Authors: Jane Shore
Wearing her baby-blue nylon nightgown,
not the muslin shroud we buried her in,
my mother stands before my closet, puzzled.
Why are
her
dresses mingling with mine?
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For once, my mother doesn't talk.
She bears no message from Jewish heaven
where the dead have nothing to do all day
but sit around and advise the living.
More like the Ten Commandments:
Never wear white in winter or velvet in summer.
Buy life insurance. File a will.
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Does she want me to choose an outfit for her?
This is a first.
She
was always the expert on clothes.
Perhaps when you die, the first thing to go
is your fashion sense, because in Paradise
everyone's dressed the same.
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I remember how, in her store, she'd
run her eyes over the racks of merchandise
and know exactly which dress
her customers should wear
to their fundraisers, cocktail parties, christenings.
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But where's she going that's so important?
Since she's lost all that weight
her dresses just hang off her,
so she might as well be naked.
Yet her eyes seem to be begging me
to help her, help her slip back again
Possessioninto the shackles of clothes.
Nesting in my nest, she slept on my side
of the double bed, stacked the booksâ
my
booksâ
she was reading on my nightstand.
In the closet, her dresses pressed
against my husband's pants.
These I boxed up for her mother,
with the baby's toys.
I tossed her blue toothbrush
and her tortoiseshell comb in the trash.
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Police took away a rug. My two best knives.
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But the kitchen still smells of her spicesâ
her cinnamon, curry, cloves.
The house an aromatic maze
of incense and sachet.
Almost every day now something of hers
turns up. The way La Brea tar pits
keep disgorging ancient bones, squeezing them
through the oily black muscles of earth
to the surface.
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A yoga mat.
I don't need it. I already have my own.
Prayer beads. A strapless bra.
A gold ring. It's pretty.
It fits my pinkie.
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I wash my face with her special soap,
a cool oval of white clay,
one thick black hair still glued to it.
And is it wrong to brew her herbal teas, try her
aromatherapies, her homeopathic cures,
the Rescue Remedy she'd told me
really worked? The amber bottle's full.
Why waste it? So I deposit
Trouble Dollsfour bitter drops on my own tongue.
Guatemalan Indians tell of this old custom. When you have troubles, remove one doll from the box for each problem. Before you go to sleep, tell the doll your trouble. While you are sleeping, the doll will try to solve it. Since there are only six dolls in a box, you are allowed only six troubles a day.
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Every morning, I unbend
their wire limbs and lay them
back in their tiny box where
they sleep all day like vampires.
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Their lidless eyes cannot closeâ
the pupils dots of black paint,
bull's-eyes ringed
with insomnia's dark circles.
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Scalps sprinkled with black salt.
Arms opened wide,
as if expecting to be hugged
or crucified.
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What were their troubles
before they came to meâ
these brothers, husbands, wives,
this neighbor's son-in-law,
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born in the old country
where churches collapsed
on their babies, and police
dragged off the baker,
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soldiers raped the sister,
and a brother came home
with his arms twisted, and
the father with no arms at all?
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Single file, they descend
the mineshaft of my unconscious,
with only a pickax and hardhat
beam to light their path.
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Yet I worry that one night,
opening their box, I'll find
five dolls left, and the next night
four, subtracting a doll a dayâ
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until, like the Disappeared,
they'll all vanish without a trace,
leaving me to worry all alone
The Blue Address Bookin bed with their empty coffin.
Like the other useless
things I can't bear
to get rid ofâher
nylon nightgowns,
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his gold-plated
cufflinks, his wooden
shoetrees, in a size
no one I know can useâ
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I'm stuck with their blue
pleather address book,
its twenty-six chapters
printed in ballpoint pen,
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X'd out, penciled in,
and after she passed away,
amended in his hand,
recording, as in a family
Â
Bible, those generations
born, married, and since
relocated to their graves:
Abramowitz
to
Zimmerman
.
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Great-uncles, aunts,
cousins once removed,
whose cheeks I kissed,
whose food I ate,
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are in this book still
alive, immortal, each
name accompanied
by a face:
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Fogel
(Rose and Murray),
474 13th St., Brooklyn,
moved to a condo
in Boca Raton;
Stein
Â
(Minnie, sister of Rose),
left her Jerome Ave.
walk-up for the Yonkers
Jewish Nursing Home.
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The baby-blue cover
has a patina of grease,
the pages steeped
in cigarette smoke
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from years spent in my
parents' junk drawer.
Though scattered
in different graveyards,
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here they're all
accounted for.
Their souls disperse,
dust motes in the air
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Dummythat I inhale.
He lolled on my twin bed waiting for me
to get home from Girl Scouts or ballet,
but I couldn't really play with him
the way I'd played with my other dollsâ
buttoning their dresses, buckling their shoes,
brushing and braiding their long, rooted curls.
He had the one crummy green gabardine suit.
His ketchup-colored hair was painted on.
And while my baby dolls could drink
from a bottle, cry real tears, blow bubbles,
and pee when I squeezed their tummies,
my dummy didn't have the plumbing.
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The water bottles I'd jam in his mouth
scuffed his lipstick, mildewed his stuffing.
Prying his smile apart, I'd run my finger
along the seven milk teeth lining his jaw.
But look inside his head. Completely empty!
No tongue, no tonsils, no brain.
No wonder he had to wear his own name
on a label sewn above his jacket pocket
to remind himself that he was Jerry Mahoney
and his straight man an eleven-year-old girl
who jerked the dirty pull string at the back
of his neck, making his jaw drop open,
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his chin clack like the Nutcracker's.
That lazy good-for-nothing! I had to put
words in his mouth. His legs hung limp,
his arms flopped at his sides. He couldn't
wink or blink or quit staring to the left;
brown eyes painted open, perpetually
surprised at what he'd blurt out next:
“Grandma Fanny has a big fat fanny!
Uncle Fred should lose that lousy toupee!
Aunt Shirley dresses like a goddamn tramp!
That son of hers, Moe, a moron!Ӊ
what
they
said behind each other's backs!
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He did a slow one-eighty of my bedroom.
“How the hell did I wind up in this joint?”â
that low, unnatural voice straining through
my own locked teeth. “Good evening, ladies,”
he leered at the dolls propped on the shelf,
cocking his head to see their underpants.
How old was that wiseacre supposed to be?â
thirteen? thirty? my father's age?âthe little
man sitting on my lap, telling dirty jokes
until his pull string snapped, a fraying ganglion
lost inside his neck beyond the tweezers' reach,
a string of words unraveling down his throat.
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After that, we practiced our act in the dark
where I couldn't see his imperfections.
We'd talk, long after the others were asleep:
I'd move my lips, lower my voice an octave;
and it almost sounded like a conversation
between a husband and a wife.
I tweaked his bow tie, smoothed his satin dickie,
rapped on his skull.
Knock, knock
. “Who's there?”