MY SISTER JEAN

     BillyG (hayden@mindless.com)

     _________________________________________________________________
     


     Chapter 12  --  Surprise Under the Pillow


          After our last near-hit-near-miss encounter, my sister and I
     had almost no time to consider our lives much less our sexual
     attraction. The demands of school and our otherwise busy social
     lives grabbed all our energy and attention.  The glances and
     poignant smiles served to remind us frequently of the pull we'd
     come to acknowledge but our natural cautiousness coupled with our
     jam-packed lives served to buffer our lusty appetites.  Yet we
     had opened a door of intimacy that was never to close for all the
     days of our lives.  In a dozen small ways, we were more
     affectionately connected, open and trusting than we even knew.

          Our mother, sensitive to the moods in our family, had not
     failed to notice that our one-time sibling abrasiveness and
     competitiveness had given way to a softer connection.  I suspect
     she was relieved.  I wondered if she might see anything beyond
     the surface.  She did so often.

          Pouring orange juice one morning at breakfast, Mom
     commented, "I want to tell you kids that it's so much more
     peaceful around here since you two became friends.  My brother
     Jim and I did the same thing when we were about your age."

          The same thing.  What'd she mean?

          Mom chatted on about her teenage life.  Jean and I looked at
     each other, then she glanced at Mom and, looking again at me,
     raised an eyebrow as if to ask, "Do you suppose Mom and  . . . ?"

          For a moment I was shocked.  Mom?  Then remembering the
     lusty sounds we sometimes heard coming from my parent's bedroom,
     I smiled to myself.   Jean and I had then decided that our
     parents probably had done "it" more than twice.  Shrugging my
     mental shoulders, I thought, "Why not?"

          Returning to the present, I became more aware of my mother,
     of her dress.  She was wearing a light robe and several times as
     she was gesturing I'd seen her breasts move under it. I thought,
     "Christ, Billy, you are a real perv.  Your own  mother!"

          In a silent mime, Jean's eyes opened in astonishment and she
     put her finger tips across the surprised "Oh" of her open mouth .
     . . just as Mom looked up.

          "What?" Mom asked.

          Quick to recover, Jean replied, "Oh, I just remembered that
     I forgot my French book at school."

          Jumping in, attempting to divert Mom's attention, I asked,
     "Did you and your brother fight a lot, Mom?"  I wasn't interested
     in their fighting as much as the possibility of their connection.
     Not that I expected she'd tell us much, but perhaps we could beat
     around the bushes a little.

          Laughing, she remembered, "Sure.  Just like most brothers
     and sisters I guess -- but you know, we really loved each other."

          Jean and I looked at each other again.  You know, that
     silent "look" that says, "Hmmmm."  Then I looked at Mom's
     breasts.  Jean glanced at Mom and then slowly shook her head in
     silent remonstration.

          Continuing, Mom added, "You know your Uncle Jim.  He's a
     strong, take-charge kinda guy now, but he was a little younger
     than me when we were kids.  Still is for that matter.  Why, there
     was a time when I could beat him up."  Then, looking off into
     some unfocused middle distance, she shook her head and added
     ruefully, "That didn't last long. He grew up fast!"

          Jean snorted her juice through her nose, remembering, I
     supposed, the play on words we'd often used, about my "growing
     UP."  Picking up her napkin, she dabbed her face and fake sneezed
     to cover her embarrassment. "And then what happened?" she asked.

          "Oh, you know.  I used to bully him and then he grew up,
     more than just physically.  He matured and became a man, like
     over night, and then he started to tease me, even though he was
     younger."

          "Did it bother you?  That change I mean?" I asked, thinking
     of how my relationship with Jean had changed in a similar way and
     wondering just what *had* gone on in Mom's younger life.  The
     truth was, I'd ceased to think of her as a chaste, puritanical
     person sometime ago.  I *knew* she was sexual with our Dad but I
     suppose I thought he had been the first and the last, her only.
     That limited view of my mother's humanness was slowly giving way
     to a more realistic acceptance of her as she probably was.  The
     thing was, I didn't know how she *was*.  I was more than casually
     interested . . . more than I wanted to admit to myself.

          Mom continued, "Well, at the time I didn't want your Uncle
     Jim to know, but secretly, I was pleased.  I mean, he was so
     strong and so smart. He could just *fix* things and he began to
     take care of me.  I liked that." She paused, buttering her toast.
     "Once there was this guy -- a real jerk, obnoxious and mean, who
     was always teasing the girls -- saying dirty things about them.
     Well, this guy said something about me once -- in front of a
     bunch of guys -- something dirty I think.  Jim heard about it and
     walked right up to the guy -- who was bigger than him by the way
     -- and said,  Don't *ever* talk about my sister,' and without
     another word, smashed him right in the nose."

          Jean gasped, "Really, Mom?  Uncle Jim?"

          "Yep.  I was there.  Saw it all.  The guy fell back.  He
     grabbed his nose. It was bleeding all over the place.  He was
     crying and saying he was going to kill my brother.  Jim walked up
     to him again and again, without another word, punched him right
     in the stomach.  Down he went. Stayed there too, cryin',
     slobberin' and cursin'.  But he didn't get up. Your uncle said,
     Yeah, yeah.  You'll *shit* too, if you're well fed. Get up if you
     want some more, asshole.'"

          Then hearing the words of her own account, Mom reddened and
     glancing at us, added, "Oops.  Pardon my French."

          "Far out," I said, even more impressed with my uncle.

          "Oh, my . . . I never heard that story," said Jean.  "That's
     really something."  And then turning to me with a smile, she
     asked, "Would you fight for me, little brother?"

          "I guess.  I mean, I *might*," and then turning to Mom
     added, "If she wasn't so darn strong and mean already!"

          Jean threw her napkin at me and yelled, "You shit!  I am
     not!  MOM, make him stop!"

          Covering my head with one arm, I held up the peace sign with
     the other hand and quickly said, "Sor-ry.  Didn't mean it.
     Honest.  Peace. Peace?" Then, turning to my mother, I added in a
     stage whisper, "She's cute when she's mad, isn't she?"

          Mom leaned back in her chair and folded her hands in her
     lap.  Her eyes and voice softened.  "You two remind me *so* much
     of me and Jim, I can't get over it."  Her nipples were poking
     through her robe.  I tried not to stare.  I failed.

          The voice in my head asked, "Did you and Uncle Jim fool
     around, Mom?"  But the voice that came *out* of my head asked,
     "You guys ever double date, Mom?"

          She smiled that special smile of remembrance.  "Sure.  Lots.
     We'd share all our stuff with each other.  He always had an
     opinion of the guys who'd ask me out.  Some were okay and some
     were not.  And he'd always ask me about the girls *he* dated.
     Things like . . ." and then she suddenly stopped talking,
     seemingly embarrassed.

          Stepping into the embarrassed silence, I said, "That hasn't
     changed.  If it wasn't for *my* wise counsel, Jean'd date some
     real weirdos, I can tell you that."

          Jean surprised me, for she didn't argue.  "Yeah, Billy knows
     a lot about the guys that I don't . . . that girls don't in
     general."  Turning to me, she added, "I appreciate your caring,
     Bro."

          Jean was picking up on the direction this was taking.  We
     worked well together that way.  But we knew Mom was no patsy and
     we didn't want to be too obvious.  We just knew she'd shut up
     like a clam if she picked up on what was in our heads -- my head
     anyway.

          "Mom, could you talk to Uncle Jim about . . . uh . . . about
     your feelings and . . ."  she finished lamely, "and  . . .
     things?"

          Mom, sensing Jean's discomfort, forgot her own and laid a
     hand on her arm.  "Sure, baby.  We could talk about everything.
     That's why it was so special."

          Uncertainly, Jean asked, "Really?  Everything?"

          Glancing at me a moment, Mom answered Jean, "Yep,
     everything."

          "Even sex?" I asked, trying not to sound too eager yet
     knowing I was edging into new ground.

          Mom hesitated.  I could tell that she felt she'd been
     accidentally pulled into this self revelation but couldn't cop
     out now.  "Yes.  Even that."  Then, putting her napkin on the
     table with a gesture of firmness, she leaned forward a bit and
     added, "Sometimes, *especially* that.  I mean, if you can't talk
     to your own brother . . ." and then she made a dismissive gesture
     with her hand and looked upward, as if for confirmation from
     above.

          "Yeah," I agreed.

          "Yeah," Jean echoed, "Your own brother . . ." and then she
     tailed off, not quite sure just what she was agreeing with.  She
     looked at me and wrinkled her nose as she cocked her head . . .
     her sign language that asks, What are we talking about, anyway?'

          "Sex, Jean.  We're talking about sex. Remember?"


          Mom, suddenly seeing our discordant thinking, threw her head
     back and laughed.  "You two . . ." she began and then wiped a
     laugh tear from her eye, "you two are like Abbot and Costello."

          "Who" I asked.

          "Who's on first," Jean prompted.

          "What's on second, " Mom continued and they both laughed at
     each other.  At my expense, I was certain.

          "Come on, ladies.  What is this, geriatric week?  We were
     talking about sex, remember?  How'd we start talkin' about
     baseball of all things?"

          Placing her hand on my arm, Mom said, "I'm sorry, Billy.
     You guys started it.  You just got me giggling.  I'm a little
     embarrassed, you know. I'm not used to talking, well . . . so
     frankly with you two."  And then, as if to cope with her
     uncomfortable position, she added quickly, "Anyway . . . anyway,
     I must go down to the  flatlands.'"  This was our name for any
     part of the surrounding area not in the foothills where we lived.

          This conversation was over I knew, at least for now.  I was
     disappointed and relieved at the same time.  On the one hand, it
     was kind of thrilling to hear something of our Mom's early life,
     but on the other, it was so foreign as to be strange and a little
     uncomfortable. We were just becoming comfortable with our own
     sexuality.  Considering Mom's was almost too great a stretch.

          Dabbing her lips again, Jean started to get up and then
     paused, looking at Mom.  "Remember I said I was going to stay
     with Aunt Peg sometime?" Without waiting for a reply, she went
     on, "Well, she's invited me over for tonight.  It's OK for me to
     go over, isn't it?"

          Moving toward the kitchen door and hardly pausing, Mom
     answered, almost absently, "Sure, baby.  Say hello for me, won't
     you?"  And then she was gone.

          "Oh crap!" I grumped with no little disappointment.  "I was
     looking forward to us watching a movie or something.  We haven't
     spent *any* time together.  We never even talk any more."  My
     tone was almost petulant.

          Jean was unmoved.  Laughing, she said, "Oh Billy, don't
     worry. We'll talk again . . . promise.  In fact, I'll call you
     tonight from Aunt Peg's house. About eleven?"

          A phone call wasn't what I had in mind, but it was clear
     that was all I was going to get, so I tried on a little gracious
     acceptance.  I tried, but it didn't fit well.

          Jean left a short while later and I moped around, trying to
     stay busy. The late morning and afternoon were taken up with
     self-appointed chores that helped me stay out of a dangerous
     place, my mind.  Years later someone was to tell me, "Bill,
     *your* mind should be used for amusement purposes only."

          Still, I spent the early evening feeling sorry for myself,
     convinced that I was unloved and largely unlovable.  I've always
     been struck by my capacity to move from joy one moment to
     self-pity the next. When I'm in a good place, those extremes
     amuse me, but when I'm in some self-centered dark hole perched
     firmly on the pity pot, it seems decidedly not funny. Moreover, I
     am quick to assume that not only is it a bad situation, but that
     I'll be stuck there forever.  No half measures in my thinking!

          Holing up in my room, I put on an Enya CD and sank into the
     luxuriant and mystical sounds that reminded me so much of Jean.
     Enya's lyrics, woven into the tapestry of her sound, washed over
     me:

               "If only I could stay with you, my train moves on,
            you're gone from view, . . ."

          Whatever loving and aesthetic side I might have had, the
     side that loved the *spirit* of Jean, was simply pushed aside by
     the power of my erotic imagery.  Somehow, fueled and driven by
     the haunting melodies of Enya, I sank into the sensual torpor of
     my reminiscence.

          If I had thought my images might somehow be visible to
     others, I'd have been embarrassed.  But safe within that secret
     place in my mind, I reveled in the richness of my erotic recall.
     As if etched in stone, the picture of Jean, standing with her
     back to me, flashing her pantied butt, came and went as a
     subliminal image.  The curve of her back, the soft roundness of
     her womanly hips, the dimples above her gluteal muscles and the
     shadowed nether regions where the thin strap of her panties
     cupped her mons . . . these mental pictures rolled through the
     interstices of "Shepherd Moons."

          The one time I'd had the opportunity to *really* look at
     Jean's nude body, it had registered and imprinted in my memory
     with extraordinary detail.  The filtered afternoon light in her
     bedroom had slanted across her torso, seeming to pronounce and
     deepen the natural shadows.  Her breasts were somehow fuller,
     heavier, the nipples even more prominent. Refracting the already
     diffused light, the almost invisible, downy hairs on her belly
     were highlighted and became a penumbral shadow above the soft,
     curly down of her pubic hair.  Without the jutting prominence of
     a pubic ledge, her belly curved smoothly in a soft arc to the
     darkened region between her thighs.  In my mind's eye, I could
     see that her rich auburn pubic hair, while not extensive, was
     thick and full and curly.  I knew what was hidden there, between
     her long, slender thighs.  I'd seen it once, close up as she had
     urinated on a dusty Sierra trail, facing me, in broad daylight.
     My mind's images flashed back and forth as a lens snaps into
     near- and then far-focus. First one.  Then the other.

          I was delighted and tormented and excited, all at once.
     We'd agreed we would have a "limited sexual connection."  We'd
     abandoned any pretense that we weren't attracted to each other,
     but under the lash of our own sense of propriety and some
     nameless fear of doing wrong, we'd agreed that whatever else we
     did, we wouldn't go all the way.  Yet, that remained so
     tantalizingly ill-defined.  Hanging in that ether of vague
     boundaries, I found myself almost agitated with desire.

          The hours passed, despite my intolerance for delayed
     gratification. A few minutes before 11 P.M. Jean called.  "Hi,
     dude!  Miss me?"

          "Naw," I lied, "I forgot all about you.  What's up, woman?"

          He laughter picked me up.  "You lyin' sack a'. . . . Your
     nose is growing!"

          "That's not all that's growin'."

          "Well, big boy," she began in her Mae West imitation, "if
     you'll check under your pillow, we'll see if we can help it grow
     a little more."

          "What  . . . ," I began, but she interjected: "I left you a
     little present. Check it out and I'll call you back in a little
     while."  Click. The line went dead.

          Still holding the dead phone to my ear, I pushed up and
     turned back, looking under my pillow.  There was a pair of Jean's
     panties. They'd been worn.  Under them was a note.


     END 12