The Brookings Rehabilitation Institute was a radical new concept in the field of criminal justice. With prisons overcrowded and funding constantly cut back it was only natural that someone in the private sector would seize the opportunity to profit from the growing criminal ranks. BRI aimed to take trouble-making young men with long, if petty, criminal records and turn them into female sex slaves to be sold to the public.
Jonathan McCormick was only 18, but he had spent most of his life in one sort of a jail or another. In between he lived on the streets and almost always ended up doing something to get him incarcerated again. Now he was a woman, known only by the serial number tattooed on her foot, and a piece of merchandise waiting to be sold to someone who would legally "own" her as well as serve as her jailer in this new type of house arrest.
Instead of being sold she was "won" by the BRI lawyer, Dave Morgan, who reluctantly accepted his "prize" after his name was drawn in company lottery. Dave had been having serious moral qualms about having been involved in such a project but a lawyer tends to learn to represent their client, despite whatever they may feel about them personally.
Together Dave and "Cindy," as the prisoner was to be called, forge a strange relationship that runs from master and slave to father and daughter and even friends and beyond as Cindy explores her new life as a woman and as human being with a chance to change her world for the better or sink even further into the depths.
"Metamorphosis" is the latest release from Stacey Zackerly in her long line of acclaimed works of transgender fiction and brings her usual blend of humor, highly charged erotica, and thoughtful musings on the nature of gender identity.
The story contains explicit adult language and graphic depictions of sexual situations. (Approximately 28,000 words.)