by: Sebtomato | Complete Story | Last updated Aug 6, 2023
Chapter Description: The picture that hasn't been taken yet.
It takes Mom and Dad a few minutes to find their adult children. They
will look back, as they try to make sense of what happened, and they will wish
that they had come back sooner.
Mom had done as Lily had asked and taken Dad out for the morning,
ostensibly to let him spend quality time in Lowe’s and pick out a new hammer
drill. They go to Lowe’s but also to the mall, and Mom, conscious of the aftereffects
of Dad’s radiation therapy, ensures he’s never far away from a restroom. She
knows that her husband would be miserable, humiliated even to have a bladder
accident in public.
The rain stops during the drive home. Glad to finally see the sun, they
enter the house through the front door. They discover the living room in
disarray, couch cushions everywhere.
Dad says softly, “Honey, someone’s been here. They might still be
inside.” He goes to the foot of the stairs. “Call 9-1-1.”
Mom shakes her head. “No, honey, I think it was the kids. Although why
they messed up the couch, I have no idea.”
“Lily and Lucas were here?”
“Well, they were supposed to still be here, actually…” Mom takes out
her phone and calls Lily.
The ringing comes from the kitchen. Mom goes through and sees the
coffee mugs, her favorite red scrapbook, and Lily’s iPhone, but no Lily or
Lucas.
“Maybe they’re in their rooms?” Dad goes upstairs, and a few seconds
later comes back down. “There’s a heck of a mess in the bathroom.” His face has
a pinched expression. “And something else…”
Mom looks at him. “What?”
Dad hesitates. “There are clothes. Strange clothes. Like, baby clothes
but big. And a terrible smell.”
“The kids aren’t up there?”
“No.”
It’s only then, when they go back to the kitchen to see if there are
answers on Lily’s phone, with Mom feeling an anxious tightening in her chest,
that they both here sounds from the backyard.
Shouting. Laughing.
Mom and Dad open the kitchen door and go onto the deck.
“Jesus,” Dad whispers. He stares at his two children, who are sitting together
in the sunshine, naked and smeared in mud. “What the…” He turns to his wife and
whispers urgently, “What’s going on?”
Mom tries to clarify. “They were going to take a photo. A special one,
for your birthday.” She tries to put what she can see, and what she’s heard
about upstairs, together to make sense. She thinks back to her scrapbook, how
it was open at a certain page on the kitchen island. The onesie picture, the
bath picture, and the mud picture.
It doesn’t explain why her grown children are behaving like feral
toddlers.
It’s enough. It’s more than enough. She cups her hands around her mouth
and calls to them. “Lucas! Lily!”
Both children look up at the mention of their names. They both smile,
wave clumsily. And they both babble incoherently.
Mom leans on the deck railing. She can’t afford to faint. Whatever this
is, she must stay in control.
“Come inside right now! This isn’t…” She wants to say ‘decent’. But
isn’t there something funny about the expression on the kids’ faces? Something
beyond their smiles, brightened by more than the sunshine?
Mom groans. She understands. A maternal instinct tells her that both
her children, 18 years old and starting their college lives, have both returned
to a time of mental innocence.
How? She has no idea.
But she stops shouting. She doesn’t bother trying to call them in from
the deck.
She walks down the steps and across the grass that is still wet from
all the rain.
“Honeys,” she says, reaching the pair. “Look at you both,” she says
softly, crouching down to inspect the damage. “You’re both so muddy!”
“Moh-mee,” Lily says cheerfully, reaching up with both hands as if her
mother is going to pick her up.
Mom takes her daughter’s hands, groans and says, “Honey. What did you
do? What happened? You said you were gonna take a photo, but this is…” She
blinks in helpless confusion. “This is something else.”
Lily grins in response. “Mehhh…methy!” She squeals, and she pulls her
hands away and pats the puddle between her legs. “Mmm,” she mumbles, clearly
delighted with her new game, and Mom watches in astonishment as her teenage
daughter smears mud across her breasts and stomach.
“Boh!” Lucas shouts, winning Mom’s attention. “Boh, boh, boh!” He
points with a clumsy hand and Mom looks over to see a striped beachball.
“That’s…your ball,” she says finally. She shrugs, and even giggles
herself. Because either she giggles or cries, that’s her choice. “You found
your ball,” she says, and her tone is that of someone addressing the youngest
of children.
She is surprised at how easy it is to speak to her 18-year-old kids as
if they were 18 months old instead, as if she just had to flick a switch and
see them as toddlers again.
She’s not surprised by how much she loves them.
“When you said the kids were planning a surprise…”
Mom turns to find Dad at her side.
He raises his eyebrows. “I mean…”
Mom shakes her head. “This isn’t what Lily had planned. She can’t have
meant for this to happen.”
“Well, they’re not acting,” says Dad. “I can see it in their eyes.” He
crouches down, looks deeply into the faces of his children, and sees nothing
but slack-jawed, glassy-eyed innocence.
Dad kisses his daughter, and then his son, on their muddy foreheads.
“Quite the gift,” he whispers.
“This isn’t what Lily told me about,” says Mom. “I don’t know what
happened.” She takes the kids hands, encourages them to their feet, and is glad
to see that at least they can both stand up. “Is it temporary?” she asks, as if
Lily and Lucas could even understand the question, never mind try to answer it.
“Who knows?” says Dad. “It’s like some kind of mental break to me. But
why both of them?”
Mom says. “Maybe one cracked, and then the other. Couldn’t bear to
leave their twin behind, you know?”
Dad nods. “They’ve always been so close.”
“Joined at the hip,” says Mom.
“Glued together with Elmer’s.”
Mom takes Lily and Dad takes Lucas, as they walk back across the grass.
Dad pulls out his phone as if he’s got someone he could call. Who? A
doctor? A psychologist? There will be more immediate concerns. Like a fresh
bath. Like clean diapers and pajamas.
Dad chuckles. “I’m half-tempted to take a picture.”
“What?”
“They look just like they did, all those years ago.” Dad chuckles
again. “Remember the photo?”
Mom nods. Of course, she remembers. It was her idea, originally, for
the kids to spend so much time playing in the yard as babies and toddlers. It
was from an article in an issue of Parenting magazine.
She laughs. She can even remember the cover! A baby in a yellow dress,
surrounded by the usual headlines:
Toddler
Discipline that works (really!)
Is
your family eating right (take our quiz)
But it was the story about mud-play that really hit home. What did the
article claim?
The open-ended nature of
mud play is perfect for the developing brain.
Seventeen
years ago, she was determined that her children should expand their experiences
and become more adventurous. Seventeen years later, her children had left for
university.
Today, they
are back in the mud.
“There’s even
the beachball,” says Dad wonderingly. “Thought we lost that years ago! Where’d
they find it?”
Mom has no idea. She says drily, “Happy Birthday, Daddy.”
Dad snorts. “Thanks, Mommy.”
They reach the steps and take a moment, parents and children gazing
back across they yard.
“Boh,” Lucas says, pointing back at the beachball.
Dad nods. “You can play ball later, son.” He pats the boy’s shoulder.
“When it’s dry. When you’re all cleaned up.”
Lucas nods in agreement, as if he understands his father’s words.
“You too, Lily loo,” Dad tells his daughter. “Bath time for
princesses.”
Lily smiles around her fingers, drooling down her chin.
Mom sighs. “You’re gonna need your Binky, aren’t you.” She looks to
Dad. “Remember how she loves her Binky?”
Mom squeezes Lily’s hand and is rewarded with a slow-witted giggle from
her daughter, the teenage girl curling her toes into a fresh mud puddle and
sucking harder on her fingers.
Is this for today, or is this for good?
Mom kisses her children, and she remembers the what the Parenting
magazine article promised.
Mud
is a learning material. Mud stimulates expressive language and critical
thinking.
She looks at both of her children. They could do with plenty of mud.
And they will also adult-sized clothing and diapers – Lily had said she
found a store on Etsy for the photo-shoot, so perhaps they can start there.
But first, comes the bath, with plenty of bubbles. And then a simple
snack, warm milk, and then lovely cuddles, followed by a sleepy story for
naptime.
And the rest?
Mom puts her arms around her children, not caring about the mud on her
clothes. She cuddles her children.
They can work out the rest tomorrow.
This story was imagined and commissioned by Anonymous.
You can find more age regression stories at Patreon.
The Gift
by: Sebtomato | Complete Story | Last updated Aug 6, 2023
Stories of Age/Time Transformation