Even before Mum told me, I knew. I'd always known there was something there. It was like an echo, a trace left behind whenever I spoke, or skipped, or dreamed. A face over my shoulder, a movement in the corner of my eye when I looked in the mirror. An extra stone on the hopscotch. My twin.
She died before I was born, Mum said. I imagined us both packed into that warm sack of life, companions, sisters, cellmates. Were we jostling for space or were our arms wrapped round each other like lovers? Did I cast her off one day, sensing the approaching ferocity of life, knowing there would only be enough nourishment for one? Did I kill her?
"Oh my darling, it wasn't like that." Mum encircled me with her arms and pulled me close so I heard her heartbeat, strong and steady, just like we had done in the womb.
It was me, I thought. I killed her. Killed her, killed her, killed her, said the echo.
It was my birthday a few days later - my thirteenth. A step into the future, to the brink of the next part of my life. The end of childhood. With this new knowledge inside me, or rather the confirmation of something I had always known, I determined to enjoy the day for both of us. We were thirteen. We were alive. Identical twin have the same genes, don't they? We were almost the same person. I would give her the day too.
I awoke the morning of my birthday with an odd feeling, a claustrophic shiver. As I struggled to get out of bed I realised it was not the duvet I was wrestling with. It was her. It was as though my sympathy had let her out, like an invitation I had not meant to write. She was pulling and tugging at me, jostling roughly just as I remembered from our days in the warm, pulsing womb. Only this time she was determined to win.
"Happy birthday, darling," Mum smiled, holding out armfuls of presents which she spread on the bed like a feast before me.
We froze, then reached for the presents. For a moment I thought she was going to win.
This time it was much worse. I really had to hurt her, had to show her who was boss. I'd got here once and I wasn't going to lose everything I'd fought for. I could hear her screams, but they were just echoes of what might have been. And echoes die away.
I ripped open a present violently, almost tearing the box inside. "A camera! The one I wanted! Thanks, Mum. Thanks for everything." I threw my arms around her, victorious, taking in gulps of air like sobs over her shoulder.
I killed her, I thought. I will always kill her. And the echo went on: kill her, kill her, kill her.
Copyright © 2008 Rob Richardson. All Rights Reserved.