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ON JUPITER PLACE

After my mother was diagnosed

with tuberculosis I lived

in one of the identical

brick houses on a long street

with my grandfather who worked

twelve-hour days six days a week

and my grandmother

who was too restless

to stay home for long

so that I was often left on my own

at age four with plenty of time

to meet the neighbors

Mr. Porti the building inspector

who died of a heart attack

behind the wheel of his Plymouth

and Mr. Cleary the Con Ed linesman

with the Marine Corps tattoo

who chainsmoked Camels

and his beautiful daughter Nora

the nurse in her crisp uniform

who worked the night shift

and walked home from the bus stop

every morning at eight

and his son Neal Jr. arrested

in Chinatown with a truckload

of stolen fireworks

and four doors down

Mrs. Kornstein whose husband

was gassed at Auschwitz

where she received

a different sort of tattoo

the jagged numerals on her wrist

that she refused to remove

and two doors down from her

behind a wall of evergreens

Mr. Boehringer the baker

a Bund member during the war

who spoke only German at home

and told anyone willing to listen

including his granddaughter

Heidi with her blond pigtails

that Franklin Roosevelt was a Jew

in league with Stalin —

Heidi who ate uncooked

hot dogs without buns

they tasted like bologna she said

which was what the Lazzeri twins

Vincent and Little Steve

piled on Silvercup bread

with no mustard or mayo

their father Big Steve a mobster

who every Christmas

gave his wife a fur coat

and on their tenth anniversary

a two-tone Coupe de Ville

that he washed and waxed

on Sundays in their driveway

next door to Mr. Porti’s family

struggling behind drawn drapes

his daughter Genevieve

in hand-me-down dresses

and scuffed shoes was my friend

her mother the widow

had suffered a nervous breakdown

so that Genevieve too

was being raised by her grandmother

herself a widow born in Sicily

who carried a cane to ward off dogs

and across the street from them

Mr. Fallon the used car salesman

who had no license

and was driven to work

by his wife a secret drinker

that everyone knew about

both of them tormented

by their roughneck son

who one day put me

in a headlock until I turned blue

and I knocked his tooth out

and bloodied his nose

and his mother screamed that I was a savage

that we were all savages

though in fact I rarely got into trouble

and mostly kept to myself

while my father all that time

lived alone in the small apartment

that had been our home

before my mother was hospitalized

and held down two jobs

one to support us

the other to pay her medical bills

until finally she was released

from the hospital

and that first afternoon was resting

in my grandmother’s room

when I was brought in to her

I hadn’t seen her in a long time

she was pale and very thin

her hair was cut short

and I told her to get out

of my grandmother’s bed

out of her room

I didn’t know who she was anymore

maybe I never did or could —

not the girl that danced

until dawn on her wedding night

or the middle-aged woman

with ailments real and imaginary

who withered beneath

the weight of her fears —

for when she died many years later

having loved me (I know) as best she could

she was still a stranger

On Jupiter Place

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