Getting Peggy back
by David Benjamin
MADISON, Wis. — We’re getting my sister back.
We
 began to lose Peg, my previously bossy big sister, when her body was 
taken over by a merciless mystery called lupus. It invaded her kidneys, 
eventually devouring them. She got a replacement kidney, named Steve, 
from a young man who lost control of his motorcycle. But even with 
Steve, Peg was trapped in a downward spiral of illness, infection, 
cancer, brain damage, a thousand drugs, and a case of sometimes comical 
but ultimately tragic dementia.
As she approached the end, Peg 
was present. But she wasn’t there. This Wednesday, despite her strength 
and sheer obstinacy, all that stuff finally killed her. 
We started recovering Peg that morning, right over her dead body.
Rosey
 was there, Peg’s sidekick since they met in Mrs. Schober’s third-grade 
class at St. Mary’s School in Tomah. Rosey was one of Peg’s first 
fortresses.
Peg built bastions against the chaos and unfairness 
of life. While our mother and dad were waging war and breaking up, Peg 
found refuge in Rosey’s house on Superior Avenue, with Rosey’s mom and 
dad as her backup parents. She found a refuge there of humor, 
intelligence and unconditional welcome. In return, she built around 
Rosey and herself a social circle, of giggling grade-school girls, that 
gentle Rosey could have never gathered on her own. All those 
girlfriends, who served to flummox and fend away the intrusions of her 
two barbaric little brothers, were another of Peg’s fortresses.
The
 love affair of Peg and Rosey survived even when Mom forsook Tomah, 
hauled us to Madison and ruined Peg’s dreams of a teenage social 
paradise at Tomah High. Rosey and Peg’s sisterhood stayed true then and 
down the years. 
Rosey remembered, reminisced and helped us to get Peg back.
Junko
 was there. She lost her own sister, to cancer, 24 years ago. By 
marrying me, Junko got a new sister, one who shared her wanderlust. Peg 
loved uncomfortable adventures. She traveled to China before there were 
any decent hotels. She slept in tents in the Amazon. She hiked up 
mountainsides in Switzerland. She traveled with us often — to Paris, to 
the Loire valley and to Brittany. She and Junko would slip together into
 girlish symbiosis, building a fresh fortress — against me. Wherever we 
were, they would take over the kitchen, building one of Junko’s gourmet 
dinners, holding me at bay and sharing jokes at my expense. I was used 
to it. I’d been staring up all my life at Peg’s battlements.
Junko
 remembered Peg’s sheer pleasure in discovering new places, her 
willingness to try almost everything. She recalled our stay at a winery 
in the Touraine, where we sat by the pool feasting on our hostess’ paella,
 where the family dog, a giant Dane named Gaspard, nosed immensely up to
 Peg hoping for a handout. Peg, fearless, summoned up her high-school 
French and, with ladylike formality, said, “Asseyez vous, s’il vous plait.”
Gaspard, obediently, bowed his great head and sat at Peg’s knee. We all laughed.
Junko remembered that. We all laughed. We were getting Peg back.
Patty,
 one of my my high-school friends, was there with her husband, Oren. 
They had only adopted Peg in recent years, when Junko and I circled back
 to Madison. They knew Peg more when she was ill than when she was the 
cool career woman whose office — at a Milwaukee law firm — was a 
fortress of efficiency. Patty knew a Peg who, in her weakened state, was
 sweet and solicitous. Patty was part of a small society that Junko and I
 created in Madison when Peg was too ill and too alone to form her own 
circle. Patty and Oren were two of the turrets in Peg’s last fortress. 
Peg told Patty secrets she would never share with me. She looked 
lovingly at Oren the way she could not see me, her lifelong adversary.
Beside
 the room where Peg had died, Patty and Oren celebrated their late-life 
bond with Peg, thanked me for adding this small burden to their 
experience. We remembered things Peg said — wisdom, memories, non 
sequiturs — and smiled, as we got Peg back.
Bill, our  brother, 
arrived from Tomah, too late to join the brief vigil that preceded Peg’s
 death. We consoled him for that. We suspected she had passed quickly to
 spare us the anguish of a prolonged death watch. Bill, like me, 
remembered Peg’s fortresses. He reminded me of Peg’s bedroom in our 
Madison apartment. She had a room to herself, while Bill and I shared 
ours. Peg’s room was inviolate. We were forbidden the back door because 
it was in Peg’s room. She checked daily for signs of intrusion. She 
lived in an oasis of feminine neatness while Bill and I ran amok, loud, 
profane and trailing crumbs.
Bill's arrival reminded me: He was 
the drummer in a teenage rock band called the Lordes, which I — always 
eager to mock a sibling — called the Lordies (because of that 
superfluous “e”). Prior to one of the Lordes’ biggest gigs, we were all 
present, including Rosey, at a rehearsal. Bill asked if Peg had a 
request. In one of Peg’s rare unguarded moments in the presence of her 
bestial brothers, she chose the Beatles’ simple, moving ballad, “And I 
Love Her.”
Recalling that, I also remembered that Peg — who was 
constantly listening to WLS Top Forty radio in Chicago (with special 
devotion to immortal DJ Dick Biondi) —  force-fed rock ’n’ roll to her 
unwilling brothers. Driven, perhaps, by all that subliminal suggestion, 
Bill became a drummer, playing down the years in a half-dozen  bands. I 
became a music maven with an encyclopedic memory of the hits I hated 
because Peg loved them.
But remembering that moment in a basement
 on Simpson Street in Madison sometime in the Sixties, as we all 
listened to Bill softly drumming and Pat Noles torturing Paul 
McCartney’s lyrics, I saw in my sister Peg a deep strain of romance that
 she rarely exposed — at least to me. It has lingered in me, a tie that 
binds us. More profoundly, it's a force that has sustained Peg, 
miraculously, through an ordeal that would have shattered, embittered 
and swiftly destroyed almost anyone else.
I realized, thanks to 
brother Bill and the Lordies, that Peg’s tenacious romance is a fine, 
subtle madness that we’ve shared as a family all our lives, a source of 
foolish strength that keeps me going. More important, it helped me, on 
the morning of her death, to get my sister back.  
Saturday, April 23, 2016
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3 comments:
Thanks for sharing. I had Mrs. Schober at St. Mary's as well. I know that I got some of my wanderlust from Peg stories of her adventures. Thank goodness for that.
Wonderful tribute to Peg, Benj.
You are sublime at times. A wonderful "Mess," indeed! Thank you.
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