Riley Phoenixblatt and Margrete Helvetica moved through the Three Rivers Mall, that dying mall where hope goes to fermen
#1


Riley Phoenixblatt and Margrete Helvetica moved through the Three Rivers Mall, that dying mall where hope goes to ferment. Air conditioning gasped overhead. Somewhere, a Wetzel’s Pretzels was openly rotting. Margrete walked like a judgment passed down from a dead tribunal, her cane tapping out slow, deliberate threats. Riley walked beside her—bowtie perfect, shirt crisp, mouth closed but eyes burning with unmistakable intent.

Then they passed Abercrombie.

The scent hit them first—chemical sex, sterilized wood, and boy. Riley’s breath caught. Their jaw tightened.

“Oh no,” they said flatly.

Inside, shirtless mannequins posed like minor gods. A real employee stood behind the counter: tan, tall, chin like a weapon, hairline carved by a benevolent architect. He looked up for a second. Smiled vaguely.

Riley’s knees buckled a little.

“God help me,” they murmured. “I’m leaking.”

Margrete kept walking.

“Not a lot,” Riley added, half to themselves. “Just… a ceremonial trickle. A kind of recognition.

They planted themselves in front of the glass. “I don’t want to sleep with him,” they said. “I want to correct him. Surgically. With precision. I want to break his facial proportions with obscure osteotomies so specific the procedure names don’t even exist in English. Shave his gonial angle until he cries out in Latin. Give him an inframalar contour so unstable it hums when the air shifts.”
Margrete didn’t turn. “You’re not well.”

“I am flourishing,” Riley said calmly. “That man is begging—begging—to be improved upon. I want to strap him to a clinic bed, whisper affirmations in his ear, and then slide a titanium implant into his midface so artistically it becomes a concept.
They stared through the glass. “That’s not horniness in the vulgar sense. It’s something purer. I want to exert aesthetic force. I want to reconfigure him until he no longer belongs to his own reflection.”

Margrete paused. “Ten seconds.”

Riley glanced down. “I might need to excuse myself.”
Then they turned, adjusted their waistband discreetly, and walked after her—erect posture, serene face, and just the faintest shimmer of sweat at the temples.
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#2


The mall food court was a fluorescent wasteland of entropy and grease, populated by the young, the hot, and the doomed. Around them: shirtless gym bros in mesh tanks, soft-eyed twinks sipping smoothies, biceps flinching under synthetic fabrics. The air smelled like sodium, testosterone, and Panda Express.

Margrete Helvetica sat perfectly still, sipping black coffee from a paper cup with UNLICENSED printed on it in Helvetica Neue Bold. Across from her, Riley Phoenixblatt was unwell—but composed. Shirt still tucked, bowtie taut, but their breathing had taken on a shallow rhythm.

“There are so many hot guys here,” Riley said, voice trembling with restraint. “It’s like eating lunch inside a gay Greek gymnasium. But with Chick-fil-A.”

They stabbed at their kale Caesar.

Margrete didn’t look up. “You’re sweating.”

“I’m planning,” Riley hissed. “Planning how to dismantle them and build something new.”
They looked to their left—an absurdly handsome boy in compression shorts licking hummus off his thumb. Riley inhaled sharply.

“I want to enbyize him,” they muttered. “Subtly. Not with hormones—with geometry.”
Margrete raised one brow.

“I’m talking experimental osteotomies, Margrete. Things the maxillofacial boards haven’t even dared to approve. A superior orbital de-canting. A lateral midface widening with diamond-point offset. Maybe even a zygomatic fission followed by a unilateral cantilevered cheek float.”

“You’re making up procedures,” Margrete said, sipping again.

“No,” Riley snapped. “I’m innovating.”

They turned toward a pair of tall baristas wiping down a table. “Those ones? I’d do a buccal fat rearrangement—not a removal, a shuffle. Keep the volume, redistribute it until their cheeks look like 3D-rendered envy. Then—maybe—a subtle nasal pedestal widening. Just enough to hint at softness without surrendering structure.”

“You want to turn them into angels,” Margrete muttered.

“I want to turn them into problems,” Riley corrected. “I want people to look at their faces and not be sure what gender god intended.”

They took a deep breath and fanned themselves with a laminated map of the food court.

“This food court is erotic, Margrete. Not sexually. Sculpturally. I’m surrounded by walking raw material. Every jawline is a challenge. Every orbital rim, a draft.”

Margrete stood.

“Where are you going?” Riley asked.

“To get napkins,” she said. “And to let you cool down before you start sketching orbital decompression plans on the back of your receipt again.”

Riley didn’t respond. They were already scribbling.

“Call it the Phoenixblatt Protocol,” they whispered. “Step one: unsex the bone. Step two: make the ambiguity divine.”
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#3
They had parted ways outside the mall’s western exit, just past a decaying Claire’s and an empty nail salon that smelled faintly of acetone and defeat. Margrete Helvetica had not hugged Riley. She never did. Instead, she simply adjusted her black frock, issued a final grunt of disapproval, and murmured, “Don’t touch anyone with unsterilized desire.” Then she vanished into a rideshare driven by a man with no eyebrows. Riley stood there for a moment, staring at the parking lot—erect, flushed, still faintly damp from the earlier Abercrombie Incident—before stepping into the backseat of their waiting limo, the interior cool and violet-lit like a surgical lounge for angels. They crossed their legs, wiped their brow, and gave a single command to the driver: Genderforge.




The matte black limo purred to a stop in front of The Genderforge—Riley Phoenixblatt’s surgical atelier, sanctuary, and personal war room. It sat wedged between a defunct plasma donation center and a shuttered Blockbuster on a grey corner of Trois-Rivières, but its obsidian facade, frosted doors, and chrome logo (a fractured jawline wrapped in a laurel wreath) announced its true nature: the site where gender is re-weaponized.

The back door of the limo opened.

Riley stepped out slowly, deliberately, like a verdict being delivered. They wore a bone-white surgical coat over a black dress shirt, high-waisted trousers, and their signature bowtie—tight, blood-red, and glinting faintly under the sky’s gelatinous overcast light. Their shoes clicked sharply on the concrete as they approached the front entrance.

The doors hissed open automatically.

Inside, The Genderforge was all soft lighting, metallic angles, and velvet seating no one ever quite felt comfortable on. Everything smelled faintly of antiseptic and the crushed rosewater cologne Riley misted through the HVAC system. The front desk gleamed.

Behind it sat Björn.

Six-foot-four. Swedish. Blonde hair pushed back with effortless symmetry. Shoulders like a cathedral's architecture. Face like a Versace ad before it gets retouched. He looked up from his monitor and smiled—a slow, devastating thing.
“Dr. Phoenixblatt,” he said, voice like glacier-melt slipping over stone. “Welcome back.”

Riley didn’t answer at first. They simply stood still, drinking him in like a pervert in a cathedral.

Then: “God, Björn. Every time I see you, I have to remind myself I’m not legally allowed to commission you for personal use.”

Björn smiled patiently. “Would you like your schedule?”

“Would I like my schedule?” Riley repeated, sauntering toward the desk. “Darling, I’d like to climb you like a freestanding ladder. But yes, let’s start with the schedule.”

Björn turned slightly to gesture toward the tablet resting on the counter. His perfect ass moved beneath his slacks with divine insolence. Riley, without missing a beat, grabbed it—a full, greedy handful, as if checking for structural integrity.
Björn didn’t flinch. He just looked over his shoulder, deadpan.

Riley shrugged. “Occupational hazard. I touch what I admire.”

Björn cleared his throat. “You have a consultation in seven minutes with a new client. His name is Don Hutt. Seventy-six years old. Former army, now some sort of crypto entrepreneur. Wants to ‘balance his face out.’”

Riley rolled their eyes. “Balance? Ugh. That usually means de-pigify me without admitting it. Is he hot?”

Björn checked the screen. “He has... a presence. Big neck. Dense skull.”

Riley licked their lips slightly. “Good. I’m in the mood to rearrange a man like a Rubik’s Cube with unresolved trauma.”

Björn handed them the tablet. Riley took it, grazing his fingers on purpose.

“I swear to God,” Riley said, already heading toward the consultation suite, “if you ever leave this job, I’ll follow you to Stockholm and open a genderful nudist bakery just to keep you within fondling range.”

Björn replied without looking up: “I’ll pencil that in for Q3.”

The doors closed behind Riley with a soft hiss. The Genderforge was open. And today, gender would once again be touched, teased, and sliced into sublime disobedience.
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#4


The Genderforge consultation suite was silent but for the hum of refrigerated injectables and the faint clink of surgical tools being rearranged just out of view. On the far wall, a looping animation showed a skull undergoing a sequence of increasingly improbable osteotomies—cuts folding into cuts, bone plates resected and re-anchored like cruel origami.
Riley Phoenixblatt sat behind their desk, unmoving, gloved fingers steepled before them like a surgeon-priest. Their eyes were cold, alert. Hungry.

The door swung open.

Don Hutt lumbered in, coughing like a rusted furnace. His flesh bulged and sagged in unpredictable places. He was wide, pink, and glossy, like something pulled too early from a meat smoker. Smelled like basement and rotten garlic. His beige shirt had surrendered entirely, stretching into topography. He laughed before even reaching the chair.

“HAW hawwww! Jesus Christ, doc, this place smells like a funeral and a whorehouse had a baby. You’re the Phoenixblatt, huh?”

Riley nodded once. “You must be Mr. Hutt.”

He collapsed into the consultation chair like an avalanche of upholstery and mucus.

“I’m here for the full transformation. Feminize me. But not some dainty thing—I don’t wanna be a wilting flower. I want to be one of those jezebel hussies that start wars. You know the one. That little minx on the socials. Sabrina—Sabrina Carpenter. That’s her.”

Riley regarded him as a butcher might a hog with aspirations.

“You want to be unsettlingly desirable,” they said, rising slowly. “I can work with that. But we won’t just ‘feminize.’ We’ll intervene.”

Don’s eyes lit up. He sniffled.

Riley began to circle, voice low and steady:
“First, we perform a multiplanar zygomatic osteodisjunction—a three-part segmentation of the cheekbone. Not to lift, but to reorient the zygomatic flare medially and forward, forcing an artificial infantile contour that will never quite relax.”

Don blinked. “Hell yeah.”

“Then, a pterygoid hamulus reshaping—deep in the skull. Completely unnecessary for aesthetics. But it’ll subtly alter your resonance. Your voice will carry a faint throb of subjugation.”

Don laughed, then coughed. “That’s filthy.”

“Next, we do a custom infranasal excision, where we don’t just shorten the philtrum—we carve a false dip that creates the illusion of a moan caught mid-breath. Your smile will always look on the verge of being interrupted.”

Don whistled. “You’re a demon, doc.”

Riley continued, circling tighter. “We’ll carve a dissonant orbital rim asymmetry—one side subtly higher than the other, imperceptible to most, but enough to produce unease in anyone trying to make eye contact. And I’ll subdermally thread bioinert microfilament into your lower eyelids to produce a faint puffiness that looks like you just finished crying after sex you shouldn’t have had.”

Don squirmed in his seat. “Goddamn. You’re really gonna make me into a wanton little strumpet, huh?”

“I’m not done,” Riley murmured. “We’ll split the mental protuberance into three parts, then reassemble it with slight rotation—creating a chin that pulls away from the symmetry of the skull. Your entire lower face will look like it’s second-guessing its own gender.”

Don wheezed. “Oh, doctor, I want that. Oh, oh, I need that. Oh, my God! Oh, Oh!”

“We’ll perform a retro-maxillary plate recessing, not for projection, but to bury the upper alveolar ridge slightly—subtle dental feminization through skeletal neglect.”
Riley leaned in now, whispering into his ear.

“And finally… I’ll shave the interpalpebral fissure down by 1.3 millimeters with a custom scalpel I forged myself. It will give your eyes a vague, accusatory narrowness. Like you’ve seen sin… and liked it.”

Don trembled slightly, jowls aquiver. “Will I survive it?”

“Survival,” Riley said, stepping back, “isn’t guaranteed. But narrative is. Your legacy is. We are going to doll you up good, Mr. Hutt."

Don said, "Well sling my slop and butter my biscuit and call be a butt, doctor!" He let out one last HAWWGH-laugh and slammed his hand on the table. “Let’s do it. Slice me up, make me into a problem. I wanna walk into a Cracker Barrel and make men ashamed of their wives." He began suddenly yelling: "I need to turn every head in the Denny's!"

Riley smiled, slow and terrible. “Then sign here. And after that, I’ll take your photos. Don’t smile in them—I want your ‘before’ to look like it knew what was coming.”
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#5
What will Don Hutt look like after his facial feminization surgery? Will he look like Sabrina Carpenter? Will he finally escape 76 years old inceldom? Find out soon.
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#6
Not a single molecule, ofc
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