Authors: Jane Shore
that someday God might read in bed
Chatty Cathyand change a life.
The first time I got my hands on her,
I took off all her clothesâto see
exactly where her voice came from.
I pulled the white plastic O-ring
knotted to the pull string in her back,
pulled it, gently, as far as it would go,
and Chatty Cathy threw her voiceâ
not from her closed pretty pink lips
but from the open speaker-grille in her chest.
Chatty Cathy was her own ventriloquist!
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She said eighteen phrases at random,
chatting up anyone who'd pull her string.
Tell me a story. Will you play with me?
What can we do now? Do you love me?
Did I love her? I loved her so much
I had to be careful not to wear her out.
Even though she always “talked back,”
behavior my parents would have spanked me for,
there wasn't a naughty bone in her
hard little body! When she'd say,
Carry me. Change my dress. Take me with you.
Brush my hair
âshe always said
Please.
When she'd say,
Let's play school.
Let's have a party. Let's play house
â
she'd flash me her charming potbelly.
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May I have a cookie?
she'd sweetly ask,
in that high fake goody-goody voice.
She wasn't allowed to eat or drinkâ
it would gunk up the mini record player
inside her chest.
May I have a cookie?
She'd pester me while I combed her hair
and buttoned her dress for a tea party.
I'm hungry
âshe'd point her index finger at me until
I held a pretend cookie against her lips
and poured her another empty cup of tea.
May I have a cookie? May I have a cookie?
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Finally, one afternoon I gave her one,
squishing it into the holes of her grille.
After that, sometimes she'd start talking
all by herself, a loud deep gargling
that shook her bodyâlimbs akimbo,
skirt inching upâshowing her panties
with the
MADE IN HONG KONG
tag
still attached.
I HURT myself!
she cried.
Please carry me. I'm hungry. I'm sleepy.
She awoke with two black marks on her leg
and a crack on her back along the seam.
A rash of Chatty Pox dotted her cheeks.
Give me a kiss,
she ordered, and I did.
I'd do anything to shut her up.
Â
Where are we going?
bratty Chatty Cathy
warbled for the last time.
She stopped wanting to play. Stopped
saying
I love you
. Next, laryngitis.
Then a growling sound.
Her O-ring cracked off, the frayed
string a strangled loop spooling
inside her damaged voice box.
Then she was mute, stiffly propped
against my bed pillow like a fancy
Danny Kaye at the Palaceboudoir doll made only for show.
He kissed me once in his dressing room
at the Palace Theater. I was six,
and he was forty, and my aunt Rozzy
had had a fling with him years before
he was famous, when he was a
tummler
clowning at her first husband's hotel
in the Catskills. Danny Kaye was famous
in our house too. My family would talk
about his family like family; his daughter,
Dena, just my age, was like a cousin
Â
twice removed. How many times
had I heard the one about how Danny
and Aunt Rozzy took a midnight drive
and smashed up her husband's roadster?
(No one was hurt.) There's a snapshot
of them smooching on a rustic bench,
Danny draped impishly across
her
lap,
the boss's wife, Queen of White Roe,
not the thrice-married, thrice-divorced,
childless bookkeeper she'd become.
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And on whose sumptuous lap I sat,
that matinee at the Palace, although
my orchestra seat cost her one week's pay.
Here was Danny Kaye in person,
Aunt Rozzy's Danny Kaye, rattling
off the names of 54 Russian composers
in the 38 seconds of a song named “Tschaikowsky.”
“Rachmaninoff, Rimsky-Korsakoff...,”
the stage so close I could see
his spit-spray dancing with the dust.
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Years later came rumors that, although
he was sunny in public, in private
he was ice. He threatened to disinherit Dena
if she ever wrote a word about him.
“Not
our
Danny,” my family said.
We knew him before he was famous,
right after he changed his name from
David Daniel Kaminski to Danny Kaye,
Duvideleh
to his parents, double-talker,
before he was Walter Mitty, Red Nichols,
Â
Hans Christian Andersen, the Court
Jester, Pied Piper, Inspector General,
Anatole of Paris, the Kid from Brooklyn,
we knew him before he stood in front
of a symphony orchestra and conducted
“The Flight of the Bumblebee” using
a fly swatter as his batonâwhen there
was still time for him to become
my uncle Dannyâwho kissed my left
My Father's Shoe Treescheek, the last and first time we met.
After giving away his Italian suits,
I couldn't find a taker for the pair
of wooden shoe trees he slipped
inside his custom-made dress shoes
imported from England. Themselves
a luxury protecting his investment,
the cedar shoe-trees kept those shoes
in shape, kept the chestnut leather
from shrinking, so you could say
they prolonged the pampered life
of his shoes, though not his own.
Every so often he would lightly sand
the wood burnished from years
of wear and oil from his fingertips,
and the lovely cedar scent returned.
Since his death, I've displayed them
on my coffee table like
objets d'art,
keeping their provenance secret.
Is it any stranger than casting baby
shoes in bronze? When I ask a man
his sizeâthe size of his
feet,
that isâ
they're either too long or too wide.
My father's shirts fit most slender
medium-sized men; they were easy
to dispose of. But his shoe trees
continue to be a problem.
Straight out of a classic fairy tale,
like the infamous glass slippers,
they'll only fit inside the shoes
that only fit the one pair of feet
Last Wordsof the future prince they're fated for.
Once the patient stops drinking liquids, he's got up to fourteen days to live. If he takes even a sip of water, you reset the clock
.
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Eleven days without a drop. The rabbi
made his rounds. They stopped her
IV and her oxygen. I asked them
to please turn off the TV's live feed
to the empty hospital chapel, lens
focused on the altar and crucifixâ
it seemed like the wrong God watching
over her, up there, near the ceiling.
And because hearing is the last
sense to go, the nice doctor spoke
to me in a separate room. He said
it's time to say goodbye. Next day,
he returned her to her nursing home
to die. Her nurses said just talk
to her; let her hear a familiar voice.
I jabbered to the body in the bed.
I kept repeating myself, as I'd done
on visits before, as if mirroring
her dementia. I rubbed her hand,
black as charcoal from the needles.
I talked the way a coach spurs on
a losing team. Suddenly she opened
her eyes, smiled her famous smile,
she
knew
me, and for the first time
in a year of babbling, she spoke
my name, then, in her clearest voice
said, “I love you. You look beautiful.
This is wonderful.” I urged her
to sip water through a straw. Then
two cold cans of cranberry juice,
she was that thirsty. Her fingertips
pinked up like a newborn's.
I wanted the nurses to acknowledge
my miracle, to witness my devotion
although I'd been absent all spring.
They reset the clock, resumed her oxygen.
I was like God, I'd revived her. Now
PickwickI'd have to keep talking to keep her alive.
That dog
never
barked, not a whimper,
so it was heaven living next door
to Pickwick and his mistress, Elzbieta,
the Polish novelist on Brattle Street,
my first apartment, my first year
out of grad school. Elzbieta had escaped
the Warsaw ghetto, then worked
for the Resistance during the War.
What had I accomplished at twenty-four?
At her holiday party, tongue-tied and
outclassed, stuck in a clot of Harvard
literati, I bonded with a fellow poet