"I don't know," said Pete. "Are we even going on a date at all?"
"Of course we are!" replied Jon. "I made a wish. And wishes come true. I don't know what happens if you decide not to do it. Maybe it makes you?Maybe you just never quite get around to deciding not to do it."
"Just kidding, babe," said Pete. It sounded strange coming from a girl. In a skirt, no less.
"Let's try something simple," said Jon. "We can go to a movie. No, wait..."
"What is it?"
Jon got out her wallet and opened it up. "I wished we'd be going on a date. Maybe I already decided we're seeing a movie and maybe I already have tickets... Oh, look at this. My license, it says 'Janet'. What's your name?"
Pete felt around her skirt for a wallet. Nope. Nothing. Janet silently pointed to Pete's shoulder and, embarrassed, she realized she was carrying a handbag. The wallet was inside and showed Pete's name to be "Pat".
"Nope, no tickets," said Janet. "I suppose that's good. It wouldn't be a chick flick, then."
"You know what?" said Pat. "I don't know anything at all about lesbians. We're supposed to be lesbians, right? How do we dress? What kind of makeup do we have? What kind of movies do we watch? What do our families think about us?"
"I don't know," said Janet. "Whatever we're wearing. The stone was nice. It turned us into girls we might like to go out with. We could have been a lot more dykeish. The movies... who cares? We see what we want to see. The family... okay, I think you have something there." Janet squinted at Pat's face. "We do have makeup, or at least you do."
Janet reached for Pat's cheek, but tentatively moved closer to her. An awkward moment of each person watching the other's reaction passed, and they put their mouths together, embraced, and kissed.
After they finished, Pat grinned and said "That felt good."
"I just wonder if we're going to regret it," said Janet. "We're going to be guys in a day from now, and we still know we kissed each other...."