strength of a young body and the determination of an old soul.
"I believe the housing office has vacancies in the north quad," I said calmly. "Unless you'd prefer I assist you further?"
Sarah's mouth fell open. The boy from art class—apparently having followed me from Martinez's class—stood in the doorway, witnessing everything.
"That was amazing," he said after Sarah had fled. "I'm Jake. And you...you're not the same Luna from yesterday, are you?"
I looked down at the torn mural in my hands—the three generations of women in my family, reaching across an impossible divide—and wondered how much longer I could maintain this charade.
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