Editor's note: this story contains scenes of non-consensual or reluctant sex.
*
1
And he was just standing there on the doorstep.
"James?" I screamed, running out of the house to greet him.
He dropped his bag and held his arms aloft.
"Hi Clare!"
I fell into his embrace. He scooped me up and spun me around.
My beautiful younger brother. He looked so handsome and healthy.
"I can't believe you're here!" I said, trying to hug deeper into his arms
"I can't believe I'm here! Traffic was all kinds of messed up."
"Why
are you here?" I asked.
I was dog-sitting at our parents' house while they were in New York for their wedding anniversary. James was supposed to be 1000 miles away at college.
"Let's go inside," he said. "I need coffee before quick-fire questions."
As he entered the kitchen he was slobbered with affection by Rogue, our parents' adorable Boxer-cross. Within moments the two of them were on the floor.
"Hi Rogi! I know, I know. I missed you too baby!"
They exchanged more kisses than we had.
I set about making us some coffee and fixing James a snack. He told me he was ravenous, which I took to be a good sign.
When he'd finished eating, I asked: "So what are you doing here? Apart from scaring the shit out of me."
He'd been away at college for less than five weeks of his fresher year. I couldn't understand why he was suddenly home like this unannounced.
"Did I scare you?" he asked.
"A little. You know I was never good at being here alone."
Our family home was an 1890's Colonial Revival house perched on top of a grassy cliff. It had stunning panoramic views of the ocean, but as a child I had been consumed with fear the house would tumble into the sea. I was eventually diagnosed with a condition called benign paroxysmal positional vertigo.
"I decided to take a break from college," my brother said.
"You only just started!"
"And now I need a break."
"How's your health?" I asked.
He looked at his empty soup bowl.
"James?"
When he looked back up, his eyes were veiled with tears.
"Oh Jesus. No. It came back?"
He nodded.
"More treatment?"
He shook his head.
"But you can still fight it, right?" I said, my own eyes now welling up.
He shook his head again.
I raced over to him and collapsed into his arms. I was more hysterical than he was. It had always been that way. After the tears had died down, we continued to hold one another in silence.
"How long have you got?" I asked. I couldn't bear the answer, whatever it was.
"30 days," he said.
"Oh god, no!"
I clutched him even harder and wailed for another few minutes.
When the new storm of grief had subsided, I remembered our parents.
"We've got to call them," I said, reaching for my phone. "Did you tell them already?"
"Not yet. I came home to tell you all together. Forgot they were on a trip this weekend."
"You forgot their silver anniversary trip to New York City? The one they've been planning for, like, six years?"
"I forgot it was this weekend," he said.
"We have to call them."
"Let's not spoil their trip."
"James, you don't spoil things by telling people the truth. The truth spoils things. Mom and Dad need to know. There's nothing more important to them than you, and that includes me!"
I went to dial Mom's number.
"Stop!" he said. "Please. Don't do that thing where you take over."
His silvery eyes were so sad and vulnerable.
"Then explain it to me," I said, putting the phone down.
"It's Friday afternoon. Mom and Dad will be back Monday morning. The news isn't going to change before then. We'll tell them together on Monday. I don't want to do it over the phone, that's why I drove here. And I'm not prepared to ruin their anniversary..."
"No, you're going to ruin their lives."
"I don't want them rushing home early. I wanted you and I to have some time together this weekend."
"You didn't know I was going to be here!"
"Well, I do now. And it's likely to be our last time..."
"Don't you say it," I said, pummeling his chest with my hands. "Don't you fucking dare!"
We clasped one another tightly in another tearful embrace. I could feel his heart beating through my chest.
I wanted to freeze the moment in amber.
***
Somehow we fell asleep.
We must have been exhausted from the emotion - and in his case, the driving.
When I awoke, the living room had grown dark and a cloud-masked sunset lit the ocean a strange, metallic gray.
I watched James sleeping at the other end of the couch.
He looked so peaceful that it made me think of his ultimate sleep. Tears began to pour down my cheeks again, but quietly.
I couldn't fall apart, however much I longed to. I had to be strong for him.
I couldn't bear the thought of losing my brother. I wasn't prepared for it.
Even though the possibility had hung over us since he was 8 years old and had first been diagnosed with a rare form of genetic lung disease.
He had collapsed at school and almost died, and it began a near-endless journey of medications, therapies and surgeries to try and save his life.
Quite often the desperate and increasingly radical attempts to save him meant that he had little or no real quality of life along the way. His childhood existence was taken up mostly with trying not to die.
He missed years of school, lost out on many of the basics of growing up; had never had a girlfriend or got to travel.
He was 19 years old now, and had recently begun an art degree.
We were excited for him because it was the first time he'd been able to focus on something that wasn't his health.
And now this.
My heart was in a million pieces.
In a cruel twist he looked healthier than I had remembered seeing him. His hair had never been so thick or lustrous, falling in golden locks around his ears. His eyebrows had never been so striking or dark, or his jaw so masculine and strong.
It was tragically unfair the disease would choose this moment to be victorious.
I wished I could call Mom and Dad. I respected my brother's right to tell them himself. But he didn't realize how much I needed their support - especially Mom's.
The burden of the news was a pressure I wasn't sure I could handle alone. I had a history of anxiety issues, mostly related to my vertigo.
I knew I had my brother for support, of course. But it felt weak to lean on him to help me deal with his own tragedy.
If I couldn't be brave, what chance did he have?
***
His eyes flickered awake and he looked at me.
"Did we fall asleep all night?"