Empty Chairs
I was ten years old when my mother was the class
mother on a one-day trip to Jerusalem and Dora got her first
period.
My mom didn’t tell me. Dora did, a couple of days
later, assuming that my mom had. In the separate building that
housed the school lavatory, Dora also wanted to show me her new
special belt that held the pad, which she was supposed to wash
every day. The whole thing was just too gross. I fled.
Throughout the next two years, weird and mysterious
things were happening around Dora. Not awesome, but rather
repulsive, like the curious importance she gave the gigantic
mounds that filled the front of her dress, and her seeking the
boys’ attention, which I so dreaded.
The boys' after-school hangout had shifted from the
schoolyard to the front of Dora's apartment building, where the
branches of an aged, massive sycamore allowed them to climb up
closer to Dora’s perch on the third floor. On my daily trek with
Sarah, Bella and Debbie to the private library off Allenby
Street, where, for a monthly fee, we took out three books each
day, we would spot Dora at her window. Her pretty face with warm
brown eyes was framed by light brown curls, and she smiled
easily even without a good reason. If the boys weren't around,
Dora walked with us to the library although she rarely even read
the one book a week from the school library while the four of us
would often finish a book on our walk back home.
For a long time, Dora wasn't even the subject of
discussion among us four. Whatever was taking place around her
dwelled in the periphery of my consciousness, but had I been
interested, I wouldn’t have known what questions to ask. My
three friends had begun to bud, and Debbie's mother badgered her
not to stoop and to let her buy her a bra. We had perused the
drawings in the midwifing book my grandmother had brought from
Russia in 1920 and had been horrified to discover what we really
had “down there.” Yet none of it had anything to do with the way
Dora pushed out her large breasts or with the boys, all a head
shorter than she, acting crazy, punching and hitting one another
just to show off, but looking like idiots.
In fifth grade, on the nurse's day off, I tore a
ligament in my ankle. I sat in class, whimpering until the
teacher could no longer ignore it and sent Dora with me to the
Red Star of David emergency room. I couldn’t hobble the four
blocks, so Dora carried me on her back. After the doctor
bandaged my leg and ordered home rest, she carried me uphill on
Mazeh Street all the way home. Her sweat was tangy and
full-bodied, like an adult’s.
A couple of weeks later, when she invited me to come
to her home to play, I couldn’t refuse. It would have been
rotten of me.
Dora's mother had blue numbers tattooed on her
forearm. She was a handsome woman, older than everyone else's
mom, her hair coiffed, her yellow dress tailored, and she
smelled clean in the heat of summer. She was so different from
my Israeli-born mom who, like me, wore her dark hair in a
waist-long braid, walked around in blue shorts and Biblical
sandals, and who favored industrial soap for our bedtime shower.
Dora’s mother said something in German to Dora, and
Dora led me to their dining room. Their furniture--heavy, dark,
and smelling of lemon and wax--was the kind salvaged from
Europe. The inlaid-wood table was so shiny that I could see my
reflection in it. Dora's mother gave us cloth napkins trimmed in
lace and served us tea in a silver set and home-baked butter
cookies that were the best I had ever tasted.
After her mother had left the room, Dora pointed to
the corpulent buffet, made of the same shiny, grainy wood as the
dining table. Above it hung a framed beveled mirror. On top of
the buffet were two framed photographs, one of a woman with a
boy and a girl, and one of a man with a younger set of a boy and
a girl. Although the boys in both pictures wore knee-long dark
pants held up with suspenders and their hair was plastered to
their foreheads as if still wet, they weren't the same boy. The
older girl was blonde. The younger one was just a toddler, with
a huge bow on top of her brown hair. Her pretty eyes looking
into the camera reminded me of Dora's.
“My parents' families before the war,” Dora
whispered.
My stomach lurched as it caught the implication. I
had seen photographs of Jews being rounded up, of cattle cars,
of barbed wire, of gas chambers. Bella's dad from Poland and
Debbie's mom from Rumania had lived through the Holocaust. But
the photos they had in their homes were of young people and
grown ups, not of little kids.
Dora went on. “Then my parents met and made me. To
make up for the kids they’d lost.”
I busied myself with the tea. I thought it wasn’t
polite to keep staring at the dead children.
We moved to Dora’s corner room, which had large
windows and was filled with dolls dressed in real clothes. An
armoire had as many board games as a store. The pink bedspread
matched the curtains. As I explored Dora’s treasures, I couldn't
take my mind off her four siblings. Dead brothers and sisters
she had never met. I thought it must be very sad to live in this
home. I tried to imagine that my sister had been born before me
and had been gassed or hurled against a wall, her scalp smashed.
It made me want to cry.
Otherwise, the whole afternoon was a drag. I beat
Dora easily in the board games. We practiced our flute lessons,
and she was okay, but got bored. When playing with dolls, she
agreed too quickly with my plots, never offering a new idea.
Dora was so unlike Sarah, Bella, and Debbie with whom I could
stage plays and then serialize them for weeks. It was like
playing alone, so I finally just ignored her as she sat
cross-legged on her bed and watched me dress and undress her
dolls while I made up stories.
The boys' interest in Dora climbed up a notch when
she started showing them her bra. One by one, she took them
behind the lavatory. I knew about it because she told me and
once even asked whether I, too, wanted to see it. I was
incredulous at her stupidity. I didn't want to laugh at her
because of her dead siblings and how sad it was to have to make
up for their loss, but neither did I want to have anything to do
with her.
In March, when she turned twelve, her mother sent
pretty hand-written invitations to her Bat-Mitzvah the following
Tuesday. It was to be a small dinner for Dora's “best friends.”
Tuesday was a school day, but since it was the day
when, during Creation, God had said twice that the day had been
“good,” it was all right to have a party. But I was mortified to
be considered among Dora's best friends. Sarah, Bella, or Debbie
surely weren’t her friends; they no longer allowed Dora to walk
with us to the library, because the boys would follow and taunt
us. Besides, there was something contaminating about associating
with Dora. People might think that I, too, was the kind of girl
who showed the boys my bra—or would do so when I needed one,
that is. I had discovered that the females in my family all wore
“falsies.” With the twin almonds I was growing, I wasn’t about
to break this tradition.
I wondered who were the other girls who had been
invited to Dora’s party. Probably the ones living behind Dora’s
building in the next block, which was zoned for the other
neighborhood school. I wished I hadn't been invited. Unlike
Sarah, Bella and Debbie, who thought boys were disgusting, these
other girls might think I was Dora’s friend. That I was like
her.
But after the trip on her back to the emergency
room, I couldn’t refuse the invitation. I thought about those
butter cookies.
My mom gave me money to buy a set of handkerchiefs
folded in a flat cardboard box under clear plastic. I drew a
picture of Dora carrying me on her back. I rhymed birthday
wishes that all her dreams would come true so she wouldn’t be
blue. I starched and ironed my mint-colored organza dress with
the black velvet bow. Along with my patent leather Mary-Jane
shoes and white socks, no one would think I wore a bra or had
dirty pads. No one would think that I took boys behind the
lavatory to show them anything.
Dora was dressed in a red Tyrolean dress, the
section below her chest crisscrossed with a thin cord. The cloth
of a white blouse underneath was gathered over her cleavage and
was embarrassingly stretched wide over her ample breasts. Below
the full, embroidered skirt, the one-inch heels did nothing to
make Dora look taller than wider.
I felt like a fraud as I handed her the present and
nodded politely to her mother. I wanted to find the opportunity
to explain that this was a mistake because I wasn’t Dora's “best
friend,” or even “a friend.” But then I glimpsed the dining room
and felt as if I had stepped into a fairy tale.
The table was open to its full length and covered
with a white tablecloth. It was set with silver candelabras and
silver finger bowls and silver napkin holders and multiples of
silver forks, knives and spoons. There was a bouquet of red
roses in the center. The first course was already waiting in
each of the plates, half a grapefruit sectioned and topped with
a cherry. On a teacart, crystal glasses of lemonade with mint
leaves were ready. Another flower arrangement sat on the buffet,
where silver serving platters awaited the food. The smells
coming from the kitchen were foreign and delicious and made
saliva gather in my mouth.
The pictures of the dead children remained in their
spots, untouched, old-world with their foreign clothes and hair,
the sepia-color pinning them to those bad times less than twenty
years earlier, when the Nazis exterminated Jews like
cockroaches.
Dora's father, a big man with a broad face and neat
wisps of white hair and kind brown eyes like Dora's, was
meticulous in his movements as he placed the needle of a
gramophone on the record. Classical notes poured into the room,
the kind that old people went to listen at concerts, the kind I
heard on neighbors’ late-night radio.
I tugged at the black velvet bow of my dress. Dora's
mother gave me a glass of lemonade and invited me to sit down on
the sofa in the adjacent living room. For the occasion, the two
double doors were opened to combine the two rooms into one. I
obeyed, and Dora came to sit next to me. We didn’t speak. Her
father said something in German, and she replied, her tone
polite like to a teacher, so unlike the easy tone I used at
home. I sipped my lemonade while examining a glass cabinet that
contained magnificent porcelain figurines. Their faces were
angelic, with tiny, pointed noses, their hands graceful, the
tilts of their necks delicate. I was awed by the beautiful,
flowing dresses with porcelain lace petticoats. Princes with
rapture in their eyes wooed the princesses, kneeling or striking
princely poses. I put down my empty glass on the coaster, rose
up, and stood fixated in front of the display.
“This princess strolls out to the woods, following
the enchanting sound of gurgling water,” I said, pointing at two
of the figures.
“There’s no woods.’
“Pretend woods,” I said, and went on. “She's sitting
by the spring and she doesn't know that the shepherd in the
clearing is really a cursed prince. When the wizard who hates
him will try to cast a spell on the princess, this dog will bark
to alert the prince, and the prince will draw his sword and
fight the wizard—”
“And the dog will pee on her shoes,” Dora added.
I was mortified. I couldn’t bear the thought of
ruining that delicate stroke of muted red on the tiny feet. “No.
These are satin shoes,” I said with exasperation.
What was the use? Standing quietly, filled with
rapture, I went on weaving new stories in my head, the music
filling the room blending them into wonderful pictures.
I forgot about Dora until she spoke behind me.
“Maybe no one will come.”
I turned, and my first thought was that I was the
only one stupid enough to come to her party. Then I felt anger
about the way Dora had brought it all upon herself and how she
now involved me. But then I saw the tears in her eyes and felt
bad. I felt pity for this big girl who towered over me but who
wanted to be my friend. Pity for this girl whose life both at
home and at school I couldn’t comprehend. I wanted to ask about
the girls who went to the other school and were supposed to be
here, but I wasn’t sure if I should.
“Are Sarah, Bella, and Debbie coming?” Dora asked
me.
I swallowed. “I didn't know you invited them.”
Dora kept looking down at me, her gaze pleading. I
felt so small, so uncomfortable with the power she handed me. I
shrugged and kept my shoulders high up in a gesture of
helplessness. I wished I could just leave.
The record had ended for the third or fourth time.
Dora’s father changed it once more. Her mother peeked out the
window again and again. They spoke in German. She gave me
another glass of lemonade. Her skin was as translucent as the
figurines’, and I realized that I had never before met anyone
who had escaped the Israeli sun. We waited.
Dora began to cry, a soft, silent weeping. Her
father stroked her hair. Her mother's lips tightened into a line
as she stepped into the kitchen and closed the door. With all
that lemonade in me, I wanted to pee badly, but dared not move.
Dora went on weeping.
Finally, her mother came out of the kitchen carrying
a tray with steaming food. Dora's father lit the candles in the
candelabra. I sat down in the dining room, Dora’s parents at
both ends, Dora and me facing each other at the center. On
either side, three chairs separated Dora's parents and us.
Twelve girls who hadn't shown up.
The four dead children looked straight at me. Grave,
foreign children. Murdered by the Nazis. I wished I had thought
of grabbing Dora’s seat first. She had known to avoid looking at
them.
I examined all those utensils and wondered which one
to pick first. My friends and I had read a manners book for when
we would be invited to dine at a palace. We practiced with
whatever was left from the set my father had inherited from his
mother and which my mom hated because it was stupid to polish
silver when we had stainless steel. Now I forgot everything the
book had said except that it was very important not to make a
mistake, so I watched Dora lift the outside fork and hold it in
her left hand as she ate the grapefruit. I did the same,
although it was difficult to eat with my left.
My bladder could hold no more. My face hot, I
excused myself and went to the bathroom, certain that it was
impolite and now they were talking about me in German. I wished
that at least one other girl had come. But when I returned to
the table, Dora’s mother was bringing more food from the kitchen
and she smiled at me kindly.
The other dishes tasted as good as they smelled. I
ate everything Dora's mother put on my plate, making sure to
thank her each time, to dab my mouth with the lacy cloth napkin
in between bites. I wanted to be good, to make up for the
absence of the twelve others, to make up for the sorrow of the
four dead children.
The last record Dora's father had changed ended.
This time he didn't get up. The record went on turning, obedient
in its soft, rhythmic hum, but the needle whimpered. The
scratching gave me goose bumps. No one moved to do anything
about it. I hugged myself and rubbed the skin of my arms. The
twelve empty chairs and the untouched place settings gaped at
me. Suddenly, Dora's father dropped his face in his hands.
Dora’s mother said something, but he only shook his head. There
was some strange trembling to his shoulders. Dora's mother bit
her lips, her face contorted. I lowered my gaze into my fingers,
not knowing where else to look. Then there was this odd sound in
the room, like a choked moan, and I looked up to see Dora’s
mother rush back into the kitchen.
I shifted in my seat. The four dead children in the
photographs were silent. I wondered how old the oldest had been
when they killed him. I was sorry that Dora was not the kind of
child who could make up for the loss. She was a woman in a
Tyrolean girl’s dress. At least her parents didn’t know what she
did with the boys.
Dora’s father still didn’t move. His scalp between
wisps of white hair shone. A guttural croak tore out of him. My
first introduction to unbearable grief bore down on me. I wanted
to cry with them, but I had no right since the Nazis hadn’t
killed anyone in my family.
Dora just looked down, her fingers twisting and
knotting the napkin in her lap.
For a split second I wanted to offer myself to them
as their child. It was a stupid idea. I slid off my chair. My
throat was constricted. “Thank you very much. The food was
delicious,” I managed to say, even though I was leaving before
dessert, before the birthday cake, possibly losing out on those
butter cookies.
Neither one answered. I didn’t knock on the kitchen
door to say good-bye to Dora’s mother before I left, although it
was impolite not to thank the hostess.
Dora’s family—the dead and the living—walked with me
all the way home.
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