452 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
452 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
Archive-name: Family/sibed03.txt
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Archive-author: Michael Kalen Smith
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Archive-title: Siblings - The Early Days - 3
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From SIBLINGS -- a novel in progress
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("The Early Days")
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[...from chapter 3...]
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I was working on my third model Zero, being careful to use only the
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minimum amount of plastic cement. The two halves of each wing were
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drying in their network of rubber bands, and I was just about ready to
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insert the wings into the slots in the fuselage. The first two models
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had come out okay and were lined up on the shelf before me where I could
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visually check the wing angles. I painted a thin bead of cement along
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the wing slots, inserted the wings, checked the angles, and prepared to
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hold my hands steady for five minutes. I intended to have a flight of
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three Japanese fighters arranged in a diving formation over my study
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desk, properly detailed and painted and each with its own individual
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markings.
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Alex's head poked in the door, dark red ponytail askew. She watched
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in silence for a few seconds as I sat unmoving.
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"What are you doing?"
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I looked at my sister, then back at the model, then patiently back
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at my sister. She saw my expression and held up a hand. "Okay, I know:
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You're working on a model. But what are you DOING?"
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"I'm holding the wings steady until the cement dries, so they won't
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sag."
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She nodded as if her worst fears for my sanity had been realized. I
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raised an eyebrow. "Hey, do I make fun of the stuffed animals on your
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pillow?"
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She smiled and continued into my room in cutoffs and a tee shirt,
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collapsing on my bed, arms out, with a loud, dramatic sigh. "I'm
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bored."
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I didn't even look up. "It's 10:30 Saturday morning, Alex. How can
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you be bored?" I kind of knew what she meant, though. I mean, here I
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was with nothing better to do than build model planes.
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"I bet you could think of something to do if you worked at it. What
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about the Coven?" My name for the four or five girls she ran around
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with, doing "girl things" together.
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"Oh, they're all out of town for the weekend, or they have afternoon
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dates, or something." She sounded faintly disgusted. "Michael, could
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WE do something together?"
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"Like what?" The wings were setting up perfectly.
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"I dunno -- go to a show maybe? Just go downtown and walk around
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and window-shop?"
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I looked over at the bed and grinned. "Well, I could take you to
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the playground and hold your hand while you go down the *big* slide...."
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She stuck out her tongue and then grinned back. I liked the way her
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nose wrinkled when she did that.
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"I'm serious! It's a nice day -- we could just go out and do
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something and have fun together, couldn't we? Unless you're embarrassed
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to be seen with your little sister, of course."
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"No, I'm not embarrassed to be seen with you, and you're not so
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little anymore, anyway." I thought about discovering her menstruation a
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few months before; I tried to think of her as a "woman" now, but it
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often wasn't easy.
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The Zero's wings had set enough that I could let go of them, but I
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slipped a paperback book under each wing, just in case. I turned
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sideways in my chair. Alex had her hands behind her head and was idly
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kicking one bare foot over her cocked knee. I thought about things I
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needed to do, projects I ought to work on. Nothing. I was caught up on
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my schoolwork and so, probably, was Alex. No pressing errands. No
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place I really had to be today. God, it WAS going to be a boring day!
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On the other hand, though Alex and I teased each other without mercy, I
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really did like her company and I knew the feeling was reciprocated. We
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had become very comfortable just hanging out together.
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"You know what we both need?" I said. "Exercise. EASY exercise.
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You feel like hiking around Fremont Park for a couple of hours?"
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Fremont was a large, semi-wild area on the eastern edge of town that
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combined lawns and softball fields and cycling paths with rocky trails
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and not-too-difficult ravines. High school students went there with
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their steadies, to lie in the sun or to sit up amongst the boulder-
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strewn hillsides and make out. Young mothers strolled their infants,
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older kids climbed trees and tossed frisbees. In the summer, the park
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was pretty busy on weekends, but this was a surprisingly mild day in
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March and most families would be stoking up their charcoal for the first
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cook-out of the year, or attacking the winter's accumulation of yard
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work.
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Alex considered the suggestion for perhaps half a second before
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bouncing up with a broad, sparkling smile. "That's a great idea!
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Wait'll I get my Keds!" She hurried out, toes curled for traction as
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she angled across the hall.
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We frequently rode our bikes over to Fremont, but the idea today was
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to hike, and if we parked the bikes someplace -- even locked -- the odds
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were slim that they would be there when we came back. But it was only a
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fifteen-minute bus ride from the end of our block to the park, so it was
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still well before noon when we arrived. There were a few athletic types
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around, but the families wouldn't begin to appear before late lunch.
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"Wanna head for anyplace special?" Alex asked as we got off the bus.
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"No place special," I replied. "In fact, let's just go wherever we
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happen to go. There's no hurry; we can just stroll, okay?"
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Alex nodded agreement and we set off at an easy pace along the tree-
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edged path that separated the open, nearly empty lawns on our left from
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the rolling, rocky hillsides on the right. We ambled along and I hooked
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my thumbs in my front pockets. Alex looped her arm through mine. She
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was only a inch or so shorter than me and we fit together quite well.
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"This is nice," she said lazily and squeezed my arm.
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A few minutes later, we witnessed one of those otherwise minor
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incidents, those little public dramas, that can unexpectedly make a real
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change in your life. Three boys about ten years old came tearing down
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the path on their bikes and swerved around us. Several lengths behind
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them was a girl a year or two younger, wearing jeans and a plaid blouse,
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peddling as hard as she could.
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"Keith!" she yelled angrily. "Mom said not to go off and leave me!
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Wait up!"
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One of the boys threw up his hands in dramatic frustration and
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coasted to a stop while the girl hurried to catch up. The other two
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boys began cruising in a circle on the grass off to one side, laughing
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at their buddy's encumbrance. The girl skidded to a halt just behind
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her brother. She was nearly in tears.
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"Why don't you just go home, kid?" Keith looked very disgusted.
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"Sisters aren't good for anything!" He glared a challenge at her.
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"I just want to play...," the girl replied, looking down at her
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shoes.
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"Well, we don't want you playing with us! Get away from me! Just
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leave me alone!" And he did a wheelie on his bike as he raced off to
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join his friends. They all headed for the beginning of one of the
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park's network of hill trails.
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The girl watched them go, then slowly turned her bike around and
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headed back the other way. She wasn't crying aloud, but the misery of
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rejection was plain in her eyes. There were tears on her cheeks and she
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was biting her lower lip. As she passed us, I realized that Alex was
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about to say something to her.
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Bad idea. I trapped the hand that had begun to slip off my arm and
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said, softly but firmly, "No."
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Alex looked at me, startled, and then the girl had passed and so had
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the opportunity to intervene.
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"Why did you stop me?" She looked surprised. "I was just going to
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tell her not to worry -- that not all brothers are like that. Didn't
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you see the way he treated that poor kid?"
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I raised my eyebrows; she really didn't understand. "In other
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words, you were going to point out to her how much luckier YOU were.
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And how would that have made her feel?"
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Alex opened her mouth, hesitated, and closed it again. She looked
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for a moment at the snubbed girl, who was peddling slowly into the
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distance with her head down, then looked back at me and nodded
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unhappily.
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"You're right; I didn't think. Sorry." She took my arm again and
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we went on. She was thinking, and I thought I knew what about, but I
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kept my mouth shut.
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My sister looked over and stared at my profile for several seconds
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before asking, "Michael,... why aren't we like that?"
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My thoughts had been running along the same lines. "You mean, why
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don't we detest each other, the way everyone else we know does?" She
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smiled slightly and nodded. "Alex, I don't know. But I'm glad it's
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different with us."
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"Me, too." She squeezed my arm, just a little.
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"Maybe," I continued, "maybe we're just different from everyone
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else, period. I mean, how many people do we know who would even be
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talking about this? We've always gotten along pretty well -- haven't
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we? Is that abnormal for brothers and sisters? Or maybe we just left
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that stuff behind quicker than most people."
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Alex was nodding her head. She looked at me again and smiled.
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"Maybe we're emotional geniuses...."
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I snorted and we went on. After awhile we found ourselves stepping
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from ledge to ledge up a hillside trail. There was a series of broad
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slate shelves to one side near the top of the hill, screened from above
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by scrub and juniper, which had obviously been left as a bench for
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climbers. You could see most of the park from there, as well as the
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trail we had climbed. It seemed like a good place to sit and talk,
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which I think we both unconsciously wanted to do.
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I sat and stuck my legs out, flexing my knees. I needed to get this
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kind of exercise more often; except for swimming, maybe I was becoming
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too "bookish." My sister stepped up on the ledge just behind mine, sat
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down, and leaned her chin on my shoulder. It was an affectionate
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gesture and I liked it. But her question wasn't what I had expected.
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"Michael, how do you feel about me?"
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I considered for a moment, but I wasn't sure what she was really
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asking. "You mean, do I like you more than that kid likes *his* sister.
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Sure."
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"Well,... no -- not exactly."
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Her voice had an odd tone. I started to turn to look at her but she
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quickly laid her hand atop my head and prevented it.
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"Don't look at me!" she added, so I didn't. "I mean, uh,... um,...
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Michael, do you love me?" It came out in a rush.
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I hadn't had a chance to thing of a good answer so I said the first
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thing that came into my head. "Of course, I love you, Alex. You're my
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sister and I care about you a lot."
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Her cheek was next to my ear and I could feel her smile. Then she
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surprised me again: She kissed me on the cheek and quickly sat back.
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She had kissed me before, when I gave her a birthday present or did her
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some kind of favor, but somehow this was different. I motioned for her
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to move down beside me, which she did. Then I put my arm around her
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neck, my hand dangling loose over her shoulder, and I studied her.
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"So? Are you going to tell me what that was all about?"
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She shrugged, a bit embarrassed, and reached up to lace her fingers
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through mine. "I don't know,... I just wondered...." I continued to
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look at her expectantly so she went on.
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"Well, that girl looked so unhappy awhile ago, and I was thinking
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that I'm usually *happy* around you, and,... well, I just wondered."
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Then I surprised myself. I leaned over and kissed her at the corner
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of her eye. She was a little startled and put her other hand up to
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touch the spot. I knew that most guys my age would rather eat dirt than
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kiss their sisters, but it felt like something I wanted to do, and I
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realized immediately that I had enjoyed it.
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Alex was my sister, yes -- but she was also a very pretty girl, and
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I definitely liked girls. Also, she was my very best friend, barring no
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one. I had warm feelings toward her on all accounts, and I had reason
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to think she felt much the same way about me. How long had I felt this
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way? For as long as I could remember. Looking back, I can see that we
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were unusually mature emotionally, and I can offer no explanation for
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that.
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Because Alex was right: We had never fought, the way most siblings
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did. We argued, often heatedly, but we never sank to name-calling. If
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we stomped off in opposite directions after a spat, we always felt
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guilty soon afterward and sought each other out to be the first to
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apologize.
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I'm not sure our parents were aware of any of this, either. As I've
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said, we were the objects of benign neglect in most matters, and we made
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up our own social and psychological norms. We played together when we
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were little, we shared our toys with almost no arguments, we took each
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other's part automatically in dealings with other kids (like the famous
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incident with the Three Bullies) -- we cooperated to what was
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undoubtedly an unnatural degree. It wasn't an attitude or a
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relationship we arrived at by forethought; it just seemed to be a part
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of our emotional makeup.
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All our lives we had been close, but now we were both growing up. I
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was becoming acutely aware that there was a female body under the jeans
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and sweatshirts and -- also unusual -- I didn't feel guilty or even
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strange about the realization.
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In retrospect, I believe my sister also had a crush on me. I was
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beginning to catch her watching me unobtrusively with an expression of
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vague longing. At the time, I just thought she was acting a little
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oddly. Certainly, I had a matching crush on her; I simply didn't
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recognize it.
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I know I wondered at the time if our relaxed companionability was a
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"phase" that would end, if we would soon be at each other's throats like
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everyone else. I hoped that wouldn't happen. I was really beginning to
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consciously enjoy and appreciate my sister's friendly presence, taken so
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long for granted. I liked living with someone so similar in appearance,
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style, and tastes to myself, someone I could talk to about absolutely
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anything without being jeered. Someone so cute, too. And I didn't
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think of any of this as "wrong." It was just the way we were, and the
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fact that we recognized so early that we were different seemed to
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isolate us even more from our friends and classmates. It drew us more
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closely together.
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I had my friends, Alex had her friends, and we shared a few friends.
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But then there was "Alex-and-me," and that was like a third person in
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which each of us shared half the responsibility.
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We sat there on the rock ledge by the trail, thinking much the same
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thoughts and reaching the same conclusions. Alex snuggled a little
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closer and leaned against me, and I replied by putting my arm around her
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and squeezing her in a soft hug.
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"Michael," she said softly without looking up, "I'm lucky to have
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you for a brother, aren't I?" She paused and the tenor of her voice
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saddened. "This probably can't go on, you know that, don't you? What's
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going to happen to us?"
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"It'll go on as long as both of us want it to, Alex." It was what I
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hoped, not what I knew. We were still very young and hope comes easy at
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that age.
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Alex turned sideways to face me. "Would it be too strange if I
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kissed you? I mean, on the lips?"
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"Not to me it wouldn't be."
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She reached up to my cheek as I spoke and I put my hand on the back
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of her neck. I felt warm and tender toward her at that moment, but it
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wasn't exactly "romantic." Neither was it consciously sexual. More
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like a deliberate emotional bonding.
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Our lips met hesitantly. Neither of us had really done this before
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with anyone -- in cold blood, so to speak. But we gained confidence
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quickly. That first real kiss between us lasted maybe thirty seconds
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and it was careful and gentle and exploratory, and it felt so very, very
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nice. And so entirely natural, as if it were destined. Neither of us
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had second thoughts.
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When our lips parted we simply sat and gazed at each other, our
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hands still in place. It certainly felt like a "magic moment" but
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neither of us was quite sure why.
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I date my love for Alex, for my beautiful and perfect sister, from
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that moment. I wasn't aware of any kind of emotional watershed at the
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time, of course. But, looking back, that kiss was when our attitudes
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and feelings toward each other began slowly to crystalize. When I told
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that to Alex, years later, she simply nodded in agreement. Our first
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deliberate kiss, she said, was like being thirsty and "taking a long
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drink from a cool well." She felt the unexplainable difference, too.
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And things were never the same for us again.
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* * * * *
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Without having to think about it, I knew I had more access to Alex's
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body than was ordinarily the case. A guy in gym was bragging one day
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about having caught a glimpse of his older sister's "snatch" (a word I
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never cared for) and I remember disapproving of his leering description
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and of the snickering reaction of his listeners.
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I was as perpetually horny as any other adolescent male, and I was
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both appreciative of and aroused by the large areas of skin Alex
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casually revealed to me more and more frequently. But I certainly
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wasn't going to describe my sister's many luscious attributes with these
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lowlifes. The braggart had actually gone on recon, hanging out around
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his house at locations where he would have the best opportunity to steal
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a peek at his sister's naked body.
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Alex showed me what she was willing for me to see -- which was
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virtually all of her -- and there was no sneaking involved. She was
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proud of her body and she enjoyed showing it off to an audience she
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could trust. She never said "Don't tell anyone," nor did she even imply
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it, because she knew it wasn't necessary. I had the usual doubts about
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my own developing sexual equipment, but Alex watched with interest when
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I changed clothes or took a leak -- and that never embarrassed me,
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either. How many penises could she compare with mine at the age of
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thirteen?
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After our walk in the park and our first real kiss, there was a
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subtle change in our behavior toward each other, especially at home.
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Previously, if my door was shut, Alex would knock and wait for me to
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invite her in. I gave her the same courtesy. But now our personal
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privacy began to disappear, entirely by mutual consent. I'd knock at
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her door and then go in, without waiting for permission; Alex did the
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same. If she was in her underwear, she didn't make a big deal of it, so
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neither did I. Then our doors were only half-closed, not shut. Then
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only occasionally closed at all.
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The same was true of the bathroom: If one of us was on the toilet,
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the other ignored the fact. We still were pretty private, but now it
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was a *shared* privacy directed toward the outside world. It was as if
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that kiss had sealed a pact of trust between us.
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We also spent more and more time together, just occupying adjacent
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space. Instead of each of us studying in our own rooms, Alex took to
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occupying my bed, sprawled out with books and papers scattered around
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her, while I studied at my desk (which was actually a large, old oak
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library table).
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We might not say a word for an hour or more, the silence broken only
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by the rustle of paper and the scratching of pencils, but just being
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near each other as we worked made the homework easier. And I discovered
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the pleasures of reading a novel while lying on my back with my head
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cushioned in a girl's lap. Sometimes I would look up from whatever I
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was doing to find Alex simply watching me and smiling. Then I
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discovered I was doing the same thing.
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We began going for walks regularly, but almost always outside our
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own part of town. We knew instinctively that our friends and
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acquaintances would hassle us, and we didn't want to start any rumors,
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either. Because when we went window-shopping downtown or climbing in
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the hills, we frequently held hands. I'm sure strangers, if they
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noticed us at all, assumed I was Alex's boyfriend, not her brother, even
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though we looked so much alike.
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We also went to the shows at the old-style theaters downtown, the
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ones with balconies. We would find ourselves surrounded in an upper
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loge by a dozen scattered couples passionately making out, and we would
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look around, grin, and squeeze our clasped hands. I could put my arm
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around my sister in a dark theater, too, and she could snuggle up
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against me unobserved. I began to long for a driver's license, but that
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was still two years away.
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Oddly enough, after that first experience on the hillside, we seldom
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kissed, except for a perfunctory "thank you" on the cheek. Perhaps we
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regarded it as too valuable and special an experience and we wanted to
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preserve its rarity. Or maybe we were just fearful of the implications.
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We recognized that out affection for each other was growing with every
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passing month, but that didn't mean we understood it. There were
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occasions, however....
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* * * * *
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Alex played flute in the junior high band for two years; it later
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became one activity too many, and she dropped band so she could stay on
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the swim team. And the flute section, as every band-survivor knows, is
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on the very front row. When the Spring Concert -- the biggest musical
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event of the year -- came around, my little sister discovered she had
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outgrown last year's "special" dress; as slender as she was, she had
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still added an inch or more around the bust. Had she been a couple of
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rows back, mostly hidden from view, she might have tried to fake it by
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letting out a few seams, but for the front row she knew she'd have to
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have a new dress.
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The rule in our family had always been that Mother and Dad kept us
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respectably clothed -- which they certainly did -- but that fancy
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non-necessaries, like jewelry, and party dresses, and leather jackets,
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either came at the usual gift times or were paid for with money we
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earned ourselves.
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Alex had a conference downstairs with Mother and came away from it
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with a $20 contribution. She had another $15 stashed away from
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babysitting and typing term papers, I knew, but from what I heard her
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say, the perfect dress, the one she really, really wanted, cost $49.95.
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Cokes were still a dime then and I could buy a new pair of Hush
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Puppies for under $10, so what she had in mind was a significant target.
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And Alex was $15 short. I asked her if she had actually counted up her
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savings and she replied morosely that she *knew* how much was in the old
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stationary box in her bottom drawer.
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I thought about it for at least thirty minutes. I had my own
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savings, of course, in a battered tobacco tin wedged up in my bed
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springs, and I had vague plans for it. But it really made me unhappy to
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see my sister so unhappy. I dug out the tin and counted nearly $40; I
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took out fifteen singles and stuck them in my pocket. I could always
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mow more lawns.
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While Alex was out on an errand later that afternoon, I opened her
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bottom drawer and dug out her money box. She had twelve singles, the
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four fives Mother had given her, and a double fistful of quarters. The
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bills were neatly paperclipped together, and I smoothed out my
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contribution and added it to the clip.
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Alex wandered in and plopped down on my bed an hour later. When I
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asked her if she had come up with any ideas for the dress she wanted,
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she shook her head slowly and continued to stare at the ceiling.
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"Look," I said, "why don't you go and actually count your savings?
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When was the last time you did that? You probably don't have any idea
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how much you have!"
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"I counted it a month ago and it was less than $20, I know."
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"Would you PLEASE just go and count it again?"
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She was becoming a bit annoyed. "Okay, okay, I'll count it again!
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But it's not enough!" And off she went. I heard her dresser drawer
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open and shut. Her bed squeaked as she dumped the box out on her
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comforter. I could barely make out her voice.
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"...four, five, six,..."
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When she finished, there was a pause of several seconds and then she
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re-counted, a little louder. Another pause, and she went through the
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bills a third time. Then there was a much longer pause and I grinned to
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myself as I pictured her bewilderment. Then I heard her bed squeak
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again and her bare feet slowly crossed the hall. I had to struggle to
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keep a straight face as she came through the door, bills clutched in
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both hands, and a look of mixed puzzlement and suspicion on her face.
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"I *couldn't* have had this much!"
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"I always knew you couldn't count above three," I replied, raising
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my eyebrows.
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"Michael -- did *you* put more money in there? From your savings?"
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"Who, me?" I tried to look innocent. "Why would I do that?"
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But I was like a pane of window glass to Alex. She walked over to
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my desk chair. "I KNOW why you did it. Now, stand up."
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I must have looked a bit puzzled myself as I pushed the chair back
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and got up.
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She put her arms around my neck and stared me square in the eye, her
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|
nose an inch from mine. "You did it because you're absolutely
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wonderful, and I don't deserve you for a brother," she said softly with
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tears in her lashes. Then she kissed me, slowly, lingeringly, in a way
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that sent muscle spasms through my toes. I held her by the shoulders
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|
because I was, frankly, afraid to put my arms around her waist. I
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wasn't sure I would be able to let go. That kiss seemed to go on and
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on, though it probably lasted only a minute or two.
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She hugged me, her cheek damp against mine. "Why do you do things
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like this for me? I'll pay you back before school's out, I promise."
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"You'll do no such thing," I replied firmly. I had already thought
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|
about this, too, and I knew how I wanted it to be. "That's not a loan;
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it's a gift. More than that: It's yours because you need it more right
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now than I do. Alex, you're my sister and I want you to be happy.
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Anything I have -- anything I *ever* have -- is yours. Always."
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She pulled her head back and stared at me, and then her expression
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shifted and the look on her face held such wonder and happiness that I
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got tingly feelings in all my nerve endings. And there was something
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|
else in her face that I couldn't identify at the time, and which she may
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|
not even have realized was there.
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But I've seen it many times since when she looks at me. It was the
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first dawn of real love. It was more than just affection -- and it
|
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struck me like the sun rising on a summer day. Then she hugged me again
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and her arms trembled as she tried not to burst into tears. And this
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time I put my arms around her and hugged back. Like Alex, I wasn't sure
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what had just happened -- was still happening -- but I felt, again, as I
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had after our very first kiss, an almost physical change in my feeling
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for my sister, a change I was certain she had experienced, too.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Copyright 1993 by Michael K. Smith. Copies may be made and posted
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elsewhere for personal enjoyment, but all commercial rights are reserved.
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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