Looking for Me

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Looking for Me Page 5

by Betsy R. Rosenthal

including me.

  Some Things I Just Don’t Understand

  I can understand

  why Dad hollers at us

  when we wreck things,

  like the ceiling,

  because repairs cost money.

  And I understand,

  because I’m not too bad at math,

  that the Depression + lots of kids = never enough money.

  But I don’t understand

  why a man who hates children

  had twelve of them.

  That just doesn’t add up.

  I’m Not the Performer in the Family

  It’s Saturday morning,

  and Mildred and I

  are taking Marian, Annette, Lenny,

  Melvin, Sol, and Jack

  and the gefilte fish sandwiches

  Mom packed for us

  to spend the whole day

  at the Roxy, watching the cartoons

  and the serials and the double feature.

  We always try to get to the theater early

  so Mildred can perform

  in the Kiddie Club onstage

  before the movies start.

  She sings and tap-dances

  so she can win passes

  for us to see the movies for free.

  I’m glad Mildred has talent,

  because if I got up there

  and tried to sing,

  they’d charge us even more

  than the regular fifteen-cent admission.

  Our Calling Card

  On the way to the Roxy

  we make our usual stop

  to buy sunflower seeds

  at the corner pet shop.

  I hold hands with Melvin

  till we get to a light pole

  and we both let go,

  yelling, “Crackers and oleo!”

  Now we’re all watching the Buck Jones serial

  and cracking open the seeds with our teeth,

  leaving little piles of shells

  all around our feet.

  But when the ushers clean up

  at the end of the show,

  they’ll never know the shells were ours—

  we’ve all moved down a row.

  Now It’s Not Too Cold to Be Outside Anymore

  So Mom is making us

  scrub and polish

  the marble steps

  of our row house,

  scrub and polish

  until they shine.

  We rub the sand-soap bars

  back and forth

  until our arms shake

  and those steps sparkle,

  all the while muttering

  under our breath

  about this horrible job

  Mom makes us do.

  But when the lady next door

  offers to pay us each a dime,

  we jump at the chance

  and polish

  hers, too.

  Signs of Spring

  I know that spring must be here

  because, like always

  when the weather changes,

  there’s my big brother Daniel,

  propped up in bed with pillows,

  wheezing.

  And no matter what

  the weather’s like,

  for breakfast

  he has to eat his cereal

  with water on it.

  And worst of all,

  he can’t have ice cream

  or milk shakes

  with the rest of us.

  But he never, ever complains.

  I know I would.

  Especially about the ice cream.

  So I try never to eat any

  in front of him.

  Our Cousins Are Coming to Town for Passover

  They live in New York,

  and they must be rich

  because Theodora wears Mary Jane shoes

  and party dresses all the time,

  and Marvin wears long pants

  instead of knickers,

  and their dad takes family movies

  on their very own movie camera.

  While they’re in Baltimore,

  they could stay with Bubby Anne,

  who has plenty of room,

  or Uncle Willie,

  who has a bigger house than ours

  and only two kids,

  or Uncle Albert,

  who has a guest room,

  or Aunt Ruth,

  who has no kids of her own

  and the biggest house of all.

  But they always want to stay with us.

  It’s a mystery to me.

  They’re the lucky ones

  because it’s just the two of them,

  but they think

  squeezing into the beds with us,

  where we’re already sleeping

  three to a bed,

  head to foot,

  foot to head,

  is the greatest thing

  ever.

  Getting Ready for Passover

  Annette is supposed to be scrubbing

  the white tile kitchen counters.

  But instead she’s opening

  and slamming cabinets

  and rifling through drawers.

  I’m busy cleaning out the icebox

  with Melvin at my side,

  searching for stray bread crumbs

  on the kitchen floor,

  when Annette comes over to me

  all teary-eyed and pitiful.

  “I can’t find it,” she whines.

  “Can’t find what?” I snap.

  “The elbow grease Mom told me to use.”

  “Keep looking,” I tell her,

  trying not to laugh.

  A Second Chance

  Mom brings home

  a nice big carp to cook for Passover,

  but when Daniel, Mildred, and I see it move,

  we decide to save its life.

  So we sneak it off the table

  and put it in the bathtub,

  where it swims around for a while.

  But it doesn’t really matter.

  It still ends up as gefilte fish

  served on a silver platter.

  Nobody Invites Us to Their House

  We’ll have the big first-night Passover Seder

  at our house,

  but only Mom and Dad

  are going to Bubby Anne’s house

  for second-night Seder,

  leaving us kids at home,

  as usual.

  We’re always having extra people

  at our house for dinner—

  Mildred’s boyfriends,

  Bubby Etta and her husband,

  and sometimes our cousins.

  Mom doesn’t seem to mind—

  she just adds more water to the soup.

  “I wish somebody

  would invite our whole family

  to their house for dinner,” I tell Daniel.

  “It’ll never happen,” he says.

  “It’d be like having

  the whole Baltimore Orioles team over.”

  I guess nobody

  wants to have soup

  that watery.

  A Family Emergency

  Connie and Eunice and I

  are playing marbles at the corner.

  I’m about to roll the shimmy

  when Eunice yells, “Hey, Edith,

  there’s an ambulance by your house

  and that looks like your mother getting in.”

  I race up the street

  as the ambulance drives off

  with Mom in the back

  holding a bundle

  wrapped in a blue blanket.

  I’m thinking it’s the baby.

  My stomach churns

  as I run up the marble steps to our house.

  The door’s wide open.

  The house is quiet.

  But then I hear crying start upstairs.

  Baby Sherry’s in her crib

  and Lenny�
��s standing next to it,

  his arm poking through the crib bars,

  holding the baby’s hand,

  and now he’s crying so hard

  he can’t even catch his breath

  to answer my questions.

  And I’m left wondering

  who was wrapped in the blue blanket.

  The Worst Night Ever

  Dad’s lumbering around the parlor,

  hunched over like an old man,

  and every once in a while

  he stops to wrap his arms around Mom,

  who’s leaving a trail of tissues on the floor

  from wiping her red, puffy eyes

  and runny nose.

  She hands us each a penny

  and sends us outside.

  “Go buy something

  for yourselves,” she says.

  So we take our pennies

  and each other’s hands

  and trudge to the corner candy store

  that stays open until late.

  We don’t know what to say to one another,

  so we just stare at the sidewalk,

  and nobody

  buys any candy.

  Nothing can take away our sadness

  on this night when we learned

  that we’ll never hold hands

  with Melvin again.

  The Day Our Family Got Too Small

  Today

  Mom and Dad made me come to school

  even though I wanted to be

  at Melvin’s funeral.

  Miss Connelly asks me why I am crying.

  I tell her

  that the day before yesterday

  my little brother Melvin with

  his floppy brown ringlets

  was wrapping his arms around my legs

  like he always does,

  that the day before yesterday

  he was walking beside me

  when I took the baby for a stroll,

  keeping his little hands on the carriage,

  trying to help me push it.

  I tell her that the day before yesterday

  my little brother Melvin

  had bronchitis

  and we didn’t know it,

  but then all of a sudden

  he couldn’t breathe,

  so Mom took him to the hospital,

  and he died there.

  And I tell her

  that the day before yesterday

  I thought my family

  was way too big,

  but now

  my family

  is one

  too

  small.

  Melvin’s Funeral

  Sylvia got to go

  because she’s the oldest.

  She told me how cute he looked

  in his white suit

  and his yarmulke.

  I wasn’t allowed to go,

  because Mom and Dad

  said a cemetery

  is no place for children.

  If that’s true,

  then why are they

  leaving my little brother there

  forever?

  It’s Passover No Matter What

  The funeral was yesterday.

  Tonight Passover begins.

  Dad says we’ll still

  have our Passover dinner

  even though no one’s in the mood.

  He brings home a chicken

  and tells me to stuff it and cook it.

  Mom’s too sad to make dinner.

  I’ve watched Mom do it

  a million times,

  but I’ve never cooked a chicken myself.

  I notice at dinner

  that nobody is eating.

  “It’s much too salty,”

  Marian says.

  “Eat it anyway,” Dad tells us.

  “You’ve lost so much salt

  from all the crying.”

  Sometimes I Forget

  Sometimes when I come home from school

  I expect Melvin to race to the door

  and wrap himself around me

  like a snug skirt.

  Sometimes when I open the door,

  so much noise rushes at me

  from Lenny, Sol, Jack, and baby Sherry

  that I even think I hear Melvin.

  Sometimes when I come in,

  someone brushes by me

  and I’m sure it’s Melvin’s floppy curls

  I feel tickling my arm.

  But then I remember,

  and the house

  feels too quiet,

  too still,

  and I can hardly breathe.

  It’s Shabbos

  Mom should be lighting the candles,

  but she’s not.

  She should be pulling in the candlelight

  with her hands

  just before she covers her eyes

  and says the Shabbos blessing,

  but she’s not.

  She should be setting the lit candles

  on the dining table

  before she serves the meal,

  but she’s not.

  “I cannot thank God

  for the Shabbos light

  when he has left me

  in such darkness,” she says.

  When God Spoke to Mom

  Up until Melvin died,

  Mom was working at the diner

  while us older kids

  were staying home after school

  to take care of the younger ones.

  But now Mom says

  that when Melvin died,

  God was telling her

  to stay home and be with her children.

  So she’s going to stop working at the diner

  and I have to start.

  I wish I could be

  one of those children

  she’s staying home

  to be with.

  The Meaning of Bittersweet

  Mom’s in the kitchen

  dipping apples in gooey caramel.

  She hands me one on a stick

  even before the caramel’s had a chance to harden.

  I ask her if today is a special day,

  like maybe somebody’s birthday that I forgot.

  “Yes, Edith,” she says, her voice cracking.

  “It is a special day.

  “Today we’re celebrating the sweetness

  that was Melvin.”

  I bite down hard on the sticky apple,

  trying to enjoy its sweetness

  while my eyes well up

  with bitter tears.

  Looking for a Way Out

  Every day after school

  I walk through the ballpark

  on my way to work

  at the diner,

  and every day

  I pray

  that one of those balls

  will hit me so hard

  it’ll break some part of me

  and I’ll get to stop working

  and stay home after school and just play

  every day.

  Back to School with a Plan

  Since I haven’t gotten hit

  by a baseball yet,

  I come up with a plan.

  I lie and tell Dad

  that I’ve joined lots of clubs

  this semester in school—

  the Coach Club and Yearbook

  and Glee Club

  and Farewell Assembly Committee

  and Victory Corps–Office Emergency Squad.

  I don’t know what any of these clubs do,

  and I only heard about them

  from my big sister Sylvia,

  because you have to be in high school

  to join them,

  but Dad doesn’t have to know that.

  I’ll just tell him I have to stay

  so late after school every day,

  meeting with all these clubs I’ve joined,

  that I won’t have time

  to work at the diner.

&n
bsp; When I tell Dad

  about the clubs,

  he scowls at me.

  “Clubs, shmubs—

  you’re too young to join.

  You’ll work for me after school,” he says.

  I guess I need a new plan.

  A Crime

  Now I have an answer for Miss Connelly,

  who asked me

  at the start of the school year

  who I am in this family.

  I used to think I was

  “the good little mother,”

  taking care of my sisters and brothers,

  but I’m really

  just one of Dad’s work slaves.

  That’s who I am.

 

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