This is my entry for the 2020 National Nude Day contest. As always, votes and comments welcome. All sexual activity (and nudity) only involves adults over the age of consent.
My sister and I had never been close.
She was four years older than me. It would be a stretch to say we were total opposites, but we certainly didn't have a huge amount in common other than having the same parents. Sally was hard-working, conscientious and devoted to the family. I was more laid-back and coasted through life, being blessed with reasonable good looks and an excellent memory that allowed me to do better in exams than I really deserved. As for my family -- I found them suffocating and dull. My parents were dutiful rather than affectionate, as if having children and raising them was just another line on the list on the fridge. After I left home at eighteen I would only return home when I absolutely had to, and would usually be counting the minutes until I could leave again.
After my parents died -- within eighteen months of each other -- my sister would make periodic attempts to get together. I resisted the majority of them, saying I was busy with work or some other lame excuse. She never missed my birthday though. Every year, without fail, I would get a card with some lines scribbled inside updating me with the latest news. Same at Christmas. I'm ashamed to say I didn't always read what she'd written. I don't think I ever sent any cards back. I wasn't good at that sort of thing.
So no, my sister and I had never been close. And now we never would be. She was dead at thirty-nine, courtesy of a drunk driver as she crossed a road on her way home from work. Her body was thrown twenty yards by the impact. She was killed almost instantly, they said.
I went to her funeral, though I did debate it at some length with myself. What was the point? Who would have known if I hadn't? But in the end I decided I should go, though I couldn't tell you exactly why. I turned up quite late, slunk in at the back, listened to the mercifully brief service, and sidled away a few minutes before it finished.
I was half way back home when my phone rang. I listened to the message, sighed, and turned the car around.
And now I sat in her solicitor's office, my annoyance at being forced to return tempered by my curiosity. Perhaps there was some small bequest she'd made me, though that was unlikely. She wasn't a rich woman. Her divorce had been messy, as they usually are, but there hadn't been much money to fight over.
But she hadn't left me anything. Except, perhaps, unwittingly, one thing.
I stared at the lawyer in horror.
"Me?"
"You are the next of kin."
"Well -- yes. But... she's old enough to be on her own now, surely?"
"Not until Penelope turns eighteen, I'm afraid."
"And when's that?"
"In about... five months' time."
"Five months! I can't look after a teenage girl for five months! I've... I've got work! I've got... my own life!" Even as I said this I disliked the slightly whining tone of my voice.
"I understand, Mr Kemp. You are not obliged by law to do anything, of course. But if you don't, she will effectively become a ward of the state."
"So... like a foster home?"
"Something like that, yes. Though I should tell you... some friends of the family have offered to take her in."
It was like a huge weight lifted.
"So -- they were friends of my sister?"
"I believe the mother -- she is divorced -- was a close friend, yes. And her daughters are very close in age to your niece. I believe they are also friends."
"Well, that's just perfect," I said. "Great. We'll do that."
He looked at me sharply. "Would you perhaps like to meet the lady in question, before deciding? This is your niece's life, after all."
I felt rather small. There was nothing about this conversation I was particularly enjoying. I supposed he was right.
"Yes -- of course. Very happy to. You can give me her details?"
He could and he did. Five minutes later I was outside his office reflecting on what had just happened. If I'm honest, I felt like I'd just dodged a massive bullet. I'd meet this lady, I was sure she'd be fine and certainly a far more competent guardian than I would be, and then I'd check with Penelope that she was happy, and we'd be sorted. I could check in on her from time to time, but that would be the extent of my obligations.
It didn't quite go like that.
**
I called her and introduced myself, and she invited me to come out to their house to meet them all. Her name was Belinda, and she said her two daughters were devoted friends of my niece, and were already hugely excited about the idea of getting an 'extra sister.' This all sounded exactly like what I wanted to hear.
Around 3pm I drove up and parked in their driveway. It was a large house, very secluded, and clearly this was a family with a good amount of money to spend. The gardens were well-kept, the house looked freshly painted, and a large, expensive looking four-wheel drive was visible through one of the open garage doors. Another tick. Although there was some insurance money to go towards Penelope's living expenses, she wasn't going to go short of anything here.
As I walked towards the house the door opened and a red-headed woman came out and smiled at me. I recognised her. She'd been one of the people who'd given a short address at the funeral earlier that day. I'd thought then she was attractive. As I got closer I saw she was more than that. She was one of those women I would have paused to take a second look at if I'd passed them in the street, knowing that doing that was rude and improper and more than a little boorish -- but also something that I had no control over.
We shook hands, her palm cool and dry. Then, to my slightly embarrassed surprise, she leaned forward and gave me a gentle peck on the cheek. There was a wonderful, subtle scent about her, something earthy and enticing, and I had a sudden, crazy urge to grab her and kiss her deeply. But, of course, I didn't.
"I'm so sorry about Sally," she said. "Do come inside, Rob."
We sat at the breakfast bar of their large, open-plan kitchen. Every surface gleamed. Although everything was tidy and neat there was still a friendly feeling about the house. There was a scattering of family photos on various tables, in which I could just make out the dim outlines of family groups. I wanted to go and peer at them, not least because I had the classic male curiosity as to whether her daughters had taken closely after their mother -- what a thought if they had. But instead I just sipped my (very good) coffee and listened as Belinda spoke quietly about my sister and my niece.
"Yes, we were quite close," she said, in answer to my question. "There was a group of four of us who all got on well, but I felt a real bond with your sister. She was very special."
I nodded in what I hoped seemed like a sympathetic and approving manner. Perhaps my sister had been special, and I'd just missed it. I'd thought she was rather average, really, just like the rest of us. Saying somebody was 'special' seemed like one of those things that people said on occasions like this.
She looked at me intently. "You don't believe me."
I probably blushed a little. Her gaze was quite knowing.
"I... honestly... I don't think I knew her that well. We'd, kind of, drifted apart these last few years."
"Yes. And that was largely down to you, I think."
This woman was a straight-talker, all right.
"Um... yes, perhaps it was."
"She was always hoping you'd come and stay for a long visit. Get to know Penelope a little, perhaps. Your sister adored you."