Authors: Jane Shore
syllables of pure pleasure:
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combinations of Pungs, Chows, Kongs,
and pillows, pairs of East Winds or Red Dragons,
making a Dragon's Tail, Windfall, LillyPilly,
Seven Brothers, Three Sisters, Heavenly Twins,
making a Green Jade, Royal Ruby, White Opal,
Red Lantern, and Gates of Heaven...
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Why did my mother deny herself?
Once when I asked her, she confessed
that she never really enjoyed business.
I think that my mother
didn't much like mothering, either.
It scared her, too, the closeness of every day.
It was easier to fold my clothes
than to touch me. Even as she was dying,
she shut me out, preferring to be alone.
Now, she's like the West Wind in the empty chair
opposite me, the absent one we skip over
because we are playing with only three.
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Emma shouts, “Mah-jongg!”âshe's won her first game.
Joyce is so thrilled, she forgets
we're not playing for money.
Rummaging in her purse, she pulls out
a dollar bill and crushes it into Emma's hand.
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We reshuffle the tiles. Twitter the sparrowsâ
all peacocks, dragons, flowers, seasons
hide under their black blankets of night.
Reflecting us, the dark window blurs our hands
then brightens into all the other hands I saw
around card tables set up under shade trees
during those long hot afternoons
in Rockland Lake, New York.
Babies napping, husbands away at work,
all the other mothers playingâ
happy, sipping their iced drinks,
A Yes-or-No Answerhappy, smoking their cigarettes.
I'll forgive and I'll forget, but I'll remember.
âYiddish proverb
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A Yes-or-No AnswerFor Emma
Have you read
The Story of O?
Will Buffalo sink under all that snow?
Do you double-dip your Oreo?
Please answer the question yes or no.
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The surgeryâwas it touch-and-go?
Does a corpse's hair continue to grow?
Remember when we were simpatico?
Answer my question: yes or no.
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Do you want another cup of joe?
If I touch you, is it apropos?
Are you certain that you're hetero?
Is your answer yes or no?
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Did you lie to me, like Pinocchio?
Was forbidden fruit the cause of woe?
Did you ever sleep with that so-and-so?
Just answer the question: yes or no.
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Did you nail her under the mistletoe?
Will you spare me the details, blow by blow?
Did she sing sweeter than a vireo?
I need an answer. Yes or no?
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Are we still a dog-and-pony show?
Shall we change partners and do-si-do?
Are you planning on the old heave-ho?
Check an answer:Â Yes
 No
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Was something blue in my trousseau?
Do you take this man, this woman? Oh,
but that was very long ago.
Did we say yes? Did we say no?
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For better or for worse? Ergo,
shall we play it over, in slow mo?
Do you love me? Do you know?
The StreakMaybe yes. Maybe no.
Because she wanted it so much, because
she'd campaigned all spring and half the summer,
because she was twelve and was old enough,
because she would be responsible and pay for it herself,
because it was her mantra, breakfast, lunch, and dinner,
because she would do it even if we said noâ
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her father and I argued until we finally said
okay, just a little one in the front
and don't ask for any more, and, also,
no double pierces in the future, is that a deal?
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She couldn't wait, we drove straight to town,
not to our regular beauty parlor, but the freaky oneâ
half halfway house, half community centerâ
where they showed her the sample card of swatches,
each silky hank a flame-tipped paintbrush dipped in dye.
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I said no to Deadly Nightshade. No to Purple Haze.
No to Atomic Turquoise. To Green Envy. To Electric Lava
that glows neon orange under black light.
No to Fuchsia Shock. To Black-and-Blue.
To Pomegranate Punk. I vetoed Virgin Snow.
And so she pulled a five out of her wallet, plus the tax,
and chose the bottle of dye she carried carefully
all the car ride home, like a little glass vial
of blood drawn warm from her arm.
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Oh she was hurrying me! Darting up the stairs,
double-locking the bathroom door,
opening it an hour later, sidling up to me, saying, “Well?”
For a second, I thought that she'd somehow
gashed her scalp. But it was only her streak, Vampire Red.
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Later, brushing my teeth, I saw her messâ
the splotches where dye splashed
and stained the porcelain, and in the waste bin,
Kleenex wadded up like bloodied sanitary napkins.
I saw my girlâPersephone carried off to Hell,
My Mother's Chairwho left behind a mash of petals on the trampled soil.
Coming home late, I'd let myself in
with my key, tiptoe up the stairs,
and there she was, in the family room,
one lamp burning, reading her newspaper
in her velvet-and-chrome swivel chair
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as though it were perfectly natural
to be wide awake at 2
A.M.
,
feet propped on the matching
ottoman, her orthopedic shoes
underneath, two empty turtle shells.
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Like a mummy equipped for the afterlife,
she'd have her ashtray and Kents handy,
her magnifying mirror,
and tweezers and eyeglass case,
her crossword puzzle dictionary.
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Glancing up and down, she never
appeared to be frisking me, even when,
just seconds before, coming home
from a date, at the front door,
I'd stuck my tongue into a boy's mouth.
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I'd sit on the sofa and bum her cigarettes,
and as the room filled up with smoke,
melding our opposite temperaments,
we'd talk into the night, like diplomats
agreeing to a kind of peace.
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I'd feign indifferenceâso did sheâ
about what I was doing out so late.
When I became a mother myself,
my mother was still the sentry at the gate,
waiting up, guarding the bedrooms.
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After her funeral, her chair sat empty.
My father, sister, husband, and I
couldn't bring ourselves to occupy it.
Only my daughter climbed up its base
and spun herself round and round.
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In the two years my father lived alone
in the apartment over their store,
I wonder, did he ever once
sit down on that throne, hub
around which our family had revolved?
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After my father died, the night
before I left the place for good,
the building sold, the papers signed,
before the moving vans drove away,
dividing the cartons and the furniture
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between my sister's house and mine,
a thousand miles apart,
I sat on the sofaâmy usual spotâ
and stared at the blank TV, the empty chair;
then I rose, and walked across the room,
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and sank into her ragged cushions,
put my feet up on her ottoman,
rested my elbows on the scuffed armrests,
stroked the brown velvet like fur.
The headrest still smelled like her!
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Swiveling the chair to face the sofa,
I looked at things from her point of view:
What do you need it for?
So I left it behind, along with the blinds,
the meat grinder, the pressure cooker.