Tags:
Fiction,
Medical,
Family,
Juvenile Fiction,
Social Issues,
Brothers and sisters,
Young Adult Fiction,
Love & Romance,
Death & Dying,
Siblings,
Friendship,
Health & Daily Living,
Diseases; Illnesses & Injuries,
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Oncology,
cancer,
Cancer - Patients,
Assisted Suicide
of medical science keeping him alive. It’s a roller-coaster ride of hoping he’ll beat all odds and fear that he won’t. Of knowing what we were willing to do for him, and now what we can’t do at all.
“I’m in,” Darla says, tapping Emily’s fist.
They look to me. I hold out my fist and we seal our pact again.
One afternoon, Darla comes to the cafeteria looking for Emily and me. Her skin is ashen.
“What’s wrong?” I ask.
“I think he’s in pain,” she says. “His body keeps jerking and they tied down his arms so he won’t pull out any of the tubes.”
My best friend, tied to a bed.
“What’s the worst that can happen?” I ask Emily.
Days later, Emily tells us. “His doctors want to cut off his other leg to help his circulation. And they want to sew his eyelids shut because he can’t blink on his own and his corneas are drying out.”
His doctors never get to follow through with their plans, though, because the next night, the twenty-fifth of June, Travis’s heart stops beating and he can’t be revived.
Emily
M
y brother dies in the early morning, when the world is at its darkest, when no one’s around him except IVs, tubes, and machines. Mom is beside herself because she wasn’t at Travis’s side. Dad tries to console her. “Jackie, we couldn’t be there twenty-four seven and still function. We did all we could do.”
I cry, but I can’t say I’m sorry, because I know how he felt about his life.
We bury Travis in the town’s oldest cemetery on a hot June afternoon in a private ceremony. The high school holds a memorial service for him in the football stadium, and half the town shows up. The aquatics team wears black armbands.
Darla comes with her mother and kid sisterbut not her father. Cooper shows up with his mother. She looks small and neat in a skirt and blouse, with her black hair pulled back in a bun and fastened with ornamental ivory sticks at her neck. She hugs my mother and father and me. If she remembers me from that night in the spring, she doesn’t show it. We all sit together and listen to people say inspiring things about my brother. And we cry.
Days later, Cooper and Darla and I meet at the lake for our own private memorial service. I drive Travis’s car. He gave me the keys for my birthday. “Now you won’t have to sneak it,” he said.
The lake air smells like summer, like coconut sunscreen and Alabama earth and mown grass. Boats zip past far out in the water, their motors sounding like droning bees. I think of other summers when we came, just the four of us, for swimming, and island picnics, and waterskiing. Now we are three.
We hold hands at the shoreline, tell stories of our best memories of my brother, watch kids dive off the floating wooden platform. The ache inside me throbs. I miss my brother. I wish he could have gotten well—it happens for lots of people who getcancer, just not for Travis. When we’re through, we stand shoulder to shoulder, awkward and silent, missing the glue of my brother’s life that held us together.
I ask, “So what are everyone’s plans?”
“The army,” Cooper says. “I’m headed to boot camp in a week.”
My knees go weak. He’s leaving.
He turns to Darla. “How about you?”
“Birmingham,” Darla says. “I’m going to live with my sister and her little boy. She had a boyfriend, but he moved out.” She motions toward her car. “I’m packed and loaded. No reason to stay here now. I’m going to get a job, maybe help out in a community theater. I’ve always wanted to be an actress.”
Knowing she’s leaving for good tugs on my heart. I regret ever thinking she was fluffy like a marshmallow. She stayed with my brother through it all, and I should have tried harder to be her friend. “I’ll miss you,” I say.
She looks doubtful, but the look passes and she hugs me. “Take care of yourself.” She hugs Cooper too, then turns and goes to her car and drives off.
“What about you?” Cooper asks.
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