Authors: Jane Shore
She filled the teakettle.
By the time it boiled,
the table was set, minus knives and forks,
and my father had fetched the big brown paper bag
leaking grease: five shiny white
food cartons stacked inside.
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My little sister and I unpacked the food,
unsheathed the wooden chopsticksâ
Siamese twins joined at the shouldersâ
which we snapped apart.
Thirteen years old, moody, brooding,
daydreaming about boys,
I sat and ate safe chop suey,
bland Cantonese shrimp,
moo goo gai pan, and egg foo yung.
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My mother somber, my father drained,
too exhausted from work to talk;
clicking chopsticks
instead of words in their mouths.
My mother put hers aside
and picked at her shrimp with a fork.
She dunked a Lipton tea bag into her cup
until the hot water turned rusty,
refusing the Hong Kong's complimentary tea,
no brand she'd ever seen before.
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I cleared the table,
put empty cartons back in the bag.
Glued to the bottom,
translucent with oil, the pale green bill
a maze of Chinese characters.
Between the sealed lips of each fortune cookie,
a white scrap of tongue poked out.
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Tonight, the waiter brings Happy Family
steaming under a metal dome
and three small igloos of rice.
Mounded on the white oval plate, the unlikely
marriage of meat and fish, crab and chicken.
Not all Happy Families are alike.
The chef's tossed in wilted greens
and water chestnuts, silk against crunch;
he's added fresh ginger to baby corn,
carrots, bamboo shoots, scallions, celery,
broccoli, pea pods, bok choy.
My daughter impales a chunk of beef
on her chopstick and contentedly
sucks on it, like a popsicle.
Eating Happy Family, we all begin to smile.
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I prod the only thing left on the plate,
a large garnish
carved in the shape of an open rose.
Is it a turnip? An Asian pear?
The edges of the delicate petals
tinged with pink dye, the flesh
white and cool as a peeled apple's.
My daughter reaches for itâ
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“No good to eat!” The waiter rushes overâ
“Rutabaga! Not cooked! Poison!”â
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and hands us a plate with the bill
buried under three fortune cookiesâ
our teeth already tearing
at the cellophane, our fingers prying open
Crazy Joeyour three fates.
Crazy Joey was famous,
more famous than the mayor.
Though he was as old as my father,
and tall and clean-shaven,
he wore his navy blue stocking cap
pulled way down over his ears,
dressed for winter even in June.
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What was he doing
hanging around the schoolyard,
slowly pedaling his dented Schwinn
just as school was letting out?
He'd pick a kid. Boy or girl.
He'd wait until you turned the corner.
Then he'd follow you home on his bike,
an empty red milk crate strapped
to its back fender.
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There were rumors
that he lived with his mother in a basement.
Rumors that he was born wrong-end first.
Rumors that his father beat him senseless.
Rumors that some boys lured him
into an alley and made him
pull down his pants and pee.
And that Crazy Joey did it, cheerfully.
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When, in the seventh grade, my turn came,
I pretended to ignore him,
clutching my homework, my empty lunchbox,
never once turning my head.
Crazy Joey trailed me
past the used-car lot and the deli,
through the neighborhood
neither of us lived in,
grid of locked garages, neat shoebox lawns,
house after house after house
like televisions all tuned to the same station.
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It wasn't my fault
I studied piano and ballet.
It wasn't my fault
both my parents were alive.
It wasn't my fault
I was normal, even though
I lived in an apartment over our store,
and not in a real house, either.
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So I didn't take the shortcut,
or try to hide, or run crying to my father
rolling up the awning of our store,
but watched my every careful step
Mrs. Hitlerthe day Crazy Joey chose me.
When my mother got into a bad mood,
brooding for days,
clamping her jaws shut, refusing to talk,
brushing past me, angry,
on her way to the kitchen,
I'd call her “Mrs. Hitler” under my breath.
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I knew it was wrong, very wrong.
But when her back was turned,
I'd stick out my tongue
at Mrs. Hitler in her blue nylon nightgown
and pink foam hair rollers,
glaring at the dishes in the sink.
Sometimes I'd give her the finger,
though I knew it was wrong, very wrong.
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Hitler killed Anne Frank,
whose diary was required reading
in my junior high.
My father fought Hitler during the War.
But the first time I heard Hitler's name
I was eavesdropping on my aunts
sitting around our dinner table,
whispering about “the Jewish camps.”
When I burst into the room,
they switched from talking English
to Yiddish, to me pure gibberish,
my ear a funnel for their gravelly words.
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Were they planning to send me back
to Camp Bell, the Jewish day camp
where, homesick, I lost my appetite
and five pounds, refusing to eat?
If they made me go next summer,
I'd go on another hunger strike.
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I'd seen the
Life
magazine
hidden in my parents' bedroomâ
seen the photographs of Jews,
all skin and bones,
and a picture of Hitler
and his little black push-broom mustache.
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I'd seen an old newsreel on TV:
German soldiers dressed
in gray uniforms, blocks of them marching,
taking giant steps in unison
as if they were playing
Follow the Leader with their friends.
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I made up a game.
While my mother cooked dinner,
I'd sit on the kitchen floor,
with a plate and a knife
and a big chunk of Muenster cheese,
and pretend I was a Jew starving to death
like the Jews I saw in
Life
.
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The cheese supply allotted meâ
like my father's Marine rationsâ
was to last exactly thirty days:
I divided my cheese into a grid
cut into thirty pieces,
I popped a tiny cube into my mouth
as if taking my daily vitamin,
and gobbled it down, then whispered,
so my mother wouldn't hear,
“I was very hungry, thank you.”
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A moment later, I'd gruffly reply,
“You're welcome,” pretending
to be my jailer, a Nazi guard;
taking on both roles, both voices,
at onceâone high, one lowâ
just like when I played with dolls.
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Day Two dawned a minute later.
My breakfast, lunch, and dinner
melted in my mouth.
“Thank You.” “You're welcome.”
Day Three followed, and so on,
as I played my game, Concentration Camp.
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And I fed myself
the way a mother feeds her baby.
And I ate and I ate and I ate
The Uncannyuntil all the food on my plate was gone.
Saturday afternoons, they like
having me over, having
had no children together
of their own.
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Late afternoon, the venetian blinds
stripe gold prison bars
on their white satin bedspread:
both of them dressed
in casual slacks and pastel golf shirts;
they played eighteen holes
earlier today.
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Door ajar, I burst in,
about to ask them a question.
He sits on his side
of the bed, facing the blinds,
his back to me,
his head tilting up to hers
leaning down, as if to kiss him.
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He turns and, for an instant,
I see itâsee her tenderly
swabbing the empty socket
of his missing right eye, her Q-Tip
poised over the flat planes of his face
as if she's about to dot an
i
.
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Losing so precious an organ
is my uncle's punishmentâ