My parents stand over the coffin and sob in each otherās arms. I feel truly and deeply sorry for them. I wish I could make things right for them, but of course, itās too late now. I want to give my mum a hug and stop her tears but I canāt reach her. Her desperate sobbing is painful to listen to. But itās what youād expect. Her only son, lying cold and lifeless in front of her. Her only daughter, gone just two months before. Iām sorry Mum. Iād come back if I could.
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Iād always loved my sister. Weād always had a special connection that most siblings seemed to lack. Of course we had minor squabbles while growing up, over things like whose turn it was to do the washing up. We always made up though, it was never serious.
I remember when she was born. I was two years old, sitting on the end of the hospital bed, looking at my mumās red, tear stained face and wondering what was screaming in her arms. Katherine fascinated me. I would sit by her cot for hours watching her sleep. When she cried, I cried too. I didnāt understand why I was doing it, it just seemed right. As we grew up, we played together because there was no one else around. When you live in the countryside, games mostly consist of imaginary games or hide and seek.
One day we were playing hide and seek on our neighbours farm and Katherine wandered off. I searched the fields for hours and hours, before returning home, exhausted, to find her sitting in the kitchen, eating supper. I didnāt feel angry with her. I just felt relieved that she was OK. I ran to her and hugged her tightly, refusing to let her go. She looked at me like I was crazy and pushed me away so she could continue eating. My mum had been worried about me but when I told her where I had been she said that I was a very devoted brother and Kat should be proud to be my sister. I liked hearing that, it made me feel important.
When we went to school Iād always stick up for her if she got into trouble. If anyone gave her a hard time Iād make sure they regretted it and didnāt do it again. Sometimes Iād pause from a game of football to watch her playing with her friends, and seeing her laugh would make me happy. Iād give her the chocolate from my lunchbox because I felt she deserved it more than me.
As we got older and puberty set in, weād sit and talk for ages. We told each other secrets and gave insights to each other into the opposite sex. I learnt a lot from her about how girls thought and why they behaved the way they did. She was the reason I was always quite popular with the girls in my class, they all wanted to be my friends. When she had arguments with friends Iād comfort her and if a boy she liked had asked out someone else, Iād do something special to cheer her up. People always told us we were a very unusual pair.
And then things changed. We were both growing up. I was well into puberty and enjoyed looking at pictures of half naked girls in soft porn magazines. She was just starting to develop. Soft curves began forming on the previously boyish figure. Her cheeks became rosier and her face took on a more feminine charm. She started wearing her silky blonde hair in different styles from the normal ponytail and seemed to take hours in the bathroom every morning. She had always been a pretty child but she grew more beautiful with every day that passed and I was proud to call her my sister.
Weād both had boyfriends and girlfriends before but nothing serious. The kinds of childish friendships where you hold hands and kiss each other on the cheek before blushing and running away. Being older, Iād had a few more serious girlfriends, but nothing long term. I always preferred Katherineās company and as soon as a girl appeared to be interfering in our relationship, I would let her go.
Then Josh appeared. I knew she liked him a lot because she was always really happy after seeing him or talking to him on the phone. When he came to the house they would be constantly touching and kissing. She saw him nearly every day and started staying out later and later just to spend more time with him. I wanted her to be happy, I didnāt want to have a problem with it, but I couldnāt help feeling like something wasnāt right. Iād always been quite protective over her and if I didnāt like one of her boyfriends I would tell her. Sheād always taken my advice and found someone else. Sheād just turned 18 and I was 20, but having grown up in the country, weād both led quite sheltered lives, so this new relationship was a big leap of maturity for her.
I didnāt say anything until her behaviour towards me started changing quite dramatically. She had always had a calm, quiet persona but she was getting increasingly impatient and would get mad at me for no reason. I wanted to put it down to hormones but it just didnāt seem like my Katherine. Eventually she stopped sharing things with me. She wouldnāt tell me anything about what she did while she was out or how her relationship with Josh was going. On top of that, there was something I didnāt like about Josh. While being very attractive, there was something suspicious in his eyes. Whenever I spoke to him I always felt like he was keeping something from me. And whenever he, Katherine and I were together, he would brush me off like I was in the way. The worse part was, Katherine didnāt seem to mind.
One evening, a rare occasion when Josh was somewhere else, I confronted Katherine while we were watching TV. I told her everything that had been on my mind and asked her to seriously consider if Josh was good for her. She sat in silence while I spoke and regarded the space on the wall in front of her for a while after Iād finished. I watched her expressionless face and waited, my heart beating loudly in my ears. Eventually, she turned to me and said coldly,
āIn case you hadnāt noticed, Iām not a little child anymore. I donāt need you to look after me. I am capable of making my own decisions and what I do with my spare time is absolutely none of your business. I appreciate the concern but I would also appreciate it if in future you would STAY OUT OF MY LIFE!ā and with that, she ran upstairs into her bedroom and slammed the door.
I sat, stunned. Not quite comprehending what had just happened. I felt alone and rejected. Suddenly, the one person who Iād always relied on to be there for me and make me feel whole, was gone. It felt like losing a part of myself, an organ that was crucial for my survival. For the first time in about eight years, I cried. Katherine was right. She was an adult now and I had no place in her life anymore. She ignored me over the next week and I moped around the house, not really eating, not really sleeping, just feeling desolate and miserable. It was a couple of weeks after that that the dreams started. But Iām getting ahead of myself. I suppose the beginning of it all was the day I needed some money.
********
It was raining. The ground was sodden and everything was saturated from three days of more or less consistent rain. My best friend rang me and asked if I would like to go and see and movie in town. I decided to go because I needed something to get me out of the house and make me feel better. It was a 40 minute walk into town, manageable on a sunny day but unthinkable on a day like this. There was a bus coming in 10 minutes and I needed to catch it if I was going to make the movie. The problem with living in the middle of nowhere is that if you donāt have something, thereās no easy way of getting it. On this occasion I didnāt have any money. I knew that once I was in town I could get money out of my bank for the movie but I needed 80p to get there.