INTRODUCTION & DISCLAIMER - When Andrew, a student from Sydney Australia meets fraternal twin brother and sister Shane and Karen who have recently moved from Newcastle they become good friends. Andrew notes that the brother and sister have a twin bond and even some impressive telepathy, but nothing seems amiss until over a year later, when Andrew starts seeing things that are out of place and wondering just how close Shane and Karen really are.
Is it all in Andrew's imagination, or are twins Shane and Karen really too close for comfort? Find out by reading 'The Tale of the Too Close Twins' - an entry in the
April Fools Day Story Contest 2024
- and be sure to rate and comment. All characters engaging in sexual activity are 18 or older at the time, and they and the events of the story are fictional, with similarity to real persons living or dead coincidental and unintentional.
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Growing up in the northern suburbs of the Australian city of Sydney, New South Wales in the 1970s and 1980s, I had very limited experience with twins in my formative years.
I was the younger of two boys, my brother Kevin two years older than me. Our Mum Susan and Dad John both had siblings and cousins, which meant Kevin and I had plenty of cousins and second cousins, but no twins in our generation, nor any in our parents' generation either.
The same was true of our grandparents' generation - no twins of any type to be seen among a large number of children. There was a set of non-identical twin brothers in my great-grandparents generation, but they were born so many years ago that they had both passed away when Kevin and I arrived in the world in 1971 and 1973 respectively.
When I started primary school there was a set of identical twin brothers in my class, and in the higher grades a set of non-identical twin sisters. One of the girls in my year had identical twin sister cousins but they lived on the other side of Sydney and I never met them, the fraternal twin girls were so much older than me so I never really knew them before they left for high school.
As for the twin boys in my class, they were a classic case of double trouble, always in the headmaster's office for one indiscretion after another. I think the teachers and administrators at my school were deeply relieved when their family moved to Canberra when the boys were at the end of Year 3. Thinking back about my former classmates, I couldn't help but wondering whether these twin boys would grow up to be the much-feared bosses of Sydney's criminal underworld, operating their vast organized crime network out of some seedy nightclub in Kings Cross like the infamous twins Ronnie and Reggie Kray had done in London's East End in the 1960s. Given that the twins' antics included running a protection racket against any boys they considered to be 'poofter', I could well believe it.
In the middle years of primary school we had a male teacher who was a fraternal brother-sister twin, but we of course never met his twin sister. Sometimes we would encounter twins - for example when we went on holiday to Port Macquarie up on the New South Wales Mid North Coast around this time there was a family staying nearby with non-identical twin boys - but otherwise our encounters with children of multiple births were few and far between.
Among my brother's friends, my friends and my parents' friends and their own kids, there were no twins to be seen apart from Pam. She and her husband were friends of Mum and Dad and I often played with their own kids. Pam had an identical twin sister named Linda, but I had never met her.
One year just before Easter I happened to watch a documentary on TV about twins and sat glued to the screen, fascinated by tales of twin telepathy, mostly between identical twins but sometimes fraternal twins too. There were stories of amazing coincidences between twins separated at birth and raised in completely different places and circumstances; a set of twin sisters from England who spoke, ate and walked in unison; and twins who always bought the same gifts for each other with no knowledge of what their sibling was buying.
Another segment was how a twin brother and sister said they always got colds at the same time, even when living separately as adults. Even stranger was a set of identical mirror image twins where one brother fell and broke his left arm at work, while his twin brother on summer vacation with his own family tripped and broke his right arm while fishing at the exact same moment.
Very interested in twins after seeing this, I raised the topic with Pam at an Easter barbeque that weekend, hoping that she had plenty of similar stories with her twin Linda. Pam however had laughed and said, "Sorry to disappoint you Andrew, but I'm afraid none of that happened with Linda and me."
Pam had then said that growing up that her and Linda - despite being mirror-image twin sisters which tended to look the most similar and have more chance of twin telepathy - had never gotten along well as kids, much less having a twin bond. There were no amazing coincidences, no strange cases of the girls getting sick or injured at the same time, and no telepathy between them. Even now as adults - Linda living down in Melbourne with her own husband and kids - the twins rarely contacted each other.
During high school, the lack of twins in my life rarely entered my mind. So I certainly wasn't expecting a set of twins to become such an important part of my life, until the day it actually happened with a chance meeting.
It was the week before Christmas 1989 - a Wednesday - and I was on leave from high school for the summer, having just finished Year 10. Like many teenagers, I had a part time job and mine was at a discount department store at a large shopping center in the area where I lived, so this was where I could be found on this grey and humid summer's day.
Being so close to Christmas and with schools across New South Wales all on leave the mall was packed with people. Some kid ran off screaming and sobbing in terror when he saw Father Christmas assisted by two elves approaching, his mother having to chase him. A short way away a couple who looked to be in their mid-30s engaged each other in a heated argument, having no qualms about airing all the details of their marital problems in front of hundreds of people like characters in a soap opera. Perhaps they should have asked Santa to grant them a divorce for Christmas?
As I anticipated, queues at the checkouts were miles long in the shop where I worked and shoppers jostled with each other for space. When I put on my uniform and caught the bus to work that morning on a typical sub-tropical Sydney day, I wasn't expecting this would be the day I would meet my new best friend and my new crush at once. Fate however had a different path in store for me than an otherwise ordinary day which I probably wouldn't have remembered a few months into the upcoming year of 1990.
I was working at the service desk, and first caught sight of them walking through the Christmas crush towards me. A tall, slim handsome teenage boy with light brown hair tending to blonde brushed back from his forehead in the same style I wore my own hair, although my hair color was a contrasting dark brown. He wore a white tee-shirt and a sleeveless open stone-wash denim jacket over the top, and matching stone-wash denim jeans and white sneakers on his bottom half.
The girl next to him was about two inches shorter and exceptionally pretty, and like her male companion wore a white tee-shirt and sleeveless jacket on her top half, although her jacket was purple in color and the fabric not denim. On her bottom half the young woman wore a short purple bubble skirt, with white ankle socks and white sneakers. The young lady's hair was similar in color to that of her companion although one would say her hair was blonde tending to light brown while for the young man it was the opposite. Her hair was long and was hanging loose down over her shoulders, and on her head she sported a purple floppy hat sometimes called a 'waif hat', the front brim pinned upwards with a yellow sunflower, these hats becoming quite popular with teenage girls in recent years.
The boy and girl paused, looking into the department store, then made their way to the service desk, where I approached them. "Good morning, how can I help you?" I asked, smiling and putting on my most professional customer service demeanor.
"Oh hi Andrew," said the girl, reading my nametag. "Could we please speak with the manager?"
Clearly they must have bought something from the store that was defective and wished to return it for a replacement or refund. No matter, I could help them out with this, and accordingly picked up a form. "Perhaps I could help you in the first instance?" I asked. "Do you have an item that you wish to return for a refund or an exchange? Or if there was some sort of problem I could take the preliminary details before I contact a manager for you?"