A tale of true love at last
By Don José Alondra
Based on a true story.
Dedicated to my beloved and perfect Amanda, my English Rose and my great muse and inspiration, who knows who she is. May God bless her.
When my father died, back in the spring, it came as a great surprise.
Mind you, he was 87, and thus perhaps it should not have been so surprising. But what I mean is that the doctors had said his heart and other organs were in remarkably good shape for a man his age, and they expected him to live on for years. His mother had lived into her 90's, and so we had expected Dad would live well beyond her. But the herniated disc in his lower spine had left him in ever more excruciating pain during the last couple of years of his life, and the last six months, most of it in a rehab centre, were particularly hellish. He lost the ability to walk; then came the wheelchair; then came nothing but bedridden pain; and then at last the release from that pain.
At least he spent his last few days in the home of my sister, Nancy. She has a beautiful house in a pricey neighbourhood in Raleigh, and I suppose that was better than a sterile hospital-type environment. The Hospice nurses were very attentive.
"Oh, we always love to see Mr Renn! He's always so sunny and upbeat."
Dad put a brave face on it. He tried to maintain his sense of humour. But soon, even that left him. Eventually, he couldn't swallow. He could not eat or drink, and even the oral dosages of morphine were hard enough to get into him.
My mother, of course, was worn to a frazzle. She was very dedicated, taking faithful care of her husband of 61 years. Late on a Friday night, she left him alone for five minutes, going downstairs to get something to eat. When she came back, he was gone. He had a smile on his face.
For a month or more, Mom was distraught and beside herself. And with the possibility of her breast cancer from the 1970's returning, her own health was now precarious, and I suddenly found myself worried about her and her impending biopsy results.
Nancy had actually had it worse. She had endured a double-mastectomy some years ago. The cancer had metastasised into her right lung, necessitating its removal.
Following Dad's death, she was surprisingly stoical, yet I guess that is simply how she coped. But her loutish, obnoxious, atheistic husband and lumpish son were frankly emotionless pricks. I could not understand them, and I didn't want to.
Mom moved in with Nancy, and to my shock, my materialistic sibling seemed to care more about her enormous house than about our own mother----very odd, considering all they both had been through. She strangely refused to allow Mom to so much as bring her favourite recliner from her own home, which Mom would soon have to put on the market----this despite the fact that my sister's house was big enough to get lost in. Visitors would need a bloody schematic to get round the place, and there was more than enough room for Mom's chair, bed and so on. Yet still my bitch of a sister refused, caring seemingly more about her own odd concept of
feng shui
and the aesthetics of her museum-like tomb of a home.
I was of course gobsmacked by this inexplicable behaviour. But I said nothing, as I knew it would do no good. Nancy was 10 years older, and thus I'd grown up essentially an only child. We rarely talked and had nothing in common but DNA. I reside near Charlotte, and so there is physical as well as emotional space between us.
Indeed, countless times, since I was 12 years old, I had found myself passionately wishing I had a sister.
Another
sister; one closer in age to me, with whom I shared significant common interests; someone in whom I could confide and
vice versa.
I was and am an ardent Anglophile. I wanted someone who shared my love----my deep, abiding love: of the Beatles, the Who and other such bands; of Shakespeare and BBC films and period dramas; of the Queen and the Windsors; of monarchism and tradition; and on and on...For me, the very word "British" was synonymous with culture.
I didn't want a brother. No. I was an artistic, sensitive boy, and I wanted to be a Renaissance man. As a writer, an artist, an actor, a singer and a drummer, I wanted someone who shared my passions. I didn't need a bloody brother----some spotty, sporty, sweaty, screaming yobbo, mad-keen on football and other such
neo-
pagan, mindless pursuits, the exclusive province of
hoi polloi
idiots. Leave that crap to my nephew.
No. Hell no. I wanted someone soft, sensitive and sweet; someone as beautiful as she was intelligent; a built-in best friend. Somebody I could talk to and who could talk to me.
"C'mon, sis," I imagined myself saying. "You can tell me anything."
Then when I was 15, not quite 16, in the summer of 1984, I read Christopher Nicole's
Secret Mémoires of Lord Byron.
The great love of this greatest of the Romantic poets was none other than his own beautiful, busty half-sister, Augusta. Indeed, they had a daughter, Medora, and she looked just like Byron.
Of course, as they didn't even meet until Byron was 14 and Augusta, 19, they grew up without the Westermarck Principle. That would have explained a lot.
After reading this remarkable book, it hit me as a blinding epiphany: I wanted a girl who was at once my sister
and
my lover.
And why not? It made perfect sense, as I discovered later. At university, I spent long years researching the topic of incest and found that it was far commoner than many supposed. It was in fact common to all cultures at all times throughout human history. Years later, I found the "Literotica" Website. I beavered through textbooks on human sexuality. There was Kathryn Harrison's
mémoire
of her affair with her father when she was an adult----a thing she entered into joyfully.
Sure, there was an unassailable logic and indeed beauty to it,
proviso quod
one was talking about consensual acts between adults. It could be a glorious, beautiful, life-affirming experience. Yet it truly remains the last love that will not dare speak its name.
Friends come and go. Spouses divorce or die. But a sibling is a matter of always. A
sister
is
for ever.
And it was for such a sister that I burned for 33 torturous years.
So if Dad's death came as a surprise, I was in for an even greater surprise.
And this one would turn out to be a very pleasant surprise indeed.
***
"I have something to tell you."
My father's voice was very hushed. I leaned in closer.
"He wants his morphine," Nancy said quietly.
He grabbed my sleeve, a wild look suddenly coming into his pained eyes.
"No!
I have something to tell you!"
"It's all right, Dad," my sister said, her voice raised to accommodate the deafness he had acquired with age. "Tommy's gonna get your morphine."
She directed me to go to the bathroom to retrieve the stuff. I came back within just a minute and handed the morphine to my sister.
"Dad," I said, my voice raised, too, out of habit, "what were you gonna say?"
"Huh?"
"You were about to tell me something."
"Oh. Sorry. Don't remember."
Soon he was asleep, and Nancy and I sat across from Dad's bed in matching, high-backed chairs that he had upholstered himself. My father was a consummate craftsman, and he had spent more than 40 years as an upholsterer. In fact, he covered every piece of furniture in my sister's house.
"What do you think that was about?"
"Who knows?" Nancy asked rhetorically, great weariness in her voice, her plain, equine face sagging even more than usual. "He's in the early stages of Alzheimer's now, Tom. He repeats himself a lot. Or he can't remember things. He can remember 1945 as if it were yesterday. It's
yesterday
he can't remember as if it were yesterday."
"Of course," I said.
Yet the look on his face and his seemingly desperate words would haunt me. What could he have possibly meant? My father was very plain. He kept no secrets from anyone.
For days after that moment and even more so after the funeral, I found myself thinking about it quite a lot. I wracked my brain, trying to think what Dad could have meant.
***
It was my sister who solved the riddle.
"We have a sister."
"What?" I replied, feeling suddenly shocked.
"And where the Hell were you yesterday? I tried all day to reach you."
"At the homeless shelter. Where else would I be on a Friday?"
"Ah, yes. You and your stupid volunteerism. You and your stupid God."
"Hey, now...What the Hell did you just say?"
She sat across from me, snarling and sneering, in my somewhat cluttered living room. She set her cup of tea, barely touched, upon an English cork coaster on my chaotic coffee table. I tried to remember that her health crises of recent years could have made her bitter and that it would be better to pray for her, rather than simply hate and resent her. But my God, that was hard, especially considering her unaccountable ingratitude and bitchiness toward our mother.
After nearly two decades, my marriage to Wendy, which had been dead for years, had finally been annulled. We were childless and had spent the past eight years living as glorified roommates, she in the master bedroom and me down the hall in one of the guestrooms. Thanks to a combination of laziness, apathy, bad genes and bad luck as an underemployed, on-again-off-again schoolteacher, she had grown fat and unattractive, and I'd gone off her long years ago. So when she met some hairy hound who paid attention to her, I was actually happy for her.
Having grown up a nominal Methodist, it was easy to become an atheist, and thus I was for perhaps 15 years. But then when the Mohammedans attacked America on the day before my 33
rd
birthday in 2001, I thought,
Ecce signum.