Authors: Jane Shore
until my bathwater turned cold.
There was a lot of dirt in Holland,
but I was doing my part to help.
One night, my father yelled from behind the door,
“What are you doing in there?”
I was washing the streets of Holland.
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Blue woman on the powder can,
blue willowware plate,
gentle brushstrokes of the pagoda roof,
blades of windmills, glazed waters of the lagoon,
blue tattoo inked in flesh,
blue ink in a diary,
blue ocean whose water is really colorless, like tears,
a flood of tears, all seven seas running togetherâ
blurring the words
Mondayand washing them away.
My father sways before the mirror
in the blue-tiled bathroom, shaving.
The wide legs of his boxer shorts
empty as windsocks,
the neck of his white cotton undershirt
fringed with curly black hairs.
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Overnight his shaving brush
has stiffened into the shape of a flame.
When he swirls it around in the mug,
the bristles plump up with lather,
as if he's folding egg whites into batter.
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The empty razor lies open-jawed
in a puddle of milky water.
The double-edged blades come packed
in envelopes of five, each blade
wrapped separately in waxed paper
like a stick of gum.
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My father glances at the mirror
like a woman applying makeup,
then paints on a mustache and beard
leaving only a thin mouth hole.
His lips look redder against the foam.
He lathers his chin, his Adam's apple,
the pebbly skin of his throat.
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Scraping, he works quickly, in silence,
in distracted concentration,
the same way he eats his dinner every night.
But what is making my mild father so angry,
arguing with the man on the glass?
He stretches his lips into the widest
possible smile, then bares
his teeth in a grimace.
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He nicks himself. Here and there,
the lather is flecked with threads of blood.
Then stroke by stroke, my father's face
gradually returns to him,
so raw and tender I ache to touch.
What in the world would harm him now,
looking as he does, with shreds
of toilet tissue stuck on his face like feathers,
Learning to Readeach one glued with a small red dot.
“Jane lived in a big white house
with a garden and a yard
and an apple tree out back.”
Waiting my turn to read
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out loud before the class,
my wooden desk and chair
bolted to the wooden floor,
Jane skipped and jumped and ran.
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Janeâmy very nameâ
was all we had in common.
Jane's mother knitted socks.
Mine couldn't knit a stitch.
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Jane and Dickâher brotherâ
a matched pair
of salt and pepper shakers,
ate dinner
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opposite each other,
Father facing Mother.
Two parents, two children, two pets.
My sister wasn't born yet.
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Big
A
and little
a,
upper- and lower-case
b,
the sibling alphabet
paraded across the chalkboard
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white on black, a negative
of my primer's printed pageâ
the page I'd read at home,
the passage I knew by heartâ
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where the kitten, Puff,
jumps into the sewing basket,
bats her paw and chases
a rolling ball of yarn
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across the kitchen floor
and gets all tangled up.
Who'd be the lucky one
to read it to the class?
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A dozen hands shot up
except Lucille's, and mine.
Shiny straight black hair,
black patent Mary Janes,
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pink cat's-eye frames
studded with rhinestonesâ
Lucille was special.
She couldn't read or spell.
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She'd had to repeat
the first grade twice,
but received straight A's
for perfect attendance.
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She sat in the first row,
close to the erased blackboard,
a swirling Milky Way.
The teacher skipped Lucille
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and called out, “Jane!”
I snapped back to my book,
the kitten, the sewing basket
and ball of yarn.
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I opened my mouth to read
the page Fate gave to me.
Not wanting to show off,
I stumbledâon purposeâ
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on the words
I knew
I knew,
and got all tangled up
in that rolling ball of yarn,
unraveling its line
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of looping handwriting
across the kitchen floor
Mother scrubbed and waxed
on her hands and knees
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âJane's mother, not mine.
Mine
puffed on her cigarette,
smoke scribbling on the air
in the rooms we call our lives,
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where it begins to snow
real snow outside the panes,
beyond the huge paper flakes
children fold, cut, and tape
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to classroom windows,
no two flakes alike:
brief fingerprints
Best Friendwhorling on the glass.
My first best friend had pale delicate skin
and when she laughed or was embarrassed
her cheeks flared up into two hot pink spots,
for hours, like stains she couldn't rub out.
She lived walking distance from the firehouse,
so the days and nights her father was on duty,
she could see him anytime she chose,
visit the private quarters on the second floor,
above the gleaming trucks and coiled hoses
where her father lived his other life.
When I first went along with Cynthia,
I thought I'd have to shinny up the brass pole
through the hole cut in the ceiling, but we
only had to walk up stairs, to see one big
happy family of men, smoking and playing
cards around the dinner table, frying sausages
on the stove, drying socks on radiators,
their heavy black rubber coats on hooks,
flayed open, smooth as animal hides.
In the dormitory, I saw their beds made
with linens from home, shelves of personal
belongings, children's photos, lucky stones.
I petted their mascot Dalmatian while
Cynthia kissed each fireman goodbye.
Afternoons after school, we'd play quietly
in the rose garden behind her house,
so as not to disturb her father, off-duty.
Once, stumbling outside in his pajamas,
he looked perfectly ordinary, not a heroâ
just like my own father, who worked regular
hours in his store. Cynthia caught me staring,
and cut in, “He's not a lazybones, really.
He's just catching up on sleep.”
When a small plane crashed one foggy morning
into the radio tower a few blocks away,
and the engine sailed over town, missing
the school, landing down the street from us,
burning an apartment house to the ground,
many people died, all the passengers.
From my bedroom window I saw smoke
and, in the distance, eleven stories high,
the tower's torn and twisted scaffolding
where the plane caught in it like a fly.
A week later, as I walked Cynthia home,
she whispered that her father, the day after
the crash, sifting through the cooling rubble
in the vacant lot next door, saw something
lying in the dirt, he didn't know what,
and picked up a woman's hand severed
at the wrist, a left hand, with a diamond
engagement ring still on it. For months
the remaining fuselage lodged in the tower
like a decomposing corpse, until someone
The Sunroomfigured out a way to bring it down.
My chickenpox was itchy, like pinfeathers.
Blisters popped out on my scalp, eyelids, even my tongue,
like the plague God brought down on Egypt.
“Don't scratch!” my mother yelled.
I couldn't help but scratch.
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Quarantined from my new baby sister,
I was playing in the sunroom Easter Sunday morning,
keeping track of the parade on the televisionâ
playing in the sunroom the whole week before,
during Passover, while I was still contagiousâ
playing in the sunroom a month before,
the one and only time I met my grandfather,
all tanned and leatheryâa cameo appearance
like a retired movie star.
He brought a crate of Florida grapefruit for the family