Authors: Jane Shore
The last of my friends, the last of the last.
No luck. I'd swathe myself again
in my neutral clothing.
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When one morning I woke up,
two black ink blots staining my pajamas,
I dragged my mother out of bed to tell her.
We squeezed into the bathroom
as if into our clubhouse
and she was going to show me the secret handshake.
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Blushing, leaking, I sat on the tub's rim,
as if poised over the mikveh, the ritual bath.
Stuffed inside my underpants,
the bulky Kotex, safety pins, and elastic sanitary belt
I'd stored in my closet for over a year.
My mother took a seat on the toilet lid.
“Ma,” I shyly said, “I got my period,”
then leaned over to receive her kiss,
her blessing.
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She looked as though she were going to cry.
In her blue nylon nightgown, her hairnet
a cobweb stretched over her bristling curlers,
my mother laughed, tears in her eyes,
and yelled, “Mazel tov! Now you are a woman!
Welcome to the club!”
and slapped me across the faceâ
for the first and last time everâ
Â
The House of Silver Blondes“
This
should be the worst pain you ever know.”
Side by side in matching plastic capes,
my mother and I were two from a set
of Russian dolls wearing the family brand
of hairâdark, wavy brown.
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A graduate of beauty school
was frosting my mother's hair today.
Only a few years older than I,
she had a honey-blonde beehive,
teased and glazed,
and a married boyfriend twice her age.
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She stuffed my mother's hair
under a punctured bathing cap.
Her crochet hook pulled dark strands
one by one through the holes.
At first my mother looked bald.
And then like one of those dolls
with rooted hair you can really comb,
clumps of hair plugged into the holes
drilled in rows around their skulls.
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Pulling on her rubber gloves,
the girl painted my mother's head
with bleach, a greasy paste,
then kneaded and sculpted the hair on top
into a kewpie doll's one enormous curl.
She set the timer, as if boiling an egg.
If she left it on too long, the hair
would turn auburn, red, blonde, silver,
and my grandmother's snowy white.
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I paged through the latest
Seventeen
.
April's Breck Girl gazed coolly back.
With her blonde pageboy
and pink cashmere sweater,
she looked as if she belonged
in the white Cadillac double-parked out front.
She
hated my babyish ponytail too!
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A semester short of his degree,
the boss's son practiced on me,
bending my neck backward
onto the cold pink lip of the basin.
His every touch gave me a shock.
Even while he trimmed my hair,
I couldn't take my eyes off my mother's
bumpy rubber scalp stained with dyes
like bruises healing yellow-brown and plum.
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If my mother had one life to live,
why not live it as a blonde?
Gone was her beautiful dark brown hair.
I had lost her
among the bottles of peroxide and shampoo,
rollers, bobby pins, rat-tailed combs,
and dryers' swollen silver domes.
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We walked the block back to the store,
one dark and one fair,
passing the grocer, the butcher, the baker,
Music Minus Oneevery window on the street a mirror.
Music minus the solo melody partâwith the tapes or records providing the background music, you can play an instrument or sing along with the band, try your hand at Grand Opera, or even perform a concerto, surrounded by a full symphony orchestra.
âFrom the Music Minus One catalogue
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Sunday afternoons, my father practiced
flute in the family room.
He warmed up, playing scales,
while my mother worked the crossword puzzle
in her wing chair, like a throne.
Three o'clock and she was still
wearing her nightgown and slippers.
Our store downstairs was closed.
She was sick of looking at dresses all week.
Sunday was her day of rest.
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I sprawled on the floor with my homework.
Each in our little orbit.
My father gave it all up when he married her.
Abdicated, like the Duke of Windsor.
Music was no life for a family man.
During the War, he had led the band
in the Marine Corps, in the South Pacific.
In the photo, each man poses with his instrument
except my father, holding a baton;
clarinets and saxophones leaning against their chests,
like rifles at port arms.
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It was my job to start the record over.
The sheet music, stapled to the album cover,
was propped on the music stand.
The needle skated its single blade
in smaller and smaller circles on black ice.
The needle skipped. He was a little rusty.
When he lost his place, it left a hole in the music,
like silence in a conversation.
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You had to imagine his life before the War.
At fifteen, on the Lower East Side, he played
weddings and bar mitzvahs;
at sixteen, he toured with the Big Bands.
You had to imagine him before
he changed his name from Joseph Sharfglass
to George Shore; you had to imagine him
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handsome in his baby-blue tuxedo
when he played with Clyde McCoy's orchestra,
lighting up hotel ballrooms from New York to California
and all the road stops in between.
One enchanted evening in Connecticut,
he saw my mother.
A week later, he shipped off to the War.
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You had to imagine his life before the Warâ
the one-night stands, the boys on the bus,
and in its wake the girls
with plucked eyebrows and strapless dresses
surrounding him like the mannequins
as he stood behind the counter
of his store, waiting for customers,
in New Jersey on the Palisades.
You had to imagine him occupying the uniform
now folded neatly in his footlocker
under the telescope pocked with rustâor bloodstainsâ
a souvenir from the War.
The record spun. He caught his breath.
MeatThe music raced on without him.
The year I had the affair with X,
he lived downtown on Gansevoort Street
in a sublet apartment over a warehouse.
It was considered a chic place to live.
He was wavering over whether to divorce
his wife, and I'd fly down
every other week to help him decide.
Most nights, we'd drop in for cocktails
on the Upper East Side and hobnob
with his journalist friends, then taxi
down to SoHo for an opening and eat
late dinner in restaurants whose diners
wore leather and basic black.
We'd come home at four in the morning,
just as it was starting to get light
and huge refrigerator trucks were backing up
to the loading docks and delivering
every kind of fresh and frozen meat.
Through locked window grates I could see
them carrying stiff carcasses, dripping crates
of iced chickens. We'd try to sleep
through the racket of engines and men
shouting and heavy doors being slammed.
By three in the afternoon the street would be
completely deserted, locked up tight;
at twilight they'd start their rounds again.
The street always smelled of meat.
The smell drifted past the gay bars
and parked motorcycles; it smelled
like meat all the way to the Hudson.
And though they hosed it down as best
they could, it still smelled as though
a massacre had occurred earlier that day,
day after day. We saw odd things
in the gutterâlengths of chain, torn
undershirts, a single shoe, and sometimes
even pieces of fleshâhuman or animal,
you couldn't tellâand blood puddling
around the cobbles and broken curbstones.
On weekends, we'd ask the taxi
to drop us off at the door
so that no one could follow and rob us.
We'd climb to our love nest
and drape a sheet over the bedroom windowâ
the barred window to the fire escapeâ
which faced across the airshaft the window
of a warehouseâempty, we assumed,
because we'd never seen lights on
behind the cracked and painted panes.
In the morning, we'd sleep late,
we'd take the sheet down and walk
around the apartment naked,
and eat breakfast in bed, and read,
and get back to our great reunions . . .
One Sunday, we felt something creepyâ
a shadow, a flickerâmove behind a corner