I never wished for a sibling, boy or girl. Center of the universe, I had the back of my parents’ car all to myself. I could look out one window then slide over to the other window without any quibbling over territorial rights, and whenever I played a game on the floor of my bedroom, it was always my turn.
Not until my parents entered their 90s did I long for a sister, a nurse I named Mary, who worked in a hospital five minutes away from their house and who would drop everything, even a thermometer, whenever I called. “Be there in a jiff” and “On my way!” were two of her favorite expressions, and mine.
And now that the parents are dead, I wish I could meet Mary for coffee every now and then at that Italian place with the blue awning where we would sit and reminisce, even on rainy days. I would gaze into her green eyes and see my parents, my mother looking out of Mary’s right eye and my father staring out of her left,
which would remind me of what an odd duck I was as a child, a little prince and a loner, who would break off from his gang of friends on a Saturday and find a hedge to hide behind. And I would tell Mary about all that, too, and never embarrass her by asking about her nonexistence, and maybe we would have another espresso and a pastry and I would always pay the bill and walk her home.