Authors: Jane Shore
and a stuffed baby chick for me.
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The moment I saw the chickâ
its black glass eyes, its real beak
smooth as a shelled peanut
with two little slits for nostrilsâ
I was afraid of it.
Its insides had been scooped out
like chickens my mother koshered:
she'd stick her hand between the legs and pull out
the shiny gizzard, liver, and the gigantic ruby
of the heart, then rub the skin and the inside cavity
with Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt.
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What scared me the most
was that the chick was really dead,
dead in its
actual
body, like a mummy;
its precious organs thrown away,
its body sanitized, stuffed with straw,
and covered with feathers dyed a sunny yellow.
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I was sure I'd caught chickenpox
from the baby chick.
I thought I'd die.
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The first Passover,
the Angel of Death had slaughtered
every Egyptian firstborn son.
Smeared blood was the sign
for the Angel to pass over.
I was a firstborn.
My body was covered with signs.
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On Easter morning,
I watched them walking home from church
to eat their Easter mealsâ
men and boys in somber suits,
women in flowered hats,
girls wearing new spring coats on sale
at Lobels Department Store,
in lovely Easter-egg colorsâsoft unbleached wool
dipped into pale washes
of baby blue, mint, lavender, and pinkâ
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pink as an Easter ham
stuck all over with cloves,
cloves like the burning scabs I scratched
The Holiday Seasonas they paraded past.
The electric eye of the mezuzah
guarded our apartment over the store,
as innocent of Christmas
as heaven, where God lived,
how many stories above the world?
Was He angry when He saw
all the windows on my streetâ
the assimilated grocer's, druggist's,
even my father's storeâ
lit up like an Advent calendar?
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Alone in my bedroom
the nights my parents worked late,
I'd hear voices and laughter
float up through the floorâ
customers trying on dressy dresses
in the fitting rooms below.
The store was dressed up too,
with tinsel, icicles,
everything but a Christmas treeâ
“Over my dead body,” my mother said.
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Christmas was strictly business
in my parents' store.
Fourteen shopping days to go,
my class sang carols
in front of the school assembly.
In starched white blouses
we marched up to the stage,
our mouths a chain of O's.
When we came to the refrain
“Christ the Savior is born,”
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as if on cue all the Jewish kids
were silent, except me,
absent-mindedly humming along
until the word
Christ
slipped out.
It was an accident!
Gentiles believed in Christ.
We Jews believed in a God
Whose face we were forbidden to see,
Whose name we were forbidden
to say out loud, or write completely.
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We had to spell it
G-d,
the missing
o
dashing into its hole.
That afternoon after school,
I sat near an empty fitting room
folding gift boxes, carefully locking
cardboard flaps in place.
Was God going to punish me?
My father knelt in the window
like one of the Magi in a crèche,
among mannequins, dressed
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and accessorized, as if they actually
had someplace to go. He dusted
off a plastic angel three feet tall.
Stored in the cellar, she lorded it
over the old broken mannequins,
naked, bald, their amputated limbs
piled in the corner like firewood.
The Sunday before holiday season
she ascended, one flight, to the store,
trailing a tail of electric cord.
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After my father plugged her in,
she glowed from halo-tip to toe,
faithâa feverâwarming her cheeks,
her insides lit by a tiny bulb.
I longed to smuggle her up to my room,
to have some company at night
when the store was open late.
I gazed down the darkening street,
Seventy-ninth to Boulevard East,
and out over the Hudson.
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At sundown, I went upstairs.
Dinner was defrosting in the oven.
The last night of Chanukah,
eight candles, like eight crayonsâ
arranged from right to left,
like a line of Hebrew writingâ
wobbled in the brass menorah.
My father struck the match.
Flame wavered in my hand;
I numbly sang the blessing
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as if the words on my breath
could sweep away the word
I'd sung earlier that day.
Was God going to punish me?
I'd have to ask the Magic 8 Ball,
my gift on the first night of Chanukah.
For the past seven nights,
before going to sleep,
instead of saying my prayers,
I'd consulted the 8 Ball.
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It could predict the future.
You asked it a yes-or-no question,
you turned it over,
and the answer slowly floated up
through the inky liquid
to the round window on top.
I held the black ball
firmly in my hands.
“Is God going to punish me?”
“CONCENTRATE AND ASK AGAIN”
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I stared out my bedroom window
across the back alley
at the rabbi's house,
and watched him walk from room
to room, his windows
like frames on a strip of film.
He vanished through his kitchen door
and reappeared a moment later
a shadow, a hazy nimbus rippling
his bathroom's frosted window glass.
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Swaying before his mirrored ark's
two fluorescent scrolls of light,
he performed his evening ritualâ
brushing his teeth,
washing his hands, then
sinking discreetly out of sight.
For spying on the rabbi,
I'd added on another sin!
I concentrated, closed my eyes,
again I asked the question:
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“Is God going to punish me?”
“REPLY HAZY TRY AGAIN”
“Is God going to punish me?”
“BETTER NOT TELL YOU NOW”
“Is God going to punish me?”
“IT IS DECIDEDLY SO”
“Is God going to punish me?”
“MY REPLY IS NO”
“8 Ball, what is your answer?”
“ASK AGAIN LATER”
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I had to see what was inside.
I took a hammer to the ball
and whacked. Not a crack;
I'd barely scratched its shell.
I looked into its eye,
the dark unblinking eye,
as far as I could see inside the skull
where, floating together in ink
(so many I couldn't see them all),
The Slapwere all the answers possible.
In 1959, at Horace Mann Elementary
in North Bergen, New Jersey,
wearing white on Wednesday meant you were a virgin,
wearing red on Thursday meant you were a lesbian,
wearing green on Friday meant you were a tramp.
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The gymnasium's locker room and showers
and drains moldered in the basement.
Sanitary-napkin dispensers were always empty,
and the changing rooms' private stalls'
flapping white curtains didn't quite close.
I undressed, put on my gray cotton gym suit,
and stepped out in the open with all the other girls.
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The gym teacher, Miss Piano, wore a Dutch-boy haircut.
Her legs were as solid as a baby grand's.
She called us by our last names, like privates in the army,
and clapped, as each girl climbed the ropes
and disappeared into girders and beams
and caged light fixtures on the ceiling.
When my turn came,
I gripped the lowest knot and dangled down;
my legs drawn up, I looked like a dying spider.
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On the bleachers, chummy as sorority sisters,
the lucky girls who had their periods
gossiped and pretended to do homework
after handing Miss Piano a nurse's note.
Where was my excuse?
After gym class, I'd undress, stuffing
my gym suit back into its mildewed bag.
But first I'd examine my underpants
for the red smear of “the curse.”