Reggy heard the words and although he was perfectly capable of understanding each word, somehow the overall meaning of the sentence was beyond his grasp.
"Wait." he said in disbelief. "This is a joke, right?"
Even as he was inquiring as to the seriousness of what he'd been told, his mind was starting to put together the sequence of events. He'd never met his father or any of this grandparents. For most of his childhood it was just his mom, Lori, busting her ass to take care of Reggy and his sister Sue. Social services had wanted his mother to name their father when they'd each been born and because she wouldn't she was ineligible for any government assistance. This also made his mother unemployable by most companies offering steady work because of how the health care law worked. So she went from project to project, often with either dead time or overlap. She made a little money here, and then there, but it was never enough and it was always a one time payment.
Reggy was ten when his mother finally started an enterprise that would actually stay in business and suddenly their family went from always barely getting by to being rather well off. It was after the money came in that Reggy met his uncle Clark. He decided to move his family near his sister so he could help his sister out once she no longer needed any help of course. As Reggy became a teenager he saw right through his uncle and at times tried to warn his mother but she let him know that she knew perfectly well what was really going on. She had told Reggy that she would tolerate it because family is family. They all had to stick together and she was willing to let her brother take advantage of her so long as he was in her life.
So as teenagers, Reggy, his sister Sue, and their cousin Laura all spent a lot of time together. Reggy was the oldest, with Sue and Laura both being almost the same age. When Reggy's uncle first moved to town, there were a lot of times when it seemed the girls had their own secret world with each other and Reggy was the odd man out. However, as they all got older, it was Reggy and Laura who became the closest of friends while Sue often spent most of her time with other friends or her constant on and off boyfriend.
Reggy was very happy to hear that Laura had been admitted to the same university that he attended. Sue was planning on going to a school in the north east so she wouldn't be around as often as Reggy once she started college life.
It was once said that a utopia would be so boring that no one living in it would ever write a thing. For Reggy, that was a lot like what his life sounded like. Sure, money can't buy happiness but it can sure buy a lot of solutions to common problems so you don't have to deal with them. And it wasn't like their family was super rich by any means but they were comfortable.
So being used to that kind of environment, it was very odd when Reggy heard his uncle and his mother arguing over something. They each clamped up the moment Reggy came into the room but from what he could tell his mother wanted to do something and Uncle Clark was against it.
Later that week, in the middle of a summer barbecue behind the house, the argument exploded again and Uncle Clark loudly declared that he was leaving, demanded his wife and daughter leave with him and in the future there would be no more contact between Laura and Reggy.
Everyone was just looking at him and thinking that perhaps he had drunk too much. Laura immediately challenged her father by stating she was over 18 and thus could stay if she wanted. That lasted for all of about thirty seconds until the girl bent to her father's will. They all left and Reggy was confused at what the hell had just happened.
Reggy's mother dodged questions about the incident and when Reggy texted Laura, even at home she still didn't know anything and told Reggy she wasn't allowed to talk to him anymore. This was getting too weird.
Once all the guests had left, the catering staff had finished cleaning up, and the house was mostly back to normal, Reggy and Sue went to their mother to demand an answer.
The answer she offered them was to give them each a glass of wine. Reggy and Sue looked at each other, not sure if they should drink or not. They were both over 18 but neither was 21 yet so that was weird.
"Oh, you can have a drink if I give it to you." their mother said. Reggy wasn't sure if Sue was drinking hers of not but he only pretended to take a sip and then he put it down. He'd been given a beer at a party by some frat boys who were trying to recruit him for their fraternity. Reggy had not liked the taste of alcohol and he didn't think his mind would change on that just because it was his mother who was giving it to him now.
"There. Let it make you feel warm." their mother said.
"You're honestly not trying to tell us you and Uncle Clark were arguing over the drinking age." Sue said.
"No, of course not. I just thought you both might need a little something to help you handle the truth."
"What truth?" Reggy asked.
"Now, this is sort of a secret so don't go repeating any of this."
"Any of what?" Sue asked.
"I mean it when I say secret. If any of this got out any more than it already is we'd be ruined."
"Then maybe I don't want to know." Sue responded.
"That's your choice. Reggy? How about you?"
"I don't want to be nosy or anything but I would like to know what's going on if this is going to affect my life."
"It might at that." his mother said.
There was a moment when Reggy and his mother waited for Sue to leave if she actually felt like leaving but then Sue gestured to let them know that she wasn't going anywhere.
"Ok. So the big thing is this. My father got me pregnant and Reggy, that's how you came into the world."
There was silence. The ticks of the clock seemed to echo through the room.
"Wait." Reggy said in disbelief. "This is a joke, right?"
His mother grimaced. "No. Not a joke. Nothing even close to a joke."
Sue started to realize what this could possibly mean and she started to look back and forth between mother and son. "Holy shit."
"So, like, he was your step dad? Someone your mom was just married to or something?"
"No, honey. He was my father just as he is your father."
Reggy felt his bones turn to gelatin and he almost started to gag. "No."
"So, mom," added Sue, "That means you're like ... our sister. What?"
"His half sister."
Reggy felt dizzy. The world was spinning around him.
"Baby, are you ok?" his mother asked.
"Ok? Ok? You dare ask me if I'm ok."
"I just thought you were old enough now to ..."
"What the hell? Are you fucking kidding me? And Uncle Clark knows?"
"No. He doesn't know about you."
"Then what the hell was all that crap you were arguing about?"
"It was about Sue."
"What about me?" Sue asked.
"Well, let's just say that your cousin Laura is also your sister."
Reggy started to sneer at his mother. "That is so fucked up on so many levels."
"You're telling me Uncle Clark is my dad?" Sue asked when she could finally get words out. "He never even talks to me."
"Yes. He didn't want me to tell you but you're old enough now. You need to know."
"Is this why I have to use an inhaler?" Reggy accused.
"What? No. That's just ..."
"And Sue has to wear glasses."
"A lot of people wear glasses., son."
"What the hell were you thinking? You just ... What? ... spread your legs for everyone in the family? Huh? You didn't care that it could cause like, birth defects or ..."
"Reg, you've been checked. Sue has been checked. You're both ..."
"I'm a mutant." Reggy said.
"That's ridiculous."
"Reg, mom's right. If ..."
"You're taking her side!"
"There's no side, Reg."
"How the hell do you have sex with your own father?"
"You just do because ... he's amazing."
"Yeah, so amazing that I've never even met the asshole."
"Well, he was against having any more children and then when my mom found out what we were doing ..."
"I don't care! I really, REALLY, don't fucking give a damn. Fucking Hell mom! This is fucked. This is so fucking beyond ... you know ... something."
Reggy stormed out and wouldn't listen to anything his mother was saying. He locked himself into his room and very loudly told them all to go away.
"You can judge me all you want but you weren't there. You don't understand."
"Leave me alone!"
Sue went up to her mother and put her hand on her shoulder. "Maybe he needs some time."
"Well, he better get over his hang ups because feeling bad about it isn't going to change anything."