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“In My Other Life My Mother Fails” & “Dish Pigs”

In My Other Life My Mother Fails

 

 

to track down my gambler father in Reno, though as in our real life, she tries every club

and casino, the hospital, the jailhouse, and SROs, and too broke for train fare

 

back to Brooklyn, rents us a shabby room.  To keep it simple, and with apologies

to my brother, in this life she’s not pregnant.  It’s just us, alone in that city

 

as foreign to us as Madrid or Berlin. In my other life, she’s still glamorous in stilettos

and fitted peplum suits, skirts short enough to flaunt her lovely legs, but not too short —

 

a girl without a husband has to take care. Each night before bed I help as she twists clean rags

into her thick, dark hair, and each morning I stand behind her, watching as she unrolls

 

a cascade of waves like Susan Hayward’s.  She paints her mouth blood red. She’s well-equipped

for waiting tables in the casinos, makes good tips pretending to be sweet. She’s lovely

 

and the men all want her, but they like her loyalty to the jerk who’s abandoned us

and no they’ve not seen him, but if they do … Let’s say she leaves me with the kindly old dealer

 

who rooms downstairs, whose own gambling man has left her, too. Her name is Maisey

or Ruthie, she chain-smokes, wears a kerchief and housecoat, teaches me to cut the cards

 

as she does, and how not to be stupid when I play my hand, the right way to wear perfume.

Let’s say I’m twelve in this life, pretty and not shy, that my mother starts to worry about me

 

growing up in that neon town with nothing but men and the desert surrounding us, and so she

writes to her parents — in this life they’re not hardscrabble immigrants from Ukraine, not a janitor

 

and cook — no, let’s make them wealthy and here for generations, owners of a chain of discount

jewelry stores or a scrap metal business. Of course they’re angry at their only daughter

 

for running off with my father, who as in our real life, is a handsome liar with little to offer

but good stories and bad luck. Let’s say they relent and wire us tickets for the train back east.

 

In this other life we live with them in a three-story brownstone under lush trees on Bedford Park.

My Nana wears Chanel suits and white gloves, takes me to Bergdorfs for clothes, to the Plaza for tea

 

and little cakes, sandwiches with the crusts cut off. My mother pretends she’s a widow, joins

the Junior League, sews bibs for the babies of the poor. At night she paints murky portraits

 

of my missing father among horses, dogs, and jockeys. In this life, we don’t live in the projects, and

he doesn’t ride the subway home each night, clinging to a strap shaped like a noose, angry

 

and bored.  I’m not homely or shy. I’m one of those neighbor girls who giggled at my mismatched

clothes and my plastic bag and my cheap shoes. In my other life it’s me who’s laughing.

 

–after Carl Dennis

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Dish Pigs

for CD & AJ

 

Yes, it’s just after dawn, stars still visible

in the slowly lightening sky,

 

but you’re not like stars. And you’re

not like the yellow dandelions

 

in the berm behind the reeking dumpster

where you lean, laughing

 

and smoking, on your break or shift’s end.

You’re not like the swift vee

 

of birds I can’t identify shrieking

up into the morning air, or the children

 

in their little jackets who’ll soon march

past us bearing Frozen and Pokemon

 

backpacks, though you’re not much older

than the slick kids in their slick cars

 

who’ll drive by headed to St. Pat’s.

You might be the ex-juvie offenders

 

and dropouts I once knew there.  Wiry

and muscled in your coarse aprons

 

splotched with grief — I mean grease —

cross-hatched imprints of hairnets

 

tattooing your foreheads, real tattoos

inked on your necks and arms,

 

you’re the lowest of the kitchen castes.

The cooks and servers call you dish pigs.

 

It’s what you call yourselves. I know

your skin is slick with fry oil, that the sour-

 

sponge smell in your hands lingers

even after you shower, that you know

 

the feel of thick rubber gloves deep

in your fingers.  I know you take small

 

sacks of leftover burgers and fries home

to basement rooms where you play

 

Deathloop, get high, and dream. But these

are memories, fancies. Now the red

 

August sun’s fully risen and you call out

a welcome to the grayhead joining

 

your bright circle. You’re not like the sun.

This is not the yard. It’s just a strip-mall

 

parking lot, and you’re not prisoners,

though you call the old man lifer.

Contributor
Susan Aizenberg

Susan Aizenberg’s newest collection is A Walk with Frank O’Hara and Other Poems (University of New Mexico Pres, 2024). She is the author as well of Quiet City (BkMk 2015) and Muse (Crab Orchard 2002), and co-editor with Erin Belieu of The Extraordinary Tide: New Poetry by American Women (Columbia University. Press, 2001). Recent poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Plume, ABQinPrint, SWIMM, Hole in the Head Review and elsewhere. Her awards include the VCU Levis Prize and the Nebraska Book Award for Poetry. Aizenberg lives and writes in Iowa City.

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