FRESH
YARN PRESENTS:
Fremo
By Dinah Manoff
PAGE
TWO:
Several
years later, Fremo was diagnosed with cancer. It was slow and terrible.
It took two years for it to claim her, and her neediness was both
moving and repulsive to me. If she had been difficult to be around
before, now she was almost impossible. She was so angry at her illness
and the inept way in which my mother and the rest of the family
tried to care for her needs. The food they brought was too salty.
Her apartment too lonely. (She had fled with her cats back to New
York City and her beloved Art Students League after just a year
in Saugus). During stays at my parents' apartment she complained
that it was too cold, or too hot. She drove them crazy. Only Trini,
their longtime housekeeper, and Rachel, my paternal grandmother,
could tolerate her irritability. Rachel is central casting for an
Italian grandmother and was always in my parents' kitchen sweating
and cursing, the bottoms of her arms covered in flour and jiggling
while she stood at the counter making dough for pasta. Trini was
from San Salvador and spoke no English. She and Rachel had cross-pollinated
a language between Italian and Spanish that only they could understand.
As for me, I was living uptown. I was in and out. Working, dating,
partying. I was a kiss on the cheek and out the door. I was no help
at all.
As
the end neared, Fremo went into the hospital. Rachel and Trini set
up camp, making sure she was cared for and clean, that her hair
was washed and that she had her make-up.
She was happy in the hospital. All those gorgeous doctors and interns
and orderlies! Fremo flirted outrageously. I think it was the one
time in her life when she knew that no matter what she did or said,
she wasn't going to be left alone.
I popped
by to see her one day. Rachel and Trini must've been out getting
lunch, because Fremo was alone in the room. She raised her head
toward me and I didn't know whether to laugh or to cry. She had
painted her eyebrows red with her lipstick liner and her lips were
lined black with her eyebrow pencil. She greeted me with a big smile
and I sat down on the edge of the bed and held her hand. It was
the only visit I had ever paid her where I didn't keep checking
the time. I sat with her that day until Rachel and Trini returned.
A week
later the call came.
I had been up all night drinking and doing cocaine, lying in bed,
promising God I would never get high again if He/She would only
let me fall asleep. Next to me in the bed passed out and snoring
loudly was Shirley, an angry black dancer who I idolized and, for
a long while, she wanted nothing to do with me. We were in a show
together and I had been determined to make her like me. This I finally
accomplished after discovering our mutual love of cocaine. Shirley
was now my best friend. We were inseparable. I had been trying to
make my breathing the same rhythm as Shirley's snores, hoping to
fall asleep by imitation, when the phone rang. An hour later I arrived
at the hospital. If both my parents had not been working and out
of town, I doubt I would have gone at all. I was so loaded I barely
found the nurse's station.
Rachel
and Trini came running down the hall and grabbed me.
"This
is it!" they said in all languages. "It's happening."
They
pulled me along towards Fremo's room.
She
was sitting straight up in bed, her eyes alert and wide open as
if she were seeing something very close up. She was moving her hands
up and down and around. I thought at first she was gesturing at
something but then I realized that she was painting. She was painting
and she was dying.
If
I could re-do what happened next it would go like this: I would
have crossed into the room and sat with her on the bed and followed
her fingers and the imaginary brushes that fluttered from them.
I would have stayed until she had filled her last canvas and I would
have told her that it was her best work ever. But I didn't. I turned
away and told Rachel and Trini that I wasn't feeling well and I
was going back to my apartment to try to get some sleep. Then I
ran down the hall toward the elevator.
"Let
me know if anything changes," I called back over my shoulder.
My
apartment is covered in Fremo's artwork. It's one of my great regrets
that my eye was too dim to appreciate what a really talented painter
she was while she was still alive. After she died I inherited all
her artwork and furniture, so I hung some of her paintings to cover
the bare walls. I have fallen in love with her work and with the
models she used, with the reflection of Fremo's loneliness in their
eyes. Her best painting is of a model named Susie -- a full-bodied,
big-breasted nude in a chair. She is wearing nothing but a hat with
feathers, and high heels. She smokes a cigarette and regards her
audience directly and without shame.
I found
nude photos of Fremo as I was sorting through her things. There
were three. In two of them, she was with a man. He was wearing a
suit and they looked very happy together; she, demurely posed on
his lap. In the third photo she is alone, seated on a chair, her
legs wide open exposing herself to the camera. I do not have the
feeling that there is anyone in the room with her. I imagine her
setting up the camera and then running to the chair and spreading
her legs in time for the shot. A private moment that she forgot
to throw away.
Trini
and Rachel sat in the front row of the funeral parlor. Trini was
praying in Spanish and Rachel was praying in Italian. The Rabbi
was winding up his remarks. Since my parents were still away on
business, I was left to assist with the arrangements. There were
a couple of distant relatives, a neighbor from Fremo's building,
an acquaintance from art school. Really we should have invited her
cats. They were closest to her. They knew her best. But the one
cat that she'd managed to keep during her illness had barricaded
himself in Fremo's closet the day she died, and for three days attacked
anyone who tried to get him out. Rachel and Trini wore Band-aids
on their hands. Under the sleeves of my dress were scratches that
ran the length of my arm.
I rose
to deliver the eulogy. As I walked up to the podium I looked down
at Fremo lying in the open casket. That morning we had dressed her
in her silk leopard skin pajamas and hired a professional to do
her hair and face. When we finished, we stood back admiring our
efforts.
"Lovey,
you look like a million bucks," I said as Rachel and Trini
murmured their approval. Then we folded her arms over her chest
and tucked her vinyl make-up bag under her hands.
"My
Great Aunt Fremo taught me the twist when I was six years old,"
I began as I stood at the podium and looked around at the other
five mourners who had spread themselves out in the funeral parlor
in an attempt to look like a crowd.
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