As identical twins, we were inseparable, right up until the age of seventeen. That's when I got a boyfriend called Brad. Brad was rude, callous and slightly vindictive. And also impossibly good looking. So, after three months of Katie bitching about how bad he was to me, it came as a bit of a shock when I came home from college one afternoon to find Katie at home with him. Of course that would have been bad enough; him having told me that he was away and all. But I suppose the real shock came when I opened my bedroom door and saw my sister taking the length of his cock into her mouth. Things got a little difficult after that. So difficult that it made life hell at home and at college. Katie and I had a fight about it, then cooled off almost immediately; reminding each other that as twins we were closer to each other than anyone or anything. Besides, we both knew it was Brad's fault, seducer that he was. Of course that truce didn't last. Every few weeks I would get horribly depressed; the vision of my ex boyfriend fucking the face of my twin sister dominating my thoughts. I would go quiet, then lash out at Katie and anyone else close to me, and change the furniture in my room in an effort to erase the memory. I also did what I could to change myself from my twin; throwing out most of the clothes I had that were identical to Katie's. Although not mad enough to adopt a goth lifestyle, I started to wear darker colours, and more outrageous outfits. Clothes that were tight around my tits and ass; porno-quality dress wear, as Katie once told me. I also cut short my once long red hair into a short-backed bob, and dyed it blonde. Eventually, Katie knew that something had to give and, several months later, used some saved-up money to move out of home into a flat on the other side of town. The last word she heard from me was "Bitch" as the door closed behind her.
This story could have ended there, with not much to tell about what happened next. It could have turned into a very maudlin tale about depression and sadness; eighteen months is a long time not to see or talk to someone who you've previously shared your whole life with. When we were younger, we used to play games of marriage; swapping the role of 'mom' and 'dad', but always keeping each other together. We just assumed that we'd always be together, whatever happened. And now it was like we had divorced. Irreconcilable differences, you could say. Even though I thought about her a lot (and I dare say she did the same), my story could have ended there, had it not been for the dreams.
A year and a half after the incident; almost a full twelve months since Katie had left home and we'd last spoken to each other, I went to bed after a full night out with some friends. I'd actually had a good time, and hadn't thought about Katie all night. But when I got home, and got to bed, the dream I had was as vivid and clear as reality itself. It started in a park I didn't recognise on a beautiful summer's day; some children were playing on some swings and slides, moms were walking babies in prams as men and women jogged past in sweat pants and t-shirts. Some suited office workers sat on park benches sipping lattes and cappuccinos. And Katie was walking along a path, talking to someone on her cellphone. She looked happy, and gorgeous. Her long copper hair bobbed gently below her shoulder blades as she walked; white vest-top and joggers/trainers making her look both athletic and relaxed. Her pale skin warmed easily in the heat of the sun and a generous sprinkling of freckles dotted her nose and cheeks (just as it would mine). I remember feeling strangely at ease watching her; interested in how she was and what she was doing, where she was going and who she was talking to. She looked happy, and was smiling and laughing with the person at the other end of the call. I wondered who it was; who it could be who was making my beautiful sister look and act so happy. In my dream I felt a wave of emotion sweep over me; emotion and feeling for my sister that I'd denied and suppressed for so long.
I was beginning to wonder if the dream would let me talk to her, let me do in dreamscape what I couldn't do in real life, when a man stepped out from under the branches of a tree and confronted her. Katie stopped, somewhat startled, and managed a nervous smile. The man reached into the belt of his dark trousers and took out a huge six inch hunting knife. The blade gleamed perfectly in the daylight, even though he seemed to be shrouded in some kind of dream-mist. Katie stared, horrified and fascinated as the man turned the knife one way then the other in front of her face. With his free arm, the man snaked a hand behind Katie's head and held her by her hair. Then he stepped closer to her and lined up the knife against her chest. The world continued around them in my dream, other people walking past and getting on with heir lives; not noticing the danger this slim young woman was in. Katie kept on staring at the blade; watched it in horror as the man began to push the knife against her; piercing the flesh of her breast. He leaned forward, driving the weight of the knife into her chest. I heard the sickening crunch of bone grinding and snapping under metal and there wasn't any blood, no blood at all, as he sliced the blade into my sister's heart.
I woke up, stifling a cry, covered in a cold sweat. I sat there; alone in my room, shivering for nearly twenty minutes as I tried to calm the racing beat of my heart. My sister had died, had been murdered. My own twin, who I hadn't spoken to in a year and a half; who I hadn't seen for long months on end. She just popped up out of nowhere in a happy dream and was killed in front of me. I sat there, clutching my heart at the point where the murderer's knife was pushed into Katie's chest, feeling the horrible pain of watching my twin die. I suddenly wanted to see and speak to her; right there and then. I wanted to put my arms around her, hold her close to me and make sure she was alright. Eventually, my own heart still racing faster than normal, I sank back onto the bed with that thought of reconciliation in my head drifting restlessly back into a dreamless sleep.
I woke up feeling terrible; as though I hadn't slept at all. The dream had disturbed me a lot during the night, but in the cold light of day it didn't seem so bad. In fact, some part of my stubborn pride felt a bit foolish for caring so much about the sister who had betrayed me. The dream preyed on my mind most of the morning, but by lunchtime I had moved on to other thoughts. That evening I went out for a few drinks with my friends and didn't think anything of it. I went home (a little drunk, and having had more than one stranger's tongue politely invade my mouth), and went to bed; falling into a black, dreamless sleep. For the next five nights I played out the normal routine of my daily life; struggling at the Marketing firm where I worked, enjoying the evenings out with friends and time at home to myself. I had nothing to particularly worry me. My sleep had become a blur to me; a black nothingness during which I switched off then returned to the world a few hours later.
Then, one week exactly from the nightmare I had about my sister, I went to bed early after watching some TV. Almost immediately, the dream began, plunging me into a vivid and vibrant world.