Authors: Jane Shore
a married man with two childrenâ
for having had a long affair
with my aunt.
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She has to clean it every single day,
and every single day
she changes the patch.
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I didn't used to think it odd
that he lived in a house with Tess
and his kids, and also
in an apartment with my aunt.
For twenty-six years
they acted like an old married couple.
Then they made it legal.
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When he wears his formal black eye patch,
Al looks like Moshe Dayan.
He couldn't get a glass eye
to replace it, one like Sammy Davis Jr.'s.
He had a little tear on his bottom lid
they couldn't sew up.
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Before I was born,
driving between Flossie and Tess,
he fell asleep at the wheel.
My mother says Al is lucky
that all he lost that night
was an eye.
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I catch a glimpse, just as
Flossie is about to cover it
with a folded square of gauze.
Gently, she pulls adhesive tape from a roll,
cuts the sticky white strip
into two equal lengths,
makes a big sticky X
to lay across the gaping socket
to hold the gauze in place.
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She is the one who sees me first.
Surprised. When he faces me,
flashing me his one good eye,
my aunt quickly covers
his nakedness. But it's too
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late, I've already seenâ
where his other eye should beâ
the wrinkled pocket of skin
The Best-Dressed Girl in SchoolI've always been so curious about.
“I could make you the best-dressed girl in school,”
my mother used to say. “But I won't.
Better that you're famous for something else,
like getting good grades
or having the best manners in your class.”
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My mother was famous.
She owned the best dress shop in town.
At thirteen, I could almost fit
into the size 3 petites
that hung in our store downstairs,
directly under my bedsprings.
So what if a dress hung loose on me.
Why was my mother so stingy?
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The first week of school,
she drove to Little Marcie's Discount Clothes.
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She beamed as she dumped the bag out
on my bed, my new fall wardrobe
piled high as a pasha's pillows:
pajamas and panties and argyle socks,
white cotton blouse with Peter Pan collar,
red tattersall jumper, dungarees,
and a blue plaid woolen skirt.
Inside every collar and waistband,
the fraying outline where the label
had been razored out.
“Don't turn up your nose,” my mother said.
“What gives
you
the right to be a snob?”
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Unfolding the blue plaid skirt,
she made me stand on a kitchen chair
while she chalked the endless circle of pleats.
Pins scratching my knees, she put up my hem.
The next day, I
and five other girls in Mrs. Cooper's class
wore the same Little Marcie's blue plaid skirt,
just like a parochial school uniform.
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But not Stacie,
the best-dressed girl in my school,
who bought her clothes at Lord & Taylor.
I wanted what Stacie hadâ
her Pendleton skirt and Lanz nightgown,
her London Fog raincoat and Bass Weejun loafersâ
and Stacie's mother, instead of mine.
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Stacie's mother spoiled her, my mother said,
because Stacie was plain,
and her grades just average.
“She doesn't have anything else going for her,”
my mother said, “other than clothes.”
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Hypocrite! My mother's whole life
was about clothes!
Buying, selling, wearing, breathing, eating,
sleeping, talking clothes!
Like a musician with perfect pitch,
my mother had a natural talent for clothes.
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She grew up during the Depression.
She'd had to work and work
to get to where she was todayâ
the owner of the best dress shop in townâ
but she was sick of clothes.
Sundays, summers, Christmas Eves,
she could never take a vacation
away from clothes.
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Her customers waited for her
behind dark green corduroy curtains,
in separate dressing rooms,
waited barefoot, in their bras and slips,
waited for her
to run to the racks and bring them back
the perfect garment to try on.
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And I waited, too,
apprenticed to my mother's exquisite taste.
Sweeping the floor
or stacking flat hosiery boxes
behind the counter, I'd climb the folding ladder
so I could better see
my mother tease a woman's arm
into a silk sleeve of a blouse,
or help her step into a skirt,
or pull a gabardine sheath over her hips,
or drape her in challisâ
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I watched my mother
button them up and zip them down.
I watched her dress the entire town.
Everyone in town, but me.
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Browsing in the store,
they'd pinch me on the cheek and say,
“You'll be a lucky girl when you grow up.”
I wasn't so sure that it was luck.
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She was the queen;
I, the heir.
It would have been a snap for her
to make me the best-dressed girl in school.
But for me she wanted better.
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“Give me, give me,” I'd shout in my head.
And my mother would answer,
as though she'd heard me,
“If I give you all these dresses now,
My Mother's Space Shoeswhat will you want when you're fifteen?”
My mother's feet were always killing her.
All day she stood in the store
selling dresses, hobbling to the dress racks
like a Chinese woman with bound feet.
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My mother's mother died of the Spanish flu
when my mother was a baby.
Raised by her grandmother,
aunts, and sisters, my mother inherited
their brown hair, their nice figures,
their hand-me-down dresses,
and their old cramped shoes.
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And so her toes grew crooked and her arches fell.
I was twelve when she bought her first pair
of orthopedic space shoes. Custom made,
they cost a bundle, plus tax.
She had to go to the factory in Manhattan
and stand for fifteen minutes,
ankle-deep in a pan of wet plaster of Paris.
Six weeks later, the shoes arrivedâ
molded in the exact shape of her feet,
the hard, black leather already broken in,
bulging with hammertoes and bunions,
and grained like a dinosaur's skin.
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She clomped to the cash register,
she clomped to fetch a customer a dress.
At noon, she clomped to the deli
and ordered a corned beef sandwich,
her rubber soles trailing black scuff marks.
It was worse than wearing
bedroom slippers in public.
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Six o'clock, she clomped upstairs
and cooked us dinner, and after dinnerâ
my father dozing on the sofa,
my sister and I sprawled on the floor
in front of the TVâ
my mother plopped down in her easy chair
with her cigarettes and newspaper,
and soaked her feet
in a dishpan of soapy water.
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Why couldn't she keep her pain to herself?
I cringed, trying to ignore her
torturing herself with a pedicureâ
using the fancy cuticle cutters, scissors,
clippers, and pumice stone
from the Hammacher Schlemmer catalogue.
An hour later, her feet were done,
wrinkly pink, like a newborn's.
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My mother was wearing her space shoes
the day we bought my first high heels
at Schwartz & Son's, the only store in town
with an x-ray machine that showed
if your shoes fit properly
and your feet had room enough to grow.
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Young Mr. Schwartz jammed my big toe
against the metal sliding ruler.
I'd grown a whole size since the fall.
He brought out the pair of ugly
“sensible shoes” my mother choseâ
squat heels and square toesâ
and the ones I wantedâ
black patent leather pumps,
pointy-toed, dangerous.
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Two inches taller, I teetered across the carpet,
toes pinching with every step,
as Old Mr. Schwartz conducted me
to the x-ray console that only he
knew how to operate.
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I stepped onto the pedestal,