I hadn’t wished her a happy birthday. We’d barely spoken for nearly 12 years.
When he said I should come to the hospital, as soon as you can, I told him I would have to think about it. “Ask her if she wants me there.”
In the background I heard ICU sounds, beeping monitors, the hiss of an oxygen mask. I heard my dad repeating my question, my sister replying in noises that sounded like a tiny animal.
Her answer was yes. But when I sat down to breathe and steady myself and not think of my sister dancing to her Rod Stewart records, I remembered the last time we had spoken. Just a few months ago, when she realized the melanoma would probably take her life. The conversation started off well, us joking about her new stubs of silver hair and how only Jamie Lee Curtis could pull off a look like that, but within minutes we were back to the way we had been for so long. There never had to be a real reason. Anything from a reminder to call our dad on Father’s Day to a blouse she’d sent that didn’t fit could spark an argument.
She said I was selfish. I called her destructive. Someone hung up mid-sentence.
It would take almost a year to remember that someone had been me.
What kinds of limits, if any, are appropriate to set for a person who is dying? Sisters fight. They say they hate each other. They blame each other for the things their parents couldn’t give. Kim was nine years older than I was and had spent most of her young adult life standing in for our mother, who was too ill, both physically and mentally, to care for my brother and me. My parents divorced when my sister was 15, and it always felt as if a new marriage had taken that place. Every decision in our home needed the approval of Team Mom and Kim. Our mother was controlling, at times abusive when it came to my sister. If Kim took a phone call in another room my mom would enlist me to spy. “I bet she’s talking about me.” If I was caught in a lie my mother would first send my sister into my room to break the news. “We know you’ve been cutting school,” Kim said. “Me and mom expect you in the kitchen to discuss this.” I spent a lot of time on the sideline, jealous because I was not a member of their secret club. Later, when I learned about the word "co-dependent" I would be grateful for that buffer.