Author's note: This is my dozenth story for Literotica, and, as with my of my stories, it is long -- 19K+.
Schrรถdinger's Hot Tub
Chloe and Zach's 4th of July Sibling Reunion
Ron Ehrs
How was I supposed to know what was going to happen when my sister came to visit me for a long weekend? We hadn't seen each other in years. And if I had known, would I have done anything differently? There was nothing like this between us in our past. Would everything have been different if I hadn't had a hot tub for us to get naked in? Should I have just called her visit off?... And missed out on the beautiful things that never should've happened?
* * *
The last week of June, my sister Chloe called to see about visiting me over the Fourth of July weekend. We talked to each other over the phone occasionally, but we hadn't gotten together in quite some time. All this even though she had gotten a job in the same city as me when she graduated from college a year ago.
It wasn't about any bad blood between us, not at all. It was entirely about our parents' divorce. I had been two years ahead of Chloe in school and after graduating from high school, I couldn't wait to get the hell out and leave for college.
By that time, it had probably been a total of about four years since our parents' marriage started falling apart. A few months before I finished high school, our dad moved out, but the whole of the previous year and quite a bit of time before, the atmosphere in the house had been toxic.
Neither Chloe nor I had any special feelings about who was at fault in the collapse of our parents' marriage. Our mom had become a realtor a few years earlier. Originally, it looked like a way for her to help add to the family income and make life more comfortable for everyone. Dad had a steady job at an insurance agency; it wasn't a particularly interesting job but the pay was decent and the job was secure. Whatever his feelings about going to his office each day all those years, he knew he was taking care of his family.
Both Chloe and I were in junior high then; she was in sixth grade and I was in eighth grade. The thing was, our mom discovered she had something of a flair for selling real estate. She had been stuck at home with us kids for all these years, and now she was out, working with other people in her office and showing houses to clients and -- most importantly -- selling houses and making commissions. Far from being the part-time activity we had all initially expected, her job quickly became all-consuming, and often she would get home well after our dad had come back from work. Needless to say, there were a lot fewer home-cooked meals and a lot more frozen dinners and pizza deliveries than before.
Not surprisingly, this led to tension in the house. Dad had initially thought it would be nice to have a little extra money coming in, but now there were months when Mom made more than he did, and truth be told, her job was a lot more exciting and satisfying than being a stay-at-home mom (or working for an insurance company).
We probably all hoped, at least for a while, that things could still work out, but ultimately there was no chance of that. Dad felt threatened, and humiliated; not only was his wife now earning more money, but he resented the fact that she was able to make money and enjoy her work in a way that he had never enjoyed his job.
The result was that the whole idea of being united as a family began to crumble. Dad had always had a drink when he got home from work, but now the drink after work was followed by a drink at dinner, and then a drink or even two or three drinks after dinner. Mom was not cooking dinner, but was often showing houses into the evening, and found herself less and less interested in rushing home afterwards.
Before mom started working, she had been the one monitoring our schoolwork and doing what she could to help us do well. Now that had fallen by the wayside, and Dad had had no interest in taking over that role, if in fact he even knew it existed.
Chloe and I had both been excellent students, but now our support system had disappeared, and the atmosphere at home became a corrosive distraction. It wasn't that we started getting F's, but instead of being the "A" students we were used to being and enjoyed being, we were now limping along with fewer As, a bunch of Bs, and the occasional C.
When we reached high school and it was time for me to look for colleges, my original dream of getting into an Ivy League school had vanished. Instead, I applied to the main branch of the University in the next state -- the two states had a reciprocal tuition agreement so there were no financial consequences, and with mom doing so well in real estate, it didn't matter much anyway. I could've gone to college in-state, but I wanted to get as far away from home as possible.
* * *
Getting away to college was like a dream for me. Aside from quick visits at Christmas and possibly Thanksgiving, I basically never went back. I took additional courses or found internships to fill up my summers, and then quickly found a job that started right after graduation.
I would call home from time to time; I was always happiest if Mom was at work and just Chloe was home to talk to. But aside from asking how she was doing, there wasn't a lot to say anymore. I really didn't want to have her tell me how bad things were for her.
I would call my dad occasionally too, but I didn't like trying to call him at the office, and in the evening after work I would have no idea how drunk he would be. The most important thing in my life right now was not having to be at home.
What bothered me most was my feeling of guilt at having abandoned Chloe by going off so far away to college. It let me get away from home, but it left her there in a situation that hadn't had time to become emotionally resolved. She was living with our mom most of the time, but would get together with our dad at least once a week.
The thing is, Chloe and I had gotten really close during all that god-awful mess. We were the only ones either of us could count on to be there for each other. Our mom probably felt bad about what she was doing to us, but instead of making her want to be there for us, it just made her more defensive about what she was doing with her new life. As for Dad, he didn't seem all that angry, but he was probably hiding it the way he had been hiding so much for so long. And obviously, that was the start of his drinking.
When her turn came, Chloe went to the University in our home state. Fortunately, the school was about 200 miles from home so she had the same sense of freedom and relief that I had felt. She loved living on the campus and went home as rarely as possible.
She and I had continued to talk by phone from time to time over the years, along with occasional emails, but we hadn't gotten together all this time. It was strange, "home" really didn't exist for either of us anymore -- in some way, the two of us were the only home that each of us had.
Chloe had finished college last year, and was now working as an assistant designer for a firm that produced high-end fashion for women. The company was located in the same city where I lived and worked. I had become a consultant selling high-tech medical devices, and was making pretty good money for someone my age.
Even though we worked in the same city, our offices were located at different ends of town, and our lives and our jobs had kept us too distracted to make an effort to get together. And even though we still had a strong bond, getting together in person might just bring up too many memories of bad times at home.
So, when Chloe called me to see if she could visit Fourth of July weekend, I was excited, but also apprehensive. It would be really nice to see her again, but suppose it didn't go well? How did she even feel about me after what I had done? There was just so much baggage.
It was funny, I kept thinking of Chloe as still being in junior high. She finished her sophomore year in high school by the time I left home, but maybe all the problems at home had kept me from paying attention to the fact that she was growing up. So, in a lot of ways, I had no idea what to expect.