Editor's note: this story contains scenes of incest or incest content.
*****
"When the Ecuadoran minister of tourism interviewed me, he said that no one ever gets attacked by a shark in the Galapagos Islands. He asked me if it couldn't have been a giant turtle. And I told him I knew a fuckin' turtle from a shark. He wasn't pleased with my attitude, but then he wasn't the one sitting there, dripping blood on a departure lounge floor while waiting to get on a delayed flight to a fuckin' substandard third world hospital."
"But you didn't get a good look at the shark, you said," Cousin David, Uncle Jim's son said. "You don't know what kind of shark it was?"
"It was a shark with big teeth," Cousin Jack Riding, Uncle John and Aunt Betty's son, retorted. "It took a bite out of my arm, just here. See? It was a fuckin' big-toothed shark with a chunk of my arm in its maw."
"Oo, gross," Candace, David's twenty-three-year-old daughter said. It was her younger, hunky husband, Steve, an auto mechanic from right here in Rochester, Indiana, who Cousin Jack was talking directly too. That didn't surprise me a bit, but Candace didn't seem to mind. Jack had been paying a lot of attention to Steve today. I guess Candace's grandfather, Jim, hadn't told her about Jack, assuming he remembered after all these years or that he ever had known or had wanted to know. I didn't go around then asking who knew what. I didn't want any of them to know. Jack had been off in Los Angeles working as a TV producer for so long that those left behind in Indiana probably had forgotten all about his early life—at least I could hope that they had.
I certainly hadn't. But then, I had better reason than any of the others not to forget about Jack's early life. I certainly didn't forget those summers we'd spent here at the Riding family home on the shores of Lake Manitou when Jack was twenty-three and I was eighteen. A five-year age gap at that age made my worship of him and complete trust in him and acquiescence to his interests and guidance easy at the time. I was a pushover. Of course, I was already inclined in that direction.
I tried not to look at Jack while we were all sitting around in a semicircle of multicolored Adirondack chairs on the lawn above the dock behind the family home and Jack was telling us about his harrowing encounter with a shark It had happened while snorkeling in the Galapagos Islands the previous fall and had included a three-day ordeal in being transported back to the States from one primitive medical clinic to the next little-less-primitive Ecuadoran hospital until his studio could get him airlifted back to California for a professional surgeon and plastic surgeon. Once there, they'd had to redo all of the work on him.
I wasn't the only one who was not pleased that Jack was talking directly to Candace's husband. Johnny, probably even younger than Steve, maybe nineteen, was looking a little irritated at Jack's behavior—that's when Johnny wasn't looking at me and smiling. He was a gorgeous young man who Jack had brought here unannounced. I think I'd heard in the confusing round of rolling introductions at the Riding family reunion at the old family home on Lake Manitou, on the edge of Rochester, Indiana, that Johnny was a male model in LA. I admit that I was surprised as hell that Jack would have a son—that he must have been a father when he was teaching me in sexual relations between men. But I wasn't surprised that he had a beautiful young man. Jack had always been a hunk himself. I did understand there had been a few wives—Jack worked in Hollywood, after all—but I couldn't imagine that the marriages had been for more than show.
I know I had been smitten by Jack those two summers we were both here a dozen years previously—the summers that I ripened sexually; the summers I pined for Jack until long after I realized that we both wanted the same thing. Of course, there was still a lot we could do, being attracted to each other, even if not in a yin-yang way that would have completely fulfilled satisfaction.
"We decided that the shark must have mistaken me for a sea lion. I'd seen one that was wounded, a gaping hole in its side, just before I fell a nudge on my arm. It didn't even hurt initially—not until the initial confusion and surprise wore off."
Jack was back to describing his snorkeling ordeal. He was looking directly at Steve, who looked back, mesmerized. I doubted that Steve had ever been out of Indiana, let alone to the Galapagos Islands. And he seemed to be going under the spell of Jack, which I well knew was easy to do. Candace was a sexy little thing, though. I hoped she'd be able to hold Steve back from the brink. We were a pretty well-educated crew here at the Riding family reunion. Steve was out of his element here. Very impressionable was Steve. If Candace weren't here—and maybe Jack's parents, John and Betty, who knew what was what and were ever vigilant, I'd despair that Steve would be crossing the divide sometime this weekend.
But then, who was I to talk? I had been just as mesmerized by Jack and I'd fallen for him hard. There had just been limitations on how far we could go.
"That was what satisfied the minister of tourism when he was at me before we flew out of Quito—that there was an accident involved, maybe. That maybe the shark didn't know he was attacking a human in a black wetsuit, easily mistaken for a sea lion. But there I was in pain, holding my arm up to ease the blood flow from a big bite, and trying to make the Ecuadoran minister of tourism feel good about the safety of tourists to his country so he'd stop talking and let me get on the fuckin' plane. As it was, we'd missed the first one and had to wait for the next one."
Jack was holding court. The rest of us—thirteen of us other than Jack—were listening to his story with a wide range of interest from Steve, who was leaning forward in his orange Adirondack chair, almost with his tongue hanging out, to the family matriarch, Marie, who was still living in this huge Victorian manse on the shore of Manitou Lake. Grandmother Marie Riding was sitting in a purple Adirondack chair, glassy eyed, in her own world, with a slight smile on her face. We were just a swirl of figures to her, but she was able to grasp that we were her family. She was with it enough to know we'd all come home to visit her in a rare family reunion, probably the last one she'd be alive for. I don't know what would happen to the family home and whether that meant there would be no more extended family reunions because there would be no family-related location for us to return to. But then, maybe Jim and Avis, David's parents, Candace's grandparents, would move into the house. That was the branch that had never left Rochester. Jim was the one who had taken over the family GMC auto dealership in Rochester.
There had been three brothers and two sisters in the generation ahead of me. The oldest of the siblings had been Virginia, but she died young. She drowned here in Lake Manitou. I always wondered why the family stayed here after that, but they did—Granddad John and Grandmother Marie clung to the lake and this big house, with its Victorian tower and gingerbread trim, ever after.
John, Junior, husband of Betty and father of Jack, was the oldest of the sons. John, who was sixty-seven, was an architect in New York still. Betty was an English professor at NYU. They were remote from the rest of the family and always seemed to have been too busy to interact with the rest of us. Or maybe it was because they want to seem above having come from Indiana. John had left Rochester as soon as he could and had never come back for longer than a few days at a time. I was surprised they'd come back now, but John was being extra solicitous of his mother, Marie, today, so I assumed his being here was some sort of guilt trip for not paying much attention to her before this end-of-life phase.
I was even more surprise that their son, Jack, had come. I understood that he wasn't coming, which is why I did, but he changed his mind at the last possible moment. Somehow, as the first day of the reunion wore on, I got the impression that Betty, at least, had come to the reunion to keep a check on Jack, as if she was afraid her son was going to disrupt the weekend and the equilibrium in the extended family.
That Jack lived on the West Coast and his parents were on the East Coast was no accident. Jack had been quite a disappointment and trial to his parents, who hadn't really had time for their son and didn't approval of what little they knew of Jack's interests and preferences. I didn't think they were aware of what Jack and I had done those two summers. They barely remembered who I was, and they asked no questions about me or the rare book shop I owned in the quaint Bucks County village of New Hope, in Pennsylvania. They didn't ask whether I had family when we were introduced the previous—and I don't. There's Noel, but I didn't bring him up at this reunion. He's a vet in New Hope. He probably would be very interested in Jack's shark story and Jack probably would be intuitive enough to have as much interest in Noel—and more success with Noel—than in and with Steve. Noel would not have to be seduced; he'd have been a pushover for Jack's charm and technique.
The third child, and second son, Jim, had been the one to stay here in Rochester, and, of course, his branch was represented by the most attendees at the reunion. His wife, Avis, who was the de facto mover and shaker in the family now that Marie's mental facilities and health were failing her, had made all of the arrangements for the reunion. She was the one who stepped in to take the sting out of relatives clashing from years of having happily avoided each other.
Their son, David, forty-five, was the assistant manager at the GMC dealership and would move up when Jim decided to retire. David's wife, Karen, was a school teacher in Rochester. Their daughter, Candace, was a dental hygienist, but she would, no doubt, move into place at the GMC dealership when it was her generation's turn there. Her husband, Steve, worked in the service bays at the dealership. He might make service manager one day, but even in that position he be above in ability level. He obviously had been acquired by Candace for his hunkiness and performance in bed rather than his intellectual prowess. Having watched him watching Jack; Johnny; another cousin, Ward Samuelson; and me, though, I wondered just what his interests were. There were no other young women here, to be sure, and the Riding family men were hunky, but Steve's roving eye made his interests pretty clear.
But with Jack, who most knew about, even if they were trying not to remember, and me, which I hoped only Jack knew about, the family had enough of such alternate preferences. Jack's history certainly had been there bubbling just under the surface for a dozen years.