My brother always talked about backpacking across Europe, for as long as I can remember. He was obsessed about it. He had studied the train routes, the activities and points of interest in all the countries, and the foods he wanted to try in each place. He had lists and itineraries and budgets all planned out and written into a businesslike proposal to give my parents by the time he was sixteen. It was vaguely agreed that he could take his dream trip when he graduated high school in a few years.
He remained focused on his trip for the next two years. By spring break of his senior year, he was ready to start booking flights from Seattle to London, which would be the first stop on his two month long adventure. He wanted to leave the day after his graduation, but my parents just put him off, over and over. He was pissed.
I could feel the tension building in the house in May when his graduation was only a few weeks away. And then one night there was a huge fight between him and my parents. I could hear yelling and all three of their raised voices. I knew what was happening, they were delaying his trip, again. He was in a rage. He broke a kitchen cabinet door and slammed out of the house.
He stayed mad. Really mad. He didn't even want my parents to attend his graduation. He stayed away from home as much as possible. He looked hurt and angry, all the time. One night his buddy was over and they were sitting on the couch in our basement and he was telling him what happened, in detail.
I was never close to my brother. He was only two years older than me, but we were so different. We had followed different paths from my earliest memories. He didn't like me. He never had. We grew up together, but we were strangers in all the ways it mattered.
That night, as he hung out with his friend, I'd been headed to the basement to grab some of my laundry. As I'd started down the stairs I had heard him talking. I stopped and stood still. You can't see the stairs from the couch, so I sat on one of the top few steps and listened, unobserved, to their conversation.
Christian was telling his buddy Titus about the now defunct summer trip. I'd been curious, but not enough to ask anyone in the house about it. But now it was all unfolding, at least my brother's side of the story.
He explained that they wanted him to wait two more years. They didn't think it was fair that he would take this trip and I didn't get to. Great, another reason for him to hate me. In two years, my parents would send us on his dream trip, together. He'd argued that they could afford this trip twice. And they could. My parents were very comfortable and we could have taken these kinds of trips every year with no problem.
He told Titus that I didn't even want to go. He was right about that, too. I'd never been interested. I was more of a trip to Paris, stay in a fancy hotel, eat bread and cheese everyday for two weeks, kind of guy. I was horrified to hear I was the cause of him not getting to go. As if my parents didn't know, or care, that we didn't like each other, we didn't get along, we actively avoided each other to keep from fighting. I understood his anger but I was also scared. Two years was a long time for him to stew on this. How much would he hate me by then? What would happen between then and now? This was terrible.
I heard Christian tell Titus that he hated me. I was a fag. A disgusting fairy. He'd rather eat shit than take me on his dream trip. He spat out his words with such hate in his tone. I usually didn't care that he didn't like me, but this hurt. I felt the tears in my eyes and I sat and cried silently on those stairs. I was angry at myself for listening in. I slunk back upstairs to my room and made plans to avoid Christian at all costs.
I felt weird around my parents, too. They knew I was gay, but they weren't comfortable with it. If they could ignore it, that was their plan. I'd never had a boyfriend. I wasn't flamboyant. I wasn't feminine. It didn't matter though. I was not their idea of perfect. Christian was perfect. And that's another reason he hated me for messing up his perfect trip. He was the favorite. Not getting something because of the family freak was infuriating to him.
As I feared, he grew more hostile towards me. Any time anything went wrong in his life, his anger towards me swelled. He keyed my car. He pissed through the window, onto my driver's seat. It was unbearable living like this. One night, when he was nineteen, he came home late. He was drunk. My parents were asleep when he came into my room and beat me while I lay in my bed. My parents didn't do anything.
When I was a senior, I tried to convince my parents I didn't want to go, again. From the minute I found out I was the reason for the delay, two years ago, I'd brought it up to them as often as I could find a reason to. I didn't want to go. I didn't want to be anywhere near Christian. If they made me do this, no one would enjoy it. Christian would detest me for the rest of his life for ruining his dream trip. And he might even "accidentally" push me off a mountain in Switzerland, if he thought he could get away with it.
And then I was graduating, with a 4.0 GPA. My parents were unimpressed with my good grades, my responsible personality. Christian was still the favorite, even in his new embittered form. He was twenty now. He'd come home drunk most nights. He drove drunk. He stole cash from mom's purse. He caused trouble in town. He got arrested for assaulting his girlfriend's dad. He was a hoodlum. But he could do no wrong as far as my parents were concerned.
Christian was a rich, white, straight male. He was entitled to act like as much of an ass as he wanted and consequences be damned. My parents allowed it. Society allowed it. I hoped against hope that he'd be uninterested in taking this damn trip by the time I graduated. And for a while his interest did seem to wane. But then I graduated and my parents brought it up and he wanted to go, with renewed interest. Damn them all.