Wednesday, July 14, 1999

Dream Vendor

There was an eeriness about the old woman that Anna was unable to define.  She didn't know the woman's name, only that she was called  la vecchia,  the old one, by the tenants in the Little Italy section where Anna and her mother shared a third-floor apartment.   La vecchia's apartment was on the ground floor of the same building, near the entrance way -- a perfect  vantage point for knowing everyone and everything that went in or out.  Perhaps it was the piercing look she gave Anna whenever they happened to run into each other at the bottom of the narrow, creaking stairs...perhaps the unearthly smile. Whatever it was made her uneasy.

She stood at the bus stop after a long day at her stenographer desk, and thought about la vecchia now and hoped she would not be there in the entrance way when Anna got home.  She shuddered inside her thin woolen coat and wrapped her scarf more securely around her neck.


Glancing across the street, she saw a young woman, shapely and beautiful in silver fox fur, step from a taxi and smile at the cabbie who was holding the door for her.  Anna tried to imagine how it would feel to be so lovely.   The lady paid her fare and then slowly, sensuously, pulled her long black leather glove back onto her right hand and up under the sleeve of her luxurious coat.  

Anna suppressed the sob that nagged at her throat. I could be attractive if  Momma would let me, she thought.   I hate her for it!   But what can I do?  I'm thirty-seven, and the pattern is set, not likely to change.  

Face paint is for harlots!"  Anna could almost hear her mother's words echoing in her head.  "Fancy clothes are the devil's tools of temptation!"

I wish she would die, Anna thought, then I 'd be free!   Immediately guilt seared inside her.  "I'm sorry, I'm sorry!" she whispered.  "I didn't mean it!"   

A gentlemen waiting beside her looked up.  "Something wrong, Miss?" he asked. 


Anna, embarrassed, stared at the sidewalk.  "No, no," she mumbled, and was relieved to see her bus, #40, pull to the curb.  She stepped aboard, planting one oxford-clad foot heavily ahead of the other.

As she climbed the three steps to their building, Anna, through the etched glass of the front door, could see la vecchia standing in the vestibule.....waiting.  Oh no! Anna thought.  She opened the door and averted her eyes, but this time...this first and only time....la vecchia opened her mouth and spoke.


"You want to buy a dream?" 


Anna thought she had misunderstood.  "What?"


"You want to buy a dream?"


"What do you mean?"


"I sell you a dream," la vecchia said.  Her smile filled Anna with anxiety.  


"I don't understand," she said and tried to pass, but la vecchia barred her way.


  "I have nice boyfriend dreams for sale," she said.  "Husband dreams, too.... money dreams....all kinds.  Money dream is nice....two apartments....two lives....very, very nice.  I also have beauty dreams...make you beautiful.  Murder dreams.......  Many, many dreams.   Which dream you want to buy?"


"Murder dreams?"


"Yes."  


Anna wiped perspiration from her brow, yet shivered and was cold.  "Oh," said la vecchia, "I see.  Yes, yes, I see.  I think I know what you want."


""No!" Anna said.  "Please!  Momma has dinner waiting.  I have to get up there!" 


"I ask one more time," la vecchia said.  "I sell you nice dream.  You want to buy nice dream?"


"Well...."  Anna hesitated; then, "No! No!" she said.  "Stop it!"  She put her hands over her ears.


La vecchia's smile changed to sneer.  "Fool!" she said.  "You have to make dream, not buy it!  So....you want to make a dream?"  


"Leave me alone!"  Anna, pushing her out of the way, stumbled up the stairs. 


"Coward!" la vecchia screamed after her.


Anna reached the third landing, rounded the corner, and fumbled in her purse for the apartment key.  "Fool!" she heard la vecchia shout again.  Then there was silence.

Momma must have been listening for her, because she was right inside the door.  How much had she heard?  "Momma...." Anna started to say, but her mother spoke first.

"What was all that screeching about?  And you're late again!  Dinner is cold.  What do you think I run here -- a twenty-four-hour restaurant?  You selfish young girls are all alike!"


Anna brushed past her, and shrugging off her coat, threw it on the sofa.  "I'm NOT young!" she cried.  "Momma, I'm thirty-seven, for God's sake!  Thirty-seven, Momma, and plain and tired and home every single night right after work!"


"Don't you DARE talk to me in that tone of voice!" her mother said.


Anna's sigh was barely audible.  "I'm sorry, Momma," she said, and the pattern remained set, not likely to change.  

Wednesday, June 30, 1999

Work in Progress

Sometimes Tessa actually forgets that she's almost seventy until she catches a glimpse of at herself in a mirror and thinks, Where did that little old lady come from?  She's joking; it really doesn't bother her -- her age, that is.  It's just that it all went so fast!  The blink of an eye, she thinks.  You blink once and forty-five years have flown by. 

"In two days it'll be our forty-fifth," she tells Bill.  "Did you remember?"

"Of course!" he says.  "And your mother said it wouldn't last!" 

"I don't think she actually said that," she says.

"But she thought it."

"Well, I'll admit that she wasn't all that crazy about you at first." Tessa smiles.  "But she came around.  Everyone, sooner or later, always does."

"Does what?" Bill asks.

"Succumbs to your charm."

She knows he likes hearing that, and it's her pleasure to pump his ego.  Poor dear balding darling!  They do tend to argue a bit, she and Bill, but the litany they often recite between them these days is how good their life together has been. When Tessa tries to image what her life would be like if he died first, the idea weighs so heavily in her chest that she has to gasp for breath.

"Are you going to be home today at lunch-time?"  Bill says.

"Why do you ask?"

"What do you mean, why do I ask?  It seems to me that 'yes' or 'no' is all that is required.  You make a epic novel out of everything!"

"I just wondered if there was some reason you needed me to be here at noon today, that's all, Grouch!"

"If I had had some reason, I would have said so.  All I ask from you is a simple answer!"

"I don't give simple answers!" she says.  

"Don't I know it!"  

"I never did.  It's part of the baggage I brought with me.  No one in my family ever gave simple answers!  Except maybe my dad.  But then, he was so much like you are.  I guess that's what first attracted me to you.  Only, I didn't realize it at the time."

"Okay, so, will you?"

"Will I what?"

"Be here at lunch time?"

"No, I'm meeting Joan and Rachel at Atria's Restaurant in Mt. Lebanon."

"Okay," he said.  "Then I won't bother stopping in before my afternoon sessions at the office."  He hugged her.  "No use coming home if you're not here."

"See?" she said in triumph, you did have a reason for asking!"

"I give up," he said.

Later, driving to the south end of the city to meet her friends, Tessa's mind wanders back to the ugly old triangular-shaped building that was their first home.  We loved those three cramped little rooms, she thinks.  To us they were heaven.  As a matter of fact, they were close to it, being on the fourth floor.  There was no elevator, but we didn't expect conveniences -- not at sixty dollars a month, which was reasonable even by 1955 standards.  She smiles, remembering.

.........................


Sarah wasn't the problem.  The problem was the bedroom's dimensions.  The only way they could fit her crib in the room was to wedge it right up to their double bed and shove the bed against the opposite wall.  That meant they had to step up onto the bed, walk across it, and climb down on the other side, just to reach the door.  But beautiful little Sarah, with her headful of black ringlets where most three-week-olds had only peach fuzz, was worth it.   She was their first-born.  

In those days, there wasn't much done about birth control, at least among Catholics, and although Tessa wanted children very much, with Bill still in school, she worried about having to quit her job.  Maternity leave was still many decades in the future, and working mothers of new-borns were a rarity more censured than pitied.  Still, they managed.  Bill, in his last year of medical school under the G-I Bill, was receiving a small living allowance from the government, and before their marriage, Tessa had squirrled away over three-thousand dollars in the bank. Bill also worked three nights a week while finishing up his last year of Medical School, and by the time Sarah was six months old, he had graduated and took an internship that paid seventy-five dollars a month.  Later, out of the goodness of its heart, the hospital raised it to a hundred. 


The whole first four months of their marriage, Tessa had worried that she might not be capable of having children.  

"I'm scared, Bill," Tessa said.

"Scared of what?"   

"That I won't do right by her," she said.  She's so little and so precious, and sometimes I feel like I'm not even grown up yet myself."

"You'll do just fine, Tessa," he said.  "I guess most new mothers might feel that way.For godsakes, Tessa, you're almost twenty-three!  You fret about everything!  You're not happy unless you have something to worry about.  You fester and fester until you find something!"

He was always analyzing her!  Medical students think they know it all!  All through her pregnancy he had analyzed.  Everytime she wanted a little attention, he said that all pregnant woman act that way.  No matter what she did, he nodded like a sage and told her it was normal for a prima-gravida.  Everything was so damn perfectly normal!  He told her a million times the whole birth thing was a natural, everyday thing.  Well, sure, for him it was!  She wondered what she had ever seen in him anyway.  Almost immediately she was sorry for the thought.

"Oh, Bill, I wish I could be calm about things the way you are!  Will you give her her bath again this evening when she wakes up?"

"No.  You have to start doing that."

"Please, Bill.  Suppose I drop her?  You're so experienced and all."

"You won't drop her!  Gee whiz, Tessa, grow up!  Oh, okay, I'll bathe her tonight, but don't you think you start taking full charge?  What will you do when I fly to Toledo next Friday for my internship interview?  I'll be gone all weekend, you know."

She groaned.  "Oh, I forgot!  That means I'll be alone with her!  I'll just have to move in with my folks until you get back."  She relaxed a little, visualizing how, calm and capable, her mother would take over.  

Requiem For Gilbert

[Revised from a piece I wrote  in 1966]

My Last Duchess

  That's my last Duchess painted on the wall,

                                                         Looking as if she were alive.  ...................

                                                                                                            Robert Browning


Gilbert has passed away.  We had been married for almost forty years.  After that long a time, it was like losing an arm or leg -- a diseased arm or leg, perhaps, but still an extension of one's own self...a terrible loss.  Oh, but I do have my memories.  No one can take those from me.  What would one do without one's memories to sustain one?  My consolation is that he had absolutely no inkling that he was going to die until the very end.  I, on the other hand, had a premonition early on, and the idea grew, nurtured by his increasingly disturbed behavior.  More than six months before his death, I had already resigned myself to it, but kept the secret locked in my heart.

How ironic that all our married life before this, I took it for granted that I would be the first to go.  He was so robust and I, insulin dependent for years, so fragile.  Still and all, I survived my surgery without too much difficulty -- the nose job I had right after I turned forty-five.  Gilbert thought it was ridiculously vain of me, but we had come into some money from his father, and I had had about all I could stand of it, -- my nose, that is.  It had looked like a large spatula.  Gilbert used to tease me mercilessly about it.

"What do you think, Nose?" he would ask me, and then to our friends, "I value her opinion because the Nose knows."  I  would chide him in private for his lack of sensitivity, but he did the same thing time after time.

Well, the operation made a marvelous improvement in my life, to say nothing of my face, but Gilbert was not at all pleased.  Now Niles Ridgeway, he thought I looked wonderful.  As a matter of fact, so did I...or do...but perhaps I should not be the one to say so.

"Angela," Niles would say, "what's a living doll like you doing married to a clump like Gilbert?"  I thought "clump" was a humorous description, although "jealous clump" would have been more accurate, since it was right after my operation that Gilbert's jealousy first showed itself.

About that time, too, Gilbert took to drinking -- I mean drinking seriously.  Our friends knew he took a nip or two now and then, but what they didn't know was that quite often he became roaring drunk.   Within a year, his addiction had progressed to the point of making my life miserable.  He hurled all sorts of foul epitaphs at me, casting aspersion of the vilest sort on my morals -- which was silly of him, really, because Niles and his wife had already moved away by then, and I hadn't even met Wilson yet.

Wilson was such a dear to me.  I don't know what I would have done without his shoulder to cry on during those trying months.  The benefit of his shoulder was short-lived, however, because one summer evening Gilbert came home in one of his drunken states and found us together.  We weren't doing anything, really, -- just talking.  Maybe we kissed a little, but just a little. 

Well, Gilbert grabbed Wilson by the neck and banged his head against the porch post, screaming, "You lousy bastard!  You stay away from my wife!  Stay away from that whore, you hear me?"

Not only did Wilson hear him, but I'm afraid the rest of the neighborhood must have, too.  I thank heaven that Rita, his wife, was visiting her mother in Duluth.  It was all so embarrassing.  And to add to my woes, Wilson turned out to be somewhat of a coward, for almost immediately thereafter our friendship dwindled.  But I mustn't let myself degenerate into the type of woman who reminisces on and on about things of little interest to anyone but herself.

As I say, though, no one but me knew the real extent of Gilbert's drinking.  I put up with it and never complained to a soul.  I'm a very loyal sort, and I feel strongly that once a woman has taken on her husband's name, she should do everything in her power to keep that name unbesmirched in the eyes of the world.  I rather pride myself in this.  No, I never mentioned a word of it.  Except to Walter, of course, and then only within the last year or so, as Gilbert became steadily worse.  Walter is married to Minnie, my next-door neighbor.  We understand each other.  Walter, that is, not Minnie.  Minnie is an insipid, canasta-playing moron.  Ah, but Walter is....well, Walter is the very soul of kindness.  One must have someone to lean upon in one's hour of need.  In Gilbert's last year, I leaned on Walter.

I remember well the evening Gilbert found I had slipped over to Walter's.  You see, Gilbert watched me like a hawk.  It wasn't so bad when he was still working, but after he retired, just a little over fourteen months ago, he made spying on me his whole life.  Poor thing, it saddens me to put it that way, when such a short time of life was destined to be left for him.  But of course, he didn't know that then.  He had always, since my operation, made my whereabouts his business, but that last year, it was almost unbearable.  He followed me everywhere, like a little puppy dog.  He even insisted upon coming marketing with me, for fear, I was sure, that I would take up with someone.  At times, I thought I'd scream for want of privacy.  All of which makes my loss that much more poignant, don't you see?  Does one become easily accustomed to the absence of one's shadow?  Well, Minnie was meeting elsewhere with her canasta group that particular evening, and Gilbert, or so I thought, was under the influence enough for me to run next door for an hour or so undetected.

Unfortunately, as I mentioned, Gilbert found out and came over for me, behaving like a true madman.  There followed then another of his wild tantrums.  He not only bandied Walter's and my name about, but implicated me with two or three others, whom I wouldn't have looked at twice if they were the last men on earth.  It infuriated him that I didn't give his accusations the dignity of so much as a denial, but merely let a slight smile play upon my lips.

He pushed his fist in front of my face then, and shouted, "So help me, if I ever catch you at it again...."

I said, "Oh, Gilbert, honestly!"

"I mean it!" he said.  "I'll smash your nose!  I'll make it worse than before!"

I didn't let on how this upset me, but I thought of the money and pain I had put into my nose and how the surgery had changed my whole outlook on me and my life, and I knew then that he was unsettled beyond repair.

Oh, but I fear I'm getting boring with my reminiscing.  It's all still so fresh, though.  Sometimes I go around the house and imagine I hear him sniveling.  I used to try to analyze it -- his snivel -- in an effort to find why it irritated me so.  A sniffle is one thing, annoying enough in itself, but a snivel is quite another.  Gilbert's was definitely a snivel.  Before his retirement, I had to contend with it only on evenings and Saturdays and Sundays.  The past year, though, it drove me fair out of my mind.

"Gilbert," I would say, as sweetly as I knew how, especially so when I began to realize how little time he had left, "please do stop that infernal thing!"
"What infernal thing?" he would ask.

And of course, there I was.  If I answered, "Your infernal sniveling," he would return with "What infernal sniveling?", and so it would go -- on and on.

At Walter's kind suggestion, I placed boxes of tissues strategically all over the house, but to no avail.  A snivel, unfortunately, is not a physical thing that can be cured by blowing.  Well, the poor soul is gone now, and with him, the habit.  Strange, how good can come from the saddest of things.

Gilbert had retired the first of April last year.  Now here it is June, and he's gone already.  So often it happens that way.  A man retires in perfect health, and less than two years later, he's dead.  Tragically ironic, isn't it?

Gilbert's death, although I could see it coming, was actually sudden when one comes right down to it.  Truthfully, I can't put my finger on exactly what precipitated it.  I do remember, however, that he had been drinking the night before, and that he looked, -- how shall I say? -- revolting that morning, asleep with his mouth open, a gray stubble of beard covering his, -- I must admit -- ugly face.  We had had words before bed...cruel words.  He had threatened me with nose-smashing again.  All this went through my mind as I looked at him.  I began to dress as quietly as possible, hoping to slip off to the market without him for once.  

One of the first things I do after getting dressed in the morning is to give myself an insulin injection, so that it isn't forgotten in the course of my busy day.  I did so that morning, plunging the needle into my upper arm.  It takes but a moment.  I happened to glance over at Gilbert, and for some fortuitous reason, like a jigsaw puzzle, things suddenly fell into place.  With the needle still in hand, I thought, why not?  By the time I had refilled the syringe and advanced toward him, he must have, as I mentioned earlier, sensed something.  He awoke.  I smiled my loveliest smile, for I wanted him to remember me throughout eternity that way.  I swabbed his arm with the same cotton I had used on my own.

He lay frozen to his pillow.  "What are you doing?" he asked.

"Just some insulin, Gilbert," I said.  "Enough to kill a horse, but you'll hardly feel it.  You'll convulse a bit, go into shock, possibly even suffer a heart attack.  The best of it is that there will be no evidence of foul play.  Your convulsions will use up the excess insulin, and this little old prick-mark won't even be noticed."

He began to thrash around then somewhat.  "But please keep your arm still," I said, with all the gentleness I could muster.  "We wouldn't want to hurt you and leave a nasty bruise on the corpse now, would we?"

He looked up at me, and I was surprised how much he really does, ... that is, did... resemble a puppy.  For the first time that I ever remember, he became affectionate.  "Sweetheart!" he said.  He hadn't called me that since before we were married.  "You can't be serious!  You wouldn't!  Oh, I never meant all those things I said!  I love you....you know that!"

By this time I had already removed the needle from his arm.  "Just lie still, Gilbert," I said, "and please stop sniveling.  Your convulsions won't begin for a few minutes, perhaps as many as ten."

"My God!  Isn't there anything can be done?"

"Oh, yes, Gilbert...several things, but I'm not going to do any of them.  I could have you ingest sugar, for instance, or any food, preferably carbohydrates, to counteract..."

He tried to get up, but I pushed him down and sat on him to keep him there.  "Please try to remain calm, Gilbert," I begged.  "It's probably too late to do anything by now anyway."

He began to whimper and promised me all the reforms he would make if only I'd try to do something to save him.  I looked at my watch, and let him blubber on for several minutes.  At last, he began to twitch and quiver, and because of my sensitive nature, I couldn't remain there any longer to witness it.

"I'm going marketing now," I said, standing up and straightening my skirt.  "Good-by, Gilbert.  By the time I return, you should be quite dead."

As it turned out, I was exactly right.