My Sister's Spawn
The younger, Mr. Alan P. Templeton knuckled the door frame at the side door of the Brownings' condo on Upper Mill Road. Alan hears the lady of the house call out then the slap of bare feet on the linoleum. He failed to suppress the insanity that came from out of his subconscious with view the lady provided through the screen on the screened security door. Bare but for a pair of very low cut briefs and a matching powder-blue bra, Melissa Browning stepped down the six stairs from the ground floor landing to the foyer with a boyish gait and a sly smirk on her mouth. Alan resisted putting into the spoken word the allure he was feeling for the pale flesh heaving over the cups of Melissa's lace-trimmed bra with each breathe taken. He backed into the sunlight and reminded himself 'behave'. He had suffered similar temptations and want for Melissa's pale flesh in the past as far back as his memory allowed.
Mrs. Browning, a fifth grade, special-Ed teacher at the middle school in the Village of Cadiz usually presented the antiquated visual of the small-town schoolmarm. Black slacks or a long black skirt and a matching blazer and a starched white Oxford dress shirt were Melissa's school day attire. Sensible shoes and black horned rimmed eye wear completed the habit with which Melissa concealed Mother Earth's bounty. That descriptive term was coined by her mother, the elder, Mrs. Alan P. Templeton when she spied her daughter in the all-together on the white sands of Seven Mile Beach the previous December.
Men in a position to know better used more simple terms. Voluptuous, being the one most often uttered softly in Melissa's presence when she was out of uniform. Other more salacious adjectives were used to describe the twenty-nine year old woman when Melissa was out of earshot.
Alan Templeton's approach that Saturday afternoon was timid and carefully measured so not to disturb the fragile balance that existed since the truce.
Melissa had taken his mother-in-law's side in the argument that erupted at St. Joseph Hospital twelve days earlier. The entire family was there awaiting word on Gayle Templeton's condition. Emergency surgery was required to correct the complications after Gayle's third mid-term miscarriage in two years.
"You're going to kill my daughter if the two of you keep up this nonsense," Barbara Kozlowski said in a less than ladylike display towards the close of their four hour vigil.
"Gayle cannot go through this again, Alan."
"She's my wife," was all Alan came up with in his own defense.
Melissa saw the distress on Alan's face as she took the six steps double time. She assumed the worst otherwise why deliver the news face to face four hours ahead of the planned get together for dinner at the Brownings?
"What's wrong?" Melissa asked when she saw the tears welling in her brother's green eyes.
"Some sappy Dixie Chicks song on the radio," Alan said the half-truth.
"Is Gayle all right?"
"Yes. She's doing better today."
Another lie; Gayle was not doing better. While physically her condition had improved emotionally she was on the verge of a breakdown following that third miscarriage.
"The bleeding is under control. Dr. Kraska said she'll be home within the week...but they had to perform a hysterectomy this morning...
"We're out of the parenting business for good."
Alan forced a smile in Melissa's direction.
"And today, you're knocking at my door to what...to tell me all is so well? I saw you pull in and you sacred the shit out of me, Alan. I thought she was dead..."
"The door is locked, Melissa. I had to knock..."
"Oh. That's about the dumbest thing you're said in years. I thought we said five-thirty."
"There was an envelope to deliver to Walker's offices on Charles Street. I was just around the corner..."
"Jeans?" Melissa questioned.
"It's my day off. I no longer work weekends. I just happened by Dad's office on my way to the hospital. I thought I'd save him the messenger fee." And put myself closer to you he did not say.
Melissa worked the lock on the screened door.
Alan stepped in when Melissa smiled contentment, at ease with his appearance at the side door.
With a glimpse unhindered by the screen, he whispered, "Caliente."
"What's that?"