Author's note: A huge thank you to Spector_Dugan for being such an amazing editor, mentor, and cheerleader on this story and many others. Hopefully I'll have the courage to post more of them soon. Everyone in this story is over the age of 18, and all errors are mine.
I was just about to finish choosing my spring semester electives when my sister Brianna barged into my room with a stack of family photo albums. She plonked them down next to the mini Christmas tree on my desk, crossed her arms, and just glared at me with those large hazel-green eyes of hers. It was probably the tenth time she'd interrupted me that day -- pretty average for a Saturday.
"I'm guessing this can't wait," I said, saving my progress on the university's website.
"Did you know about this?" she said. I could feel her scrutinizing gaze boring into my temple.
"Sure," I said. "Family photos. What about them?"
"Rowan, I'm being serious."
I closed my laptop and set it aside. Brianna liked to throw me into the deep end of conversations she'd been having with herself, usually after getting so worked up that she couldn't explain what she wanted, needed, or just had to talk about at that exact moment. Yesterday, it had been chapter seven of book three of her latest urban fantasy teen romance, where the vampire protagonist had discriminated against the werewolf cheerleader because of his personal biases towards hairy women.
I wasn't familiar with the books, so it took me about twenty minutes to form a complete mental picture of what was frustrating her since she'd only give me non-sequitur snippets of information. The understanding that eventually coalesced in my mind was formed in the following sequence:
Brianna was angry at some alpha-jock that hates on hairy women.
This jock's most recent bullying victim is a cheerleader.
Also, the cheerleader is a werewolf.
This was obviously from a book. A series, actually, book 3 to be exact. (Before this clue, I was worried it was some real-life bullying situation at her high school.)
And apparently the asshole jock drinks a lot of... grape juice?
No, not grape juice, blood. He's a vampire.
So this vampire jock is a hateful, annoying, creepy protagonist who expects all his girlfriends to be big-breasted, clean-shaven, skimpy-clothed bimbos.
Oh, and his name is Robert, but he goes by Bob.
After about twenty minutes of Brianna just rattling off out-of-sequence and out-of-context parts to some wildly inconceivable fantasy teen drama (because who names a vampire Bob, right?), I finally understood that Bob the jock vampire had dumped Brittany the cheerleading werewolf because she was too hairy (WHEN SHE TRANSFORMED), which was totally unfair since she has no control over that aspect of her physical appearance.
"Bob's a dick," I said.
"Thank you," she said, then did a one-eighty back to her room, presumably to start reading the next chapter.
Today, her frustration seemed to be about something closer to home. I hadn't seen her this riled up since she found a bottle of MSG in the spice cabinet. She chewed out our parents for weeks, then dyed her normally mousy-brown hair to a fluorescent bubblegum pink in protest. Mom and dad didn't care about the hair, but they stopped using the flavor enhancer anyway.
This was worse, though. Based on the family albums, my money was on photographic evidence of our mom and dad feeding us highly processed food as kids, which would be directly responsible for us developing type two diabetes in the next few years.
We have good parents, really. Brianna was just a very picky eater. Mom had once joked that her first words were "too salty" after dad had given her a bowl of pureed black beans.
"You're being very serious about some old photo books," I said matter-of-factly, summarizing the extent of the knowledge I'd gathered so far about her current indignation.
She opened the first photobook and leaned in. "Here and here," she said, stabbing her finger at the family portraits of our mom and her parents. "What do you see?"
I tried to ignore her loose pastel tie-dye pajama top hanging low enough to reveal her sports bra covered breasts.
"Mom, grandma, and grandpa?" I said.
"Yes, but what do you SEE?"
"I'm going to need some help on this one, Brie."
She looked at me like I was blind. "Why are the photos cropped so weirdly?"
I could kind of see her point. Most of the family portraits were poorly staged against fake looking back-drops, and were generally low-effort, like they'd been taken by some freshman photography major at one of those cheap discount superstore photo shops.
"Umm, terrible photographer?" I guessed, still not sure where she was going with this.
She put her hands on her hips and gave me a judgmental look. "Think, Rowan. You're supposed to be the smart one."
"Brie, I really don't see anything," I said, exasperated. Then I tried to think like her. What was the most absurd, unlikely conspiracy theory I could come up with based on those pictures.
"Like, do you think mom's family cropped out some disowned child, and we have a mystery delinquent aunt or uncle out in the world somewhere?"
"You're getting warmer," she said.
I'd reached the bonkers threshold of my imagination, so I didn't respond. Then, she said something that literally short-circuited my brain.
"Dad was cropped out of those pictures."
I tried to compute the implications of that sentence while she quickly turned pages and pointed to other photos. Some were of mom on her own, some were of mom's parents, and some were of the three of them. For the most part, they were pretty average, family photos.
"So, you're saying that dad..."
She nodded encouragingly.
"...was cropped out of photos in mom's family album?" I was basically repeating what Brie had just said since the synapses in my brain were still misfiring.
"You almost have it," she said.
"Wait," I said, stopping to make sure we were both working with the same information. "Mom and dad met in college. They were raised on opposite sides of the country. And they're both only children."
"Do we know that for sure?" she said, raising an eyebrow. Brie liked to question any and all assumptions, but this was getting ridiculous.
I sighed. "Fine. Mom and dad told us those things."
She smiled and nodded.
"But, they also told us all about their childhoods," I added, not wanting to get into the details. We never got to know our grandparents on our father's side, not even through pictures. They'd passed away in a house fire that had tragically taken their lives, along with pretty much any photographic evidence of their existence. Luckily for dad, he'd been away at a slumber party and escaped the tragic accident.
"Exactly," Brianna said. "Stories. ALL STORIES. That's Exhibit Number One."
I still had no clue what she was talking about.
"Now, here's the nail in the coffin," she said, with a dramatic pause. "WHY, do we look so much like our parents?"
"Umm..." It felt like one of those trick questions, like when you're asked if a pound of rocks weighs more than a pound of feathers.