'You don't have to be careful any more, Marce'

Opinion: Place: Los Angeles area emergency room. Time: Various times over the last 18 years

Opinion: Place: Los Angeles area emergency room. Time: Various times over the last 18 years. Scene: White male, about 50, brought in by ambulance, pale, short of breath, in distress.

Intern: You're going to be all right, sir. I'm replacing your fluids, and your blood studies and electrolytes should be back from the lab in just a few minutes.

Patient: Son, you wait for my electrolytes to come back and I'll be dead in 10 minutes. I ran the ICU here for 10 years. I'm pan-hypopit and in (circulatory) shock. I need 300mg of hydrocortisone right now. In a bolus. RIGHT NOW. After that, I'll tell you what to run i'nto my IV and what lab tests to run. Got it?

Intern: Yes sir.

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This scene played itself at least half a dozen times. The patient was my brother Marcel. He'd later call to regale me with the whole play-by-play, punctuated with innumerable, incredulous can-you-believe-its.

We laughed. I loved hearing that mixture of pride and defiance in his voice as he told me how he had yet again thought and talked his way past death.

Amazingly, he always got it right. True, he was a brilliant doctor, a UCLA professor of medicine and a pulmunologist of unusual skill. These diagnostic feats though were performed lying flat on his back, near delirious and on the edge of circulatory collapse.

Marcel instantly knew why. It was his cancer returning - the rare tumour he'd been carrying since 1988 - suddenly popping up in some new life-threatening anatomical location. By the time he got to the ER and was looking up at the raw young intern, he'd figured out and what to do.

I loved hearing these tales, in part because it brought out the old bravado in him - the same courage that in the 1980s, when Aids was largely unknown and invariably fatal, led Marcel to bronchoscope patients with active disease. At the time, not every doctor was willing to risk being on the receiving end of the coughing and spitting up.

"Be careful, Marce," I would tell him. He'd laugh.

Friends and colleagues knew this part of Marcel far better than I did. We hadn't lived in the same city since he went off to medical school when I was 17. What I knew that they didn't, however, was the Marcel of before, the golden youth of our childhood together.

He was four years older and a magnificent athlete: good ballplayer, great sailor and the most elegant skier I'd ever seen. But he was generous with his gifts. He taught me most everything I ever learned about every sport I ever played. He taught me how to throw a football, hit a backhand, grip a nine-iron, dock a sailboat in a tailing wind.

He was even more generous still. Whenever I think back to my childhood friends, I realise they were not my contemporaries but his. And when you're young, four years is a chasm. But everyone knew Marcel's rule: "Charlie plays".

The corollary was understood: if Charlie doesn't play, Marcel doesn't play. I played.

And how we played. Spring came late where we grew up in Canada, but every year our father would take us out of school early to have a full three months of summer at our little cottage in the seaside town of Long Beach, New York. For those three months of endless summer, Marcel and I were inseparable, vagabond brothers shuttling endlessly from beach to beach, ballgame to ballgame.

Day and night we played every sport ever invented.

There is a black-and-white photograph of us, two boys alone. He's maybe 11, I'm seven.

In the photo, nothing but sand, sea and sky, the pure elements of our summers together. We are both thin as rails, tanned to blackness. Marcel's left arm is draped around my neck with that effortless natural easefulness - and touch of protectiveness - that only older brothers know. Whenever I look at that picture, I know what we were thinking at the moment it was taken: it will forever be thus.

Ever brothers. Ever young. Ever summer.

My brother Marcel died on Tuesday, January 17th.

It was winter. He was 59.