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Authors: Enid Shomer

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BOOK: Imaginary Men
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Page 25
it gave me the illusion that I never had to settle down, that I was beyond the reach of family. The letter was marked URGENT and explained that Fran was very sick. It ended with a plea for me to telephone as soon as possible.
"She had a tumor on her spine," my mother said when I finally reached her. "We think it came from a bad fall when she took the kids roller skating. They removed it," she whispered. "It was malignant.''
The word "cancer" filled my mind, hordes of fiddler crabs with their pincers upraised like the ones I'd chased every summer as a child along Biscayne Bay. I tried to imagine Fran with a life-threatening disease but could only produce the image of her with baby after baby in the maternity ward of the hospital. "Will she be all right?" I asked.
"I waited to write you, hoping to have good news."
"When?"
"Two months ago. She's had radiation and all her hair fell out. She weighs eighty-six pounds."
I remember looking through the window of my friends' house at the heather that purpled the September fields and wondering if heather grew anywhere else in the world. Everybody was pitching in, my mother said. Herb, though, was falling apart. Could I come home and take care of the kids? I could sleep in the guest room in the basement. I agreed and made arrangements for the next plane back to the States. In my mother's voice there had been a music, a music that caught me up in its melody, its refrain. We can save her, it said, if the sacrifice is big enough.
<><><><><><><><><><><><>
But we couldn't save Fran, and my mother, who lived all her life conservatively as a kind of white magic against such a tragedy, was beyond consolation. My father called in the Florida aunts toward the end of Fran's illness. They flew to Washington and stayed at Fran's house with me, sleeping on cots in the rec room. They took on cooking and cleaning and babysitting with a fervor I wouldn't have expected of them. But even they, with their perpetual Florida tans and tropical radiance, were lost in the larger crowd of family, in that swaying throng of mourners dressed in black.
The funeral was held in the poshly appointed Zimmerman's Star of David, the largest Jewish establishment in town. I had never ex-
 
Page 26
perienced grief before, and now I used it as an excuse to avoid Melissa, Maury, and the rest of the Washington clan. Everyone overlooked my aloofness, impressed, I knew, with my devotion to Fran, with my selflessness. I held onto my sacrifice like a shield and refused to cry through the rabbi's long eulogy. All the time I kept waiting for the grief to hit me like a tidal wave, for it to grab me like a claw.
At the cemetery, a beautiful snow-covered hillside in Virginia, both my parents fainted and were helped back to their feet by the Florida aunts. Those two were everywhere, consoling the family, lending a hand when the awning threatened to blow down at the graveside, helping mourners into and out of cars. They wept unashamedly, not so much for themselves, as Debs confided to me in the limousine, but on my parents' behalf. Ava was more silent than I had remembered her. She had a silver streak through her hairwhether natural or peroxidedlike Indira Gandhi. It gave her an otherworldly look, as if it were the badge of some wisdom obtained at great expense. All she said to me that afternoon was, ''There are no rewards for us here." Her green eyes swept the horizon and arced into the clouds and back.
After the burial, there was the
shiva
, the period of ritual mourning. Zimmerman's had delivered to Fran's house a dozen wooden chairs small enough to be elementary school furniture. When we returned from the grave, my aunts dutifully unfolded them and set about serving the platters that friends of the family had sent. Only the immediate family had to sit in the little chairs, terribly uncomfortable on purpose to keep the mourners' attention on pain and grief. The aunts brought us food and encouraged us to eat. During all of this service they were as humble and quiet as geishas.
The eating and crying continued all evening until the last guest left and my sister's husband, Herb, collapsed into sleep. Finally, only my parents, the aunts, and I remained. Ava suggested my mother switch from her mourner's chair to the sofa. My mother, mute as she had been all day, obeyed, moving in a daze. She took off her shoes and stretched out the length of the couch. "God," she suddenly said. "I helped Frannie pick out this fabric." She felt the nubby tweed of it and sobbed. "What's the point?" she asked us all.
"Oh, Hen, I'm so sorry," Ava said.
"I know," my mother said.
"But Hen," Ava went on, "there's something I want to tell you. Something you have to know."
 
Page 27
All of us looked at her.
"She isn't really dead," Ava announced. I could hear the sound of genuine jubilation in her voice, of conviction. "No one really dies. We all come back. I knew it when I was in India. You mustn't think of her as lost forever."
My mother looked to Aunt Debs.
"Yes," Debs agreed. "It's a comfort. Somewhere your Fran and my Teddy go on. Transformed." She exhaled, and we watched her cigarette smoke hang in the air for a moment like a magician's rope trick.
Then my mother bolted upright on the couch. "You're crazy!" she shouted. "Both of you."
"No, Hen, you don't understand"
"You've always been crazy. Only now you call it religion. We're leaving. Get our coats," she ordered my father.
"Please," Aunt Debs begged, tears streaming from her eyes.
"Wait, Ma," I called to her as she punched her fists through her coat sleeves.
"Wait for what?" my mother said, turning on me the same venom she felt for the aunts. "My Frannie's dead. Who cares if she comes back as something else? She isn't coming back to those four children. Or," she socked her chest, "to me.''
That was the last time she ever saw the aunts, though she and my father eventually retired to Florida. The aunts tried to contact her repeatedly, but she dismissed all apologies and offers of reconciliation and returned their letters unopened. And I think, mild as she was, that she took pride in having taken so absolute a stand against them. Years afterward she refused to speak their names. She tended her anger like a rock garden, nourishing it once a year on the anniversary of Fran's death. Fifteen years later, when I came home for a visit, I saw her light the
yahrzeit
candle and heard her say bitterly, "Back as a flame? Only a little flame?"
<><><><><><><><><><><><>
The aunts left the day after the funeral, hugging thin coats around their print dresses at the airport as we waited for their call to board the plane. I knew I'd want to defend them if their names ever came up, if I ever found myself sorting through the family mythology. And
 
Page 28
I knew I'd never change my parents' minds about the incident. They needed that anger too much. I could imagine myself far into the future, living perhaps in Taos or San Francisco, some place I'd never been, talking to a child with a face I couldn't picture clearly, a dark face like mine. I'd tell her about the weddingnot my own, but Fran's.
When their plane taxied down the runway I wished I were on it with them, our faces leaning together in a threesome toward the small window, the city spreading out below us like a game board. The trip south would have felt like walking under a very large shade tree, a tree so large that the coolness under its branches went on and on into nightfall.
 
Page 29
Goldring among the Cicadas
Harry Goldring was fifty-nine years old and still worried about upsetting his mother, Bella. On alternate Wednesdays, he ate lunch in her apartment. Today, he was going to talk to her about moving to a retirement village. He really was. She would pitch a fit. He would feel disloyal.
Despite his age, Harry still felt like a young man with his whole future stretching out before him. When he dealt with Bella, though, he felt old. He thought this was unusual. Most people he knew complained of feeling like little kids around their parents.
While Bella stuffed peaches with cottage cheese, Harry studied a photo of his younger brother. Mel was pushing fifty, but in the pic-
 
Page 30
ture on Bella's mahogany sideboard he was a perpetual nineteen, tan and muscular from months of holding action against the Japanese.
Bella noticed Harry staring at the picture. "Such a handsome boy," she said. "We almost lost him."
Harry asked if she wanted a glass of tea, but it was too late.
"Quinine, quinine, quinine," she chanted, cutting her peach into bite-sized bits. "I never saw a human being take so much medicine. We supported the drugstore."
Next she would be calling Mel her Yiddishah Marine. Harry resisted the urge to remind her that he had tried to enlist, too, but had been declared 4Fvolatile blood pressure even then. In Bella's mind Mel held the title of family hero while Harry was the family mensch. That meant Harry bought ambulances for Israel while Mel invested in the Redskins and socialized with goyim, knocking back martinis and who knows what other poison. Mel was shrewd, Bella always said, while Harry
Harry had a heart as big as his body
. He'd always been fat. He loved food. He was married to a fat woman and his son, Maury, was even fatter. Harry couldn't recall a single movie or book that showed what fat people were really like. They never got to rescue anything but leftovers.
Harry always pretended to be on a diet when he visited his mother. Now he arranged his cottage cheese in a neat mound and rehearsed what he and Mel had agreed on.
Ma, it's time to give up the apartment. Even with the maid you work too hard. You need people around you
. But Bella didn't just live in her apartment like other people, Harry realized, looking at the mirrors from Czechoslovakia, the Persian rugs. She was a curator, for Christ's sake, and the apartment was a museum of Velvel's success and her own good taste. You couldn't fit a museum into the one-bedroom units of the Potomac Retirement Village. Still, Bella was eighty-two years old. She'd fallen twice in the two years since Velvel died. Once she'd fractured an ankle and the other time suffered a mild concussion. Both times she'd been waxing the floor. When Velvel was alive, if he caught her climbing a stepladder to vacuum drapes, he'd yell something in Russian, and she'd giggle and stop. Now there was no one to make her giggle or stop.
Bella put their plates in the sink, then walked slowly to the bedroom and returned with an ornate hat in a plastic bag. "I want Florence to have this. I wore it for your thirtieth anniversary."
 
Page 31
Harry thanked her, though he knew that Florence would give it to the maid. The day he'd won the low-income housing contracthis biggest deal everhe'd been relaxing in the den, feeling kingly in his household, the master of a notable destiny, when Jolie Mae walked by, dragging the Hoover and wearing Bella's mink-collared sweater over her uniform. Now he frowned as he imagined the old black woman in the fancy beanie.
Bella moved carefully toward the TV and flipped on an afternoon soap. "Mama," Harry began, "I've been thinking"
"Not now," Bella said. "I want to see if that stupid Ann keeps her baby. You'll think later." She angled her cheek toward his face, prompting him to lean down and kiss her goodbye. He felt the blood rush to his head. Then something sputtered right under his breast bone, like a failing car starter. Something scurried there, threatening to run away.
<><><><><><><><><><><><>
Harry sat staring through the french doors at the patio where a small wind-devil of autumn leaves sucked at the flagstones. Soon it would be his busy season. The nation's capital would be limping through another winter. Pipes would be freezing and bursting all over town.
He let a Hershey's Kiss dissolve in his mouth and thought with pride of his fleet of four white panel vans.
Goldring's Plumbing
the "o" a gold ring set with a huge diamond solitaire. Under it, his slogan:
Service is an engagement we take seriously
. There were worse ways to make a living. He didn't expect his customers to remember him when they were taking a nice steamy shower. But when the tap ran cold, when the toilet backed up or the garbage disposal choked on steak bones, then,
then
they were calling his name.
The phone rang. His son, Maury, was having a problem. His wife needed breast reduction surgery, and their insurance company wouldn't pay. The plastic surgeon had sent two letters explaining that her heavy breasts were straining the thoracic vertebrae. "'Purely cosmetic,'" Maury read to Harry from the insurance company's letter. "These guys have no compassion. Can you imagine? All her life, she thinks she's lucky to have big boobs, and it turns out they're making her hunchback."
BOOK: Imaginary Men
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